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Daily Archives: March 1, 2017
Masters of the waves talk of high seas, thrills & spills – The New Indian Express
Posted: March 1, 2017 at 9:31 pm
MUMBAI: John Donnelly and Kevin Burdock are two of the fastest men on water and hold the P1 Super Stock World Speed Record of 107.69 kmph. But they recall the video that brought them social media fame was that of their crash in June last year at the P1 Superstock powerboat race in Greenock, Scotland. The sea in Scotland can be tricky because there are waves coming from many different directions, says Donnelly, the powerboat teams pilot, in an interview in Mumbai on Tuesday evening ahead of the inaugural Nexa P1 Powerboat, Indian Grand Prix of the Seas.
There were two of us going into the turn. Stuart and Sarah Cureton, who are also here, were in the other boat. I guess one of us misjudged the turn, slammed into each other and they were thrown off the boat. Thats when it hits home that it can be a very dangerous place to be in, chips in his navigator Burdock, who also owns their racing boat. The most difficult thing was that we didnt know they were okay. The rescue teams were on it straightaway, and they took them away. We were sinking in our boat and had to call for help. Our boat was really badly damaged but we fixed it overnight, went out again the next day and won the following race.
Theres always that element of risk, like in all motorsport, says Donnelly. Thats the adventure. Even after the accident, we couldnt just quit. It helped that both the Englishmen having engineering backgrounds. While Donnelly was a marine engineer and used to work for Honda boat racing teams, Burdock is an F1 transmission engineer.
I am the guy in the background who secretly wants to be in the F1 car, quips Burdock, who is also a not-so-secret James Bond fan and has designed his own range of 007 memorabilia. The 49-year-old Burdock took to the sport in 2015 mainly because it was more democratic and didnt need the big bucks of motor-racing in a car.
Donnelly and Budrock are the glamour team, in tennis parlance, the top seeds, for the Nexa P1 Powerboat, Indian Grand Prix of the Seas, which will take place on Marine Drive on the coming weekend. Though their engineering background helps them tinker with the boat, within rules obviously, the unique thing about the P1 series is that the panther boats, which will be used for this weekends race, and all the same and powered by the 250HP BRP Evinrude engine. We got at average speeds of 70 mph, says Burdock. Some people might say thats not a lot, but on the water, its like driving at more than 100 mph, on a rocky road, in the rain without a windshield! All this while racing other roaring boats and trying to avoid them.
deeptipatwardhan@newindianexpress.com
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Masters of the waves talk of high seas, thrills & spills - The New Indian Express
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Family School rebuts report on lack of diversity – Coastal View News
Posted: at 9:29 pm
Carpinteria Family School representatives at the Feb. 28 Carpinteria Unified School District Board of Education meeting rebutted points in a report released last fall that affirmed the school has become an enclave of relative whiteness and wealthiness within the school district. Fashioned in the schools trademark tone of compassionate communication, CFS defended its position in the district as a progressive alternative to mainstream public education while detailing many steps it has taken to overcome its inclusivity problem.
The Family School is just one of many important solutions to education in Carpinteria. We (educate) through compassionate communication, creativity, local and global service projects, high level parental involvement, environmental awareness, student leadership and a prosperous, loving community thats open to all, said CFS second- and third-grade teacher Jan Silk.
Following complaints levied against the school district last spring, a third party investigation was conducted, and a report concluded that the district needed to correct the social and ethnic divide between CFS and Canalino School, which share the same campus. Some of the friction between the two schools is rooted in shared resources like the library and cafeteria and who pays for them.
The discussion on race in schools created ill will on the campus. Silk cited an instance of CFS being referred to as Caucasian Family School as being particularly hurtful, and more so to the many ethnically diverse families at CFS. Silk said representatives of the school all wished to put the report behind them and move forward in a way that addresses concerns but also continues to respect the schools important place within CUSD, much in the same way the new Dual Language Immersion program is an attractive alternative for many families.
Acting Superintendent Jamie Persoon, who is also Canalino School principal and acting CFS principal, described the many steps that have been taken since the report to attempt to make the CFS population reflect the CUSD population. The report did not find any intentional effort to create a less diverse school population at CFS, but the responsibility fell to the school and school district to correct the issue through outreach and greater collaboration between Canalino and CFS in regard to shared resources and a more united campus culture. It is illegal for school districts to simply shuffle students between schools to engineer equally diverse populations.
Persoon gave the example of shared student assemblies to encourage integration between the schools and a cost-sharing system of billing CFS 12 percent for shared resources, since CFS comprises 12 percent of the campus population.
Efforts to increase diversity starting next school year include prioritizing entry to CFS for students who qualify for free or reduced lunch. Each year CFS enrolls 12 new kindergartners through a lottery, and in the past, siblings of CFS students were given priority entrance before the lottery, which left significantly fewer spots available in the lottery. The school district eliminated the sibling policy and will give spaces to students qualifying for free or reduced lunch priority placement in the school before a lottery would be used to fill any remaining spaces.
In 2015-2016, the lottery for CFS included 20 white children, two Hispanics and one English learner.
Co-president of Parents for CFS Caroline Haines took issue with the way the investigation was conducted. She said nobody from CFS was interviewed as part of the investigation other than former principal Leslie Gravitz, who had been released by the school district before the investigation. She also contested the part of the report that said CFS has fewer students in its classrooms than other elementary schools in the district, stating that in fact much of the time there are more students in CFS classrooms than the average.
The differences in demographics between school populations should not be seen as intentional or desirable. As a community we wholeheartedly believe that diversity is a value to our community, Haines said.
CFS will join with other district elementary schools on March 2 at a bilingual transitional kindergarten and kindergarten information night in order to present all schools equally. All sides acknowledged through the process of the complaint and report that CFS could be more proactive in informing spanish speaking and lower income families about the school and the process of enrollment. The school was founded on principles high parent involvement and had suggested it had policies of $500 annual contributions per student and mandatory classroom time in previous materials, but that language has since been eliminated, a move that could persuade families of lower socioeconomic status to feel welcomed.
The CFS and Canalino communities are significantly divided, with the racial and socioeconomic disparity between the schools creating an unsustainable us versus them mentality that models segregation for the students, stated the report written by lawyer Felicita Torres released last fall.
Supe search on track for April 8, 9 interviews
About six candidates for the vacant superintendent position will be interviewed on April 8 and 9. Recruiters hired by the district to conduct the search said applications have been coming in and the window is open through mid March. At that point, they will take a week to scoop the creme de la creme from the top of the stack and invite those candidates for in person interviews. The recruiters held multiple community meetings to gather public feedback about the school district and what qualities will be most attractive in a superintendent to lead the local public schools.
Editors note: The author of this article has a child at Carpinteria Family School.
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Forget SpaceX: 10 companies that will change space travel in 2017 & 2018 – Geektime
Posted: at 9:28 pm
The first Axiom Module (lower right, with body-mounted solar panels) to join the International Space Station (rendering by Axiom).
SpaceXs announcement that they will launch two tourists on a trip around the moon has captured imaginations with renewed speculation about the future of space travel and accessibility to the beyond. We are excited to announce that SpaceX has been approached to fly two private citizens on a trip around the moon late next year. []
SpaceXs announcement that they will launch two tourists on a trip around the moon has captured imaginations with renewed speculation about the future of space travel and accessibility to the beyond.
We are excited to announce that SpaceX has been approached to fly two private citizens on a trip around the moon late next year. They have already paid a significant deposit to do a moon mission, Musk wrote in their announcement. Like the Apollo astronauts before them, these individuals will travel into space carrying the hopes and dreams of all humankind, driven by the universal human spirit of exploration.
However, it really is not fair to a number of other companies that are revolutionizing space travel all the same but dont have the substantial resources or notoriety of Elon Musks gargantuan company. Musks celebrity status makes his every tweet a news story (not totally unlike, but in many ways extremely unlike, the newest US president). With that sort of figure, it is hard to capture peoples attention if you are running one of SpaceXs pretenders and competitors. The Hawthorne, Cali company not only operates its own mission services using rockets it built itself, but also sells those rockets to other launch providers.
SpaceX is playing with an optimistic clock in terms of travel to Mars. Whether or not they do make it, and there is no reason to doubt they cant beat the likes of NASA to the Martian surface, there is still a lot of ground to cover to ensure a sustainable space industry for the United States and beyond.
This years Lunar XPRIZE contest sponsored by Google will likely kick off a new era in space-bound venture capital and entrepreneurship as a flock of phoenixes rise from the sands of 2017s moonshots. But plenty of other companies not looking to land rovers on nearby celestial bodies (sometimes more distant ones, or none at all) will also likely benefit from a sector that is overdue for an investment boom, including a growing number of firms building their own rockets with sleeker and more compact designs than the SpaceX Falcon 9.
This is a non-exhaustive list of 10 companies mirroring, challenging, or augmenting the work SpaceX is doing by following through on the next steps to getting humanity into space on a more regular basis:
SpaceILs resdesigned lunar probe, which may make Israel only the 4th country to land a rover on the moon (SpaceIL)
SpaceIL is also worth mentioning here, but not for the same reasons as Moon Express. They are also part of the Google Lunar XPrize contest, but whetheror not they winthey will have enabled a team of some 250 people to get stronger in skill sets that will likely serve as the base of an entirely new ecosystem for space-faring technology. Being located in Israel and with enormous notoriety, its a foregone conclusion that simply being associated with this team will pay dividends for SpaceIL veterans.
They will also have major connections to the local startup ecosystems most influential leaders and top investors, eager to underwrite any entrepreneurship coming from the team. Expect that the end of the decade will see as many if not more space ventures come from Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and Haifa as you will see from San Mateo, Palo Alto, and Menlo Park.
SpaceIL shows off their latest and greatest model for their lunar lander, scheduled to go up in 2017 with SpaceX (image: Geektime/Gedalyah Reback)
With those kinds of networks in hand and numerous well-connected government connections the team has made since launching the project, theres a good chance this team will spawn a new sub-sector of the space startup scene: landers and probes. For the foreseeable remainder of 2017, nanosatellites will remain the booming sector for space, but talk of new missions across the solar system in addition to efforts to reach the moon will propel competition in the rover industry.
The first Axiom Module (lower right, with body-mounted solar panels) to join the International Space Station (rendering by Axiom).
Founded by CEO and President Michael T. Suffredini, former manager of the International Space Station for 10 years and instrumental in the ISSs development, Axiom is developing thefirst private version of an ISS, which will become extremely important when the ISS is retired in the next few years.
Axioms plan is to attach the basis of the new station to the old ISS, making it independent when the original station is decommissioned. Once operating, the station will host 60-day-long astronautical missions, 7-to-10-day space tourist trips, on-orbit research and manufacturing (microgravity is ideal for production of bacteria for example, according to startup SpacePharma), and exploration systems testing with eyes on customers like Moon Express or SpaceX, which are considering plans for manned missions to the surfaces of the Moon and Mars.
Axiom Space concept for private ISS (rendering by Axiom)
It sports a stacked team with BizDev run by space shuttle mission specialist Michael Lopez-Alegria, Intuitive Machines CEO and Deputy Director of NASA Johnson Space Center Stephen Altemus, and Space Angels Network Managing DirectorAmir Blachman running strategic development.
Axioms missions are tentatively scheduled to begin by 2019.
Screenshot of the Space Nation app against a backdrop of an astronaut (courtesy)
Launching a contest to go on a space vacation is the stuff of Total Recall, but the first true iteration of it is coming out of Finland this year. The effort is backed by a consortium of companies that includes the aforementioned Axiom Space. Equal partners include space media company Cohu Experience, new Space and education company Edge of Space, and Finnish education company Fun Academy.
Theyear-plus-long contest to recruit a new astronaut is itself a long-term test of brains, brawn and fortitude that begins with the release of a free-to-download app in the fall of 2017. After several months of open competition with brain games and challenges through the app, 130 semi-finalists will be invited for a two-week intensive course at a yet-to-be-chosen location. After that, 12 finalists will face off in a three-month-long battle to win the worlds first astronautical prize. The trip wont be a vacation, as the winner be he or she a scientist or not will be trained to do experiments aboard the International Space Station. From there, one would presume the world is the winners oyster and a budding number of career opportunities will come their way.
Kalle Vh-Jaakkola, CEO of the Cohu Experience and Space Nation. Photo credit: Courtesy
Back in the 90s I began to wonder, Why arent we on Mars? Why arent we back to the Moon? Cohu Experience Founder and CEOKalle Vh-Jaakkola told Geektime recently. The golden age of startups has spurred his childhood dreams and an opportunity for a yet-to-be-found rookie astronaut. We wouldnt have founded this company and this venture, without this empowerment and all that entrepreneurial movement that anything is possible.
DSI is the only team on this list that is dead set on mining asteroids. Asteroid composition varies for a number of reasons and contain untold quantities of chemical and metallic resources from sulfur to gold. They are planning to reach so-called Near Earth Asteroids (NEAs) before daring to venture further out to the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. The company explains many NEAs are smaller in mass, meaning their gravity will not be an obstacle to reaching the rocks and extracting resources.
Of course like any mining operation there will be a timeline. Probes would have to conduct prospecting, then harvest ore and process it. Thats without the task of returning the extracted material to Earth.Those initial prospecting missions are supposed to start soon with the launch of small probes like the Prospector-X, which will be tested in LEO with the co-sponsorship of the government of Luxembourg. Following what they hope are successful tests, a suped-up probe called Prospector-1 will be deployed to an NEA.
Prospector-X, a joint project with Luxembourg (DSI)
DSI is developing Prospector-1 both for its own asteroid mining ambitions, as well as to bring an extremely low-cost, yet high-performance exploration capability to the market,Grant Bonin, chief engineer at Deep Space Industries, explains on the company website.We hope to enable both existing and new public and private organizations to explore the inner solar system using this affordable platform.
But the most innovative idea here might not be in plans to dig up gold, platinum, or perhaps Rare Earth metals like lithium. They are targeting water-and-ice-rich asteroids first, which they claim will be in abundance among NEAs. The reason is simple: water will be the engine propellant the probes will use, thus initial missions will also save precious mass by refueling via its resource-extraction tests.
Concept of Deep Space Industries asteroid capture plan (DSI)
That plan resolves issues of feasibility. If their probes can successfully collect a resource and deploy it on the same trip, that would lend credence to ideas of using similar concepts with liquid methane lakes on the surface of Saturns moon Titan or processing metals on site to construct replacement pieces for on-board computer hardware. Its a robotic and engineering challenge that could pay bigger dividends for DSI than even the resources themselves.
Bigelow Aerospace is one of the companies making strides building portable habitats for astronauts. Their first model, BEAM, was successfully attached to the International Space Station in spring 2016. The inflatable room was put together in seven hours by NASA astronaut Jeff Williams. At 13 feet long and 10.5 feet wide (4 x 3.2 meters), its definitely small, but this is just the companys first deployment since receiving a $17.8 million contract from NASA back in 2013 to design and deploy an inflatable habitat.
It sounds sort of like popcorn in a frying pan starts up, Williams said at the time, reflecting the immediate effect pumped air had in the vacuum of space when BEAM was deployed.The goal is ultimately to extend these sorts of dwellings to locations beyond the ISS with the surfaces of the Moon and Mars first and foremost in the minds of the companys executives and engineers.
Expandable habitats significantly decrease the amount of transport volume for future space missions, said NASAs BEAM project manager, Rajib Dasgupta, said last year. These expandables take up less room on a rocket, but once set up, provide greater volume for living and working. After thorough testing, we believe crews traveling to the Moon, Mars, asteroids or other destinations could use them as habitable structures or as labs or work areas.
Creating a puncture-proof habitat would be critical for emergencies. Presumably, a long-term surface habitat would not be made only of inflatables, but these would serve astronauts in the field exploring Mars away from home base or as temporary fixes for fully-fledged and more complex astronaut homes in the future.
Founded by Paul G. Allen in 2011, Vulcans subsidiary Stratolaunch Systems has been pushing for a more flexible and more cost-effective model for orbital launches that relies on using specially-designed high-atmospheric planes to deploy small payloads into low-Earth orbit (LEO). Deploying payloads by plane in theory will grant a lot of flexibility in terms of launch location and launch windows.
Without getting specific about the materials used to design their plane, Vulcan has commissioned Scaled Composites to build it. It will be 238 feet long and have a wing span of 385 feet, propelled by 6X Pratt & Whitney PW4056 engines with a maximum takeoff weight of 1.3 million pounds.
The stratolaunch plane design (Vulcan Aerospace)
They also reached a multi-year agreement in October 2016 with public aerospace and defense company Orbital ATK to use the latters Pegasus XL air-launch vehicles attached to Vulcans space-ward planes.
Orbital ATK President Scott Lehrsaid at the time, The combination of our extensive air-launch experience and the Stratolaunch aircraft has the potential to provide innovative and cost-effective options for commercial launch customers.
Vulcan stratospheric launches concept (Vulcan)
Their investment arm Vulcan Capital also took part in a $20 million Series B funding round for Spaceflight Industries back in March 2015.
While their concept is not new, it remains more logistically familiar than using rockets. Rocket reusability is also a novel and still unperfected concept. The durability and multi-usability of planes makes this an attractive option.
Named after the Greek goddess of pain, Odyne is trying to make it cheaper to get nanosatellites into space by continuously working on more efficient rockets for smaller amounts of cargo. They certainly have the minds to meet needs for mettle. The company was founded by mechanical engineer and systems architect Eric Ward of MIT, who is also a co-founder of the MIT New Space Age Conference.
He will work in tandem with embedded systems expert and entrepreneur Andrew Greenberg, whose other companies have dealt with medical devices. Hes also the founder of the Portland State Aerospace Society (PSAS), whose acronym must be an allusion to the pizzazz the two hope to bring to the industrial space ecosystem.
Space is Hard, but we wont make it harder. We consider ourselves Rocket Engineers not Rocket Scientists, Odynes website explains. Humans have been launching liquid-fueled rockets for almost a century, and the foundational science has already been done. We combine this science and knowledge into simple, effective and reliable rockets, to launch micro- and nano-satellites to orbit.
Theyre advised by Accion Systems Co-Founder and CEO Natalya Brikner as well as MIT School of Management lecturer Shari Loessberg.
The more the merrier when it comes to new rocket concepts. The talent behind this project is what gets it on the list, as there has been no proof of concept or even a design provided yet by Odyne. Ward is a prime example of the new kind of entrepreneur hitting the skies, as seen in this feature by Fast Company.
An American-Kiwi company, Rocket Labis the brainchild of New Zealander Peter Beck and just recently sent its Electron rocket for testing in February 2017 to its own launching station. Theyve developed their own engine, the4,600lbf (pound force inch), turbo-pumped LOX/RP-1 Rutherford. Their first rocket, dubbed somewhat lazily Its a Test, should get the all-clear to go to space later in 2017.
Its an important milestone for our team and for the space industry, Beck said about the final pre-launch testing. In the past, its been countries that go to space, not companies. Through the innovative use of new technologies our team has created a launch vehicle designed for manufacture at scale. Our ultimate goal is to change our ability to access space.
Theyve raised an undisclosed amount of investments from Bessemer Venture Partners, K1W1, Khosla Ventures and even Lockheed Martin. Where those investors are excited is the service of selling the rockets themselves, which were projected back in 2015 to have an eventual price tag of a mere $4.9 million each. Thats about a tenth the price of a SpaceX Falcon 9. Their limit comes in the lighter payload.
You can infer that they have raised in the tens of millions of dollars at least, since New Zealands government will provide up to $5 million in matching investments for R&D with hi-tech businesses through theCallaghan Innovation Growth Grants program that Rocket Lab benefited from in 2014.
Ixion concept attached to the ISS (bottom) (image via Ixion Initiative)
Not to be confused with the design-similar Axiom, Ixion is another joint effort making the list and yet another new venture that has already secured a deal with NASA. Backed by NanoRacks, Space SystemsLoral (SSL) and the United Launch Alliance, Ixion will endeavor to figure out the best way to convert the upper stages of rockets into long-term habitats. That would circumvent the issue of throwing a habitat into a cargo hold or building one from scratch using 3D-printing-like machines on the surface of the Moon or Mars.
Ixion will enter theNext Space Technologies for Exploration Partnerships-2 (NextSTEP-2) program and start by testing their projects in LEO. They will try to demonstrate its proof of concept by converting a Centaur rockets upper stage, then attaching it to the International Space Station. Like Bigelow, they have their eyes set on the surfaces of not-so-distant moons and the rest of the Suns planets.
Our plan is to dramatically lower the proposed costs for habitats to allow for the largest customer base, both commercial and government, says NanoRacks CEOJeffrey Manber. With Loral and NanoRacks working together, we have the knowledge base to assure a solid commercial use of tomorrows habitats via re-purposed ULA Centaur platforms.
The ISS will support three of the companies on this list in the near future, illustrating how important Axioms private space station project will be for future habitability tests and support. Expect more companies to enter that fray eventually as it becomes one the one hand more feasible to build alternative private space stations and more experts from agencies like NASA with ISS experience enter the business world.
a href=http://www.fireflyspace.com>Firefly wants to make space launches ubiquitous, and they see that happening through their proprietary light rocket design. Theyre looking to capitalize on projected, meteoric growth in the small satellites industry that has seen companies like Planet launch massive (88-strong) constellations as recently as February 2017. That launch included other projects though from small nanosat companies and even universities. With demand expected to grow and payloads regularly hosting more than 100 nanosatellites at a time, there will be a race to provide fast and efficient service. This rocket is thin. Stage 1 (the bottom part) is only 6 feet in diameter while Stage 2 (the top part) is 5 feet in diameter.
It can hold a 200 kg payload and uses an aerospike booster, which the company says is more efficient across the range of pressures in rocket flight than traditional bell nozzles.They recently announced $300 million worth of preliminary orders (which they refer to as letters of intent/LOI) from prospective customers that would fill their launch schedule through 2021.
That would include 42 launches, with another 35 launches worth $280 million anticipated between 2022 and 2025.With a NASA deal in hand, expect their first NASA launch to take place in March 2018.
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Forget SpaceX: 10 companies that will change space travel in 2017 & 2018 - Geektime
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Watch an astrophysicist explain how NASA’s next space telescope will help us time-travel through the Universe – The Verge
Posted: at 9:28 pm
In just less than two years, NASA is slated to launch the most powerful space telescope thats ever been built. Its the James Webb Space Telescope, of JWST, and its being hailed as the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope that is currently in orbit around Earth. Theres a key difference, though, between the spacecraft. Whereas Hubble sees the Universe in mostly visible light, JWST will observe the cosmos in the infrared a type of light that cant be seen but is associated with heat emission. The JWST will capture this kind of light using a segmented mirror more than 20 feet across, allowing the observatory to look deeper into the Universe, and further back in time, than ever before.
At the end of last year, NASA celebrated the completion of the optics portion of the JSWT
At the end of last year, NASA celebrated the completion of the optics portion of the JSWT the mirror and instruments the telescope will use to study the most distant galaxies and star systems. Now, the space agency is putting the JWST through a series of tests to make sure the spacecraft will be able to handle its launch into space on a European Ariane 5 rocket in October 2018.
As NASA gets the JWST ready for space travel, one of the agencys astrophysicists, Amber Straughn, will give an update on the telescopes progress. Straughn, the associate director of the astrophysics science division at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center, studies the Universes most puzzling phenomena from supermassive black holes to the evolution of galaxies. Tonight, during a lecture at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, she will talk about the development of JWST and what the completed spacecraft will teach us about the Universe.
The lecture begins at 7PM ET. People can participate in the conversation on Twitter by tweeting at Perimeter or using the hashtag #piLIVE.
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What You Need to Know About Elon Musk’s Plan to Fly People to the Moon – Singularity Hub
Posted: at 9:28 pm
What
On February 27, Elon Musks SpaceX announced plans to fly two non-astronauts, or private citizens, on a loop around the moon.
No one except Elon Musk and the two moon-explorers-to-be know who they are yet. SpaceX has stated only that the individuals approached the company asking to be flown around the moon (as opposed to the company recruiting them), that theyre not linked to Hollywood in any way, and that theyll be paying SpaceX a large sum for the journey.
Since Apollo 8, the first voyage to the moon in 1968, only 24 people have flown to the moon, and 12 have walked on its surface. Theyve all been American, and theyve all been men. If either of the moon mission passengers are female, SpaceX will make history in more than one way.
Interestinglyand terrifyinglyMusk said the mission will be completed on autopilot, without a trained astronaut or technician on board. The two passengers will be on their own.
Passengers will ride in SpaceXs Dragon 2 capsule, powered by itsFalcon Heavy rocket.
At 230 feet high, 40 feet wide, and more than five million pounds of thrust at liftoff, the company claims Falcon Heavy will be the most powerful operational rocket in the world by a factor of two.
Its important to note, though, that the rocket hasnt been tested yetthats scheduled to happen this summer.
Dragon 2 is similar to the Dragon capsule SpaceX currently uses to deliver cargo to and from the International Space Station (ISS).
The mission will need a license from the Federal Aviation Administration.
The Falcon Heavy will launch from the Kennedy Space Center near Cape Canaveral, Florida.
More specifically, it will take off from launch pad 39A, which was used by the Apollo program for its lunar missions in the late 60s and early 70s.
The flights estimated distance is 300,000-400,000 miles into space, which would put humans farther from Earth than ever before.
SpaceX is aiming for the mission to take place as soon as late 2018. But this timeline is highly ambitious. As noted above, Falcon Heavy has yet to be tested. Anything short of a seamless performance would likely push the moon mission back by months, if not years.
Similarly, the crew version of Dragon is scheduled to make its first voyage at the end of this year, in automatic mode and without any passengers on board. Pending success of that trip, a manned flight would travel to the ISS in the second quarter of 2018.
Even if these tests are successful, it would seem more time would be needed to prepare both rocket and capsule for the much-longer moon orbit.
Though exact figures havent been disclosed, Musk called the cost comparable to that of sending astronauts to the International Space Station. That number was recently estimated to be over $70 million per person, going up to $81 million by 2018. The cost went up dramatically after NASA retired its own fleet in 2011 and began contracting with private companies and the Russian space agency to send people and cargo to and from the ISS.
In 2001, American multimillionaire Dennis Tito became the worlds first space tourist, booking a trip on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft to the ISS for an estimated price tag of $20 million. Since then, six more wealthy individuals have gone to space because, well, they wanted to, and they could.
Besides being a high-profile test of its ability to get beyond Earth orbit, SpaceX's moon mission could serve as a stepping stone for future Mars missions. The unmanned Red Dragon Mars mission also plans to use a Falcon Heavy rocket and Dragon 2 capsule.
Theres a lot of speculation that the SpaceX announcement will set off the first public/private space race, pitting private companies against NASA. But SpaceX stated that NASA has encouraged private missions, as through them long-term costs to the government decline and more flight reliability history is gained, benefiting both government and private missions." NASAs Commercial Crew Program funded Dragon 2s development.
However, NASA did announce that it will be looking to put non-astronauts on its Space Launch System rocket, and the associated crew capsule, Orion.
If a public/private space race does ensue, NASA has decades of experience under its belt. But private companies like SpaceX have the advantage of less oversight, and manufacturing thats not politically-driven.
Space race or no space race, forget formerly exotic-seeming places like Bali or Fijiit seems the moon is set to become mankinds coveted tourist destination of the future.
Banner Image Credit: SpaceX
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Singularity University opening organisation in Denmark The Post – The Copenhagen Post – Danish news in english
Posted: at 9:28 pm
The renowned Silicon Valley-based think-tank Singularity University has announced plans to establish a new innovation hub in Copenhagen.
The hub will be located at a 5,000 sqm space in Copenhagen Science City and will aim to provide a lift to Danish digitalisation, innovation and entrepreneurship.
When I visited Silicon Valley last week, Singularity University was the first item on my agenda and with good reason, said the foreign minister, Anders Samuelsen.
SU bridges the gap between global challenges and technological solutions, which is important tous if we want to keep one step ahead of the future.
READ MORE: Denmark stepping up tech diplomacy in Silicon Valley
CPH nails it The new innovation hub will become just the second to be established by Singularity University outside its headquarters in Silicon Valley. According to Samuelsen, this underlines Denmarks position as an elite location for innovation and digitalisation.
SingularityU Denmark, as the hub will be called, will offer a number of education and innovation courses that combine latest trends within exponential technology with future business arenas.
According to Rob Nail, the global head of Singularity University, the choice of Denmark was not a coincidence.
Denmark is a recognised global leader in many areas of technology, including green tech, biotech, pharmaceutical sciences, telecommunications, ITand design. We all know the successes born in Denmark: LEGO, Universal Robots and Skype to name just a few, said Nail.
Our intent with the new business venture is to build on these achievements and create new opportunities. I was told that LEGO is short for leg godt, and SU wants to play well in Denmark.
Read more about the project here (in English).
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Does Zapping Your Brain Actually Help You Learn Faster? – Singularity Hub
Posted: at 9:28 pm
From time to time, the Singularity Hub editorial team unearths a gem from the archives and wants to share it all over again. It's usually a piece that was popular back then and we think is still relevant now. This is one of those articles. It was originally published March 6, 2016.We hope you enjoy it!
A cognitive neuroscientist and his team at HRL Laboratories in Malibu, California, seem to have achieved the impossible.
According to a press release, the team measured the brain activity patterns of six commercial and military pilots, and then transmitted these patterns into novice subjects as they learned to pilot an airplane in a realistic flight simulator.
If youre picturing people downloading knowledge directly into the brain Matrix-style, sorry to hand you the blue pill its utter nonsense.
Which is a total shame, because the brain-boosting technique used in the study transcranial direct current stimulation, or tDCS, is nothing short of fantastical.
Hook up some wires with a 9-volt battery, and you have a state-of-art thinking cap that activates select regions of the brain of your choosing. By directly tinkering with the brains electrical field no surgery required tDCS has the potential to treat depression, anxiety, chronic pain, OCD and motor symptoms in Parkinsons disease.
A handful of small studies including the HRL Laboratories research also tantalizingly suggest that it could heighten creativity, enhance spatial learning, boost math skills and language acquisition and even trigger lucid dreams sometimes weeks after the initial stimulation.
It seems to give you any kind of benefit you want, says Dr. Flavio Frohlich, a neurobiologist at the University of North Carolina and expert in tDCS-assisted cognition.
Sound too good to be true? Perhaps. Ask its doubters, and the only thing that tDCS is good at is giving people a nasty electrical burn.
Its high-tech brain gain riding the hype cycle train. Herere the facts and the fiction lets see how deep the rabbit hole goes.
The short answer: no one really knows.
The techniques brain-boosting effects were discovered serendipitously. At the turn of the last century, Drs. Walter Paulus and Michael Nitsche at the University of Gttingen in Germany popularized the technique while studying motor learning and working memory. They carefully placed two electrodes over motor regions of the brain, using gel to ensure full contact with the scalp. This generates a weak electrical current about 1 or 2 milliamps, low enough to be powered by a 9-volt battery.
To the teams surprise, participants receiving the stimulation learned faster than those who received only sham stimulation a placebo zap to trick them into thinking they were getting the treatment. Almost all later studies followed this protocol, including the aforementioned flight simulator study.
So whats happening to the brain?
The tDCS current itself is too weak to activate neurons; instead, it changes the ability of neurons to respond to stimuli, such as learning a new task. There are two types of stimulation: anodal stimulation primes neurons to be more excitable and thus more likely to fire, boosting signal; cathodal stimulation makes it harder for neurons to fire, decreasing noise.
In this way, tDCS can modulate the signal-to-noise ratio in a select brain region and tweak information processing. The word tweak here is key. tDCS doesnt transfer meaningful information it only improves the ability of subjects to learn.
At the same time, the current jolts plasticity-related molecules into action in neurons, changing their ability to respond to neurotransmitters.
But it goes even deeper than that. In another study, scientists at the Office of Naval Research found that tDCS in mice strips away certain molecular markers on their DNA. This causes neurons to pump out more BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), a major vitality-boosting protein that promotes synaptic plasticity and the birth of new neurons and nurtures the brain.
These molecular changes could be why tDCS has long-lasting effects that linger for weeks, suggested the authors in their paper.
That said, its currently impossible to precisely target neural networks with tDCS in the way that optogenetics can. The current only flows in superficial layers of the cortex, rarely reaching deeper brain regions such as the hippocampus, a central hub for learning and memory.
And what happens to the rest of the brain during stimulation? Your guess is as good as mine.
Given the uncertainty in how tDCS works, its perhaps not surprising that it doesnt always work.
Several past meta-analyses cast serious doubt on the techs brain-boosting powers. Two such papers, both from the University of Melbourne, found that single-session tDCS had little-to-no reliable effect on executive function, language or memory in healthy young volunteers.
There are also disheartening reports that in some cases, zapping the brain impedes cognition.
Last year, Frohlich and colleagues published a report suggesting stimulation lowers IQ scores. His team measured the IQ of 40 healthy volunteers, then zapped them with either sham or real tDCS for 20 minutes over frontal areas of the brain specifically, the prefrontal cortex involved in flexible thinking and higher reasoning. When retested, people receiving tDCS performed worse than the non-stimulated controls.
Another team found that although tDCS could speed up the learning process associating Egyptian-like symbols with numbers it impaired the volunteers from automatically using this new knowledge in subsequent tests. The authors dubbed their finding the mental cost of cognitive enhancement.
Despite potential perils, optimism for the tech remains sky high.
The promise is so great that tDCS was featured in the prestigious academic journal Nature this week, with scientists warning against overzealous DIY use, already commercially available to biohackers for about $150 a pop.
Stimulating is easy, but doing it right is not, said Frohlich. Commercially available units arent regulated, and it takes at least some training to be able to correctly place the electrodes without injuring the scalp.
And since we still dont understand the long-term effects (not to mention potential side-effects) of tDCS, its far too early to call the technique totally safe.
People may well be damaging their brains, said Frohlich.
For now, the benefits arent worth the risk. As the story continues, however, that could change.
Electrodes get smaller all the time, making it increasingly possible to more precisely modulate brain activity. Although at the moment its hard to imagine targeting only a handful of neural networks using tDCS, its conceivable that next-gen non-invasive brain stimulation could dramatically improve in specificity.
More specific brain stimulation means more specific behavior outcomes.
There are already hints of this possibility: transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), which uses magnetic fields to modulate brain activity, is already used in brain-to-brain communication, where scientists stimulate a receivers brain with EEG waves recorded from an encoder performing simple tasks.
Theres a hell lot of controversy, but preliminary (published) results show that the encoders brain waves contain enough information to cause specific motor responses in the receiver, such as moving his hand in a certain way.
Now imagine an experts brain waves teaching a novice on complicated tasks.
Here, tDCS will prime the novices brain to better encode and retrieve new information. This is, in fact, what the press release mentioned earlier hinted at: that expert pilots brain waves helped newbies master a flight simulator.
Thats not the case the tDCS used in that study was run-of-the-mill steady currents, not fancy EEG recordings. But in a few decades? We probably still wont be able to download knowledge or program learning directly into our brain.
Well just be learning really, really fast.
Images courtesy of Shutterstock.com
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Charlie’s Place II to open in Ascension Parish Spring 2017 – Donaldsonville Chief
Posted: at 9:25 pm
Quality care in a home-like experience for individuals with Alzheimers and dementia-related disorders
Charlies Place II Respite and Activity Center, the first expansion of the Alzheimers Services of the Capital Areas nationally recognized Charlies Place, is scheduled to open in early April 2017. It will be located on Purpera Road in The Arc of East Ascensions building in Gonzales. The person-centered respite care program will begin operations two days per week, six hours per day. CP II will offer a purposeful day out for mild to moderate Alzheimers affected individuals, as well as provide a much-needed break for their caregivers.
A four-time recipient of the Alzheimers Foundation of America Excellence in Dementia Care Distinction, the original Charlies Place, located on North Boulevard in Baton Rouge, has provided socialization and engaging activities to affected individuals, since it opened in 2007. Area physicians at St. Elizabeths Hospital are also very supportive, having repeatedly identified respite care as a serious community need.
With the aging of Americas baby boomers, Alzheimers and Dementia are on the rise, and scientific research is rapidly expanding across the country. In 2015, Scott Wilks, Ph.D., of the LSU School of Social Work, reported that CP Is benefits to both affected individuals and their caregivers were markedly discernible. The Caregiver Control Group not received respite support had a 67% higher stress rate than those using CP Is services. In addition, results also indicated that over 18 months the CP I Care Group showed no significant decline in their cognition and socialization. In other words, high quality, compassionate respite care does make a significant difference.
Charlies Place II already has the help and support of many people, organizations and companies, including the Lamar and Dixon Foundation, which have pledged $100,000 of matching funds to inspire other foundations and donors in support of CP II. However, the best endorsements undoubtedly will come from the people CP II will serve.
Since my mom has been going to Charlies Place or her social club, she has improved in every area," a caregiver who uses CP I for her mother, enthusiastically said. "Shes so excited to go, even though she cannot tell me much about her experience. I think she feels part of society or the world once again.
Alzheimers Services of the Capital Area is a local, non-profit organization which provides education and support programs to those affected by Alzheimers disease or dementia in ten civil parishes surrounding the Greater Baton Rouge area, including Ascension, Assumption, East and West Baton Rouge, East and West Feliciana, Iberville, Livingston, Pointe Coupee and St. Helena. Alzheimers Services is not affiliated with a national organization, which allow all funds raised to support families in the local community.
For more information about CP I and II programs and fees, please visit http://www.alzbr.org or call (225) 334-7494.
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Charlie's Place II to open in Ascension Parish Spring 2017 - Donaldsonville Chief
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Tron 3 Plot Details Revealed: ‘TRON: Ascension’ Would’ve Been A Real World Invasion Movie – /FILM
Posted: at 9:25 pm
/FILM | Tron 3 Plot Details Revealed: 'TRON: Ascension' Would've Been A Real World Invasion Movie /FILM TRON 3, which had the working title TRON: Ascension, isn't dead, according to director Joseph Kosinski (Oblivion). Every once in a while somebody involved in TRON 3 says never say never, but two years ago was when Disney pulled the plug on the project. Tron 3 Will Be Called Tron Ascension and It's Really Happening Here's What Tron 3 Was Going To Be (and May Still Be) About Tron 3 May Still Happen, New Invasion Plot Details Revealed |
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Tron 3 Plot Details Revealed: 'TRON: Ascension' Would've Been A Real World Invasion Movie - /FILM
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Softbank CEO: The Singularity Will Happen by 2047 – Futurism
Posted: at 9:24 pm
Sons Predictions
The CEO of Japanese telecommunications giant and internet multinational Softbank is at it again. Masayoshi Son has been consistent with his predictions as to when the technological singularity will occur. This time, Son predicted that the dawn of machines surpassing human intelligence is bound to occur by 2047 during a keynote address at the ongoing Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Son famously made the same prediction at the 2016 ARM TechCon, when he revealed that Softbank is looking to make the singularity happen.
One of the chips in our shoes in the next 30 years will be smarter than our brain. We will be less than our shoes. And we are stepping on them, Son said during his MWC address. In fact, he expects that a single computer chip will have an IQ equivalent to 10,000 by that point in time. Thats far beyond what the most intelligent person in the world has (roughly 200). What should we call it? he asked. Superintelligence. That is an intelligence beyond peoples imagination [no matter] how smart they are. But in 30 years, I believe this is going to become a reality.
Sound like every single human-vs-machine sci-fi flick youve seen? Son doesnt quite think so.
Instead of conflict, he sees a potential for humans to partner with artificial intelligence (AI), echoing the commentsElon Musk madein Dubai last month.. I think this superintelligence is going to be our partner, said Softbanks CEO. If we misuse it, its a risk. If we use it in good spirits, it will be our partner for a better life.
Son isnt alone in expecting the singularity around 2047 Google Engineering director and futurist Ray Kurzweil shares this general prediction. As for his predicted machine IQ, Son arrived at that figure by comparing the number of neurons in the human brain to the number of transistors in a computer chip. Both, he asserts, are binary systems that work by turning on and off.
By 2018, Son thinks that the number of transistors in a chip will surpass the number of neurons in the brain, which isnt unlikely considering recent developments in microchip technology overtaking Moores Law. Its worth pointing out, however, that Son put the number of neurons in the brain at 30 billion, which is way below the 86 billion estimatemade by many.
That doesnt matter, Son said. The point is that mankind, for the last 2,000 years 4,000 years has had the same number of neurons in our brain. We havent improved the hardware in our brain, he explained. But [the computer chip], in the next 30 years, is going to be one million times more. If you have a million times more binary systems, I think they will be smarter than us.
Will these super intelligent machines trample over humankind? We dont know. But Son is convinced that, given our abundance of smart devices, which include even our cars, and the growth of the internet of things (IoT), the impact of super intelligent machines will be felt by humankind.
If this superintelligence goes into moving robots, the world, our lifestyle, dramatically changes, said Son. We can expect all kinds of robots. Flying, swimming, big, micro, run, two legs, four legs, 100 legs.
And we have 30 years to prepare for them all.
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