Almaz – Wikipedia

The Almaz (Russian: , "Diamond") program was a highly secret Soviet military space station program, begun in the early 1960s.

Three crewed military reconnaissance stations were launched between 1973 and 1976: Salyut 2, Salyut 3 and Salyut 5. To cover the military nature of the program the three launched Almaz stations were designated as civilian Salyut space stations.Salyut 2 failed shortly after achieving orbit, but Salyut 3 and Salyut 5 both conducted successful manned testing. Following Salyut 5, the Soviet Ministry of Defence judged in 1978 that the time consumed by station maintenance outweighed the benefits relative to automatic reconnaissance satellites.

The space stations cores were known internally as OPS (Russian: , GRAU index 11F71 and 11F71B), from "Orbital Piloted Station" (Russian: ).[1] As part of the Almaz program, the Soviets developed several spacecraft for support rolesthe VA spacecraft, the Functional Cargo Block and the TKS spacecraftwhich they planned to use in several combinations.[2][3] The heritage of the Almaz program continues, with the ISS module Zarya being one example.

Vladimir Chelomei at the OKB-52 design bureau promoted Almaz as a response to the US Air Force's Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) project. MOL had been widely publicized in the US press in the early 1960s, which provided Chelomei plenty of material to use to lobby for a Soviet response.

The Almaz space station programme involved three major hardware components:

The OPS would have a maximum diameter of 4.15 metres (13.6ft), a mass of roughly 20 tonnes (20 long tons; 22 short tons), and an internal habitable volume of 47.5 cubic metres (1,680cuft).[1]

Much like its MOL/Gemini counterpart, the initial Almaz APOS space station design called for the launch of an Almaz-OPS space station and a VA return capsule containing its initial three man crew, mated together as OPS/VA atop Chelomei's UR-500 Proton rocket.[3] As with MOL/Gemini, once in orbit the crew would access the lab through a hatch in the heat shield at the bottom of the VA capsule.After an extended stay of 30 to 60 days of military observation and photography the crew would return to Earth by way of a VA return vehicle.[4][5]

Unlike the American MOL design, the Soviets designed the Almaz to be recrewed and resupplied. For this, they created the TKS resupply craft (11F72), which consisted of an FGB and a VA return craft to carry the crew, also launched together on a Proton rocket. At the station, one docking port would be available to receive the TKS craft once the previous crew had left the station in their VA capsule.[2]

While the MOL was cancelled in 1969, the Almaz program was integrated into the Salyut programme and resulted in three flown space stations, two of which were crewed successfully. As "man-rating" the VA spacecraft and the Proton rocket took longer, the first phase called for the launch of three Almaz stations without the VA spacecraft, with the crew instead launched separately by Soyuz rocket in a modified Soyuz spacecraft. Plans called for the first three Almaz stations to be visited by three two-month-long expeditions each. This was realized fully by two missions and partially by one; however, the initial intention of launching Almaz APOS and the TKS spacecraft together with its crew in VA spacecraft would never materialize during the program, and neither would the TKS craft play its intended role as resupply craft. The Almaz APOS design, without VA spacecraft, would evolve into the Almaz OPS station cores of the Salyut programme.[4][6]

In addition to reconnaissance equipment, Almaz was equipped with a unique 23mm Rikhter (factory index 261P or 225P) rapid-fire cannon mounted on the forward belly of the station. This revolver cannon was modified from the tail-gun of the Tu-22 bomber and was capable of a theoretical rate of fire of 1800-2000 (up to 2600) rounds per minute. Each 168gram (ammo 23-OFZ-D-R ) or 173gram (ammo 23-OFZ-G-R) projectile flew at a speed of 850m/s relative to the station. The cannon was tested at the end of the mission by firing 20 rounds, when the station was operating in unmanned mode. To aim the cannon, which was on a fixed mounting, the entire station would be turned to face the threat.[7] The Almaz series are the only known armed, crewed military spacecraft ever flown.

Salyut 3/OPS-2 conducted a successful remote test firing with the station unmanned due to concerns over excessive vibration and noise.

OPS-4 was to have featured two rockets instead of the aircraft cannon, but this system has not been shown publicly and may have never been fully manufactured despite it being used experimentally.

Three Almaz OPS space stations were flown from 1973 to 1976 in the Salyut programme: Salyut 2 (OPS-1), Salyut 3 (OPS-2) and Salyut 5 (OPS-3).Five crewed Soyuz expeditions were flown to the Almaz space stations Salyut 3 and Salyut 5, with three reaching their stations and only two of the missions being considered fully successful at that time the three crews that had reached their stations had manned Almaz stations for a total of 81 days when the program was ended.[6][8]

Besides the three flown space stations OPS-1 to OPS-3, seven more spaceframes of Almaz space stations had been built when the program was cancelled: OPS-4, Almaz-205, Almaz-206, Almaz-T, Almaz-T2 (Kosmos 1870), Almaz-1 and Almaz-2 with Almaz-T2 and Almaz-1 having successfully flown as repurposed unmanned radar-carrying reconnaissance satellites (see below). The partially outfitted hulls of Almaz-205 and Almaz-206 are today in the property of Excalibur Almaz, a company that plans to launch these as manned space stations (see below).[9]

The first Almaz station (OPS-1 or Almaz 101.1) was launched on April 3, 1973. For purposes of military secrecy, it was publicly designated Salyut 2 upon reaching orbit. A crew was prepared to fly to the station but an accident days after the launch left OPS-1 disabled and depressurized.[10]

OPS-2 (or Almaz 101.2), announced as Salyut 3, was launched on June 25, 1974. The crew of the Soyuz 14 spacecraft spent 15 days aboard the station in July 1974. A second expedition was launched toward OPS-2 in August 1974, but failed to reach the station. The station successfully remotely test-fired an onboard aircraft cannon at a target satellite while the station was unmanned. Salyut-3 was deorbited in January 1975.[8]

OPS-3 (or Almaz 103), announced after launch as Salyut 5, entered orbit on June 22, 1976. It was visited by two crews in mid-1976 and late 1977. Salyut 5 was deorbited on 8 August 1977, and broke up as it reentered the Earth's atmosphere.[11]

The next Almaz station, OPS-4, was to be the first station launched with a three panel Mech-A Synthetic Aperture Radar and a manned reusable Return Vehicle VA, however the VA was replaced by a second TKS docking port. This station's Shchit-1 23mm defense cannon was also to be replaced with an advanced Shchit-2 space-to-space cannon. The Shchit-2 was reported to be a two projectile system, although no photographs of it have ever been published and it does not appear that this system was ever installed on the station. OPS-4 was grounded when the Almaz manned program was cancelled.

Following cancellation of the program, the Almaz station was reconfigured as an unmanned heavy radar-carrying reconnaissance satellite. Three such satellites were launched, two of which functioned successfully in orbit.[12]

Almaz-T - The first Almaz-T blasted off from Baikonur on October 29, 1986. It did not reach orbit due to the failure of the first and second stages of the Proton launcher to separate. The safety system then destroyed the vehicle.

Kosmos 1870 - On July 25, 1987, Almaz-T2, the second Almaz-T spacecraft, successfully reached orbit with an inclination 71.92 degrees toward the Equator and it was officially identified as Kosmos-1870. The spacecraft functioned for two years, providing radar imagery with a resolution down to 25 meters, until it was deorbited on July 30, 1989.

It was the first commercial radar satellite, according to Art Dula (chairman of Excalibur Almaz), who worked in a company marketing the radar images gathered by the satellite.[13]

Almaz-1 - The third Almaz-T spacecraft was launched on March 31, 1991 under the name Almaz-1. After the launch a failure of the communications antenna designed to downlink the imagery via the Luch relay satellite was noted. Also one of the solar panels failed to deploy completely, leaving the main radar panel of the spacecraft partially blocked. After 18 months of successful work the Almaz-1 was deorbited on October 17, 1992 over the Pacific Ocean.[clarification needed]

Almaz-2 (Almaz-1V) - Not flown. It had a new radar that would have provided a resolution of 5 to 7 meters. In addition, an optical-electronic payload on the station would have been capable of producing imagery with a resolution of 2.5 4 meters.

The heritage of the Almaz space station program continues until today, and can even be found today in the International Space Station.

The DOS space station core modules were based on the Almaz-OPS hull design, which was mated by Sergei Korolev's organization OKB-1 with their own Soyuz-derived subsystems. OKB-1 was at that time in competition with the designer of the Almaz, Vladimir Chelomei's organization OKB-52, and was thereby able to short-cut the development time for the first space station and beat OKB-52, which had started design work much earlier.[14]

DOS space station cores derived since 1971 from the Almaz-OPS hull design include:

The modules based on the DOS design are not the only heritage of the Almaz program still in use: The habitat, propulsion and service module of the TKS spacecraft, the so-called Functional Cargo Block (FGB), went on to become the core of many Soviet and Russian space station modules.[2] The FGB-based Kvant-1 module of the Mir space station was the first space station module of its kind, and the Zarya Functional Cargo Block, which is as of 2018[update] still in use on the International Space Station.

The private spaceflight company Excalibur Almaz has bought the two partially completed Almaz-205 and Almaz-206 space station hulls from the Russian NPO Mashinostroyeniya (the former OKB-52) with the stated intention to outfit and launch them.[15][16][17][18][19]The Almaz-205 module is similar to the OPS-2 of the Salyut 3 station, while the Almaz-206 is closer to the OPS-3 of the Salyut 5 station.[20]

In addition, Excalibur Almaz acquired four VA return capsule hulls (derived from the TKS/VA spacecraft) and plans to outfit and launch them as well: one is planned to be used in support of space tourism while the other three capsules are reserved for scientific and commercial payloads. The needed development of propulsion systems for the VA capsule was reportedly delegated to an unnamed European organization as early as 2009.[17]

Excalibur Almaz has as of January2012[update] postponed its first launch to 2015 to be able to include more lucrative deep space capabilities like asteroid mining.[21]

Read more here:

Almaz - Wikipedia

Where is the International Space Station? / International …

Where is the International Space Station?

The International Space Station with ESAs Columbus laboratory flies 400 km high at speeds that defy gravity literally. At 28 800 km/h it only takes 90 minutes for the weightless laboratory to make a complete circuit of Earth. Astronauts working and living on the Station experience 16 sunrises and sunsets each day.

The tracker above, developed by ESA, shows where the Space Station is right now and its path 90 minutes ago and 90 minutes ahead. Due to Earth's rotation the Station seems to travel from west to east over our planet. Below the map of Earth you can see where the Station is flying directly above. You can see the International Space Station with your own eyes from here by looking up at the right time.

Below is a live view of Earth taken by a camera on the International Space Station, a view similar to that astronauts get from above. Without Earths atmosphere to protect us, people and equipment endure the full barrage of cosmic rays and solar radiation. The images are part of the NASA HDEV experiment that is looking at how fast these harmful rays degrade the image through camera and equipment damage. Sometimes the image is black because the Space Station does not have continuous radio contact with ground control. In that case, check back later.

Thank you for rating!

You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

26039491

See original here:

Where is the International Space Station? / International ...

Space Station Casting Studios – The Most Convenient …

Date* Aug 21stAug 22ndAug 23rdAug 24thAug 25thAug 26thAug 27thAug 28thAug 29thAug 30thAug 31stSep 1stSep 2ndSep 3rdSep 4thSep 5thSep 6thSep 7thSep 8thSep 9thSep 10thSep 11thSep 12thSep 13thSep 14thSep 15thSep 16thSep 17thSep 18thAug 21stAug 22ndAug 23rdAug 24thAug 25thAug 26thAug 27thAug 28thAug 29thAug 30thAug 31stSep 1stSep 2ndSep 3rdSep 4thSep 5thSep 6thSep 7thSep 8thSep 9thSep 10thSep 11thSep 12thSep 13thSep 14thSep 15thSep 16thSep 17thSep 18thAug 21stAug 22ndAug 23rdAug 24thAug 25thAug 26thAug 27thAug 28thAug 29thAug 30thAug 31stSep 1stSep 2ndSep 3rdSep 4thSep 5thSep 6thSep 7thSep 8thSep 9thSep 10thSep 11thSep 12thSep 13thSep 14thSep 15thSep 16thSep 17thSep 18thAug 21stAug 22ndAug 23rdAug 24thAug 25thAug 26thAug 27thAug 28thAug 29thAug 30thAug 31stSep 1stSep 2ndSep 3rdSep 4thSep 5thSep 6thSep 7thSep 8thSep 9thSep 10thSep 11thSep 12thSep 13thSep 14thSep 15thSep 16thSep 17thSep 18th

Studio* Studio 1 + 1 Parking Space ($12/hr) Studio 2 + 1 Parking Space ($17/hr) Studio 3 + 1 Parking Space ($25/hr) Studio 4 + 1 Parking Space ($30/hr) Studio 5 + 1 Parking Space ($35/hr) Studio 6 + 1 Parking Space ($38/hr) Conference Room + 1 Parking Space ($20/hr) Acting Studio + 1 Parking Space ($45/hr) Studio 1 + 1 Parking Space ($12/hr) Studio 2 + 1 Parking Space ($17/hr) Studio 3 + 1 Parking Space ($25/hr) Studio 4 + 1 Parking Space ($30/hr) Studio 5 + 1 Parking Space ($35/hr) Studio 6 + 1 Parking Space ($38/hr) Conference Room + 1 Parking Space ($20/hr) Acting Studio + 1 Parking Space ($45/hr) Studio 1 + 1 Parking Space ($12/hr) Studio 2 + 1 Parking Space ($17/hr) Studio 3 + 1 Parking Space ($25/hr) Studio 4 + 1 Parking Space ($30/hr) Studio 5 + 1 Parking Space ($35/hr) Studio 6 + 1 Parking Space ($38/hr) Conference Room + 1 Parking Space ($20/hr) Acting Studio + 1 Parking Space ($45/hr) Studio 1 + 1 Parking Space ($12/hr) Studio 2 + 1 Parking Space ($17/hr) Studio 3 + 1 Parking Space ($25/hr) Studio 4 + 1 Parking Space ($30/hr) Studio 5 + 1 Parking Space ($35/hr) Studio 6 + 1 Parking Space ($38/hr) Conference Room + 1 Parking Space ($20/hr) Acting Studio + 1 Parking Space ($45/hr)

Start Time* 8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm

End Time* 8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm8:00 am8:30 am9:00 am9:30 am10:00 am10:30 am11:00 am11:30 am12:00 pm12:30 pm1:00 pm1:30 pm2:00 pm2:30 pm3:00 pm3:30 pm4:00 pm4:30 pm5:00 pm5:30 pm6:00 pm6:30 pm7:00 pm7:30 pm8:00 pm8:30 pm9:00 pm9:30 pm10:00 pm10:30 pm11:00 pm

Studio Unavailable at that time.

See original here:

Space Station Casting Studios - The Most Convenient ...

NASA Live Stream – Earth From Space (Full Screen) | ISS …

Earth From Space Live StreamWant to know what bit of Earth you're looking at or Where is the ISS?This stream has a live map https://www.youtube.com/c/SpaceVideos...

UPDATES:

February 27th - Undocking of Soyuz Capsule and return home of Expedition 54 crew from the ISS

Live NASA Earth from Space - live stream from the International Space Station.

Got a question about this feed? Read our FAQ'shttps://spacevideosfaq.tumblr.com

Sadly there are a number of people today that believe the earth is flat - this is a myth based on a lie with no basis in science.

The flat earth "theory" has more to do with religion and superstition that anything connected with scientific truth. It is devoid of proof.

If you have to ask, "Is the Earth Flat?" the answer is No and this live stream from the International Space Station will show you Earth seen from 240 miles above the planet.

ISS HD Video - NASA Live stream of Earth seen from space Live video from NASA HDEV cameras aboard the International Space Station.

What does Earth look like from space? Watch the planet roll by Captured by HDEV cameras on board the International Space Station.

The International Space Station - ISS - circles the earth at 240 miles above the planet, on the edge of space in low earth orbit.

The station is crewed by NASA astronauts as well as Russian Cosmonauts and a mixture of Japanese, Canadian and European astronauts as well.

Is Earth flat? NO!

The ISS passes into the dark side of the earth for roughly half of each of its 90 minute orbits. As the Space Station passes into a period of night every 45 mins video is unavailable - during this time, and other breaks in transmission recorded footage is shown when back in daylight earth will recommence. As seen from the Nasa ISS live stream on the International Space Station - A real astronaut view of Earth!

By the courtesy of International Space Station:UStream live Feed From the NASA HDEV live cameras aboard the ISS. Watch the earth roll http://www.nasa.gov

Nasa live stream from the ISS showing the Earth from Space.

This is ISS HD Video streamed directly form the space station.

The incredible views are set to beautiful relaxing music from Kevin MacLeod------------------------------------------------------------------------------Don't Forget To Subscribe To My Channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/ouramazin...

24/7 LIVE Nasa Earth From Space ISS Live Stream - Real Footage - International Space Station

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Read the original here:

NASA Live Stream - Earth From Space (Full Screen) | ISS ...

China’s Tiangong-1 space station will crash to Earth within …

Chinas first space station is expected to come crashing down to Earth within weeks, but scientists have not been able to predict where the 8.5-tonne module will hit.

The US-funded Aerospace Corporation estimates Tiangong-1 will re-enter the atmosphere during the first week of April, give or take a week. The European Space Agency says the module will come down between 24 March and 19 April.

In 2016 China admitted it had lost control of Tiangong-1 and would be unable to perform a controlled re-entry.

The statement from Aerospace said there was a chance that a small amount of debris from the module will survive re-entry and hit the Earth.

If this should happen, any surviving debris would fall within a region that is a few hundred kilometres in size, said Aerospace, a research organisation that advises government and private enterprise on space flight.

Aerospace warned that the space station might be carrying a highly toxic and corrosive fuel called hydrazine on board.

The report includes a map showing the module is expected to re-enter somewhere between 43 north and 43 south latitudes. The chances of re-entry are slightly higher in northern China, the Middle East, central Italy, northern Spain and the northern states of the US, New Zealand, Tasmania, parts of South America and southern Africa.

However, Aerospace insisted the chance of debris hitting anyone living in these nations was tiny. When considering the worst-case location the probability that a specific person (ie, you) will be struck by Tiangong-1 debris is about one million times smaller than the odds of winning the Powerball jackpot.

In the history of spaceflight no known person has ever been harmed by reentering space debris. Only one person has ever been recorded as being hit by a piece of space debris and, fortunately, she was not injured.

Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist from Harvard University and space industry enthusiast, also sounded a note of caution. He said fragments from a similar-sized rocket re-entered the atmosphere and landed in Peru in January. Every couple of years something like this happens, but Tiangong-1 is big and dense so we need to keep an eye on it, he told the Guardian.

McDowell said Tiangong-1s descent had been speeding up in recent months and it was now falling by about 6km a week, compared with 1.5km in October. It was difficult to predict when the module might land because its speed was affected by the constantly changing weather in space, he said.

It is only in the final week or so that we are going to be able to start speaking about it with more confidence, he said.

I would guess that a few pieces will survive re-entry. But we will only know where they are going to land after after the fact.

The Tiangong-1 or Heavenly Palace lab was launched in 2011 and described as a potent political symbol of China part of a scientific push to become a space superpower.

It was used for both manned and unmanned missions and visited by Chinas first female astronaut, Liu Yang, in 2012.

In 1991 the Soviet Unions 20-tonne Salyut 7 space station crashed to Earth while still docked to another 20-tonne spacecraft called Cosmos 1686. They broke up over Argentina, scattering debris over the town of Capitn Bermdez.

Nasas 77-tonne Skylab space station came hurtling to Earth in an almost completely uncontrolled descent in 1979, with some large pieces landing outside Perth in Western Australia.

Originally posted here:

China's Tiangong-1 space station will crash to Earth within ...

Real time satellite tracking for: SPACE STATION – N2YO.com

SOYUZ MS-06 RETURNS THREE ISS CREW MEMBERS TO EARTH - Expedition 54 Flight Engineers Mark Vande Hei and Joe Acaba of NASA and Commander Alexander Misurkin of Roscosmos have returned from the International Space Station (ISS) in their Soyuz MS-06 spacecraft. The trio landed on the steppes of Kazakhstan around 02:31 UTC.During their 168 days in space, they were part of the first expedition that began a long-term increase in the crew size on the U.S. segment from three people to four, enabling NASA to double the time dedicated to research surpassing 100 hours of research in one week. More (Source: NASASpaceFlight.com - Mar 1)

SECOND OF NOAAS HIGH-DEFINITION WEATHER SATELLITES READY FOR LAUNCH - The second satellite in a quartet of new NOAA weather observatories is awaiting liftoff Thursday aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket, heading for a position 22,000 miles from Earth to scan the western United States and Pacific Ocean for typhoons, wildfires and fog.The GOES-S weather satellite, to be renamed GOES-17 once in orbit, is bolted on top of a 197-foot-tall (60-meter) Atlas 5 rocket set for launch from Cape Canaveral at 5:02 p.m. EST (2202 GMT) Thursday.The launch window extends for two hours, and the official weather outlook calls for an 80 percent probability of favorable conditions. More (Source: SpaceFlight Now - Mar 1)

NEW SATELLITE WILL SHIFT SHAPE WHILE IN SPACE - While the U.S. and Russia often steal the scene when it comes to wondrous space missions, in Europe the U.K is launching a new satellite that is sure to surprise its international partners. The Eutelsat Quantum satellite, built by the firm Airbus, will be the first commercial satellite equipped to shapeshift while in orbit. Operators will be able to reconfigure the satellite in real time, modifying elements such as its frequency and the areas of the earth it covers. Speaking with Phys.org, Yohann Leroy, deputy CEO of French satellite operator Eutelsat, said that what is really new is the level of flexibility that the satellite will provide [] thanks to a combination of technologies that we will put on board the satellite. More (Source: Futurism - Feb 28)

RUSSIA CLAIMS IT NOW HAS LASERS TO SHOOT SATELLITES - A defense source tells Russian media that military engineers have advanced work on the next big anti-satellite weapon.Russian defense companies have created a plane-mounted laser that can hit satellites at least according to an anonymous source quoted by Russian news agency Interfax. On Saturday, an Interfax report cited the source as saying that weapons maker Almaz-Antey has completed work on the anti-satellite complex, which includes the laser and associated ground control gear. More (Source: Defense One - Feb 28)

STATION HATCHES CLOSED, TRIO PREPARES TO HEAD HOME - At 2:58 p.m. EST, the hatch closed between the Soyuz MS-06 spacecraft and the International Space Station in preparation for undocking. Expedition 54 crewmates Mark Vande Hei and Joe Acaba of NASA and Commander Alexander Misurkin of Roscosmos are scheduled to undock their Soyuz at 6:08 p.m. NASA Television will air live coverage of undocking beginning at 5:45 p.m. More (Source: NASA - Feb 28)

EUTELSAT QUANTUM EUROPE'S NEW-GENERATION ULTRA-FLEXIBLE SATELLITE - This Monday, Eutelsat, Airbus and ESA presented the new Quantum satellite in Portsmouth, UK. A communications satellite of the latest generation, it is much more versatile than anything that came before. On July 9th 2015, less than three years ago, Eutelsat, Airbus, and the European Space Agency (ESA) signed an agreement for the construction of a telecommunications satellite called the "Quantum" that would be very different from all its predecessors. And now construction is finished: On Monday, the engineering partners presented the Quantum in the British coastal town of Portsmouth, with ESA astronaut Tim Peake in attendance. More (Source: Deutsche Welle - Feb 27)

JAPAN LAUNCHES H-2A ROCKET CARRYING RECONNAISSANCE SATELLITE - Japan on Tuesday launched an H-2A rocket carrying a government intelligence-gathering satellite from the Tanegashima Space Center in southwestern Japan.The optical reconnaissance satellite will be used for such purposes as monitoring developments at North Korean missile launch facilities, increasing the number of the nation's intelligence-gathering satellites to seven.The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. launched the H-2A F38 rocket from JAXA's launch site in Kagoshima Prefecture. More (Source: Kyodo News Plus - Feb 27)

SPACE HOTELS COULD BE REALITY BY 2021 - For many of us, space tourism seems pretty far off.But according to the Daily Mail, the ultra-wealthy could be making reservations in a space hotel as early as 2021.Once again, we are all super jealous of rich people and their extravagant travel plans. Billionaire hotel mogul, Robert Bigelow, founder of private space company Bigelow Aerospace, has announced the companys plans to send an inflatable hotel into orbit and create a new space station. More (Source: Travel Weekly - Feb 27)

JAPANESE SPY SATELLITE LAUNCH DELAYED BY POOR WEATHER FORECAST - A bad weather forecast has prompted Japanese space officials to delay the launch of an H-2A rocket with a high-resolution government-owned reconnaissance satellite by at least 48 hours until Monday night, U.S. time.Ground crews at the Tanegashima Space Center, Japans primary spaceport in the southwestern part of the country, will keep the H-2A rocket protected inside a vertical assembly building before rollout to the launch pad around a half-day before liftoff. More (Source: SpaceFlight Now - Feb 25)

SPACEX POSTPONES FALCON 9 LAUNCH OVER PAYLOAD FAIRING CONCERNS - SpaceX officials have postponed the launch of a Spanish-owned telecommunications satellite from Cape Canaveral planned for this weekend to conduct additional testing on the Falcon 9s payload fairing pressurization system, the company announced Saturday.SpaceX did not set a new launch date, but the mission was expected to be pushed back multiple days from its previous Sunday launch target.Standing down from this weekends launch attempt to conduct additional testing on the fairings pressurization system, SpaceX said in a statement posted on Twitter. Once complete, and pending range availability, we will confirm a new targeted launch date. More (Source: SpaceFlight Now - Feb 25)

ASTRONAUT: TRUMP'S PLAN FOR THE SPACE STATION A HUGE MISTAKE - Donald Trump's administration is floating a proposal to return to the moon -- and to shut down the International Space Station to help pay for it. The first part of this idea is good. The second is horrible. If enacted, it could well spell the end of NASA's human spaceflight for the foreseeable future.There is a wild card here, too: I refer to the commercial spaceflight efforts of companies like Elon Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin. For the first time, visionary leaders of commercial companies are striving to build space infrastructure and exploration programs funded by commercial activities. Yes, there is the possibility of NASA partnering with them, but that is not the pressing question in my view now; the continuation of ISS is. More (Source: CNN - Feb 23)

LOCKHEED MARTIN COMPLETES ASSEMBLY ON ARABSAT'S NEWEST COMMUNICATIONS SATELLITE - A new, high-capacity communications satellite that will deliver TV, internet and mobile phone services to the Middle East, Africa and Europe is one step closer to launch. Lockheed Martin has completed assembly on the Arabsat-6A satellite, which was recently shipped to its Sunnyvale, California facility to begin a comprehensive series of tests to ensure the satellite is ready for operations in orbit."This new satellite will strengthen our existing fleet that offers millions of people mobile and landline communications service across the region," said Khalid Balkheyour, CEO of Arabsat. "We look forward to completing and launching this state-of-the-art new satellite to offer even greater internet, television and radio services to our customers." More (Source: Space Daily - Feb 23)

THE LOW-COST MINI SATELLITES BRINGING MOBILE TO THE WORLD - Large chunks of the planet are still of out of reach of mobile phone signals - that's about four billion people without access to digital communications. But this could change thanks to shrinking satellite sizes and costs.Lower-cost, space-based mobile phone services will soon be a reality thanks to one firm's fleet of nano-satellites that will bounce your voice or text signal from one spacecraft to the next and finally down to the person you're calling. More (Source: BBN News - Feb 23)

RECYCLED SPACEX ROCKET BOOSTS PAZ RADAR SATELLITE, FIRST STARLINK TESTBEDS INTO ORBIT - Launching with a Spanish radar observation craft and the first two experimental satellites for SpaceXs planned global broadband network, a Falcon 9 rocket fired away from Californias Central Coast shortly before sunrise Thursday after several days of delays.The 229-foot-tall (70-meter) Falcon 9 launcher climbed into a clear sky from Space Launch Complex 4-East at Vandenberg Air Force Base, riding a column of orange exhaust from nine kerosene-burning Merlin main engines. More (Source: SpaceFlight Now - Feb 22)

ARMYS IMAGING SATELLITE UP AND RUNNING, BUT ITS FUTURE IS TBD - How valuable is it for troops in the field to have their own dedicated source of satellite imagery and other space-based intelligence? That is a question officials hope to answer in upcoming military exercises where commanders will have an opportunity to test the Armys newly deployed Kestrel Eye microsatellite.The Kestrel Eye Block IIM was sent into orbit in October from the International Space Station. It is now operational, said Dan Harkins, marketing manager at Adcole Maryland Aerospace, the satellite manufacturer. More (Source: SpaceNews - Feb 22)

SPACEX DELAYS FALCON 9 ROCKET LAUNCH DUE TO HIGH-ALTITUDE WINDS - SpaceX called off an attempted launch of its Falcon 9 rocket in California today (Feb. 21) due to strong high-altitude winds, according to the company's CEO, Elon Musk.The Falcon 9 rocket was scheduled to lift off at 9:17 a.m. EST (1417 GMT) from Space Launch Complex 4E at California's Vandenberg Air Force Base. But about 10 minutes before liftoff, SpaceX announced it was standing down from the launch try. More (Source: Space.com - Feb 22)

GOODBYE, ISS. HELLO, PRIVATE SPACE STATIONS? - Have you heard? The ISS might go away in 2025. Yep, that ISSour big, honking space laboratory in the sky, one of the most successful international partnership stories of all time. Continually staffed since 2000. Off the Earth, for the Earth. One of the most expensive public projects ever, second possibly only to Americas Interstate Highway System. Unofficially, 2025 has been the stations retirement year since 2014, when NASA and its international partners agreed to keep it flying through 2024. But theres always been an assumption that end date could stretch to 2028, a point cited as when degrading hardware might start making life aboard the station a little dicey. More (Source: The Planetary Society - Feb 21)

GOES-S TO LAUNCH NEXT WEEK JOINING GOES-16 IN NOAAS NEW GENERATION OF WEATHER SATELLITES - Americas fleet of weather satellites will grow this March as NASA and NOAA launch GOES-S, the newest satellite that will help meteorologists to improve forecast accuracy.GOES-S will be the second member of a new generation of geostationary weather satellites, joining GOES-16, formerly known as GOES-R, which launched on Nov. 19, 2016The GOES-S satellite will join GOES-16 as NOAA continues to upgrade its satellite fleet, Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross said. More (Source: Accuweather - Feb 21)

SPACEX LAUNCH OF PAZ AND MICROSAT-2A AND -2B POSTPONED - The launch of the Spanish PAZ satellite from Vandenberg AFB by SpaceX has been postponed, with a reference to "technical reasons" by that country's Ministry of Defense as the reason for the new delay. PAZ, when on orbit, will perform both military and civil operations, such as troop movements, environmental observations and more. More (Source: SatNews - Feb 19)

NASA EVICTS GOLD-HELMETED ROBO-ASTRONAUT FROM SPACE - NASA is sending the ISS Robonaut a sinister-looking humanoid with legs like tentacles back to Earth for repairs.Robonaut 2 has officially been out of action since 2015 after a hardware upgrade went terribly wrong leaving the dexterous humanoid incapacitated.Following failed attempts to get the gold-helmeted action man back on its feet, it will now be sent home for a fix, with the intention of one day returning to the International Space Station. More (Source: RT - Feb 17)

Read the original post:

Real time satellite tracking for: SPACE STATION - N2YO.com

Live from the International Space Station – Ustream

NASA Public-Education OFF AIR NO VIDEOS Astrotech - MMS 1 OFF AIR NO VIDEOS Astrotech - MMS 2 OFF AIR NO VIDEOS DesertRATS OFF AIR NO VIDEOS ISS HD Earth Viewing Experiment 264 VIDEOS JSC Requested Programming OFF AIR 7 VIDEOS Live_ISS_Stream 609 VIDEOS LSP - 2 OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA AFRC OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA ANALOGS OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA ARC OFF AIR 26 VIDEOS NASA CSBF OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA CSBF Operations 30 VIDEOS NASA CSBF Operations OFF AIR 2 VIDEOS NASA CSBF Operations OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA DLiNfo1 OFF AIR 74 VIDEOS NASA DLiNfo2 OFF AIR 21 VIDEOS NASA EDGE OFF AIR 130 VIDEOS NASA Event 12 OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA Event 13 OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA Event 14 OFF AIR 8 VIDEOS NASA GRC OFF AIR 6 VIDEOS NASA GSFC OFF AIR 72 VIDEOS NASA GSFC Science and Exploration OFF AIR 64 VIDEOS NASA GSFC SE Seminars OFF AIR 11 VIDEOS NASA HEROES OFF AIR 1 VIDEO NASA JSC OFF AIR 87 VIDEOS NASA KSC OFF AIR 4 VIDEOS NASA Live OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA MSFC OFF AIR 224 VIDEOS NASA Public-Education 10,424 VIDEOS NASA Social OFF AIR 23 VIDEOS NASA SSC OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA Television OFF AIR 9 VIDEOS NASA_JSC-PAO OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NASA-TV Wallops OFF AIR 26 VIDEOS NASAtelevision's Verizon channel OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NE1 - NASA EDGE Megacast: H-Alpha Telescope OFF AIR 2 VIDEOS NE10 - Exploratorium's Telescope View of the Eclip OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NE11 - JPL OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NE2 - NASA EDGE Megacast: Ca-K Telescope OFF AIR 2 VIDEOS NE3 - NASA EDGE Megacast: White Light Telescope OFF AIR 2 VIDEOS NE4 - NASA EDGE Megacast: Processed Imagery OFF AIR 2 VIDEOS NE5 - Homestead Eclipse Events OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NE6 - Live Coverage of the Eclipse by the Explorat OFF AIR NO VIDEOS NE7 - La cobertura en vivo del eclipse por el Expl OFF AIR 120 VIDEOS NE8 - Exploratorium's Telescope Sonification of th OFF AIR 1 VIDEO NE9 - Exploratorium's Telescope View of the Eclips OFF AIR NO VIDEOS

Read the original here:

Live from the International Space Station - Ustream

Space station astronaut sees solar eclipse shadow on Earth – CNET

The ISS astronauts had a great view of the moon's shadow.

The view of a solar eclipse from space can be very different than what we see down here on Earth. Italian Space Agency and European Space Agency astronaut Paolo Nespoli snapped a series of photos of the moon casting its shadow on the planet from his vantage point on board the International Space Station. Nespoli tweeted the images on Monday.

Two of the photos show the view with parts of the space station in the frame. A dark blotch appears near the curve of the Earth where the moon cast its umbra. The shadow looks huge from this perspective. People standing in that umbra would be seeing the solar eclipse as it happened.

Nespoli wrote, "Voila! The # Eclipse2017 shadow from @Space_Station, no words needed."

The world's space agencies have been busy documenting the eclipse. Earlier Monday, a NASA photographer captured a gorgeous photo of the ISS transiting the sun as the moon took a bite out of the star's bright face.

The International Space Station Twitter account later shared another series of photos showing what the six astronauts in orbit witnessed during the event:

Now Playing: Watch this: Solar eclipse wows millions across the US, see it all

1:41

Originally posted here:

Space station astronaut sees solar eclipse shadow on Earth - CNET

Eclipse 2017: Photo from Space Station show’s moon shadow … – Express.co.uk

The eclipse stunned millions of people across the planet yesterday but none had as good a view as those in the ISS.

Now a photograph of the eclipse has been released by the station's astronauts, taken 250 miles up from the Earth.

It shows the umbra, the Moons shadow, passing across the planet, leaving a portion of the land below in sheer darkness.

While the majority of the planet is shown bathed in light, one patch is captured from space as a black dot.

NASA

1 of 9

REUTERS

The eclipse was partially visible in different areas across the globe, including the UK, but a total eclipse was visible in the US, where it was referred to as the Great American Eclipse.

The darkest path, where Americans witnessed the total eclipse, stretched all the way from Oregon on the West Coast to South Carolina on the East Coast.

REUTERS

1 of 28

A multiple exposure image shows the solar eclipse as it creates the effect of a diamond ring at totality as seen from Clingmans Dome in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee

The total path of totality passed through Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and South Carolina.

it was the first time since 1979 a total eclipse was visible from anywhere in mainland America, and the first time since 1918 it was visible across the length of the entire country.

REUTERS

GETTY

Even US president Donald Trump took time out to witness the eclipse from the balcony of the White House with his wife Melania and youngest child Baron.

Ignoring advice, he chose to look directly at the Sun without any eye protection, grimacing slightly before looking away and putting on sunglasses.

See the article here:

Eclipse 2017: Photo from Space Station show's moon shadow ... - Express.co.uk

Canada’s newest astronauts consider moon, Mars missions after space station trip – Toronto Star

By Peter RakobowchukThe Canadian Press

Tues., Aug. 22, 2017

MONTREALIts a far-out dream that Canadas two newest astronauts are hoping will come true: orbiting the moon within the next decade or so.

In fact, Joshua Kutryk and Jennifer Sidey are already looking beyond the International Space Station as they begin two years of intense basic training.

In an interview from Houston on Tuesday, Kutryk pointed out that Canada is committed to the space station until 2024 along with its international partners.

But the 35-year-old Albertan said the plan for what will happen after is already starting to be defined.

We dont have the details ironed out but we know that its going to involve new destinations, probably the moon and then Mars, said Kutryk, adding he expects Canada to seek out and play a large role.

I think that were living in a lifetime now when we see humans, including Canadian humans, potentially going back to the moon and thats just a super exciting thing for me to think about.

Thats to be determined but I do feel a lot of excitement for the Canadian space program in general, he said.

Sidey, who will be training alongside Kutryk, said travelling around the moon, in so-called cislunar orbit, is on her agenda.

Certainly, Im definitely in for the idea of deep space (and) longer space flights, kind of pushing what we can do, she said.

Cislunar for us is going to be incredibly important as a gateway to put people in orbit and eventually go back to the moon.

The 29-year-old Calgary-born astronaut was asked about her chances of orbiting the moon in the coming decades.

Her response was: Who knows, who knows, but Id love that... who wouldnt, huh.

But the focus over the next two years will be on understanding various things, including systems on the space station, human behaviour, robotics and survival training.

They will also learn Russian.

Were going to be juggling all sorts of subjects and theyre all very different and theyre all very important (and) keeping all those balls in the air at once is going to be tough, Sidey said.

Kutryk, a test pilot, admitted that learning Russian will be a tough test, noting it took him about 25 years to be comfortable in French.

Based on that experience, and when I look at the idea of learning a third language in two years, thats something thats definitely going to be challenging, he said.

On Tuesday, Kutryk and Sidey also joined a dozen American trainees in a link-up with three astronauts now on board the International Space Station.

Flight engineer Peggy Whitson, 57, who is on her third long-duration space station mission, had some advice for the group: know how to fix things.

You need to get good at using tools, Whitson said as she floated inside the space station. Thatll be an important part of your training, so pay attention to that part of it.

So you cant be hesitant about taking something apart and putting it back together, because thats a lot of our job.

The Toronto Star and thestar.com, each property of Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, One Yonge Street, 4th Floor, Toronto, ON, M5E1E6. You can unsubscribe at any time. Please contact us or see our privacy policy for more information.

Continued here:

Canada's newest astronauts consider moon, Mars missions after space station trip - Toronto Star

The International Space Station Had Two Views of the Eclipse – Atlas Obscura

The International Space Station crosses the solar disk during the eclipse. NASA/Joel Kowsky

One might be forgiven for imagining that a fly crawled across the lens NASA used to capture this image of yesterdays eclipse near Banner, Wyoming, but thats no fly. Its the International Space Station (ISS), more than 30,000 cubic feet of pressurized habitat, with six people aboard, traveling at 17,200 miles per hour more than 250 miles above Earth. This composite combines seven images of the station making its way across the solar disk, as millions watched the celestial show from belowa transit it made three times during the eclipse.

The six crew members currently on the ISSRandy Bresnik, Jack Fischer, Peggy Whitson, Paolo Nespoli, Fyodor Yurchikhin, and Sergey Ryazanskiywere the only people to see the eclipse from space. Here is what they saw when they looked up

and when they looked down:

They have seen and will see any number of wonders during their time in orbit, but the eclipse that entranced the United States has to be a highlight.

Originally posted here:

The International Space Station Had Two Views of the Eclipse - Atlas Obscura

The ultimate photobomb: NASA spied the Space Station crossing the eclipsing sun – Mashable

A cool thing happened in the sky today: the moon covered the sun, and people got super emotional about it.

While we watched from Earth, either with special glasses. cardboard boxes. or with our own scorched retinas, astronauts got to see the eclipse from another perspective.

And we got to see them creeping across the sun, thanks to a NASA photographer. Look at it... it's pretty awesome.

In photos taken by a NASA photographer located in the Northern Cascades National Park in Washington, the International Space Station is seen in silhouette as it transits the sun at roughly five miles per second during a partial phase of the solar eclipse, Monday, Aug. 21, 2017.

Compared to the size of the sun and the moon, the ISS resembles an ant crawling across a luminescent piece of cheese, or a TIE fighter roaring across an orange Death Star.

Here's a composite image made from four different frames.

The video at the top of this story, taken by NASA's Joel Kowsky, shows the space station crossing the sun at five miles per second. It was taken by a high speed camera that captured images at 1,500 frames per second.

Feel free to make a badass TIE fighter sound effect as you watch.

People in the United States won't get to experience a total solar eclipse again until 2024. Better buy your glasses now before they skyrocket in price.

Read the rest here:

The ultimate photobomb: NASA spied the Space Station crossing the eclipsing sun - Mashable

SEE IT: International Space Station witnesses ‘umbra’ of eclipse – NY … – New York Daily News

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, August 21, 2017, 4:55 PM

For at least one group of people the eclipse was out of this world.

Millions of people saw #Eclipse2017, but only six people saw the umbra, or the moon's shadow, over the United States from space today, the International Space Station posted on Twitter Monday afternoon.

An accompanying photo showed a dark spot breaking up white wisps on the Earths cloudy surface.

NASAs astronauts Randolph Bresnik, Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson were joined in watching the strange and majestic sight by Russias cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergei Ryazansky as well as Italys Paolo Nespoli.

President Trump stares right into solar eclipse without glasses

No words needed, Nespoli said.

50 photos view gallery

Buzz Aldrin, the second man to walk on the Moon, used the occasion to remember his own experiences.

It occurred to me that I got to see quite a few solar eclipses. Every time we orbited into the shadow of the moon, he said over the weekend, adding that he was one of 24 lucky people to have such as sight.

Humans will do it again with the view of #Mars Eclipsing the Sun! he posted Monday.

A one-star review: The Daily News rates the solar eclipse

Space adventurers small viewing party 254 miles above the Earths surface on Monday was joined by millions of earthlings down below who watched the moon block out part or all of the sun.

Dubbed the Great American Eclipse, the phenomenons totality was seen in a path that cut from Oregon through South Carolina, with less spectacular results farther away.

Read more from the original source:

SEE IT: International Space Station witnesses 'umbra' of eclipse - NY ... - New York Daily News

SEE IT: International Space Station witnesses ‘umbra’ of eclipse on Earth’s surface – New York Daily News

E8@k04!T$K]tu+x?2C 5GN4 SXFR(G{=eW^j0]$*gzJS>Q(FI)4Er4r84m~sy0m3;]^N*=;>|VV3>htzI>U~S/od)Kq/zXzp?Lv:sBhP;p#+f>I] hd.u%c+r0{^,x&vN^I)Xiu>}a5v-I1J+xV3a:P+_DB*'^G**d9v'De#$ctAS|Xs(hE(Iks6 S^N8, fWfw f$vxLe,LP*[Y)HD|m;qD[lY/_& Oy)yxKstlW)F6]e7|OC;gWow{0a$UnxBZ2M83@xa,xh7Vtm}-un%P",lLUi"Mg}-jP"7;DpYvV-I=h8~*{m} sE$R?5C@"SP}79h]YnnA7(R{)Nlm~P{Ho!9U^@ry~g(@. 9s~9{qvq7z +YP!/`w2&PK2,/ CfJ]YJWbGGT,-O#M!VT"UXn4~*YQ0J'^+y;-KR:1iU{`VD%/Eu4xPdam/FD@G^LFT; vgJSZa)fvk:Sa,V30(p]qXl-[cfY'yCK:!Ejdv:p- 2jz&yO,

Ge?_R:A12|O{ R]0h"L12Ae tp.N9ORbO,4BXxpg5Tl7T-sZ&`8CuM^.:Vaa&+:57 p|0x@'k`vQ/[wA:2**7Whh0&O 9a *^-p7)npA'!S1pE@bYnu_?AF*'BI Tk(>;h01f)q [W7RmV0)Hu*]pGGv+9} =k#H07Xr6}; JfLQlIj8wDB"bW^f^.OrDr7=O"X~.T0gYtxr T vKx,z0&#[p[;F$ut"/.XK#{DrY].wRQ8401/OtV+FwZ*XC8j-*u2fKVr@m^+R'K97f.${7KgK/L7:0uQYo;tXjlI+beeTba{C I L"Lu# j0sr,&~g" 3h+*1 f^ WR]:V|ZOF6eJD${>&+0elLDly @9 lY%6F~al!b@X OR,F2e AwW1 }bIiymV&%1Y9:`iX}l+'Xyym}!TI2q{482kqL;4/g6r?h08zb! 9 wz.TN|+l!0-b_ck%%^(&NRgs ,Kss6%"hx$`{^"B0m4_Rm`zXO3|FagB1$OC R@@t2B(r2[)g35:52$,-pJR9i3}8}>5fg5h?x8>

xQNd4ja _i7SE_(H% s1Py 5Gqr|Qj`@8NS!UR!_ v_F*rnf.^E?A vJ@#Q1n}bxr g,*xfs(CQQ;LKZGOdu?&X "$[x {*2dEJ9]ee4z&%mQffMrZg|V%pdS{cz|3-WBS%M%BA1tFI.)){ *_i%Y 2C7#SP?G5@J0J2Fs@73dw3THoM/Dw|K7ti U~7[%^~ve}}xjRm}mK_L/3f*vfM9X-]kd9>?XOS8#KU;&-iSE+l\+}=xc$_]>^l,D:(vlm4VAZeKnveHD0h0_DN2 cA-4 0x,5a2V'4KbTCyv'} HZ!&`yp?zj=G>wbuMsUgB`SoZK60?!*!!7Nw)]&O@tG} qhoiq]CTa0`+=OGBx,z+QBp0bdX2i+!>s8P[a9zZm(?r^jF5(5$C RIaVn}5{WGhu;u]>;MxtEgY[p88avo.i`@~o$h5p~E O994! foEvLWN(03s>a,s%@JCW;jF Pk?tQ $h|8=OPH1)m"T8?( @c!npUUWjJhIPXXsuIn"9,|"TXzSU!X+1o""JPN)i#~_]!M?s+B5}1rB@hR)T/$pS^I1GJC/|0` %HUiL@}bQ@znoYlUH!F_/9 F4J~q=@tz$g_,3+F'Za}RR+TOZ+eD06z~uY=^/F{IabF+-]"Z}Y7;mcfX]U~9 ^@|H& B1{y;ps!rpEK](c " 2 XbU=w7 +?' W =n!|/dGN.IPkv{dB 7#4h!Z*$b*+l"#Cp~UI`AJUUFv" tkzu]'Jy[" (Eb|I>Q Mqs3=.Fu3=AaN=%&wB}ro93 /ztvLgwr.TbLe$rRx*KENlzh/u&aCKB_r

=[B#y%[:?uz}?*5Uz_uKgr~rgOKy*AM]'L[Hilvr~?kr2|$c.q%dqC[NlA^4'-5Pw6JweE.u[MLt.yO|My1q(R4eigpg:uVb|Hg!MnGR Z433/dINM,1sFiKX?snlD>n=/"^i#Vfb*o)Skc?h!v`}8gI7kx9{Nivhzi'Nr8e^>gyYrTCn[7`"c[P>^bre;=_ ImVu{T-[sZP_:>f/iO2O@"{x!kn-'eJwg3DJDsED73Y0fgOYZ{}T1K,wD'cR` 6;6Qk 95-bFvIge3Y[{AaLx*7&0P *S51Nd7]]Uq&]m"}Jtm.%%1 >Qu:~dz:-~_f'Tl^?MWFfu>FBJB*:Fv(H(O#uBp{V.rr~M&uzG|YZ]}G3(>1VG>kqG.p.vVRc@.r7vknv5i]{;O/wu-[9@krF{A0U_k/U_xr,2*gSp.'(+t0GgJ};Lw*iwVp&x8&Txx=`|.Kx qTE|#rv:t@l"=w"Kk)"'-$fSg5=?a-JXw6l6"L-=NZD?G{FL+>bk,m/:X0A8HS'&0:zrkkp]q&c>""S`u.x9xqO34bOI;xM%d|3|t/|iR+doc~3We6x ,(M/^)(7-oS9y$xRp1|dP#w'o Tb= cI}w>K}ge5Gkh=h ulGOk{v^Y3?X3{@]4x9:gN'qRFz1+~wM3p:ok?a_!V2b{A#']]9wGT/a+.J9_Orw"s9g >ozQymK4c&r%LGf>tOG.:o}+s??;{KG;+GX?g5#_PU$Rk Zv1TabHgRs k5b3zAO*h"xi x]Uyel]x2B;yoCNW,> F?EGe:B'"hkd(dS U7c{7M@"?(sng LgQ+qfu5C8'G]+7|Wy|xh!]3.^N>Toch`auu`'> 7vyw~7LxwcW [779'8D0': }+nfJ0[~N+ }W2f!2+]wgw$ns4T( t>%I Px*Si|$I42Xx+f#-!f{P@"/C#?JBl. Qi@e)%J4s28}-GZv/m6Z#/M382VG~1W7B~|cG)*C`~ p+6J9]|ZixQb(2y({_'|1^n#>D):{-.DsWtH{>NWx+gU7~[CC"d>%rF[p _?`Tz>k!>3>T '8}1R:Cpct cw ' C'_1~}sU;[[/-.tIys1G^PY}k?k""pC1j `?3lbyX .K`tn^e.9&/xG~xJ `ZQ6+1FKb~,r%$7a!B6 r^D$e;m#m}Z%%b2"C7E4pR6$~PI?fHGgZd. whGd=?=NNWMIxc&*mnBr;seI`sSL{_ JGrICY~=k61dypNouu>_&~wU8E^%x%8_`}jRb`{n6L# ^ F]#b:|G|1|Y35J 5b;|Lbk ~v!vyM*c;EYvfC9s`07j|6hkn+@fy^S^y{6DrQ1NBq:?G}YSq}y?a4 vqM%>lDg^*j}Fp8 }m#bP7VJ@m{huzJs9@pp, b$MIG}}1}o{_OLmi13-^xe>bXtn@`L{~g1T/;zyOUf.w7[P?Jutvl#4o_ rB.a:Iz$h7;!^i9bxfZb")uVs#ujy-w

gSL3Y4-a1 anf]kbNf=ZnG y]^psArv[/#e^0=QoE"f$jd.Gn_YHy8U9LT"Vm$T.ekU H:eT$r|zvNBhl* e.Ybws- Zu}+fgrsmO{]eN1GO]S}sPW'}k%-G}THl#Iz/pD8T[Kr)lQ.yu;&~i.2N3;}hfi` W"xW9!o5acjM6.Q x1}).ch(%v[OaKwXLxn^.`+xB,3FZab5C^KM3oHwPNkC]_ZoU#Km1itPOb`_sRFVc1>Y&2nge+ha]o39997|FQ;D3[=VcmI2`_/`|JHHYcx X v s[XwppD10,s[jH-rN((jPyP5DCoVnfb5Q3>g[ r LP{:'rI;B]ScX01Go_kGH0yhE ,"g;rX]e3Xmm2 j/ sqs14)[C?Ks o..z (jqIb9kC7b+hrj:Nm'k>l*;6ngD|o.^KCB)LBl#_tQ`&bO9a'`x$Hc)7chZq/ .!STU!-.L?Y9jM:{ Q:d(kY*35w. hzf8{M=,'3Ph'38CaDmXI zqm$4> }ZAcMc%vi:Ln*|rk!$@[Kd4Q;4L m@)4^V% {is%+ xUQ8ydfBo88w7 cQ!3>guQiH W Oc:_6!|"{V#U--/&8axgtXU 3Q{wY/:C07ms"ZjHf_mt>)zRbc>X{;RpH'pFY=>e]r->a9J8ugwvFL{'7g)zsP_qg6t9'g?W,Dg1m%f1L-n3 -k^}tu}&o"3E_KnjFs"Uc&>22j|Oyz;O@wq Ofe]y[#`|gGl?l6NoKfl17tg[O=~YYA0M9*G*1%BI{2&~,6yQ."A$L^tz JorqI0^hAb''QtuR.kFTde`l!.FHix0!K h^Wuqn{B#()>Vy;8$Av_or)/Q s7W{ bQEs7[#[m(rTHx7qg'm}G[RCG??;jlmx& TE'"|x5}~1to~!W |Q_KE ) /rKqv3`|NvNK|K5/.K:IC!bc.O44_akqZYX^|AR{LJmc,0sJ}]W^g|ON6[mGB]sQM=#p(_(E];}3!Aly}^GJIdUV+}:[IF#tt!w{Lz#Nk?9$8 cOkwTQ?>kq?}q[b~fclw_Mo6 hS,3R x@w?/3/W95~a`QNsF`@`m/X.[+E]5ND+)1N[V{ [m~m5J u%>WP+55Ci/.?a'n~h|$F~5|l)s #:~tuu^GBb4u~d83[1cqb#~%%jV7?jOl}3n{^f.|xb9Mp.fhGNQ:M9O Q0}& 0)O{|>kBQNLknyW:Lj1 Z1DhKi^/:??gayFMoxJ6A:'xEn]%(G _DKs.D~ t=B;mX H,Y}8>f!X_PDY`pRhZ:c)Q}$>)ARL?,yR]^QCD'!_:C/a&5VLqK OCX|RA3ImEg>Xt3"{Ga(R7o=6D.gQiv?AGhU?=+Q-[YF~Y?=97s,7$Rxy%EH4tfMR%g%^9f'jf,R9k~{I`B^j=')F-fAA;[8D=e84Yys4B={$6sCqjv3Qdm+Ngg^ptYQzJDZt>E=jj1ng`;>[?@sr}o`[${{;COj m K6|^c"RV.5}D}v?F] A;"4 =pp6{gRuB pf;_pz}>|}a'vDy{Z F/9yy[;cV Eh>Wc0zV77[f{C*ihFOyj9Dqzf9w^~-('nnC]x2]k29 8~@wR9%jC4f|+]r8/ <5/`x,$E nfubtTio=a4m m*s-U^O9bgl>f#tOjuFExl-0~9"`:f@ki/O1,!?S}-1_9NeGl^VhKiW?Ysk0WoXvlHHv3ReDZFxHX];L1qUQo5~*I8N1tEq`=5f/}WrENWWEP@@Q $I'UqX1sLwZ6X)TzCmzs8f+>5d_*En]Zq;t_^]os1)2gvu#u5eckvLE)#&5Is67eIq;> |R?orLOzoRyDVbj9`F; x! +L]ta'Bv3em%)O<;/!!,9_+[=[NS@LN*XM8!v.0cwMMyf/1FKK(nXy>f4_WL"g8_h` y$>aB;o<"~;'EwY)%hurl ?Y_Ka+2O@7Q^B!f|F'9ka?M~}?knasY.Q~yITYpyZZcT6Q1>R>6pA0~1**jb1@@+2DK14"gSCcEl_~ !gGUwM{yMR?|j9tm-qWuxR/3fJk[c1Ou%9W X5<#!qC6vwa:l.13oD'$xPv,~s/GG@].?[#gJ_R`djY%gu$^WBps*9jC6~QO,wU7mNq1p'$Qd~2- /O??99[p%MM}KC3SH7C~A. wg5"Ws=aR<{-bm|0:OA] yqtz#b^zp^*{hC8i0LD7$hSp{Y j}gf^i<,d^P^R#]I3JKbQl18Icv/NTBp|Rw#j;|5z} 7gsj^+v;S3{s:5fw{p5}G~?:.+*iRxqU*GaNqa;c(Xr5n88" M8<-eJMX*y%g.0 >BH!>s#~DB|[4 zm1| r"

<7gxFA<_j wZs};}_~4G?qupo^g7WX'=gyM&oL?O@,qK~GyA[wmF,`[A y&U8gx7wFv.Po_x/6?mU

Read the original post:

SEE IT: International Space Station witnesses 'umbra' of eclipse on Earth's surface - New York Daily News

WATCH: During eclipse, NASA sees Space Station move across sun – Palm Beach Post

A NASA photographer captured a stunning image during the total solar eclipse on Monday.

The photo shows the International Space Station clearly set against the sun as the moon began to cast its shadow.

The Space Stations Twitter account also posted a video that shows the massive orbiting spacecraft moving from the right to left across the face of the sun.

The video was shot with a high-speed camera in Banner, Wyoming, according to the tweet.

People on Twitter were quick to react to the photo and video, with one person calling the photo thethe neatest thing about this eclipse.

Only the ISS is cool enough to photo bomb the eclipse, another person tweeted in reply to the video.

Later, the Space Station crew tweeted images only they were able to see: the solar eclipsesumbra, or shadow, visible on Earth.

Read more here:

WATCH: During eclipse, NASA sees Space Station move across sun - Palm Beach Post

WATCH: International Space Station flies across sun during eclipse – WBIR-TV

Lindsay Maizland , TEGNA 2:55 PM. EDT August 21, 2017

In this NASA handout, acomposite image, made from seven frames, shows the International Space Station as it transits the Sun at roughly five miles per second during a partial solar eclipse, Monday, Aug. 21, 2017 near Banner, Wyoming. (Photo: Joel Kowsky/NASA via Getty Images, 2017 NASA)

If you look closely at this photo and video of the solar eclipse, you will see a tiny speck crossing the sun. That speck is actually the International Space Station with a crew of six astronauts onboard.

Station transits sun at 5 miles per second in video taken at 1,500 frames per second with high-speed camera from Banner, Wyoming. pic.twitter.com/x6NNvCc0Af

NASA shared the video on Monday, Aug. 21 as a total solar eclipse swept across a portion of the United States. It was shot from a camera in Banner, Wyoming and was sped-up to 1,500 frames per second. The station moves at five miles per second.

Millions around the country watched the total solar eclipse, or when the moon completely obscures the sun, on Monday. It started along Oregon's west coast shortly after 1 p.m. ET (10 a.m. PT). The sky turned dark for a few minutes in the middle of the sunny day. It will end along coastal South Carolina before 3 p.m. ET.

2017 TEGNA MEDIA

View post:

WATCH: International Space Station flies across sun during eclipse - WBIR-TV

Here’s what the 2017 solar eclipse looked like from space – The Verge

The 2017 solar eclipse has come and gone! Now, its time to stare in awe at all the amazing images captured by NASA, the European Space Agency, their satellites, and the luckiest folks off Earth: the astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

Yes, while you were pinching and zooming on your phone trying to nail the perfect Instagram moment, space agencies around the world were gathering the kinds of eclipse images that we could never dream of capturing ourselves.

To wit, there are already plenty of great images of shadow that the Moon cast across the country. Lets start with a few GIFs and videos of that, made from images captured by GOES-16, a satellite that launched into orbit last November:

The astronauts aboard the ISS were well-prepared to shoot the eclipse. American astronaut Jack Fisher tweeted a photo this morning of the dozen or so cameras that he and his space-bound co-workers were planning to use, while Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli shared a close-up of the giant solar filter covering his telephoto lens.

The ISS crew saw the Moons shadow from a more dramatic angle than the straight-on satellite shots.

While the astronauts were shooting the eclipse from a few hundred miles above, a very well-placed NASA photographer back on Earth captured the ISS as it crossed in front of the eclipse. It might look like its moving slowly in the video, but the ISS actually travels at about 17,000 miles per hour.

Another satellite operated by the European Space Agency, Proba-2, caught one of the most otherworldly images of the bunch. The satellite used a telescope that studies the extreme ultraviolet light coming from the Sun to capture this view of the eclipse:

More images of the 2017 solar eclipse are still pouring in, so well add any other space-related ones here if we spot them. And as always, feel free to drop your favorites in the comments below!

View post:

Here's what the 2017 solar eclipse looked like from space - The Verge

Cosmonauts launch 3D-printed satellite from space station – Space Daily

During a lengthy spacewalk on Thursday, Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy released five mini satellites by hand, including one made almost entirely of 3D-printed materials.

Some new reports are claiming the satellite is the first built from 3D-printed components to be launched into space, but in June, NASA launched a cube satellite made almost entirely of 3D-printed materials.

NASA claimed the satellite was not only the first 3D-printed satellite launched into space, it was the lightest satellite ever launched, weighing just 64 grams.

The latest satellite launch marks the first time the Russian team has launched a 3D-printed satellite. The mini satellite was designed and built at Siberia's Tomsk Polytechnic University.

Tomsk TPU-120 will spend roughly six months in orbit. Scientists are keen to learn how the 3D-printed materials are weathered by space.

Three-dimensional printing has the potential to save aeronautics and satellite manufacturers time and money.

"We have satellites ready for launch that have 50 to 60 printed parts on them," Mark Spiwak, president of Boeing Satellite Systems International, told reporters during a press conference in March. "We are actively working with our suppliers on complex brackets and fittings that used to be machined parts. There is tremendous progress being made."

Four other nano-satellites were also hand-launched by Yurchikhin and Ryazanskiy, all weighing between 10 and 24 pounds. One of the nano-satellites was launched in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Sputnik 1 launch, the world's first artificial space satellite, as well as the 160th anniversary of the birth of Russian scientist Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, a pioneer in the fields of astronautics and rocketry.

During Thursday's spacewalk, the cosmonauts installed a series of struts and handrails outside the Russian module. Yurchikhin and Ryazanskiy also collected fresh dust samples as part of the ongoing effort to monitor microbial communities living on the space station.

With the rise of Ad Blockers, and Facebook - our traditional revenue sources via quality network advertising continues to decline. And unlike so many other news sites, we don't have a paywall - with those annoying usernames and passwords.

Our news coverage takes time and effort to publish 365 days a year.

If you find our news sites informative and useful then please consider becoming a regular supporter or for now make a one off contribution.

Read this article:

Cosmonauts launch 3D-printed satellite from space station - Space Daily

Space Station Astronauts Are High on a Fresh Ice Cream Shipment – Atlas Obscura

Any astronauts who consumed this product did so with their feet on the ground. Wikimedia Commons/APN MJM/CC BY-SA 3.0

Everything you believed as a child is a lie. Your Furby doesnt know who you are. The Tamagotchi you cherished, then killed with neglect, was never actually alive. Sea monkeys dont look like monkeystheyre cryptobiotic brine shrimp! And astronaut ice cream? The stuff that you made your parents buy in the museum gift shop that comes in foil packets and vanilla, raspberry, and chocolate flavors that more or less taste the same? It never actually went to space.

But there is such a thing as astronaut ice cream. As a group, these intrepid explorers, scientists, and pilots love the stuff. So they were very excited, according to NPR, when earlier this week a shipment of 30 individual Bluebell ice cream cups and some Snickers ice cream bars were shot up to them, 250 miles above the surface of the Earth. Lets see Amazon Prime try that. (Patience.)

The frozen treats came as part of a usual resupply mission to the International Space Station. Some 6,400 pounds of lab equipment, supplies, and food arrived in the SpaceX Dragon capsule. The challenge for ice cream in space is storing it once it gets there. Sure, space is very cold, but you cant hang the ice cream outside like a six-pack in a mountain stream. Astronauts have limited freezer and refrigeration space, mostly used for storing blood and urine samplesnot what you want to root through in search of a popsicle. However, the supply capsule, which returns to Earth, has freezers to bring back those samples, leaving a little extra cold storage in the orbiting station.

The catch, if you want to call it that, is that the astronauts are going to need to that freezer space back, so they have to launch into a full-scale ice cream party. They have just a few weeks to empty the freezer. Its a really special treat, but when it gets there, they have no place to put it, Vickie Kloeris, from NASAs Space Food Systems Laboratory, told NPR. Its tough duty, but theyll manage to eat it in the time allowed.

There are other goodies among the supplies: citrus fruits, carrots, even a surprise avocado or two. Astronauts can live at the International Space Station for as long as a year, and when one spends that long in a confined, alien space, the psychological impact of food becomes very important. After an initial phase where astronauts were given free rein on what to eat, Kloeris and her colleagues decided to put together a standardized menu that maximizes variety and minimizes repetition. Now, she said, all the managers in the space station program are aware how important it is to be sure these crew members get coffee the way they like it.

One thing that has little psychological impact in space, however, is freeze-dried ice cream. Given the choice, it turns out, adult humans dont really like it, especially if the real stuff is available, even occasionally. NASA did originally commission the product for one of the Apollo missions, but never made it part of the space program. It wasnt that popular; most of the crew really didnt like it, Kloeris said, in a NASA feature.

Go here to read the rest:

Space Station Astronauts Are High on a Fresh Ice Cream Shipment - Atlas Obscura

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station launch 3D-printed satellite – Digital Trends

Get today's popular DigitalTrends articles in your inbox:

Why it matters to you

Launching stuff into space gets expensive quickly and these 3D-printed satellites can help offset those enormous costs for space programs.

Around the globe, 3D printing is changing manufacturing as we know it and it looks like this innovation is by no means limited to our planet. On Thursday, a pair of cosmonauts aboard the International Space Station launched the worlds first satellite made almost wholly out of 3D-printed components.

It is ungodly expensive to launch items to space. In fact, it costs about $10,000 per pound to launch an object into orbit. Consequently, NASA has been exploring 3D printing to minimize costs. The agency, in partnership with the company Made In Space, has 3D printed an array of tools to use onboard the ISS.

To avoid the harsh vacuum of space, these materials have been predominantly used inside of the space station. However, Thursday, Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy released five nanosatellites as part of larger extravehicular activity mission. The first of which had an exterior casing made with a 3D printerat Russias Tomsk Polytechnic University. It is important to note that the 3D-printed satellite contains traditional internal electronics.

This launch is part of a larger effort to better understand the how 3D-printed components weather the vacuum of space. Highly reminiscent of the Voyager Golden Record, the 3D-printed satellite also contains greetings in a host of languages from around the globe. The small satellites (each is less than two feet in size) are expected to orbit the Earth for about six months. One of the satellites celebrates the 60th anniversary of Sputnik 1, the worlds first successful satellite while another commemorates the 160th birthday of Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, who is considered the father of Russian rocketry.

As part of the satellite launches, thetwo Russian astronauts spent nearly eight hours outside of the space station. This was substantially longer than the planned six-hour spacewalk. This mission included collecting other experiments outside of the ISS and also wiping residue from the exterior for analysis.

We will have actually some grounds to get drunk today, I think, joked one of the cosmonauts.

Currently, the cosmonauts share the space station with three Americans and an Italian.You ever hear the one where a pair of cosmonauts, three American astronauts, and an Italian walk into a space bar?

Excerpt from:

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station launch 3D-printed satellite - Digital Trends