Could this $300 billion 'space mushroom' replace the ISS?

Washington DC company United SpaceStructureswants to create a new space station It rotates six times a minute to create artificial gravity - with the 'stem' and 'dome spinning in opposite directions It would be 1,300ft (400 metres) long, cost 200 billion ($300 billion) and take 30 years to build We believe artificial gravity is required to support long term living in space, Bill Kemp from USS told MailOnline

By Jonathan O'Callaghan for MailOnline

Published: 04:53 EST, 8 April 2015 | Updated: 06:20 EST, 8 April 2015

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One problem with space travel is that humans arent very good at coping with reduced gravity - their bones and muscles deteriorate over time.

But one company says they have an answer - a giant rotating space cylinder that can create artificial gravity.

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A Washington DC-based company called United Space Structures wants to create a new space station. Their giant cylinder (shown, with the ISS and Space Shuttles illustrated) could apparently replace the ISS. It would rotate six times per minute to create artificial gravity, and would be 1,300ft (400 metres) long, cost 200 billion ($300 billion) and take 30 years to build

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Could this $300 billion 'space mushroom' replace the ISS?

Space Station Sends 3-D-Printed Parts Back to Earth

The astronauts aboard the International Space Station usually receive packages from Earth, but things are the other way around this week: A shipment of parts 3-D printed in orbit has made its way back to the surface for testing. The ISS 3-D printer has been active for a few months, putting out small pieces and complete tools, and now the items need to be examined closely to see whether they came out right. NASA's Quincy Bean is in charge of the printer project, and got to unbox the carefully packaged pieces, which were sent back to Earth in February aboard SpaceX's fifth contracted resupply mission to the ISS. You can watch him do the honors in this video uploaded Tuesday:

One piece he shows off is a complete ratchet, which was designed on Earth and then "beamed up" to the station, where it was actually printed in November. Previously the printer had made a spare part for itself, and since then has made all manner of small pieces that will help the investigators understand how microgravity affects the printing process.

Once the details are worked out, the ISS crew will know what parts and tools can be reliably replaced by printed versions, removing the need to send up more via rocket. You can keep up with the latest news from the project at NASA's 3-D Printing site.

First published April 7 2015, 1:26 PM

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Space Station Sends 3-D-Printed Parts Back to Earth

There Are No Politics on the International Space Station, with Astronaut Ron Garan – Video


There Are No Politics on the International Space Station, with Astronaut Ron Garan
Former NASA astronaut Ron Garan explains how the cooperative lessons learned through space exploration are applicable in other realms of life. Garan is author of the new book The Orbital Perspectiv ...

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Hermitcraft FTB: SPACE STATION BUILD! Ep. 11 (Hermitcraft FTB Infinity) – Video


Hermitcraft FTB: SPACE STATION BUILD! Ep. 11 (Hermitcraft FTB Infinity)
Video Info Today we start working on our new build. The space station! Hope you enjoy! Donation Info Paypal: https://streamtip.com/t/ijevin Patreon: https://www.patreon....

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Hermitcraft FTB: SPACE STATION BUILD! Ep. 11 (Hermitcraft FTB Infinity) - Video

Fan’s LEGO Replica of International Space Station Soars to …

A fan's yearlong mission to gain support for his LEGO version of the International Space Station is now complete.

Christoph Ruge's model of the orbiting outpost recorded its 10,000th vote on Friday (April 3) after being posted to the Danish toy company's social website, LEGO Ideas, more than a year ago. Ruge's plastic brick replica of the space station racked up its final 2,035 supporters in a matter of just 10 hours after it made it onto the front page of another popular website.

"Please support the project so we can all have a little ISS in our homes and/or office cubicles," Monitor343, a Reddit member, wrote in his appeal to readers of the site's Space community. [LEGOs and Space Travel: A Photo Gallery]

LEGO will officially review fan-proposed ideas for production if they receive 10,000 votes on the LEGO Ideas site.

The project's soaring support came within 26 days of its expiration. Interest in the space station model grew slowly until last month, when it finally reached the halfway mark of 5,000 votes. Along the way, NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) partners aboard the actual space station gave Ruge's idea a boost by sharing it with their social media followers.

"A space station design is up for LEGO community fans to vote on," NASA wrote on Twitter in November.

Ruge also had the chance to talk about and show off his model at ESA's European Astronaut Center, located near Cologne, Germany.

"Beginning the [March 21 SpaceUp] event with a talk by veteran astronaut Reinhold Ewald and a live tweet from space by ESA astronaut Samantha Christoforetti set the bar high," the space agency described on its website. "It continued to be raised even higher ... [by] both giant and miniature International Space Station models built out of custom LEGO bricks."

Ruge's large model, as posted on LEGO Ideas, recreates the International Space Station in its current configuration, including all of its U.S., Russian, Japanese and European modules. Built from slightly more than 1,000 LEGO bricks, it features rotating solar arrays, an articulated robotic arm and visiting vehicles that can dock to the outpost.

Ruge's model, if approved for production, will be LEGO's first replica of the complete International Space Station to be offered for sale. In 2003, the company, in partnership with the Discovery Channel, sold a 162-brick set of the orbital laboratory based on its then-still under construction configuration.

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Fan's LEGO Replica of International Space Station Soars to ...

Lakewood High chosen by NASA to test plant project on space station

Clara Wilson, 16, left, Ryan Sparks, 16, Trevor Lucero, 17, and Joe Tiberi, 16, right, work with elements of their self-developed Hydrofuge 9.0 after class at Lakewood High School on April 1, 2015, in Lakewood. (Anya Semenoff, Your Hub)

LAKEWOOD Inside a lab at Lakewood High School, an after-school project has morphed into a system that could one day feed and provide stress relief to astronauts in space.

On April 13, six years of design work and testing including four flights aboard the "vomit comet" parabolic plane in Houston will be put to the test when a zero-gravity hydroponic plant chamber built by instructor Matt Brown's class will be blasted into space and tested aboard the International Space Station for 120 days.

Clara Wilson, 16, gestures to the Hydrofuge 9.0 after class at Lakewood High School on April 1, 2015, in Lakewood. (Anya Semenoff, Your Hub)

The project is part of "high school students united with NASA to create hardware" program or HUNCH a partnership where the space agency theoretically gets cost-effective and useful equipment while students get a chance to try their skills on real-world exercises.

Lakewood High is one of a select few schools in the country with a fully-developed project capable of landing a coveted spot on the International Space Station.

"It's really unusual for a high school class to get 120 days aboard the ISS," Brown said. "Most of the experiments that have gone up before us have been small, short-term things. This a really complex, complicated device that was 100 percent developed, designed and tested right here in the classroom."

Six years ago, the group was told by a NASA liaison that the agency was always looking for plant experiments. The students came up with an experiment looking at the psychology of how plants could affect humans beings in space.

"Here we walk outside and there's green everywhere, and up there, they're living in a computer for six months to a year and that messes with you a bit," Brown said.

The only problem with that experiment?

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Lakewood High chosen by NASA to test plant project on space station

Plants use sixth sense for growth aboard the Space Station

IMAGE:Image a is a culture dish of arabidopsis seedlings for the plant gravity sensing investigation. Image b illustrates photon emission from the plants when plants are rotated and calcium ion... view more

Credit: JAXA/Hitoshi Tatsumi

Although it is arguable as to whether plants have all five human senses -- sight, scent, hearing, taste and touch -- they do have a unique sense of gravity, which is being tested in space. Researchers with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency will conduct a second run of the Plant Gravity Sensing study after new supplies are delivered by the sixth SpaceX commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station. The research team seeks to determine how plants sense their growth direction without gravity. The study results may have implications for higher crop yield in farming and for cultivating plants for long-duration space missions.

The investigation examines the cellular process of formation in thale cress, or Arabidopsis thaliana, a small flowering plant related to cabbage. The genetic makeup of thale cress is simple and well-understood by the plant biology community. This knowledge allows scientists to easily recognize changes that occur as a result of microgravity adaptation.

Understanding the cellular processes in plant development may translate to better knowledge of cellular processes in the human body. Since thale cress is considered a model organism for biological research, there are genetic similarities that may reveal insights into our health. Specifically, this could impact medical science since research teams may gain a better understanding of mechanisms of diseases affected by gravity, such as osteoporosis and muscle loss.

In the Plant Gravity Sensing study, scientists examine whether the mechanisms of the plant that determine its growth direction -- the gravity sensor -- form in the absence of gravity. Specifically, the research team analyzes how concentrations of calcium behave in the cells of plants originally grown in microgravity when later exposed to a 1g environment, or gravity similar to that on Earth. Plant calcium concentrations have been shown to change in response to temperature and touch and adapt to the direction of gravity on Earth.

"Plants cultivated in space are not experienced with gravity or the direction of gravity and may not be able to form gravity sensors that respond to the specific direction of gravity changes," said Hitoshi Tatsumi, Ph.D., principal investigator of the Plant Gravity Sensing investigation and associate professor at Nagoya University in Nagoya (present address: Kanazawa Institute of Technology), Japan.

Researchers use a centrifuge in the Cell Biology Experiment Facility in Kibo, the Japanese Experiment Module, to monitor the plants' response to changes between microgravity and a simulated 1g condition. The research team does this to determine if the plants sense changes in gravitational acceleration and adapt the levels of calcium in their cells.

Scientists hypothesize that the process in which amyloplast -- particles within the plant cell that store and synthesize starch for energy -- distributes and assembles occurs in the direction of gravitational pull. Once the amyloplast settles, it activates mechanisms within the plant's cells, including an increase in calcium concentrations. These mechanisms form the molecular structure in the cell that stimulates gravity sensing for growth. The unknown here is whether or not the gravity sensing components actually assemble in microgravity to determine direction of plant growth.

If the study hypothesis is proven true, it may be possible to modify plant gravity sensing mechanisms on Earth or to cultivate healthy plants for consumption on future deep space missions or conceivably on other planets. The plant's gravity sensor may be regulated for growth in either a low or high magnitude of gravitational acceleration.

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Plants use sixth sense for growth aboard the Space Station

Fan's LEGO Replica of International Space Station Soars to 10,000 Votes

A fan's yearlong mission to gain support for his LEGO version of the International Space Station is now complete.

Christoph Ruge's model of the orbiting outpost recorded its 10,000th vote on Friday (April 3) after being posted to the Danish toy company's social website, LEGO Ideas, more than a year ago. Ruge's plastic brick replica of the space station racked up its final 2,035 supporters in a matter of just 10 hours after it made it onto the front page of another popular website.

"Please support the project so we can all have a little ISS in our homes and/or office cubicles," Monitor343, a Reddit member, wrote in his appeal to readers of the site's Space community. [LEGOs and Space Travel: A Photo Gallery]

LEGO will officially review fan-proposed ideas for production if they receive 10,000 votes on the LEGO Ideas site.

The project's soaring support came within 26 days of its expiration. Interest in the space station model grew slowly until last month, when it finally reached the halfway mark of 5,000 votes. Along the way, NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) partners aboard the actual space station gave Ruge's idea a boost by sharing it with their social media followers.

"A space station design is up for LEGO community fans to vote on," NASA wrote on Twitter in November.

Ruge also had the chance to talk about and show off his model at ESA's European Astronaut Center, located near Cologne, Germany.

"Beginning the [March 21 SpaceUp] event with a talk by veteran astronaut Reinhold Ewald and a live tweet from space by ESA astronaut Samantha Christoforetti set the bar high," the space agency described on its website. "It continued to be raised even higher ... [by] both giant and miniature International Space Station models built out of custom LEGO bricks."

Ruge's large model, as posted on LEGO Ideas, recreates the International Space Station in its current configuration, including all of its U.S., Russian, Japanese and European modules. Built from slightly more than 1,000 LEGO bricks, it features rotating solar arrays, an articulated robotic arm and visiting vehicles that can dock to the outpost.

Ruge's model, if approved for production, will be LEGO's first replica of the complete International Space Station to be offered for sale. In 2003, the company, in partnership with the Discovery Channel, sold a 162-brick set of the orbital laboratory based on its then-still under construction configuration.

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Fan's LEGO Replica of International Space Station Soars to 10,000 Votes

Sarah Brightman chases her dream to the International Space Station

Brightman contributed to the design of her own mission patch for TMA 18/16M to commemorate her trip to the International Space Station in September. (credit: SarahBrightman.com)

In September, soprano and classical crossover performer Sarah Brightman, with cosmonaut Sergey Volkov and ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen, will be launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan to the International Space Station. She will be travelling as a spaceflight participant arranged by Space Adventures. Brightman will be only the second female spaceflight participant to travel to the ISS, after Anousheh Ansari in 2006.

Six men have also made the epic trip through Space Adventures. However, Brightmans worldwide fame will draw unprecedented attention to orbital personal spaceflight during her mission to and aboard the ISS. News networks will begin airing segments about her trip weeks in advance of launch. The day of launch it could be the top story on every news broadcast around the world. For Brightman, it will be the realization of a dream she has had for decades.

Brightman was born in August 1960, the first of six children. By the time of the Apollo 11 lunar landing in 1969, she had already been attending piano and dancing classes for five years. She had followed the news of the July 16 launch of the Saturn V carrying Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Mike Collins.

On July 20th, the Brightmans gathered their children around the television in their Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, England home for the live broadcast. Millions of people were riveted to their TVs as the black and white video images were beamed live back to Earth. Sarah Brightman watched in wonder as Neil Armstrong stepped down the ladder of the lunar module. He cautiously placed his boot on the lunar surface and uttered those immortal words, Thats one small step for manone giant leap for mankind. At that moment, something clicked for Brightman, she recalled in an interview.

Being lucky enough to have watched the first man land on the Moon, Brightman said in a London press conference on March 10 hosted by Carol Vorderman, we thought we were going to be astronauts. It was all about space [back then]. For me to have got this far and to be able to have a taste of what I felt at the time, is an amazing thing.

Like many others who witnessed the first American astronauts to walk on the surface of the Moon, Brightman harbored the dream of one day going into space herself. She did not know how that might come about, but she always carried this dream with her. She continued her musical training and entered the Arts Education School in 1971. The die was cast, and Brightman embarked on a path that led her to stardom and worldwide fame. She focused on theater performance and later, her voice as a soprano having received her formal training at the Royal College of Music.

During the 1980s and the 1990s, Brightman continued to build a recording and performing career around the world. In 2001, she learned with interest of the flight of Dennis Tito to the ISS, arranged by Space Adventures. She became even more intrigued at the possibility when she read about Anousheh Ansarithe first female spaceflight participantwho achieved her own dream of going into space for an eight-day mission aboard the ISS.

On October 10, 2012, Brightman was in Moscow for a press conference where she would make a dramatic announcement. Also present were Alexey Krasnov, chief of Roscosmos Piloted Programs Department; Eric Anderson, Chairman of Space Adventures, Ltd.; and Neil Ford of UNESCO. The suspicions of the media that were present were confirmed before a word was even spoken. Being the consummate entertainer and performer, the conference opened with a music video showing film clips of Sarah Brightmans childhood interspaced with historic footage from American and Russian manned space missions, with a musical overlay of her singing Angel, from her upcoming album Dreamchaser.

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Sarah Brightman chases her dream to the International Space Station

How to train your astronauts

IMAGE:Astronauts Scott Kelly and Kjell Lindgren are shown during International Space Station EVA Maintenance 9 Training at the Neutral Buoyancy Lab at the Sonny Carter Training Facility. view more

Credit: NBL/Bill Brassard

Training an astronaut is no easy task. Astronauts go through years of rigorous technical, health and safety training to learn simple and complex tasks for a typical four to six month mission. They develop skills in systems, robotics, spacecraft operations, space engineering activities and even learn Russian. As NASA develops deep space exploration missions on its journey to Mars, the agency is investigating current training methods in order to adapt to the longer and longer missions.

"During the Shuttle Program, astronauts trained about 5 to 8 years for a 10 to 14 day mission, with a work-timeline scripted down to the minute." says Immanuel Barshi, a research psychologist from NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, in the center's Human Systems Integration division.

Decades of crew member research demonstrate that space can have adverse effects on people. Data suggests that the longer humans are in space, the greater the effects. On a trip to Mars, for instance, humans will be exposed to three years of microgravity and radiation; confined in an environment with three to five other people; separated from home; will experience altered day-night/light cycles; and will have three years to inevitably forget some of the training learned before leaving the planet.

Barshi's research, a study called Training Retention, examines to what extent these aspects of a Mars mission might affect a crew member's performance, as well as provide fresh insights into the way humans are trained for their jobs on Earth. Working with collaborators at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Barshi will study astronaut Scott Kelly's performance during his one-year mission aboard the International Space Station, in addition to that of other astronauts on six-month missions, and will compare results with astronauts on the ground over the same timeframe.

In conjunction with the Center for Research on Training at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado, Barshi will compare the astronaut skill retention data from space and ground with that of undergraduate students. Much of what is known on how people learn and how well they retain information or skills is based upon university research. Such comparisons are critical to the application of ground assumptions to space operations, especially how the effects of long duration space travel affect crew members.

"Researchers know that skills retained for long periods are very specific, while generalizable skills decay much faster unless continuously practiced," says Barshi.

For example, a person can learn to enter the numbers 8675309 on a computer keypad extremely fast with excellent accuracy, and retain the skill for a long time. Ask them to do the same task, only this time using a different number sequence and the same person will be just as slow as another person who never practiced the original task. Meaning, it is the specific sequence of numbers that people remember, not the generalizable skill of entering any number.

Results from this study will not only inform choices about astronaut pre-launch, on-board and follow-on training, but they may apply to training requirements for other professional careers. Currently, high risk industries, such as oil drillers, nuclear power plant operators, medical doctors and aircraft pilots or air traffic controllers, set training requirements based upon industry consensus and not necessarily specific research.

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How to train your astronauts

Star Citizen Sunday – Meet The Vanguard, Space Station Bases, Terra Sneak Peek + More – Video


Star Citizen Sunday - Meet The Vanguard, Space Station Bases, Terra Sneak Peek + More
Keep up with all the news over the past week from CIG #39;s upcoming epic space sim, Star Citizen. This week, The Aegis Vanguard is up for sale, we get 10 great questions answered plus more news...

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Star Citizen Sunday - Meet The Vanguard, Space Station Bases, Terra Sneak Peek + More - Video