No Fourth of July rocket launch for SpaceX – Orlando Sentinel

People will have to rely on regular old fireworks on the Fourth of July over Cape Canaveral as SpaceX will wait at least a day before it tries for a third time to launch a satellite aboard its Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy Space Center.

Elon Musk tweeted, "We're going to spend the 4th doing a full review of rocket & pad systems. Launch no earlier than 5th/6th. Only one chance to get it right."

When the company does try again, the rocket will lift off from launch pad 39A, the 102nd mission to launch from that historic complex that was home to Apollo and space shuttle missions.

The payload for the mission is a satellite for Luxembourg-based company Intelsat. The satellite built by Boeing is part of Intelsats next generation constellation of satellites, the fourth sent up by the company. The new satellites are geared to offer higher quality Internet service and mobile communications.

Both previous attempts to launch the rocket on Sunday and Monday nights were scrubbed just 10 seconds before planned liftoff by automated computer systems.

Sundays scrub was due to a computer guidance problem. The reason for Mondays scrub was still being determined Tuesday.

If there is a successful launch this week, there will be no attempt to recover the first stage rocket booster, which has been a hallmark of many SpaceX launches from Cape Canaveral. The satellite payload has to be placed into a higher orbit, meaning more rocket fuel will be used, and no chance for recovery.

If it launches, it will be the third rocket launch for the Hawthorne, California-based company in two weeks. The company launched a Bulgarian satellite from Kennedy Space Center on June 23 as well as 10 satellites on June 25 from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

While it wasnt able to put a rocket into space on Monday, SpaceX did welcome home the Dragon cargo capsule from the International Space Station. The splashdown in the Pacific Ocean marked the completion of the first reused commercial spacecraft to be sent to and returned home from the space station.

The Dragon capsule launched from Kennedy Space Center on June 3 and undocked from the ISS on July 2. The same capsule made its first trip to the ISS three years earlier. The reuse of the capsule and reuse of the rocket boosters by the company are part of its efforts to drive down launch costs.

SpaceX's cargo capsule is the only supply ship able to survive re-entry into Earth's atmosphere.

The planned launch, when it happens, will be the 11th from Cape Canaveral from all companies in 2017.

rtribou@orlandosentinel.com, 407-420-5134

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No Fourth of July rocket launch for SpaceX - Orlando Sentinel

Rocket failure may delay China’s space station and moon missions – New Scientist

Countdown to failure

Xinhua News Agency/REX/Shutterstock

By Timothy Revell

Chinas latest space launch has ended in failure. The Long March 5 rocketsuccessfully took off at 11.23am GMT on Sunday from the Wenchang Space Launch Centre in China, but after an hour came tumbling back down to Earth due to an abnormality.

Once in the air, mission control in Beijing tried to save the rocket by changing its flight plans, but those attempts were unsuccessful. The rocket, along with the experimental communications satellite it was carrying, crashed into the Pacific Ocean shortly afterwards.

The cause of the failure is still being investigated, but is likely to cause delays for future launch plans. This is the second Long March failure in two weeks, with a television satellite failing to hitch a ride into space on June 19. At the moment, its not clear if there is a connection between the two incidents.

China had planned to launch a rover into space by the end of this year, destined for the dark side of the moon, with the hope of bringing rock and soil samples back to Earth. But the mission relies on hitching a ride aboard a Long March 5 rocket, so may be delayed if the causes of the latest failures take a while to find and rectify.

Delays are possible. The rocket cannot fly until we find out the problem and solve it, and that will take time, said Wang Jianyu, the commander in chief of Chinas quantum satellite project who is also involved in the moon missions.

China also has plans to complete the construction of a space station, as well as landing humans and building a settlement on the moon. These missions will rely on Long March 5 rockets, so finding the points of failure is crucial to avoid lengthy delays.

Read more: China has had a telescope on the moon for the past two years

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Rocket failure may delay China's space station and moon missions - New Scientist

SpaceX Dragon cargo craft departs space station, returns to Earth today – Zee News

New Delhi: A SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft is returning to Earth from the International Space Station (ISS) on Monday.

NASA says the release of the SpaceX/Dragon CRS-11 Cargo Craft from the space station is scheduled to take place at 2:28 a.m.EDT.

NASA Television and the agencys website will provide live coverage of Dragon's departure beginning at 2 a.m.EDT.

In the event of adverse weather conditions in the Pacific Ocean where the spacecraft is scheduled to splash down, the return of the Dragon cargo craft was delayed by a day to Monday.

The splashdown zone for Monday has an acceptable weather forecast and is closer to port in Long Beach, California. Splashdown is expected around 260 miles southwest of the California coast.

Recovery forces will retrieve the capsule and its more than 4,100 pounds of returning cargo, including science samples from human and animal research, biotechnology studies, physical science investigations and education activities.

The spacecraft, which arrived at the station June 5, delivered nearly 6,000 pounds of supplies and experiments, including a NASA instrument to study neutron stars.

Dragon, the only space station resupply spacecraft able to return to Earth intact, will be retrieved by a SpaceX team from the ocean and shipped it to port in southern California.

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SpaceX Dragon cargo craft departs space station, returns to Earth today - Zee News

Chinese rocket launch fails after liftoff – CNN

Carrying an experimental communications satellite, China's largest rocket lifted off at 7:23 p.m. local time (7:23 a.m. ET) toward clear skies from the seaside Wenchang space launch center on the southern Chinese island of Hainan.

But 40 minutes later, the state-run Xinhua news agency flashed a headline declaring the launch a failure -- without providing any details.

Dubbed "Chubby 5" for its huge size -- 5 meters in diameter and 57 meters tall -- the LM-5 rocket is designed to carry up to 25 tons of payload into low orbit, more than doubling the country's previous lift capability.

On Twitter, Xinhua initially posted: "#BREAKING: China's launch of Long March-5 Y2 carrier rocket fails."

It then tweeted: "Anomaly was detected during its flight and further investigation will be carried out."

The launch failure means further delay for a series of planned Chinese space endeavors -- including its robotic and eventual human lunar programs -- according to Joan Johnson-Freese, a professor at the US Naval War College and an expert on China's space program.

"With the LM-5 being new technology, the failure points out that rocket science is extremely difficult and why more countries don't have the technology," she said.

Before the launch attempt, Johnson-Freese said the rocket would give China "heavy lift capabilities" needed to develop a large space station as well as new capabilities to reach interplanetary destinations.

China has announced plans to land a robotic probe on the dark side of the moon later this year and to reach Mars around 2020.

All such future missions will depend on the LM-5 and space officials told reporters Sunday that the latest launch would help perfect the rocket design, including enabling it to send a space station into orbit "in a year or two."

Originally announced in 2001, the LM-5 project initially suffered lengthy delays because of funding challenges and difficulties in developing new technologies for the first Chinese launcher to fully use liquid propellant.

The LM-5 finally made its debut last November, also at the newly built Wenchang site, and was successfully launched.

Its creators have said the LM-5's capabilities are now on par with the US-designed Delta IV rocket, long considered the most powerful in the world.

"The two rockets are at the same level ... though different propellant mix means the Delta is still a bit more efficient," He Wei, the LM-5's general designer, told CNN before the failed launch.

"The Delta has had years of experience while this is only the second launch for the LM-5 -- so we will keep modifying and improving to make our rocket more mature and reliable."

China was late to the space race -- it didn't send its first satellite into space until 1970, just after the United States put the first man on the moon.

But in the decades since, China has pumped billions of dollars into research and training.

Since 2003, China has staged a spacewalk, landed a rover on the moon and launched a space lab that it hopes paves the way for a 20-ton space station.

It has also sent five crews into space in the same span of time, making it only the third country in the world -- after Russia and the US -- with such success.

CNN was among a dozen overseas news organizations to gain rare access to the launch site in Wenchang, a sleepy city of 600,000 residents on the east coast of Hainan, sometimes called China's Hawaii.

The Wenchang space center, completed in 2014, is the country's fourth and newest. Unlike the other three Cold War era-built sites -- in the desert or mountains -- Wenchang's coastal location allows for easy transportation of rocket stages and payloads by sea.

Its proximity to the equator also benefits space launches by adding orbital velocity to the rocket, as the Earth rotates the fastest at the equator.

Surrounded by a lush green landscape, the space center has already become a big selling point for local tourism officials -- and real estate developers.

Outside construction sites for high-rise apartments and luxury hotels, billboards advertising unbeatable views of space launches dot palm tree-lined streets throughout the city.

While entry to the actual space center is strictly controlled by the government, local officials have touted public viewing areas in the city capable of accommodating thousands of space tourists.

State media outlets have expressed hope to see Wenchang turn to China's Cape Canaveral, a top tourist attraction in the US state of Florida thanks to two major space launch centers nearby.

The "space coast" comparison aside, however, bilateral cooperation in space programs between Washington and Beijing has been nonexistent since the US Congress in 2011 banned NASA from working with China over national security concerns.

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Dragon Spacecraft’s Historic Second Return to Earth: How to Watch … – Space.com

SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft will depart the International Space Station July 2, bringing more than 4,100 lbs. of cargo back to Earth.

UPDATED 7/1 8:52 p.m. EDT: Due to weather conditions in the Pacific Ocean splashdown zone, the Dragon spacecraft's release will be delayed until Monday, July 3 at 2:28 a.m. EDT (0628 GMT).

On Monday (July 3), the crew of the International Space Station will bid farewell to a Dragon cargo spacecraft, which will head back to Earth with more than 4,100 lbs. (1,900 kilograms) of returning cargo in tow. It's this specific spacecraft's second splashdown: It brought cargo to the space station and safely returned to Earth in 2014 as well.

When the cargo craft launched to the space station in June on SpaceX's Falcon 9 spacecraft, it was the first-ever relaunch of a previously used Dragon.

Departure coverage will begin at 2 a.m. EDT (0600 GMT), and you canwatch it here on Space.com, courtesy of NASA TV. Flight controllers will detach the spacecraft using Canadarm2, the space station's robotic arm, and then NASA astronauts Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson will command the arm to let go, NASA officials said in a statement.

The spacecraft will move away from the space station and then head out of orbit, splashing down in the Pacific Ocean after a 5.5 hour journey. The deorbit burn and splashdown won't be shown on NASA TV.

The spacecraft brought close to 6,000 lbs. (2,700 kg) of supplies, equipment and research experiments to the station. Its cargo included the Neutron star Interior Composition ExploreR (NICER) and the experimental Roll-Out Solar Array (ROSA). After ROSA's experiment completed, the array was jettisoned from the space station because the ground team was unable to roll it back up to stow.

When Dragon splashes back down, SpaceX personnel will travel two days by sea with the spacecraft to return it to Southern California. From there, the craft's cargo will be shipped back to Houston, NASA officials said in a blog post.

Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her @SarahExplains. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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Dragon Spacecraft's Historic Second Return to Earth: How to Watch ... - Space.com

SpaceX Dragon Cargo Spacecraft Set To Depart International Space Station Sunday – SpaceCoastDaily.com

arrived at the station June 5

After delivering about 6,000 pounds of cargo, a SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft is set to leave the International Space Station on Sunday, July 2. (NASA image)

BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA After delivering about 6,000 pounds of cargo, a SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft is set to leave the International Space Station on Sunday, July 2.

Space Coast Daily TVwill provide live coverage via NASA of Dragons departure beginning at 11:15 a.m. EDT.

Flight controllers will use the Canadarm2 robotic arm to detach the Dragon capsule, which arrived at the station June 5, from the Earth-facing side of the stations Harmony module.

After they maneuver Dragon into place, Expedition 52 Flight Engineers Jack Fischer and Peggy Whitson of NASA will command release of the spacecraft at 11:38 a.m.

Dragons thrusters will be fired to move the spacecraft a safe distance from the station before SpaceX flight controllers in Hawthorne, California, command its deorbit burn.

The capsule will splash down about 5:16 p.m. in the Pacific Ocean.

Recovery forces will retrieve the capsule and its more than 4,100 pounds of returning cargo, including science samples from human and animal research, biotechnology studies, physical science investigations and education activities.

NASA and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, the nonprofit organization that manages research aboard the U.S. national laboratory portion of the space station, will receive and process research samples, ensuring they are distributed to the appropriate facilities within 48 hours of splashdown.

In the event of adverse weather conditions in the Pacific, the backup departure date is Monday, July 3.

Dragon, the only space station resupply spacecraft able to return to Earth intact, launched June 3 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Launch Complex 39A at NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida, for the companys 11th NASA-contracted commercial resupply mission to the station.

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Video: Garth Brooks serenades astronauts on International Space Station from Mission Control in Houston – NewsOK.com

Oklahoma native and Country Music Hall of Famer Garth Brooks has achieved another first: performing a serenade for a fan currently located in outer space.

In a special episode of his Facebook Live video series, "Inside Studio G," Brooks on Thursday visited Mission Control Center at NASAs Johnson Space Center in Houston, where he chatted via satellite video with astronaut Jack Fischer and his crew mate, astronaut Dr. Peggy Whitson, who are on the International Space Station.

Fisher is a devoted Brooks fan who picked the country music superstar's hit "The River" as the first tune on his pre-launch playlist back in April when he embarked on his first trip into space. He said on Twitter when he revealed his playlist that "The River" is his favorite song.

The astronaut likened the Songwriters Hall of Famer to Shakespeare and thanked him for being an inspiration, noting that "The River" has been his anthem for nearly three decades.

"I think that you have so many great songs and so many great messages. But it's the heart that you put into every performance and the soul that you put into all those songs that make them so impactful," Fisher said.

His praise moved Brooks to tears.

"Thank you very much for letting the music be part of your life," Brooks said.

With his wife, fellow country music star and Food Network personality Trisha Yearwood, on harmony vocals, Brooks sang a verse of "The River" to Fisher and Whitson.

"Awesome. I got goose bumps everywhere," Fisher exclaimed.

Brooks also surprised Fischer with a visit from his wife, Elizabeth, and their daughter, Sariah, who joined him at the center, while Yearwood, naturally, asked the astronauts about the food. The best-selling cookbook author offered to fix them their favorite terrestrial meals upon their return to Earth.

According to People, Brooks is the first celebrity to go live on Facebook from Mission Control while speaking to an astronaut in orbit.

Your life is full of amazing moments andIjust got to have one, the singer-songwriter told People. WhatI love is social media allows you to take that journey to actually see these guys and do this. In all honesty,I totally forgot that we were on Facebook Live becauseI was so involved talking [to them].

Brooks and Yearwood even posed for a selfie with the astronauts' onscreen images, which Garth posted on Twitter with the caption "Could this be the longest distance selfie EVER?"

From Houston, Brooks and Yearwood are performing in concert at 7 tonight and 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Cajundome in Lafayette, Louisiana. As previously reported,Brooks next will play four home-state shows in two days next month at Oklahoma City's Chesapeake Energy Arena: 7 and 10:30 p.m. July 14 and 3 and 7:30 p.m. July 15. For tickets and information, go towww.chesapeakearena.com.

-BAM

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NASA keeps a close watch for bad bugs on space station – Economic Times

New York, June 29 (IANS) Scientists at NASA organise regular checks to ensure that the International Space Station (ISS) has one of the cleanest living environments and is free from bacteria and other micro-organisms, the space agency said.

"Once every three months, we sample from two locations in each module of the US segment of the station," Mark Ott, a microbiologist at NASA's Johnson Space Center, said in a statement.

Samples collected from surfaces and from the air are cultured on plates containing a growth medium, one specific for bacteria and the other for fungi. Those plates return to the ground and scientists identify each organism that grows on them.

The study, published in the journal of Microbiome, identified 11 strains of bacterium belonging to what microbiologists call the Bacillus anthracis, cereus, thuringiensis group, or Bacillus cereus group.

While this large family of microbes includes some bad bugs, Bacillus is extremely common on the Earth and around humans, so finding this type of bacteria on the space station is not unusual, the scientists said.

Using DNA hybridisation, researchers identified individual species in the samples and, while some were a close match to Bacillus anthracis type strains, they did not have the physical characteristics or the toxin-producing plasmids required to consider them a potential risk.

Further, drinking water on the ISS is treated similarly to the water we drink on earth to kill and keep micro-organisms from growing with regular monitoring on the station's drinking water systems.

"The astronauts' drinking water is, microbiologically speaking, cleaner than just about anything they drink on earth," Ott said.

In addition, the medical staff keeps a particularly sharp eye out for micro-organisms that pose a risk to the health of astronauts and when any turn up, the space station gets a more-thorough-than-usual cleaning.

"We should be investigating new and different ways of monitoring spacecraft for micro-organisms but we must be careful when we interpret the results," Ott added.

Continued research is being done to understand what organisms grow on the space station and how they affect an astronaut's health, the scientists said.

--IANS

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NASA keeps a close watch for bad bugs on space station - Economic Times

Mission Accomplished: CSUN’s CubeSat Launches from International Space Station and Contributes to NASA Research – CSUN Today

Not CSUNSat1.

This mini satellite has performed like a dutiful child this summer, calling home at least twice a day to California State University, Northridge and doing all of its homework.

After months of preparation and waiting, on April 18, electrical and computer engineering professors Sharlene Katz and James Flynn and their students cheered with relief as NASA launched CSUNSat1, the universitys first stellar explorer, to the International Space Station (ISS). The cube-shaped satellite is about the size of a shoebox and launched from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., aboard the OA-7 Cygnus spacecraft SS John Glenn, propelled by an Atlas V rocket.

It took four days to reach the space station, where astronauts unloaded and prepared the satellite and other payload for deployment. In mid-May, Katz and Flynn got word that NASA was ready to launch CSUNSat1 into orbit to start its mission. Then on May 18, the ISS crew deployed the mini satellite into low Earth orbit. Once it had safely cleared the massive space station, CSUNSat1 was allowed to power up and begin its mission operations and experiments.

Later that night, the satellite made its first pass over the CSUN ground station, designed and built from scratch (like the CubeSat itself) in the corner of an electrical engineering lab in Jacaranda Hall.

It was a tense and historic moment for CSUN. Katz and Flynn waited quietly in the ground station with several of the more than 70 students who have worked for four years to bring this project to life and to orbit. The device was designed in partnership with NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena to test the effectiveness of JPLs energy storage system to help explore deep space in extremely cold temperatures.

At 11:21 p.m., CSUNSat1 came up over the horizon, within range of the large, custom-built antenna on the roof of Jacaranda Hall. Katz, Flynn and their students and alumni held their breath. Then, they heard it: the first contact from the beacon, the long and short tones of International Morse Code. In addition to programming it to send data back to CSUN, the engineering team had built the satellite to broadcast its status every three minutes as it circles Earth, using Morse Code.

It is unfortunate that many CubeSats go up there, and theyre never heard from. You can imagine how those students and researchers must feel, Flynn said. Its like sending your child into the world, and it doesnt write home. You never know what happened to it. [When I heard the beacon], I felt like eight tons was off my shoulders. I was elated.

It [broadcasts] a letter B at the beginning of the beacon that tells us the experiment is ready to be run, added Katz, who noted that she and Flynn chose old-school Morse Code for the stellar traveler because it works when computerized data fails and because both professors happen to be fluent in Morse Code, thanks to a passion for ham radio in their teen years.

The satellite is orbiting 400 kilometers above the Earth, at Mach 22 22 times the speed of sound, which is at about 7.6 kilometers per second. This means that just a few minutes before it makes contact with the ground station in Northridge, its traveling over New Zealand.

CSUNSat1 sends data to CSUN as it passes over Northridge about six times each day. JPL assigned the team a list of tasks to complete, and by June 18 the group had checked off the entire list of experiments required for mission success including switching the CubeSat to operate from its experimental battery. The tests are key for deep-space technology, to help NASA develop a battery to aid in exploration out past planets such as Jupiter and Neptune without heaters, Flynn said. Current satellite batteries require heaters to function below freezing temperatures.

(L-R) Electrical and computer engineering professors Sharlene Katz and James Flynn; CSUNSat1 alumni Don Eckels 15 (Computer Science), now working at JPL, and Benjamin Plotkin 16 (Computer Science); and electrical engineering graduate student Rosy Davis cram into the small workshop room where they built and tested the CubeSat. June 14, 2017. Photo by Richard Chambers.

JPL and NASA expect to learn how a new form of storing energy will work in space, Flynn said. The current [satellites dont work below] freezing. But this system can do a North Dakota winter no problem, and create lots of power and store lots of power. NASA doesnt trust anything that hasnt flown. Our job is to test it in space. Once its successful in our spacecraft, theyd be willing to trust a mission to it.

The CubeSat uses solar panels to recharge its battery, and the experimental battery is designed to deliver a large surge of energy in a short period of time at very cold temperatures, Katz and Flynn said. Now that the satellite is in orbit, the students have gained even more priceless hands-on engineering experience, including overcoming variables such as radiation in the planets orbit.

CSUN was one of 14 universities selected for the orbital journey, by the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative. Prior to selection, Katz and Flynn received a $200,000 grant from NASA to fund the project, competing against more than a hundred other applicants for 13 grants.

The miniature satellite is designed for short-term use, and a short lifespan.

How long it will be up there is a little bit up to Mother Nature, Katz said. Its [lifetime is] six months to a year, according to NASA. It depends on the drag and decay.

But with this faithful child acing all of its experiments and tasks, it still has time for extra credit before it fades away.

JPL is already talking about having us do some additional experiments as an extended mission, Katz said.

The Morse Code beacon employed by the satellite makes it possible for anyone with a ham radio and interest to tune in and track CSUNSat1 as it orbits the Earth. Space and NASA enthusiasts around the globe from the Netherlands to Brazil have set up remote ground stations and are helping contribute to CSUNs research and data collected from the satellite. One amateur radio enthusiast in Indiana, for example, sends the students beacon reports each morning from the Midwest, Katz said.

To track CSUNSat1 and learn more about this and future projects, please visit http://www.csun.edu/cubesat/

CSUNSat1 alumnus Benjamin Plotkin 16 and electrical engineering graduate student Rosy Davis run the telemetry and mission control stations as they monitor the CubeSats pass over Northridge, on June 14, 2017. Photo by Richard Chambers.

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‘Transformers: The Last Knight’ Serves Up Real Space Technology – Space.com

By Elizabeth Howell, Space.com Contributor | June 29, 2017 02:38pm ET

Credit: Paramount

The most recent Transformers film, like its 2011 predecessor, incorporates real space technology into its action-packed chaos.

"Transformers: The Last Knight" grossed a franchise low of $73.2 million after its opening June 21, prompting some to worry if this bodes poorly for the franchise's future, according to the Hollywood Reporter. But as fans discuss what went so wrong with the concept, the real-world space gear that makes an appearance forms a small, bright point in the film.

The International Space Station and Hubble Space Telescope are among the familiar space names cited in "The Last Knight," and for the real space aficionados out there, the scriptwriters even throw in a joke about the space shuttle. While more details are in the following slides, we're keeping it spoiler-free for major plot points, so you can safely read on, even if you haven't seen the film.

Credit: Shutterstock

In "The Last Knight," images from the Hubble Space Telescope are used to track an imminent threat to the Earth. The images are shown briefly in a politician's office in Britain, on a television screen. The telescope has been in orbit since 1992 and is one of NASA's most famous observatories; data from the telescope has been used to determine that the universe's expansion rate is accelerating and to map galaxies from the early universe. Closer to home, Hubble has watched asteroid and comet activity, including when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 smacked into Jupiter in 1994. [Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9's Epic Crash with Jupiter in Pictures]

Credit: Nasa/Apollo 11

There's a brief shot showing the site of an Apollo moon landing, including an Apollo lunar module, a flag and a spaceship (from the Transformers universe) known as the Ark. As we found out in the 2011 film, "Transformers: Dark of the Moon," the Ark landed on the moon in 1961. In the Transformers universe, the Ark is investigated after the first astronauts on the moon landed during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969. The real Apollo 11 mission was a quick scientific reconnaissance of the moon rocks at the Sea of Tranquility, as well as a technological demonstration that humans could safely land and run a mission on the moon. The Apollo moon program concluded in 1972 after six successful landings and an aborted one (Apollo 13). [Lunar Legacy: 45 Apollo Moon Mission Photos]

Credit: NASA via Getty

Astronauts on the International Space Station see some Transformer technology in action in the new franchise film. On the space station, viewers first see the famed robotic Canadarm2, which is used to grapple cargo spacecraft and other large objects. There also is a view through the Cupola, a seven-window wraparound observatory that astronauts use in real life for photography and to do spacecraft berthings. The space station has been occupied by humans for nearly 17 years, since the arrival of Expedition 1 in 2000. Most crews today number six astronauts, with Americans, Russians and a range of crewmembers from other nations on board.

Credit: NASA via Getty

Most of the space action occurs at NASA''s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is best-known for its robotic exploration of the solar system through missions such as Cassini; finishing up a mission at Saturn; and New Horizons, which recently passed Pluto.

At JPL, an unnamed engineer (Tony Hale) sees a looming threat to Earth out in the cosmos. Trouble is, nobody believes him at first. Notably, NASA's "meatball" logo appears in the film, which shows that the agency reviewed the script and approved of the use of NASA insignia which isn't always granted: The movie "Life" had an alternate logo.

Credit: Jack Taylor/Getty

The European Space Agency (ESA) is featured several times in "The Last Knight," which is unusual for an American franchise film: Operations at an ESA control center are briefly shown, the Hubble images are credited as coming from ESA (a partner in Hubble) and an ESA image from an unidentified satellite is used to look at a thermal anomaly on Earth. In real life, ESA is an intergovernmental organization with 22 member states. After the United States and Russia, it is the third-largest partner on the International Space Station and has contributed several laboratories, launchers and cargo ships to the orbiting complex.

Credit: Kim Orr/NASA/JPL-Caltech

During "The Last Knight," a very quick video at JPL's Space Flight Operations Facility shows an animation of satellite data flowing into the Deep Space Network. The DSN is a network of three telescopes located in California, Spain and Australia that communicate with missions in deep space. It is perhaps most famous for staying in touch with the two Voyager spacecraft that (between the two missions) flew past Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune in the 1980s and 1990s. In 2012, Voyager 1 sent data back to the DSN indicating that it was the first probe to reach interstellar space. (That fact took another year to be recognized, however.)

Credit: Paramount

One scene during "The Last Knight" likely takes place at a NASA headquarters executive's office: The shot is identified as taking place in Washington, D.C. and the office clearly has a NASA flag hanging in the background. During the scene, one person picks up a model of the space shuttle on top of an aircraft and asks how that combination could possibly fly. The improbable actually did happen dozens of times, however, as the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft an extensively modified Boeing 747 successfully and regularly flew the space shuttle from landings in California to the shuttle's processing facilities at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

After the program's completion in 2011, the SCA ferried the four remaining shuttles (Discovery, Endeavour, Atlantis and test shuttle Enterprise) to museums across the United States. Then, the two SCAs were retired; one was used for parts for NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), while the other was preserved intact for display at the Joe Davies Heritage Airpark in California. [Now Boarding: Inside NASA's Boeing 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft]

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Elizabeth Howell is a contributing writer for Space.com who is one of the few Canadian journalists to report regularly on space exploration. She is pursuing a Ph.D. part-time in aerospace sciences (University of North Dakota) after completing an M.Sc. (space studies) at the same institution. She also holds a bachelor of journalism degree from Carleton University. Besides writing, Elizabeth teaches communications at the university and community college level. To see her latest projects, follow Elizabeth on Twitter at@HowellSpace.

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Divination Space Station: Fontaine Foxworth + Brown Girl Tarot – Patheos (blog)

The Empress card from the Brown Girl Tarot. All rights reserved.

Divination Space Station is proud today to feature Brown Girl Tarot , the worlds first real life non-illustrated Tarot Card Deck, that exclusively features 78 photographs of Women of Color and one adorable brown baby girl! Brown Girl Tarot deck is set to include 78, 3.5 X 5 artfully designed photographed, 350 GSM, Satin finish cards, including all suits of the Major and Minor Arcana. Created by Fontaine Foxworth, BGT celebrates and embraces the beauty and diversity of brown and black women, as every card is art directed to emphasize the core, sacred messages of tarot- with a modern brown girl spin. BGT aims to Uplift, Empower, & Unite WOC, Whilst Redefining Black Spirituality Through Tarot Cards. Im honored to reveal that I will be included in this deck too, as the Hierophant card. It was my pleasure to sit down with Foxworth recently and ask her some questions about tarot and this exciting new deck.

When did you start divining? With what method?

About 3 years ago, I found my first deck of tarot cards in the empty apartment above mine. My sister and I were only snooping around up there to use the gas stove to make some ginger tea. I had just moved in and the gas was not on in my apartment and I was feeling sick. The deck was in a velvet pouch in an otherwise empty kitchen cabinet. I have fallen in love with tarot and its divine power ever since.

The Strength Card courtesy of Brown Girl Tarot. All rights reserved.

What method do you use most often now?

I most often use tarot as my main source of divinatory meditation, however I have included the use of crystals, blessing oils, incense, and have even dabbled in spell work via Wiccan magical practices and evoking Orishas. I have been also grounding and molding my spirit to channel directly from source.

How important is the choice/phrasing of the question?

I think the choice and phrasing of the question is really important. I like to hone my energy and spirit onto very specific queries to the universe. I feel like if you are confused or unclear about the questions you need answers too, you should meditate and get as clear about what you are asking spirit to help you with. Its easy to get mixed messages from the universe, if you were not clear about your problem in the first place.

Do you have a yes/no method of divining you recommend?

I dont really have a yes/no method. Im pretty open to trying new things because I have a adventurous spirit. I think its about whatever you are most comfortable with, and whatever seems most natural to you. Some people like to practice divination using mirrors as oracles, but I personally havent ever had great success with that method. I guess some things take time and practice.

Is there any advice you have for newcomers when using divination?

I would say take it one step at a time. Opening your heart and spirit to this kind of work takes a lot of courage, focus, and will power. Its a sacred space that opens your spirituality up to a higher realm of consciousness definitely something that cant be rushed or forged. Be patient with yourself, and spirit also.

How did you come up with the idea for the Brown Girl Tarot Deck?

Brown Girl Tarot came by way of divine inspiration. I dont remember the date, nor the moment the thought came in my head. It was like one day it didnt exist, and the next day it did. In my imagination, it feels like the idea was implanted in my head by something not of this world when I was sleeping, and I have no recollection of how it was done.I just remember one night, whilst laying in bed thinking about it, I felt compelled by spirit to raise my hand and reach toward the ceiling. All I could say out loud, repeatedly was, thank youthank you. Im divinely grateful for Brown Girl Tarot.

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Divination Space Station: Fontaine Foxworth + Brown Girl Tarot - Patheos (blog)

These Companies Want to Revolutionize Trash Day on the Space … – Air & Space Magazine

Stowage gets a little tight up there on the Space Station, as John Phillips illustrates in 2011.

airspacemag.com June 28, 2017 8:00AM

Science in, garbage out. Every time a Cygnus or Progress cargo spacecraft brings up tons of experiments and equipment to the International Space Station, it stays around long enough for the astronauts to unload the new supplies. Then the spacecraft is refilled with tons of trash for a suicidal trip back through Earths atmosphere, where spacecraft and trash both burn up.

The routine is costly in terms of both money and astronaut time; it takes hours to finish all the loading and unloading, since every item must be carefully tracked. By some estimates, plastics account for about 20 percent of whats thrown out on a typical mission. NASA has found ways to reduce waste, such as having astronauts drink recycled urine, but it will need even better ideas for trash disposal if the agency wants to send humans on long missions into deep space.

Thats why its funding a couple of promising ideas for trash disposal under the NASA Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, which awards contractors up to $750,000 each for a two-year study. If they still look promising, the projects would be fully commercialized.

One of the ideas is to turn packaging plastic into raw material for 3D printing. The technology, called ERASMUS, takes Ziploc bags or any other thermoplastic waste, and transforms it into filament. Developed by Tethers Unlimited, ERASMUS is intended to be fully plug-and-play, with astronauts simply loading the container with trash, then walking away while it does its thing.

ERASMUS can even turn waste plastic into food-safe utensils for astronauts to use. Space station crews now clean their utensils and plates with wet wipes, according to Rachel Muhlbarer, additive manufacturing program manager for Tethers Unlimited. Over timeif all youre doing is wet-wiping [utensils] every so often, it is gross, she says.

ERASMUS is now in Phase 2 of NASA funding, and in addition to testing the basic technology, theyre looking at how plastics degrade in microgravity. Its not clear whether degradation happens differently in microgravity than on Earth, or whether the material will outgas differentlya potential problem given the stations carefully balanced atmosphere.

Another trash-y idea currently receiving Phase 2 SBIR funding is a heat melt compactor developed by NASAs Ames Research Center, in partnership with Materials Modification of Fairfax, Virginia. Earlier versions of the HMC suffered because water vapor could not be easily removed from polyethylene bags, which plugged the vents from compacting chambers and stopped steam from escaping. The HMC now uses a membrane bag to allow water vapor to escape, while keeping the solid waste generated during the HMC process.

In a separate project, Materials Modification is looking to improve cleanup on board the ISS. We have also developed an antimicrobial, self-cleaning coating on surfaces to keep the NASA crew compartments clean and reduce the logistical burden of carrying a lot of wipes and cleaning supplies onboard, said Kris Rangan, chief chemist of the company, in an e-mail.

If successful, both of the SBIR contractors plan to test their proposed technology on the station in coming years. The long-range goal is to develop cleaning and trash disposal ideas for use on NASAs Orion spacecraft in the 2020s. That vehicle is headed for deep space, where Earths atmosphere wont be available for use as a convenient incinerator.

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These Companies Want to Revolutionize Trash Day on the Space ... - Air & Space Magazine

Stanford engineers design a robotic gripper for cleaning up space debris – Stanford University News

Go to the web site to view the video.

Kurt Hickman, Stanford University

Researchers combine gecko-inspired adhesives and a custom robotic gripper to create a device for grabbing space debris. They tested their gripper in multiple zero gravity settings, including the International Space Station.

Right now, about 500,000 pieces of human-made debris are whizzing around space, orbiting our planet at speeds up to 17,500 miles per hour. This debris poses a threat to satellites, space vehicles and astronauts aboard those vehicles.

What makes tidying up especially challenging is that the debris exists in space. Suction cups dont work in a vacuum. Traditional sticky substances, like tape, are largely useless because the chemicals they rely on cant withstand the extreme temperature swings. Magnets only work on objects that are magnetic. Most proposed solutions, including debris harpoons, either require or cause forceful interaction with the debris, which could push those objects in unintended, unpredictable directions.

To tackle the mess, researchers from Stanford University and NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) have designed a new kind of robotic gripper to grab and dispose of the debris, featured in the June 27 issue of Science Robotics.

Hao Jiang, graduate student in the Cutkosky lab and lead author of the paper, shows a basketball being gripped by the gecko-inspired adhesive. (Image credit: Kurt Hickman)

What weve developed is a gripper that uses gecko-inspired adhesives, said Mark Cutkosky, professor of mechanical engineering and senior author of the paper. Its an outgrowth of work we started about 10 years ago on climbing robots that used adhesives inspired by how geckos stick to walls.

The group tested their gripper, and smaller versions, in their lab and in multiple zero gravity experimental spaces, including the International Space Station. Promising results from those early tests have led the researchers to wonder how their grippers would fare outside the station, a likely next step.

There are many missions that would benefit from this, like rendezvous and docking and orbital debris mitigation, said Aaron Parness, MS 06, PhD 10, group leader of the Extreme Environment Robotics Group at JPL. We could also eventually develop a climbing robot assistant that could crawl around on the spacecraft, doing repairs, filming and checking for defects.

The adhesives developed by the Cutkosky lab have previously been used in climbing robots and even a system that allowed humans to climb up certain surfaces. They were inspired by geckos, which can climb walls because their feet have microscopic flaps that, when in full contact with a surface, create a Van der Waals force between the feet and the surface. These are weak intermolecular forces that result from subtle differences in the positions of electrons on the outsides of molecules.

The gripper is not as intricate as a geckos foot the flaps of the adhesive are about 40 micrometers across while a geckos are about 200 nanometers but the gecko-inspired adhesive works in much the same way. Like a geckos foot, it is only sticky if the flaps are pushed in a specific direction but making it stick only requires a light push in the right direction. This is a helpful feature for the kinds of tasks a space gripper would perform.

If I came in and tried to push a pressure-sensitive adhesive onto a floating object, it would drift away, said Elliot Hawkes, MS 11, PhD 15, a visiting assistant professor from the University of California, Santa Barbara and co-author of the paper. Instead, I can touch the adhesive pads very gently to a floating object, squeeze the pads toward each other so that theyre locked and then Im able to move the object around.

Close up of the robotic gripper made by the Cutkosky lab at Stanford University. The gripper is designed to grab objects in zero gravity using their gecko-inspired adhesive. (Image credit: Kurt Hickman)

The pads unlock with the same gentle movement, creating very little force against the object.

The gripper the researchers created has a grid of adhesive squares on the front and arms with thin adhesive strips that can fold out and move toward the middle of the robot from either side, as though its offering a hug. The grid can stick to flat objects, like a solar panel, and the arms can grab curved objects, like a rocket body.

One of the biggest challenges of the work was to make sure the load on the adhesives was evenly distributed, which the researchers achieved by connecting the small squares through a pulley system that also serves to lock and unlock the pads. Without this system, uneven stress would cause the squares to unstick one by one, until the entire gripper let go. This load-sharing system also allows the gripper to work on surfaces with defects that prevent some of the squares from sticking.

The group also designed the gripper to switch between a relaxed and rigid state.

Imagining that you are trying to grasp a floating object, you want to conform to that object while being as flexible as possible, so that you dont push that object away, explained Hao Jiang, a graduate student in the Cutkosky lab and lead author of the paper. After grasping, you want your manipulation to be very stiff, very precise, so that you dont feel delays or slack between your arm and your object.

The group first tested the gripper in the Cutkosky lab.They closely measuredhow much load the gripper could handle, what happened when different forces and torques were applied and how many times it could be stuck and unstuck. Through their partnership with JPL, the researchers also tested the gripper in zero gravity environments.

In JPLs Robodome, they attached small rectangular arms with the adhesive to a large robot, then placed that modified robot on afloor thatresembleda giant air-hockey table to simulate a 2D zero gravity environment.They then tried to get their robot to scoot around the frictionless floorand capture and move a similar robot.

We had one robot chase the other, catch it and then pull it back toward where we wanted it to go, said Hawkes. I think that was definitely an eye-opener, to see how a relatively small patch of our adhesive could pull around a 300 kilogram robot.

Next, Jiang and Parness went on a parabolic airplane flight to test the gripper in zero gravity. Over two days, they flew a series of 80 ascents and dives, which created an alternating experience of about 20 seconds of 2G and 20 seconds of zero-G conditions in the cabin. The gripper successfully grasped and let go of a cube and a large beach ball with a gentle enough touch that the objects barely moved when released.

Lastly, Parnesss lab developed a small gripper that went up in the International Space Station (ISS), where they tested how well the grippers worked inside the station.

Next steps for the gripper involve readying it for testing outside the space station, including creating a version made of longer lasting materials able to hold up to high levels of radiation and extreme temperatures. The current prototype is made of laser-cut plywood and includes rubber bands, which would become brittle in space.The researchers will have to make something sturdier for testing outside the ISS, likely designed to attach to the end of a robot arm.

Back on Earth, Cutkosky also hopes that they can manufacture larger quantities of the adhesive at a lower cost. He imagines that someday gecko-inspired adhesive could be as common as Velcro.

Additional Stanford co-authors are Matthew A. Estrada, Srinivasan A. Suresh, Amy K. Han, Shiquan Wang and Christopher J. Ploch. Christine Fuller and Neil Abcouwer of NASA JPL are also co-authors. Cutkosky is also a member of Stanford Bio-X and the Stanford Neurosciences Institute.

This work was funded by NASA, the National Science Foundation and a Samsung Scholarship.

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Stanford engineers design a robotic gripper for cleaning up space debris - Stanford University News

Unplugged: Promising shows at Space Station, El-Rocko over holiday weekend – Do Savannah


Do Savannah
Unplugged: Promising shows at Space Station, El-Rocko over holiday weekend
Do Savannah
Once again this week, the all-ages Starlandia Concert Series at the Space Station, 2436 Bull St., features a promising mix of touring and local talent. On June 30, the Space Station will feature touring acts Plan Z, a self-described electro-pop-punk ...

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Unplugged: Promising shows at Space Station, El-Rocko over holiday weekend - Do Savannah

The SpaceStation sponsors Media Agency Rising Star Award – Bizcommunity.com

At this year's Most Awards ceremony, The SpaceStation will sponsor the Media Agency Rising Star Award. The Media Agency Rising Star Award goes to the person who has consistently displayed excellent relationship skills, open minded, innovative, confident, challenges the status quo, outspoken, decisive, takes the lead, involved in the industry and developing a profile.

Image supplied.

We chose to sponsor The Media Agency Rising Star Award, specifically because in the digital arena, the landscape changes almost daily. In this fluid industry, it is essential that industry pillars recognise the need for ongoing development and robust recognition for those people who are showing talent in the media industry both as an inspiration to future talent and an ongoing guide for the industry as a whole.

The award ceremony will be held on Thursday, 14 September 2017 at The Wanderers Club in Illovo, Johannesburg.

Voting for the 9th annual Most Awards will continue until Friday, 30 June 2017. To vote, click here.

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The SpaceStation sponsors Media Agency Rising Star Award - Bizcommunity.com

Farewell, ROSA! Space Station Lets Go of Roll-Out Solar Array After Retraction Fail (Video) – Space.com

After a week of tests on the end of the International Space Station's robotic arm, the Roll-Out Solar Array (ROSA) was safely jettisoned. While the rollable solar panel unfurled successfully at the beginning of the experiment, the ground operations team was unable to retract it to stow.

ROSA is a flexible, lightweight unit that could someday help power solar-electric propulsion spacecraftfor journeys far beyond Earth. It was released yesterday (June 26) according to a procedure developed before the instrument flew, in case of this contingency, NASA officials said in a blog post.

"Once jettisoned, ROSA will not present any risk to the International Space Station and will not impact any upcoming visiting vehicle traffic," they added.

If it had been retracted successfully, ROSA would have been stowed in the trunk of SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft, which departs the space station in a week. But it still wouldn't have made it back to Earth: Dragon's trunk will detach and burn up in Earth's atmosphere as the cargo spacecraft returns.

During the week-long experiment, crews on the ground monitored how well ROSA deployed, observing via video from the space station, as well as measuring its performance over the course of the week as the assembly moved through sunlight and shadow. Its re-rolling marked the end of the instrument's in-space test, according to NASA.

The space station crew is busy packing Dragon for its departure Sunday (July 2); the departing spacecraft will bring cargo and experiments back from the station to splash down in the Pacific Ocean about 5.5 hours after its 11:38 a.m. EDT (1538 GMT) release from the station.

Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her@SarahExplains.Follow us@Spacedotcom,FacebookandGoogle+. Original article onSpace.com.

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Farewell, ROSA! Space Station Lets Go of Roll-Out Solar Array After Retraction Fail (Video) - Space.com

Gardening in Microgravity: How Space Plants Are Adapting (Video) – Space.com

A new NASA video explores the science of space gardening and what researchers are learning about plants in space.

In 2015, astronauts aboard the International Space Station ate the first produce ever grown in space. During Expedition 44, NASA astronauts Scott Kelly and Kjell Lindgren, as well as the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kimiya Yui, chomped down on red romaine lettuce that was grown in the station's Veggie plant growth system in August of that year.

It was a big moment, and a necessary step toward NASA's goal to travel to Mars someday. [Plants in Space: Photos by Gardening Astronauts]

As the new video from the agency's video series "Science at NASA"explains, the ability to grow both edible and nonedible plants in space is essential for deep-space travel and the establishment of dwellings. Plants provide both a food source and the ability to recycle air and water, Anna-Lisa Paul, a University of Florida professor who researches how plants grow in extreme environments, said in the video.

While it was a major step toward someday being able to grow gardens on Mars, the lettuce taste test was nowhere near the end of this endeavor. Scientists aboard the space station and here on Earth continue to test how plants adapt to harsh environments.

Paul and her colleague Robert Ferl, also at the University of Florida, first launched plants into space in 1999, on space shuttle Columbia, and have been studying plant growth in space ever since.

The roots of plants grown on tilted soil on Earth grow in a slanted direction, which scientists call "skewing," according to the video.

Through their research, Paul and Ferl discovered that gravity doesn't actually affect the direction in which roots grow, as Charles Darwin had previously hypothesized. Darwin believed that skewing was partially due to gravity's effect on the roots, but Paul and Ferl discovered that plants grown in microgravity exhibit the same behavior, meaning that roots don't need gravity to seek out necessary nutrients.

Growing in microgravity did, however, change the plants' genetic response, according to the video.

"When living organisms are faced with environmental change, their response almost always involves a change in genetic expression," Paul said in the video. "To cope, they switch on and off certain genes."

The genes that changed are associated with the cell walls of plants, according to the video, though Paul and Ferl aren't yet sure what purpose this serves. They plan to conduct experiments to study this effect as well as other ways plants adapt to microgravity, and scientists aboard the space station will also continue to study plant growth in an effort to help people survive on Mars and beyond.

Follow Kasandra Brabaw on Twitter @KassieBrabaw. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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Bread’s Done! This Company Wants to Help Astronauts Bake in Space – Space.com

This proof of concept shows the front plate of an oven that can bake bread in microgravity.

A team of engineers and scientists may have just found a way for astronauts to enjoy fresh bread in space.

Currently, astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) rely on tortillas as their "bread" because they have a long "shelf life" and don't produce crumbs. But now, a team of engineers and scientists in Germany is developing an oven that works in microgravity, as well as space-grade dough that's suitable for baking bread in orbit, so that astronauts may one day be able to bake and enjoy fresh bread on the job.

Germany-based startup Bake In Space also plans to develop a made-in-space sourdough brand based on yeast cultivated at the International Space Station.

According to Sebastian Marcu, founder and CEO of Bake In Space, the idea came from his friend, spacecraft engineer Neil Jaschinski, who had been struggling to find a better solution to what he says was poor-quality bread in the Netherlands, where he works.

"Bread is a big topic in Germany," Marcu told Space.com. "We have 3,200 variations of bread, with a bakery pretty much on every street corner. In the Netherlands, most Germans would complain about the quality of bread." [Space FoodEvolution: How Astronaut Chow Has Changed (Photos)]

Spacecraft engineer Neil Jaschinski poses with Bake In Space's prototype microgravity oven.

Jaschinski have overcome the lack of good bread by learning to bake his own at home. However, he and Marcu realized that their fellow German, ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst who is slated to command the ISS in the second half of 2018 would have no choice but to survive his six months in space on NASA-approved tortillas.

"I have heard from several former German astronauts that they really missed bread" while in space, Marcu said. "Everything on the space station has to have [a] long shelf-life. And fresh produce, freshly baked products that's something they really miss."

Former German astronaut Gerhard Thiele has joined the project as well.

'We need to take care of the human beings that we are sending [to space], of their wellbeing, and food, as well as the environment, is an essential part of this," commented Thiele, who spent 11 days in space in 2000 aboard Space Shuttle mission STS-99

To have something fresh, whether it is bread or whether it is vegetables, it would be wonderful.

Bread has been a staple in human diet for thousands of years but replicating the art of bread making in orbital conditions presents multiple challenges. Microgravity, Marcu said, is only one of them.

"We have to comply with a whole set of safety regulations that we have on the space station," Marcu said. "We have to make sure that none of the surfaces [of the oven] becomes hotter than 45 degrees Celsius [113 degrees Fahrenheit]. This means that we cannot preheat the oven; we cannot open the oven in the middle of operation."

On Earth, bread needs to be baked at a temperature of about 400 degrees F (200 degrees C). Once its done, the bakers remove it from the heated oven. But that would not be possible in space. Processes such as thermal convection, which helps to mix up air on Earth, don't work in space. If a bubble of air that hot were to escape from the oven in orbit, it could stay floating inside the station for quite a while, posing a serious health risk to the astronauts,Marcu said.

Marcu said the team has found a way to overcome this challenge.

"We basically put the baking product, the dough, inside the cold oven and start heating it up," he said. "Once it's almost done, we start cooling it down. But at that time, any product will start to get dry, and that's why we need to design the oven so that some water is added during the baking process."

The oven also needs to be able to operate with only 270 watts of power about one-tenth the power used by conventional ovens on Earth. Marcu said the team hopes to have a prototype ready by the end of this year. [The International Space Station:Inside and Out(Infographic)]

Mastering the process of baking is only one step toward making the space-grade bread. Crumbs could damage the station's equipment, or astronauts could accidently inhale them. Marcu said he hopes the combination of the new baking process and a carefully designed dough will solve the problem.

There are further challenges when it comes to the dough, Marcu added. While the ultimate goal is to make bread in space from scratch, he said, the engineers will launch a premade bread product to the space station as a first step. But as with all space food, this bread product will have to have an extremely long shelf life and survive without a fridge or a freezer.

"At the moment, we are testing out different dough recipes, doing longevity storage tests, keeping them at ambient temperature and making sure that nothing grows inside that is not wanted that could contaminate the space station," Marcu said.

Separately, Bake In Space will send a yeast culture to the space station that the astronauts will use to create sourdough, which will be delivered back to Earth to establish a line of made-in-space bread.

Sourdough is a traditional type of bread dough that people used before the industrialization of bread making. It uses naturally occurring yeast and bacteria that ferment the dough and provide it with its typical mildly sour taste.

"Sourdough basically takes up the bacteria from its near vicinity and the person that has his hands in the bread, and that's how the special taste of the bread is developed," Marcu said. [Can You KeepKosheror Halal inSpace?]

"Wherever you are on Earth, sourdough has a unique taste, whether it's created in San Francisco or India," he added. "It will be interesting to see what the flavor will be when we cultivate it in space."

Marcu said the made-in-space bread could be one small way to improve the quality of life in space before space tourism and deep-space exploration fully take off. Although the diversity of space food has improved greatly, it can still be rather dull compared Earth-based fare.

"On Earth, bread has always been a symbol of quality of life," Marcu said. "Bread always stands for friendship and well-being, and that's what drives our project. If we want to go further into space, we need to create quality of life, and that's why bread is really a stepping stone for human exploration of space."

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NASA to Study Artificial Organs on the Space Station – Nextgov

International Space Station has always been home to a multitude of scientific experiments. One of their latest is unusual: It includes artificial human body parts and will help the scientists aboard the station learn even more about the effects of microgravity on the human body.

Knowing how the body will reactis key for some of themissions NASA has planned for the future, likes those that will go further into space.

The experiment will last for four years and is part of a collaboration between the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space.

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Now, there won't be spleens and livers free-floating around the space station. Instead, these "organs" will be small transparent slides, each about the size of an AA battery, with microfluidic channels running throughout that will recreate the effect of blood and airflow. These channels will be lined with the cells of an organ to be studied.

The cells will grow in three dimensions and won't flatten on a slide like they would on Earth. Each organ chip focus on a specific conditionthat astronauts often face in microgravity, including respiratory infections, bone deterioration, and cellular aging and recovery

The kidney-on-a-chip model will help show the effect of microgravity affects kidney function but also, the data and results could potentially be applied to kidney-related conditions, like kidney stones. Similarly, the brain-on-a-chip model will be studied neurodegeneration which will help astronauts as well as people dealing with certain neurological conditions back on Earth.

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NASA to Study Artificial Organs on the Space Station - Nextgov