Daily Archives: May 1, 2021

GOP worries fiscal conservatism losing its rallying cry | TheHill – The Hill

Posted: May 1, 2021 at 5:40 am

Republicans say fiscal conservatism simply isnt the GOP rallying cry it used to be, and thats making it much harder to counter President BidenJoe BidenAmericans for Prosperity launches campaign targeting six Democrats to keep filibuster Washington's split with Turkey widens but it is up to Turkey to heal the rift Incomes, consumer spending soared in March as stimulus bill boosted recovering economy MOREs push for trillions of dollars in new government spending.

Instead, culture war issues like immigration, religious freedom, LGBTQ rights, Big Tech and the Black Lives Matter movement are taking center stage in conservative politics.

The initial shift in Republican political priorities away from belt-tightening coincided with the demise of the Tea Party, the dominant force in the 2010 midterm elections, and the rise of now-former President TrumpDonald TrumpWashington's split with Turkey widens but it is up to Turkey to heal the rift Tomorrow's special election in Texas is the Democrats' best House hope in 2021 Giuliani to Tucker Carlson: 'No justification' for FBI raid MORE, who presided over an $8 trillion increase in the national debt.

Now, Republicans are having a tough time generating the same outrage over Bidens multitrillion-dollar spending agenda as they did over former President Obamas signature initiatives: the American Relief and Reinvestment Act and the Affordable Care Act, which cost far less than what Biden is proposing on infrastructure.

Senate Republican Whip John ThuneJohn Randolph ThuneTrump drama divides GOP, muddling message Schumer warns Democrats willing to go it alone on infrastructure Pandemic casts shadow over Biden's first address to Congress MORE (S.D.) said unfortunately fiscal concerns are probably not as important to the GOP base as 10 years ago and that Trump helped transform the partys priorities.

It wasnt something that was an important issue for President Trump, and so many of our base voters align themselves with President Trump. Its almost like now debt, deficits, spending become abstract issues that a lot of folks arent paying attention to and should be, he said.

There was a political evolution, Thune said, and the fiscal conservatism that was a core tenet of the Tea Party got displaced ... by the more populist elements of the Republican Party.

He went on to say that while Trump was able to energize voters by hitting on hot-button cultural topics, such as immigration and border security, its now time for the GOP to get back to its traditional stance on fiscal issues.

Im frankly very concerned about the level of spending and debt, and I think Republicans have got to be the adults in the room and exercise the fiscal responsibility that seems to have been absent, lacking the last several years, Thune said.

Sen. Lisa MurkowskiLisa Ann MurkowskiTrump drama divides GOP, muddling message Moderate Republicans leery of Biden's renewed call for unity Biden makes case for sweeping change MORE (R-Alaska), a central player in the Senate immigration negotiations, said the party is kind of different compared to the early years of the Obama administration.

Tea Party fiscal conservatism is now hard to find, she said, adding that the party base is more strongly conservative on some of the social issues.

Who is the party of fiscal restraint anymore? she asked.

Former Speaker John BoehnerJohn Andrew BoehnerPress: John Boehner: good author, bad leader Juan Williams: A breakthrough on immigration? GOP worries fiscal conservatism losing its rallying cry MORE (R-Ohio) criticized House conservatives in his new book, On the House: A Washington Memoir, for abandoning their Tea Party principles during Trumps four years in office.

None of these guys said anything when the Trump administration added $1 trillion to the federal budget deficit by the end of 2019 before a single dime was spent on COVID-19 relief, he wrote.

They were rubber stamps for it in Congress. Many of them who raised huge stinks about [the Troubled Asset Relief Program] were only too happy to let Trump bail out farmers hurt by his trade war with China, he added, referring to the $700 billion measure that Congress passed in October of 2008 to prop up the nations financial system.

The shift in political priorities was even more apparent last month when the House Republican conference voted by secret ballot to lift the ban on earmarks it had enacted in March of 2010, when the Tea Party was on the rise.

The Senate last week voted to keep a symbolic earmark ban in place with the understanding the GOP conference rule would not be binding and members would be free to request earmarks for their home states.

Heres the sad reality: Almost nobody in Washington, Republican or Democrat, cares much about the debt, but lots of grandstanders care a lot about who racks up that debt, said Sen. Ben SasseBen SasseGOP worries fiscal conservatism losing its rallying cry Hillicon Valley: Facebook, Twitter, YouTube execs to testify at Senate hearing on algorithms | Five big players to watch in Big Tech's antitrust fight Senators introduce legislation to protect critical infrastructure against attack MORE (R-Neb.).

Most folks are OK with deficits just as long as its their party that gets the short-term political advantage of claiming to be saviors shoveling cash. I dont care if youre a Republican or a Democrat, the math is the math, he added.

Sasse brought a chart to a Republican conference meeting Wednesday, during which he and his colleagues discussed allowing earmarks to return, showing the ratio of public debt to gross domestic product (GDP) now stands at nearly 100 percent and is due to rise to 114 percent by 2030.

That is projected to exceed the record debt-to-GDP ratio set in 1946 after World War II.

The national debt stood at $19.9 trillion when Trump took office in 2017 and hit $28 trillion last month.

Republicans are trying to revive fiscal concerns as they push back against Bidens $2.3 trillion infrastructure proposal but are having trouble gaining traction.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellHarris, senators work behind scenes on jobs package Trump drama divides GOP, muddling message Cheney on fist bump with Biden: 'We're not sworn enemies. We're Americans' MORE (R-Ky.) this past week touted a $568 billion Republican-proposed infrastructure plan as a more modest alternative to Bidens and warned of the mounting debt.

Its one thing to run up the national debt when you have a hundred-year pandemic but just to keep routinely adding trillions of dollars to the national debt I think is ill-advised for the future of the country, he said last week.

Republicans want to pay for their plan by repurposing money sent out to state and local governments in Bidens $1.9 trillion pandemic relief plan, setting user fees and tapping the Highway Trust Fund.

Yet polls have shown strong support for Bidens plans to spend trillions of dollars to turbocharge the economy, a course he settled on after Democrats concluded that the $787 billion stimulus package passed in the early months of Obamas first term did not do enough to get the economy back on track after the Great Recession.

Senior White House adviser Anita Dunn last month circulated a Navigator Research poll showing that 59 percent of Americans support Bidens infrastructure agenda and that 83 percent support his desire to expand access to child care and investments in clean energy infrastructure, which are not highlighted in the alternative GOP proposal.

A Politico-Morning Consult poll from this month showed strong support among Republicans, Democrats and independents for Bidens infrastructure spending priorities, and 65 percent of voters were on board with raising the corporate tax rate to help pay for them. The survey even found that 42 percent of Republicans favored raising taxes on corporations.

Steven S. Smith, a professor of political science at Washington University in St. Louis, said that Republican warnings of 10 and 12 years ago that Obamas agenda would fuel inflation never panned out, undercutting the potency of fiscal conservatism as a political message.

The Republican argument of 2009 that this massive increase in federal spending is going to cause a disastrous inflation, it simply isnt an argument that holds water with most economists or the general public, he said. Thats important context.

We never experienced much inflation, still arent experiencing much inflation and yet have another economic downturn with massive unemployment and underemployment. And I think the public buys the argument the government has an essential role in recovery, he added.

The lack of staunch opposition among Republican voters to Bidens economic agenda makes it trickier for Senate Republicans to oppose, especially when winning back the majority means securing victories in purple states like Georgia, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Republicans as a whole from lawmakers in Washington to mainstream GOP voters and conservative activists were much more unified against Obamas health care agenda in 2009 than they are against Bidens spending plans.

Sen. Chris MurphyChristopher (Chris) Scott MurphyDemocrats face big headaches on Biden's T spending plan Senate Democrats push Biden over raising refugee cap GOP worries fiscal conservatism losing its rallying cry MORE (D-Conn.) said the fact that GOP senators are now spending serious time putting serious proposals is a good sign, praising their $568 billion infrastructure offer as meaningful.

Republicans are not spending their time eviscerating the infrastructure bill like they did the Affordable Care Act. Theyre spending their time explaining how they would do it differently, and thats constructive, he said, noting the differences between now and 12 years ago.

Scott Wong contributed.

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Can worsening economies and increasing repression herald a new Arab Spring? – Open Democracy

Posted: at 5:39 am

The World Bank report says that the pandemic has disproportionately affected poorer householders who are more likely to be self-employed or work in the informal sector, as these two areas have been most affected by the pandemic.

Just over one year since most of the world entered lockdown due to the pandemic, the overall situation is no better for many countries than it was at the end of 2020. In fact, it appears that more difficult times are yet to come.

All of this comes into play in the absence of any far-reaching economic, social, fiscal and institutional reforms. This absence, including the need to fight corruption or respect human rights, can only exacerbate political and social conflicts. In the case of North Africa, one result we have observed in our research has been a strong increase in migratory flows.

In Tunisia, this also shows up in the numerous and increasingly violent protests that the country has been witnessing since the end of last year and the start of this year, which is reminiscent of the beginning of the revolution in December 2010.

According to Amnesty International, Moroccan authorities used the pandemic to pass restrictive legislation and continue to crack down on freedom of expression by targeting journalists, activists and individuals who are critical of the state.

As for Egypt, the military regime continues to grow its hold over the country, preventing any possibility of dissent, let alone one that would resemble the mass protests that erupted in January 2011.

We may be unlikely to witness another Arab Spring in the very near future, but worsening economic conditions, entrenched corruption and an increasing crackdown on freedom of expression could prove to be the recipe for a future one.

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Breaking News – discovery+ Documents Backyard Engineers Pursuing Their Dreams of Space Flight in All-New Limited Series "Homemade…

Posted: at 5:38 am

DISCOVERY+ DOCUMENTS BACKYARD ENGINEERS PURSUING THEIR DREAMS OF SPACE FLIGHT IN ALL-NEW LIMITED SERIES "HOMEMADE ASTRONAUTS"

'Homemade Astronauts' to Stream Thursday, May 13, on discovery+

(LOS ANGELES) - Although we've been living in the space age for over half a century, very few people have experienced space for themselves. For some, space travel is the ultimate mission - exploring our universe beyond the Earth's atmosphere to discover the unknown. HOMEMADE ASTRONAUTS streaming Thursday, May 13, on discovery+, will document three self-financed teams who dream of becoming some of the first private citizens to launch themselves into space.

Each year, civilians from across the country and around the world set out on their own backyard space race - using nothing but grit, determination and self-taught skills to create their own home-built rockets and spacesuits. HOMEMADE ASTRONAUTS follows the journey of three groups of dreamers who pave their own paths, each with a different approach to space travel.

The four-episode series, filmed over the course of two and a half years, documents the rarely seen world of home-made space travelers and the extreme lengths these teams take to reach their goals.

These pursuits of big dreams come with big risks. And no one took bigger risks or had bigger dreams than lifelong daredevil Mike "Mad Mike" Hughes. He and his build partner Waldo Stakes set out with the ultimate goal of propelling Mike 62 miles above the earth, all the way to the Karman line, the border between Earth's atmosphere and outer space. Their plan is to raise enough money to build a "Rockoon" - part rocket, part balloon - as a cost-effective way to make the journey.

Cameras document their progress as Mike first makes three bold attempts to reach up to one mile above the earth in a steam-powered rocket. His goal: to garner publicity and fundraising for his rockoon. In March 2018, Mike launched himself nearly 1,875 feet into the air in the Mojave Desert. On the heels of this successful launch and landing, Mike tweaked his design and aimed for a full mile above ground in February of 2020.

In taking this big step towards his ultimate dream of reaching 62 miles above the earth, Mike met a tragic end when his launch did not go as planned. Sending shockwaves throughout the rocket-building community and all who knew and loved him, Mike's friends and supporters gathered in July of 2020 in tribute to the man who pursued his dream, and paid the ultimate price.

Separately, in Minnesota, the real-life "Rocketman," Ky Michaelson, is the first civilian to build and launch an unmanned rocket into space. He's working together with his son, Buddy, and entrepreneur Kurt Anderson - "The Rocketboys" - to take his skills to new heights. Ky hopes to become the first amateur to build and launch a fuel-powered, manned space rocket. Along the way, Ky and the Rocketboys build a rocket sled, in which Kurt attempts to break the land/ice speed world record.

Finally, in Oregon, anthropology professor Cameron Smith takes matters into his own hands to pursue his dream of space flight, after finding out years ago that his vision did not meet NASA standards. Now, he is creating a spacesuit that can withstand all the elements of space travel, with the ultimate goal of taking himself to the Armstrong line, 60,000 feet above ground. Using supplies as unexpected as a crockpot, he crafts a space-worthy suit that he tests on himself for safety on an airplane flight. With that success, Cameron designs a specialized hot air balloon, and comes up with an ingenious plan to float himself to the highest height.

In addition to streaming HOMEMADE ASTRONAUTS on discovery+, viewers can join the conversation on social media by using #HomemadeAstronauts and following @Discovery on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Tiktok and @discoveryplus on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram for more updates.

HOMEMADE ASTRONAUTS is produced by World of Wonder. Executive Producers for World of Wonder are Jeremy Simmons, Fenton Bailey, Randy Barbato and Tom Campbell. Executive Producer for Science Channel is Caroline Perez. Lindsey Foster Blumberg is Supervising Producer for Science.

About discovery+

discovery+ is the definitive non-fiction, real life subscription streaming service. discovery+ features a landmark partnership with Verizon that gives their customers with select plans up to 12 months of discovery+ on Verizon. discovery+ has the largest-ever content offering of any new streaming service at launch, featuring a wide range of exclusive, original series across popular, passion verticals in which Discovery brands have a strong leadership position, including lifestyle and relationships; home and food; true crime; paranormal; adventure and natural history; as well as science, tech and the environment, and a slate of high-quality documentaries. For more, visit discoveryplus.com or find it on a variety of platforms and devices, including ones from Amazon, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Roku and Samsung.

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Breaking News - discovery+ Documents Backyard Engineers Pursuing Their Dreams of Space Flight in All-New Limited Series "Homemade...

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The Food Tech Show: The Future of Space Food – The Spoon

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Feeding humans hurtling through space isnt easy.

While todays astronauts get to eat high quality cuisine made on on earth by some of the worlds best cooks, space travel in the future will require entirely new approaches that can grow enough food in space to produce sufficient calories and nutrients for astronaut crews on multiyear interplanetary missions.

Which is why theres growing interest from the space agencies from the U.S., Canada, Japan and other countries to find new and novel food system concepts that can keep astronauts and eventually even permanent space inhabitants fed.

To discuss the current and future state of space food, I recently got together with Anjan Contractor, the CEO of BeeHex, a company who created a 3D pizza printer for NASA. Also joining us was Dane Gobel, the operations administrator for the Deep Space Food Challenge, a new initiative by NASA and the Canadian space agency to spur innovation in developing new food systems for long-term space travel.

Some of the things we discuss on the podcast:

And much more!

You can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts. You can also listen by clicking the player below.

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Light This Candle: What You Need to Know About Alan Shepard’s Historic Spaceflight – National Air and Space Museum

Posted: at 5:38 am

I'm a hell of a lot cooler than you guys. Why don't you just fix your little problem and light this candle?

On May 5, 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American to travel to space. His historic mission in the Freedom 7 spacecraft came a little over three weeks after the Soviet Union successfully made Yuri Gagarin the first person in space. While Gagarins spaceflight lasted 108 minutes and included a single orbit around Earth, Shepards lasted only 15 minutes and was suborbital.

Shepards mission was part of Project Mercury, NASAs first human spaceflight program, and Shepard was part of a group of astronauts called the Mercury Seven.

NASA introduced the Project Mercury astronauts to the world on April 9, 1959, only six months after the agency was established. Known as the Mercury Seven or Original Seven, they are (front row, left to right) Walter M. "Wally" Schirra Jr., Donald K. "Deke" Slayton, John H. Glenn Jr., M. Scott Carpenter, (back row) Alan B. Shepard Jr., Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom and L. Gordon Cooper, Jr.

Alan B. Shepard Jr earned his bachelors degree from the United States Naval Academy in 1944 and graduated from the Naval Test Pilot School in 1951 and the Naval War College in 1957. Shepard began his naval career deployed in the Pacific during World War II and he later entered flight training at Corpus Christi and Pensacola, earning his wings in 1947. As a pilot, Shepard logged more than 8,000 flying hours, 3,700 of which were in jet aircraft.

Shepard joined the astronaut program in 1959 and began of training for his first spaceflight. According to NASA, the Mercury Sevens training was intended to provide the new astronauts with an education in astronautics and space biology, conditioning for space flight, training in the operation of the new Mercury vehicle, familiarization with ground operations, and aviation flight training. This included time in the U.S. Navys centrifuge to test his ability to withstand severe acceleration and deceleration forces while they couldnt actually train in space, they could recreate the experience as best as possible. This made ground simulator training incredibly important and required that the selected astronauts be able to adapt quickly if the in-flight experience unfolded differently than in training.

After two years of training, the day was finally here: On May 5, 1961, Alan Shepard climbed into his Mercury spacecraft Freedom 7 and became the first American and second person in space on a 15-minute suborbital spaceflight.

To launch Shepard and his spacecraft into space, NASA turned to existing military ballistic missiles, modifying a U.S. Army Redstone rocket. The Mercury-Redstone Launch Vehicle was also used to launch Gus Grissom when he became the second American in space a few months later. From John Glenns 1962 orbital flight onward, Mercury missions were launched on modified U.S. Air Force Atlas ICBMs.

NASA turned to military designs once more for the Mercury spacesuits. Shepard wore a modified version of a U.S. Navy Mark IV flight suit (designed for high-altitude military pilots in the Navy and Marine Corps) for hisFreedom 7mission.Its futuristic look is thanks to a silver-colored coating meant to increase his visibility if an emergency rescue was needed. The zippers crossing the suit (27 in total!) were designed to make the fit very tight. In order for Shepard to get in and out of the suit, he had to unwrap that spiral zipperpractically going around his entire bodyand then rewrap the suit around him, tightening the zipper as he went.

Shepards mission ended 15 minutes after launch with splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean. Throughout the mission, ground control had nearly continuous contact with Shepard through a worldwide network of ground stations, ships, and aircraft. NASA designed the Mercury capsule for a water landing, with a parachute that deployed at 24,500 feet to begin slowing the spacecraft. Unlike Yuri Gagarin, who parachuted out of his Vostok capsule, Shepard and other American astronauts stayed inside the capsule during the entire descent. After landing in the ocean, Shepard exited the spacecraft and was hoisted into a Navy helicopter and taken to the nearby aircraft carrier USS Lake Champlain.

Different than Gagarins secretive launch, Alan Shepards spaceflight was very highly publicized, and millions of people watched the launch live, turning him into a national hero. In the days after his successful spaceflight, Shepard received ticker-tape parades in DC, New York, and Los Angeles, and received the NASA Distinguished Service Medal from President John F. Kennedy. In 1963, Shepard became the Chief of the Astronaut Office after being grounded from future spaceflight due toa diagnosis of Mnire's disease, an inner-ear disorder that can cause dizziness and nausea. However, in 1969 Shepard underwent an operation to relieve the symptoms of Mnire's and was cleared to fly again. He returned to space as commander of the Apollo 14 mission in 1971, becoming the fifth person to walk on the Moon.

Shepards two spaceflights took place nearly 10 years apart and his differing experiences one spaceflight a 15-minute orbital flight and the other a nine-day voyage to the Moon including nine hours of extravehicular activity on the lunar surface showcases how far NASAs human spaceflight capability had come in a single decade.

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Virgin Galactic Reschedules First Quarter 2021 Financial Results and Conference Call In Response to Recent SEC Guidance Relating to Warrants Issued by…

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LAS CRUCES, N.M.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: SPCE) (the Company), a vertically integrated aerospace and space travel company, announced today that it has rescheduled the reporting of its financial results for the first quarter 2021 to following the close of the U.S. markets on Monday, May 10, 2021. Virgin Galactic will now host a conference call to discuss the results and provide a business update that day at 2:00 p.m., Pacific Time (5:00 p.m., Eastern Time). The Company is rescheduling its reporting due to the recent statement issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) on April 12, 2021 relating to the accounting treatment of warrants issued by special purpose acquisition companies (the SEC Statement).

The Company today reported in a Current Report on Form 8-K that, following its review of the SEC Statement and consulting with its advisors, the Company will restate its consolidated financial statements included in its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020. The restatement is due solely to the accounting treatment for the warrants of Social Capital Hedosophia Holdings Corp. that were outstanding at the time of the Companys business combination on October 25, 2019. The Company expects to file the restated financials prior to the new conference call date and estimates that it will recognize incremental non-operating, non-cash expense for each of the fiscal years ended December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019. The Company does not anticipate that the restatement will impact its previously communicated non-GAAP financial metrics, including Adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow.

As of today, approximately 2.7 million warrants remain outstanding, which represents less than 10% of the warrants originally issued.

As previously communicated, Virgin Galactic is targeting its next rocket-powered spaceflight from Spaceport America to take place in May.

A live webcast and replay of the conference call will be available on the Companys Investor Relations website at investors.virgingalactic.com.

About Virgin Galactic Holdings

Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc. is a vertically integrated aerospace and space travel company, pioneering human spaceflight for private individuals and researchers, as well as a manufacturer of advanced air and space vehicles. It is developing a spaceflight system designed to offer customers a unique and transformative experience. You can find more information at https://www.virgingalactic.com/.

Forward Looking Statements

This press release contains certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws with respect to the Company, including statements regarding the expected impact of the restatement of the Companys financial statements on its 2020 financial results and the timing of filing of its 10-K/A . These forward-looking statements generally are identified by words such as believe, project, expect, anticipate, estimate, intend, strategy, future, opportunity, plan, may, should, will, would, and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements are predictions, projections and other statements about future events that are based on current expectations and assumptions and, as a result, are subject to risks and uncertainties. Many factors could cause actual future events to differ materially from the forward-looking statements in this presentation, including but not limited to the factors, risks and uncertainties included in the Companys filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC), including, its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020, accessible on the SECs website at http://www.sec.gov and the Investor Relations section of the Companys website at http://www.virgingalactic.com. These filings identify and address other important risks and uncertainties that could cause the Companys actual events and results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made. Readers are cautioned not to put undue reliance on forward-looking statements, and, except as required by law, the Company assumes no obligation and does not intend to update or revise these forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.

Financial Disclosure Advisory

The Companys independent registered public accounting firm, KPMG LLP, has not audited or reviewed the estimates contained in this press release regarding the impact of the restatement on the Companys historical financial results. All estimates contained in this press release are subject to change, possibly materially, as management completes the Form 10-K/A and the Companys independent registered public accounting firm completes its audit of the Companys restated financial statements.

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Virgin Galactic Reschedules First Quarter 2021 Financial Results and Conference Call In Response to Recent SEC Guidance Relating to Warrants Issued by...

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Mars helicopter Ingenuity snaps epic photo of rover tracks, will attempt 3rd flight Sunday – Space.com

Posted: at 5:37 am

NASA's history-making Mars helicopter Ingenuity will make its third Red Planet flight this weekend, if all goes according to plan.

The Ingenuity team is targeting early Sunday morning (April 25) for sortie number three. The flight plan calls for Ingenuity to get about 16.5 feet (5 meters) above the floor of Mars' Jezero Crater, travel a total of 330 feet (100 m) and stay aloft for 80 seconds, chief pilot Hvard Grip of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory wrote in a blog post today (April 23).

Grip did not give an estimated liftoff time but did say that data and photos are expected to starting coming down to Earth around 10:16 a.m. EDT (1416 GMT) on Sunday.

Video: Zoom in on Ingenuity helicopter's 1st flight on Mars

Ingenuity's first two flights were not so involved. On its groundbreaking first flight, which occurred on Monday (April 19), Ingenuity went straight up and down, attained a maximum altitude of about 10 feet (3 m) and stayed aloft for 39.1 seconds. On Thursday (April 22), the solar-powered helicopter remained airborne for nearly 52 seconds, got more than 16.5 feet (5 m) high and moved laterally a total of 13 feet (4 m).

During that second flight, Ingenuity snapped a photo of Jezero's floor and the tracks made by its much larger partner, NASA's Perseverance rover. It's "the first color image of the Martian surface taken by an aerial vehicle while it was aloft," NASA officials wrote in a caption for the newly unveiled photo, which Grip featured in his blog post today. (Ingenuity took photos during its first flight as well, but apparently only with its black-and-white navigation camera.)

Ingenuity is a technology demonstration designed to show that aerial vehicles can operate on Mars. A successful flight campaign could open the Red Planet's skies to extensive exploration, NASA officials have said.

The helicopter landed with Perseverance on Feb. 18 and deployed from the rover on April 3 to prep for its month-long flight campaign, which ends in early May. The Ingenuity team aims to make a total of five flights during that span, with each one more ambitious than the last.

Mike Wall is the author of "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

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Stanford alumna Kate Rubins returns to Earth after six months of being in space – The Stanford Daily

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Kathleen Kate Rubins Ph.D. 06 boarded a mission in November 2020 to conduct scientific experiments under a microgravity environment. She returned to Earth on Apr. 16, bringing updates about her latest research finding.

Great to be back on the planet! the NASA astronaut said at the post-flight news conference last Tuesday.

Sunday marks National DNA Day, which celebrates advancements in the field of genomic research. In 2016, Rubins participated in Expeditions 48/49 to conduct scientific experiments in space. She became the first person to sequence DNA in space, research that she continued on her most recent mission a game changer in the field that opens up possibilities for analyzing various biological samples in space.

A former Stanford cancer biology student, Rubins recent assignment at the International Space Station (ISS) totaled 300 days in space across two flights charting her as the U.S. female astronaut with fourth most days in space.

She described her sense of awe and wonder upon glimpsing the Earth for the first time at the press conference: I was blown away, I couldnt even talk, she said. It is one of those views that never gets old.

Rubins 185-day stay in orbit is part of her preparation for the chance to become the first woman to walk on the moon as soon as 2024. The most recent of the 12 people to walk on the surface of the moon was there on Dec. 19, 1972, as part of the final mission of the U.S. Apollo program. Fittingly, in Greek mythology, Apollo has a twin sister named Artemis, for whom the new lunar landing program is named.

Prior to joining NASA as one of nine members of the 20th NASA astronaut class, she was a principal investigator at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at MIT. She studied viral infections that affect Central and West Africa, including Ebola and smallpox. She brought expertise in infectious disease, molecular biology and microbiology to the team at the ISS.

On Nov. 15, the spacecraft left the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and docked on the Earth-facing port of the Rassvet module, a part of ISS, after a two-orbit, three-hour flight. While in space, she worked on numerous research projects, including comprehensive microbe sampling of the space station and cardiovascular cell behaviour in microgravity.

We were able to advance quite a bit from the 2016 initial sequencing, Rubins said at the press conference. [The] team has developed a lot of different ways of processing samples so they can go straight from a swab to a sequence, which is really important if you are looking at microbes or environmental samples.

Rubins also spent a large portion of the time aboard the ISS studying how plants sprout in microgravity. Freeze-dried food does not always contain all the nutrients astronauts need, especially for long voyages, so her work could help missions in the future.

We did get a few to harvest, Rubins said, describing the radishes that she managed to grow. I shared these with my crew mates so the whole crew was the first to eat radishes in space.

Space biology research will also be crucial to the success of the Artemis exploration program, according to aerospace and astronautics associate professor Simone DAmico.

New genetics and biological techniques are needed to understand how life adapts and changes during spaceflight, he said, adding that ultimately, the goal is to support human exploration of the moon and Mars. Gaining more insights here, such as how fluids move around plant roots in microgravity, is necessary for carrying out large-scale crop growth.

Conducting day-to-day biological experiments in space comes with various challenges. In an earlier interview with microbiology and immunology professor David Relman, Rubins described the practical challenges of conducting experiments in space.

Everything is floating, she said. Nothing is tacked down on your lab bench. You have to put velcro on every piece of equipment.

One of Rubins ongoing interests during her time in space was to establish a full microbial map of the space station, which she initiated during her latest trip by collecting 800 different environmental samples in the Space Station.

In an email to The Daily, Relman explained that studying the microbiome of human-inhabited spacecraft will offer multiple interesting insights.

Spacecraft in particular are the ultimate example of a closed environment, with tightly regulated environmental and life-support processes, he said. The role of microbes in adapting to, and modifying such environments, is relevant for our understanding of the interplay between microbial communities and human-associated environments on earth, including for managing and mitigating microbial community processes.

Relman added that better understanding and anticipation of microbial threats to human health will be critical as humans begin to look into long-term space travel. Understanding ways in which humans contaminate their local environments and the way environmental microbes could threaten our health will guide future investigation on how to best monitor and control these issues.

When theres any possibility of discovering extraterrestrial life forms, NASA investigates how to ensure that nothing on a foreign celestial body is exposed to earthly disease. According to Rubins, the moon is a very good control for Mars. Sampling everything that astronauts are bringing with them to the moon will help them develop a library and catalog of microbial population.

I think it would be a really incredibly interesting experiment to sample the lunar surface just as were doing the course of our exploration and understand our microbial footprint, Rubins said.

The crews on board NASA SpaceX Crew-1 mission, which coincided with Rubinss travel, are scheduled to return to Earth on Wednesday, April 28. Rubins said that shed love to go back to the space station again, and for the next expedition shell bring a few photographs of family, a journal and mostly the sense of awe and wonder.

This article has been updated to reflect that Kate Rubins was the first person on the planet to sequence DNA rather than the first woman.

A previous version of this article incorrectly attributed a quote to Rubins instead of Relman. The Daily regrets this error.

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Stanford alumna Kate Rubins returns to Earth after six months of being in space - The Stanford Daily

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