Daily Archives: February 5, 2022

A look outside the Bowdoin bubble – The Bowdoin Orient

Posted: February 5, 2022 at 5:04 am

As a Bowdoin student from central Maine, I have begun to realize that, in many ways, Maine is like two different states. To the Bowdoin students who are used to the liberal and welcoming politics of Brunswick and the greater Portland area, there is confusion as to how someone like Paul LePage was able to become the leader of such a seemingly open-minded state. Called Americas Trumpiest governor, LePage became infamous for his racist rants about drug traffickers and his obscene voicemail to a lawmaker who called attention to his racism. Just weeks into his tenure as governor, he shockingly told the NAACP to kiss his butt.

Understanding the popularity of LePage, who is now running for a third term as governor, is critical to understanding the totality of Maine, its people and its ongoing economic challenges.

As someone from the more rural and conservative part of the state, it is not surprising to me that LePage remained popular among so many of the white working-class Mainers who loathe the technological advancement and change associated with people from southern Maine, and especially with those from out of state. To these voters, LePage, being from the town of Lewistonwhich is known for its blue-collar rootsmeans more than just loyalty and understanding. His tenure as a manager of Mardens, a chain discount store popular in the state, gave him cache as a hardworking man of the people. His bluntness and willingness to offend the elites was also part of the appeal.

In addition, LePage plays into the us versus them mentality that has been exacerbated by the political and socioeconomic differences among Maines first and second congressional districts. To those from southern Maine, LePage and his supporters are often viewed as ignorant and bigoted people, stuck in the past and obstinately trusting the GOP to somehow save them from their economic failures. To many from the northern parts of the state, wealthy out-of-touch people and people from away are not seen as real Mainers and dont understand the struggle that comes from the loss of commerce and support that came with the shrinking of the mill industry in many communities. When people lament the popularity of figures like LePage and Donald Trump in Maine, blame is pushed onto the hicks for their closed-mindedness. This, in turn, causes conservative voters to feel distanced from the people and politics of the southern part of the state.

I recently heard that a student from out of state was told that everyone from north of Bangor is crazy. But this again speaks to the idea of the vastly different poles of the state of Maine. There is no line that divides the politics of Maine into normal and crazy or liberal and conservative. There is, however, the concept of a Volvo line that demarcates how the quality of life and values are believed to shift from yuppie millennials and crowded tourist towns to hunting and fishing enthusiasts who love the Second Amendment and use Facebook as their primary news source. But this line also speaks to issues of income inequality and wealth disparities in the state.

While these divisions are salient in situations like elections, they are not black and white. There are Bernie Bros in Presque Isle and Trump fans in Portland. Maines second congressional district (representing the northern four fifths of the state) has a Democrat for its representative. At its core, classism is a large component of the conversation, and disparities in education and income must be recognized. Generally, the further north you look in Maine, the lower the median household income becomes, the lower the level of education becomes and the more economic opportunity becomes scarce. While poverty is not the root of conservativeness, this gap in vitality is a source of contention.

Misplaced anger for Maines disparities elevates people like Paul LePage, who can make big promises to empower those who feel left behind and ignored, and who has a Trump-like persona of being tough on outsiders and having the best interests of the people of rural America at heart.

Not noticing and understanding the complexities of all of Maineincluding the parts of the state that are geographically far, and very different from, Brunswickcan lead to a simplistic understanding of Maines politics.

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A look outside the Bowdoin bubble - The Bowdoin Orient

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Californias Red Counties – The Nation

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A Shasta County Board of Supervisors meeting where residents argued for and against impeaching board members. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Throughout Northern California, a swath of conservative, sparsely populated counties have headed in a dramatically different direction politically in recent years to the rest of the state. Nowhere is this more clear than in Shasta County, home of the magnificent Shasta Mountain as well as 179,000 residents, and a mecca to mountaineers and hikers from around the world. In November 2020, while two-thirds of California voters chose Biden over Trump, in Shasta those numbers were reversed. Nearly 63 percent of local voters supported the coup-plotting MAGA man.

Shasta, along with roughly a dozen other northern and eastern counties in the state, has a dismal Covid-vaccination ratejust over 50 percent have received one dose of the vaccine, but significantly under half the population has received two or more dosesand a political environment increasingly fractured around the issue of mask mandates, public health restrictions, and vaccine requirements. The low vaccination rates have, especially during the Omicron surge, translated to high rates of infection, hospitalization, and death. At the same time, conservative residents have grown increasingly hostile to any and all public health measures intended to rein in the pandemic.

Last year, a recall effort was launched against three members of the countys board of supervisors, whom activists deemed werent conservative enough, especially when it came to pandemic policies. One of the three campaigns, against supervisor Leonard Moty, got enough signatures to qualify for the ballotMoty says that his well-financed opponents targeted him, in particular, on the assumption that once he fell, the county government would immediately tilt toward the alt-right. The recall election was set for this past Tuesday, February 1.

Moty is a Republican, and the former police chief in the town of Redding; but, despite these credentials, he and two of his colleagues, Joe Chimenti and Mary Rickert, were targeted for recall by conservatives after they voted to censure the other two county supervisors, Les Baugh and Patrick Jones, for letting the public into the boards chambers on January 5 of 2021 in the face of a countywide order banning in-person meetings. The three were also criticized by conservative opponents for not withdrawing the county from Governor Newsoms color-tiered system, in place for more than a year, that set different levels of restrictions on businesses and on public gatherings depending on what the infection levels and test-positivity rates were in each county.

While not all of the votes have been tallied yet, early returns from Tuesdays election strongly indicate that Moty will lose the recall. As of Wednesday evening, the no-on-recall side was trailing the yes-on-recallers by more than 5 percent, and the conservative activists were preparing to evict Moty, whom they deride as a RINO (Republican In Name Only), from his county office.

With many thousands of mail-in votes still to be counted, it is, of course, still mathematically possible for Moty to emerge triumphant, but local media and Moty himself expect the recall to prevail. If the supervisor loses, the front-runner to replace him is a conservative anti-crime activist named Dale Ball who, ironically, has a slew of problems with the law in his own past. At least one local media outlet reported that in the 1990s, Ball picked up several DUIs and a couple other criminal charges. The Record Searchlight, a newspaper with a circulation of 30,000 based in the regions largest town, Redding, also reports that he was arrested in 2006 on child endangerment charges after apparently beating his girlfriends 13-year-old son with a flashlight. Ball claimed that he hit the boy in self-defense, and he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge in the case. He also argues that his long track record of volunteerism, including organizing efforts to clean up homeless encampments, ought to carry far more weight than a sixteen-year-old misdemeanor charge. (Moty counters that, yes, Ball did clean up the encampments, but he says that Ball also ran with a vigilante group that called itself the Redding Area Transient Patrol, more colloquially known as the Rat Patrol, because, says Moty, They consider homeless people to be rats, and they were going to clean up the rats.)

Whether or not Balls volunteerism was colored by a vicious animus against the homeless, as homeless advocates allege, and whether or not Balls somewhat dubious past should count against him a generation later, there remains the broader question of political affiliations. Both The Sacramento Bee and KQED, the local public radio station, report that if the recall effort succeeds, a majority of the county board of supervisors will be aligned with militias and with the Proud Boys. If that is indeed the case, Shasta will be the first county in California to elect a far-right majority to its board of supervisors. Its members will include those who want to turn the county into a Second Amendment sanctuary county, and who want to bypass all public health mandates around Covid. Current Issue

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Inevitably, this will put the rural county on course for a head-on collision with the state government. It will also likely trigger similar political upheavals over the coming election cycle in a number of other counties, school board districts, and town governments in the rural far north of the state.

Theyre extremists, my way or the highway, and theyll stop at nothing to get there, Moty told me earlier this week. They think federal and state government is the enemy, that counties should not accept federal and state money. But 85 percent of our budget comes from state and federal money. If we dont accept that money, itll be very hard to operate. Youd have to cease HHS services, homeless services, assistance for the mentally ill.

The alt-rights ascendancy in Shasta gives a window on what could be a fractious political future for Californias rural north. Collectively, the dozen or so rugged, mountainous counties of the north, all conservative, all with vaccination rates of under 50 percent, have a population of fewer than 2 million, or about 5 percent of the states population; but geographically they represent a large proportion of the states landmass. Over the past few years, these counties, so different from Californias urban south, have formed the heart of a growing movement to secede from California and to form a separate stateperhaps along with some of the more conservative rural counties in Oregonnamed Jefferson.

In 2014, voters in Tehama County voted, in a nonbinding election, to secede from California. Two other counties opted not to secede. That same year, however, several other county boards of supervisors also voted to explore the concept of secession, with three of them voting to secedefrom the state. More recently, pro-Jefferson secessionists have detailed ambitious maps showing that the new state would include 23 of Californias 58 counties, taking with it roughly 2.5 million of the states nearly 40 million residents. As with Shasta, these counties are overwhelmingly rural and conservative, and, in the Covid era, they tend to be under-vaccinated and hostile to statewide mandates, though not all of them to quite the same extent as is Shasta. In last years recall election against Governor Newsom, all but one of the counties east and north of Sacramento voted in favor of recalling the Democrat.

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Shastas recall vote this week doesnt bring the fever dream of Jefferson any closer to being implemented, but it does send a warning shot across Sacramentos bows. There are powerful conservative and radical-right currents swirling below the surface, even in deep-blue states like California, and the pandemic is continuing to provide combustible fuel for this political conflagration.

This is going to be the model they are going to use to try to take over a lot of other rural counties, says Moty, as he contemplates the new political realities of his county. If they can do this to me, with my history and reputation in the county, they can do it to anyone. And then it will be school boards and city councils next.

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Sheriff working with law makers on constitutional carry bills – Sand Mountain Reporter

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Marshall County Sheriff Phil Sims is making it clear how he feels about the constitutional carry bills now before the legislature.

In a recent interview, Alabama Sheriffs Association Executive Director Bobby Timmons reportedly said Americans dont have the right to carry a handgun and that he would be in favor of changing the Constitution to limit the Second Amendment.

Bobby Timmons may be our Executive Director but he does not speak for us all, Sims said. I am a Republican conservative sheriff. I believe in the Second Amendment and I support the Second Amendment. He does not speak for me and what he said does not reflect my views as the sheriff of this county.

Sims said there are several bills being looked at in the session right now that involve the constitutional carry, also known as permit-less carry.

I have read several of the bills and am working with our local delegation and with our Lieutenant Governors office to help make the bills better, Sims continued.

In HB-66, or House Bill 66, there are some things I would like to see added to it.

Sims said many things are important to address.

In this bill, what I would like to see is a more definitive answer as to certain persons who are forbidden to carry guns, he continued. Examples are anyone convicted of a felony needs to be added to this bill. Right now, in Alabama, if you are convicted of a non-violent felony, you can posses a pistol. Its contrary to federal law. Alabama law conflicts with federal law, in that part of it. I want to see that if you are convicted of a felony, until you get it expunged, you cant have a pistol.

These will go to the repeat offenders who have low level felonies, like drugs offenses, burglaries, thefts, interference with custody, those type things. Another thing Id like to see addressed is people who are out on bond for felony arrests. No matter what the arrest is, if you are out on bond for a felony arrest, I dont believe those people have the right to carry a pistol until their case is disposed of. That needs to be addressed in this bill, Sims continued.

Another thing I would like to see more definitive is our mental health issues that we face. We are in a mental health crisis right now. Some of the most dangerous calls that we answer are mental health related. I would like to see that be addressed. For instance, if you have been involuntarily committed, those people should not have a weapon or firearm until they are cleared by a medical doctor.

Sims says taking away pistol permits actually hurts his officers.

If permits were gone, we couldnt track people who have come from out of state and have felony convictions. Right now, we can track it because we can check peoples permits, he said. We need to have those things addressed in the bill so when we do come across those people who get guns, we need to have a tool to be able to take that gun away from that person. Yes, they are going to get guns but if we dont have a tool to take it from them, we cant take the gun.

Sims said he would even be willing to negotiate and give up the permits, as long as they can maintain a way for law enforcement to still take the guns off the streets from those who should not have them.

Pistol permits are $10 a year and the revenue greatly helps law enforcement, Sims said. If the permits were dropped, that revenue would then have to come from somewhere else.

The pistol permit fees go into a discretionary account that is audited by the the Public Examiners of the State, he said. Those funds go to things like training, guns, ammo, sending deputies to the academy, vehicles sometimes, new training facilities and even a new firing range weve never had.

My goal is to see that the permits remain, if nothing else, as voluntary. I think citizens would buy a permit and want to continue to support their local law enforcement, Sims said.

A pistol permit can also be used as an ID in the State of Alabama.

No doubt about it. I think if law abiding citizens want to carry guns, they have the right to. Theres no question about that, Sims said.

Timmons has come under fire from gun groups for his statements.

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Why the Future of Humanity Relies on Space Exploration – CEOWORLD magazine

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As climate change warms the planet, sea levels rise, and wildfires become commonplace, humans edge more precariously onto the precipice of a much harsher landscape. According to experts, humanitys environmental woes are so severe that a global-scale ecological catastrophe is already underway.

During such dire times, questions remain about the issues we are focusing our money and energy into. Among them, whether the current pursuit of space exploration and its cost is foolish or a cynical bet against planet Earths survival.

Spaceflight isnt just a master-minded escape plan for the richest among us, though. The key to saving our planet, and humanity, partly relies on the innovations from space exploration. The commercial sector has already adopted inventions that were funded or designed by space agencies. These include several ecology-based projects like one that uses LED light color that triggers growth for indoor agriculture or satellites used to predict the weather and document climate change. Space technologies are evolving and can help us harness a more sustainable world.

Frontier Technologies

Innovations like artificial intelligence, The Internet of Things (IoT), 5G networks and other robotic mechanics are paving the way for sustainability initiatives on Earth and in space. Incorporating these innovations into frontier technologies, or Space 2.0 technologies, can actively help to fight climate change. AI tools, in particular, can help reduce air pollution, hydrological risk, while also environmentally managing e-waste. For example, AIs predictive analytics fostered by space monitoring can forecast metrics on air quality, solar/clouds, temperature and more regarding its ability to help decrease air pollution.

Additionally, 5G supported by new-age communication satellites can manage smart water supplies and help reduce water loss inefficiencies. As water is one primary medium through which well experience climate changes effects, 5G can be instilled into smart water management systems. In doing so, it offers real-time remote sensing that ensures faster response times, minimizes disruption flows, and reduces unaccounted water loss. At the same time, it can also support planning and operations via accurate demand predictions and cost savings via energy optimization for cities and states. Singapore uses a system called WaterWise in conjunction with the Public Utilities Board of Singapore (PUB). It achieves its sustainability goals by utilizing hundreds of sensors that feed insights into data-analytic tools, installed island-wide to detect pipe leaks and monitor water pressure, flow and quality.

Additionally, IoT networks, also supported by communication satellites, could manage smart infrastructure to help reduce carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases.

Communication technologies, in particular, could be key in meeting sustainability targets outlined by the Paris Agreement, which limit global warming to 1.5 celsius. Among these innovations, Space 2.0 technologies, the second generation of space systems.

Satellites to Track Weather and Climate Data

Satellite technology is one of the most crucial space tools to help curb the climate change crisis. Satellite data, communications, and its applications provide high-resolution, real-time global monitoring of the planet. Today, over 160 satellites measure various climate change indicators.

They also continue to provide data so scientists can track changes to geological features like ice sheets. Launched in 2018, NASAs Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite spacecraft (ICESat-2) monitors the thinning of sea ice and indicates how ice cover had disappeared from coastal parts of Greenland and Antarctica. Their latest satellite was developed to provide extra information on how ice cover decreases or changes over a year. Scientists use the data from these next-generation satellites which take measurements every 85 centimeters along the ground path to hopefully improve forecasts for rising sea levels and global weather and climate patterns.

Satellite imagery and climate data also supports sectors like agriculture, offering benefits to the communities they serve. Amazon Web Services and Digital Earth Africa use Open Data Cube to make global satellite data more accessible and can be used to help farmers improve food production to reduce hunger, tackle unregulated mining and its knock-on effects, and identify new opportunities for economic growth.

Space Sensors

Today, more than 600 remote sensing satellites monitor borders to make the world more transparent. Within the context of climate change, it also helps protect ecological systems and wildlife on Earth. The International Cooperation for Animal Research Using Space (Icarus) Initiative is one initiative that incorporates ISS satellite to monitor and protect wildlife. Scientists use this to track migratory patterns of birds and other animals from space with the help of small transmitters attached to their backs. This data is then processed back to the ISS, where it is transmitted to Earths facilities and offers a synopsis of animal life on Earth that is later synthesized into environmental data.

Whats more, space sensors also give Earth the benefit of reducing emissions from heating systems. Miniaturized ceramic gas sensor technology, originally developed for measuring oxygen levels aboard spacecraft reentry, is now used for systems that control heater combustion, a major source of pollutants. The system reduces exhaust gases that harm the environment and helps heating systems work at an optimum level, reducing fuel use by 15 to 20 percent.

While space technologies arent the end-all-be-all answer to improve climate change on Earth, they play a significant role in supporting how we manage life at home. According to the UN, over half of essential climate change variables can only be measured from space. In the future, investments in these tools will only increase and the need to advance other life-sustaining technologies on extraterrestrial planets will be needed too.

Consider how one day, we will build outposts on the moon and Mars that must replicate and sustain all of our planets life-giving essentials off-world. As such, we will need technologies capable of recycling essential resources like water, food, air to make these planets renewable and self-sustaining for current and future space exploration missions. Its the progress we make in developing these innovations that we will continue to harness as models to preserve Earths wellbeing. Its safe to say, the way to sustainability is up.

Written by Dylan Taylor.

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Track Latest News Live on CEOWORLD magazine and get news updates from the United States and around the world. The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of the CEOWORLD magazine. Follow CEOWORLD magazine on Twitter andFacebook. For media queries, please contact: info@ceoworld.biz

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Johns Hopkins to host discussion on civilian space exploration, discovery, and research Feb. 3 – – Baltimore Fishbowl

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Last Monday, after traveling about a million miles, the James Webb Telescope reached its new home.

NASAs telescope is now parked in a space called L2 a region between the gravitational fields of the Earth and sun where it could spend the next 10 or more years surveilling outer space.

The Webb telescope, which was launched Dec. 25, is being controlled from the Space Telescope Institute in Baltimore.

On Feb. 3, from 12:30 1:30 p.m., experts at Johns Hopkins University will host a live virtual discussion on developments in space exploration, including the Webb telescope, space weather, the Parker Solar Probe, and upcoming space missions.

The discussion moderated by Chuck Bennett, professor and director at Space@Hopkins will include Hopkins professors Adam Riess and Sabine Stanley, as well as Jason Kalirai, mission area executive for civil space at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.

The event is part of the universitys Congressional Briefing Series, which allows policymakers, staff, and members of the public to gain insights from Johns Hopkins experts.

The event is free, but registration is required.

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Space exploration could be Earths saving grace – DW (English)

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The first time German astronaut Alexander Gerst took off into space, he was overwhelmed. Hed seensatellite photos of Earthbefore, but they were nothing in comparison with the real thing.

I [saw] the Earth with my own eyes for the very first time and all of a sudden, this huge, gigantic planet that I thought was infinite, maybe with infinite resources or things like that, appeared dauntingly small in the light of the blackness of infinity. And that caused me to see Earth differently."

Gerst was part of the International Space Station (ISS) Expedition 40 and 41 from May to November 2014. Hereturned to space again as part of Expedition 56 and 57 in June 2018.

German astronaut Alexander Gerst

"It was revealing [for me] to fly to space for the first time, he said. As a geophysicist, we know exactly the diameter of the Earth, the thickness of the atmosphere. I thought I knew it all."

Gerst, who spoke during last week's 14th European Space Conference, said space exploration can offer a solution to the climate crisis by taking a step back and looking at the "problem from the outside."

"We astronauts have to transport that view, that change in perspective [back] to Earth."

Before satellites were first launched into space in the mid-20th century, we knew very little about the dynamics of our climate. Today, numerous satellites collect information which helps us piece together the story of our changing planet. In 1985, they helped discover the hole in the ozone layer, and data from space remains key to tackling global warming.

Some satellites monitor signs of climate change, such as melting ice caps, rising sea levels and amounts of CO2 in the atmosphere. The Jason-3 satellite (pictured), launched in 2016, can make precise measurements of global sea levels, a key indicator of climate change. The data will give us a stronger understanding of just how our oceans are being affected by increased temperatures.

Space technology has paved the way for the development of increasingly sophisticated surveying and monitoring tools which can track everything from deforestation to illegal fishing ships and even oil spills. This way, researchers know exactly when and where environmental and legal action needs to be taken.

Satellites play a vital role in tracking natural disasters such as hurricanes, wildfires and floods. As well as providing an early warning for those on the ground, they also help authorities track the intensity of the event and understand the scale of the devastation. Monitoring storm systems helps generate better climate models to predict future disasters.

Growing plants in space has already taught us valuable lessons which can be applied to sustainable agriculture on Earth. Astronauts on the International Space Station have discovered they can use less water to grow vegetables, and China recently made history by germinating a cotton seed on the far side of the moon. As our planet warms, this knowledge could be vital for farmers.

Unfortunately, space technology has also had a negative impact on the environment. Every time a rocket is launched it produces a plume of exhaust smoke filled with bits of soot and a chemical called alumina, which can build up in the stratosphere and deplete the ozone. Space agencies are looking to lessen their use of "ozone-depleting substances" and are researching more eco-friendly fuels.

There are currently more than 20,000 trackable pieces of space junk in orbit around Earth, including everything from old rockets to bolts and screws. They're not technically part of Earth's ecosphere, but if we're not careful the junk may become so dense that satellites won't be able to function properly and provide us with the data we so desperately need.

Author: Ineke Mules

While space exploration demands a considerable amount of money from the EU budget, Gerst argues that its worth it.

The benefits of technologies developed to support space exploration are not merely restricted to sustaining human life in space, he said.

Space experience helps lead researchers to develop technologies that we can use on Earth, things that we need to save the planet," Gerst said.

Gerst said they conducted experiments on the space station that investigated how plant roots know which direction to grow. This question is being heavily researched in order to develop plants that can grow their roots more quickly to find water deep in dry soil.

"That is something that will come in very handy if climate change really changes a lot of areas that formerly were green and now they're dry, he said.

European Space Agency (ESA) Director General Josef Aschbacher noted that more than half of the climate parameters such as sea surface temperature, glacier melting, the melting of the polar ice caps and sea level rise are measured in space.

Without satellites, we wouldnt know the extent of climate change," Aschbacher said, adding that without this information, it would be difficult to make and implement decisions related to the climate crisis.

During a virtual interview with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen from space last week, German astronaut and materials scientist Matthias Maurer, who is currently on a six-month SpaceX science mission, noted the many climate change-related details observable from space.

Flying at the height of around 400 kilometers above the planet and circling Earth 16 times a day, Maurer said they can see slashed and burned forests, drought and lakes that used to be on the maps.

"We can also see that human mining puts a lot of scars into the surface of our planet, he said.

Maurer said they are also able to observe natural events happening in real time, like the recent flooding in Brazil or theeruption of the underwater volcano in Tonga.

He added that the Copernicus Earth observation fleet provides data that is important for politicians to act upon.

Copernicus is the European Union's Earth observation program. It offers information services that draw from satellite and non-space data.

Maurer launched in November last year on the SpaceX Crew Dragon Endurance spacecraft for a mission to advance scientific knowledge and demonstrate new technologies for future human and robotic exploration missions.

An issue frequently brought up with space exploration is the debris it leaves floating around in space.

There are fears that with more private companies vying to go to the moon, such as billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX, more junk will fill the atmosphere.

According to the ESA's January 2022 update on space junk, there are some 30,600 debris objects regularly tracked by Space Surveillance Networks.

Maurer said his space station experienced a space debris collision warning just two weeks ago. The stations planning teams on the ground had to calculate if the debris had the potential to hit them.

"That shows us that there is a lot of debris here in space, and it's a very important topic, not only for the ISS because it puts us at risk, but also because of the older satellites that we have."

Maurer noted there needs to be action taken to avoid future space debris. The ESA has declared that by 2030, they want to have a net contribution to space debris. Maurer said this would not onlymean they need to take action to remove massive parts from space, but also to reduce the introduction of new space particles.

Both Maurer and Gerst are optimistic that the findings from space exploration could help politicians and scientists find solutions to the climate crisis, using the famous words "there is no Planet B."

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New company run by former NASA leader aims to build robotic outpost near the Moon – The Verge

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A new startup run by a former acting NASA administrator hopes to capitalize on the recent zeal for lunar space exploration by building robotic outposts and spacecraft to send to space near the Moon. Their goal is to create a fleet of robotic helpers that can do a variety of tasks near the Moon, such as providing internet capabilities, collecting data, refueling spacecraft, and assembling structures in lunar space.

The company called Quantum Space was formed in 2021. At the helm is Steve Jurczyk, who served as NASAs associate administrator beginning in 2018, before becoming the agencys acting administrator when President Biden was inaugurated. After retiring in May, Jurczyk decided to team up with three additional entrepreneurs and experts in the space industry to create this new company based out of Maryland.

Jurczyk, who is the president and CEO of the company, says Quantum Space is focused on the Moon since NASA is also focused on returning there. The space agencys primary human spaceflight enterprise at the moment is Artemis, a massive initiative to send the first woman and the first person of color to the lunar surface. Along with performing a series of human landings, NASA is also partnering with various commercial companies to send a fleet of landers and rovers to the Moon to explore the environment. Given all of these proposed lunar missions, Quantum Space felt like there was an opportunity to create vehicles that could be useful in the area.

We know theres going to be a lot of activity around and on the Moon in the coming decade, primarily driven by Artemis, Jurczyk tells The Verge. But you know, national security where civil spaces goes, national security will have to go also. Jurczyk anticipates Space Force and other military entities might leverage NASAs lunar exploration and become customers in the future.

Jurczyk says he envisions multiple types of vehicles that Quantum Space can build in the coming years to aid with the future influx of Moon missions. First, the company hopes to create a robotic outpost that could potentially help with communication in the region of space between regular Earth orbits and the Moon, known as cislunar space. NASA has a concept for creating an internet-like system of communications infrastructure around the Moon called LunaNet, which would be less reliant on Earth technologies for navigation, communication, and data relays. Jurczyk says his companys robotic outpost could be involved. We believe we can be a node or nodes in that network, for both spacecraft in orbit as well as spacecraft on the surface, he says.

Along with communications, the outpost could also do observations of Earth or the lunar surface, as well as host payloads for collecting data on the lunar environment. The company also envisions providing space traffic services for spacecraft traveling around the Moon. There are also options to observe the climate of Earth from a unique vantage point, as well as characterize near-Earth objects like asteroids. Quantum Space sees its outpost being at a specific point in space between the Earth and the Moon known as an Earth-Moon Lagrange point, where the gravity and centripetal forces between the two bodies are just right for spacecraft to remain relatively stable. The particular Lagrange point that Quantum Space is aiming for is called L1, and its about 38,100 miles from the Moons surface.

In the long term, Quantum Space also wants to create its own robotic servicing spacecraft essentially, a satellite mechanic that can refuel the outpost and other nearby vehicles, as well as conduct repairs. That way the outpost can have an extended lifetime in cislunar space. Such an idea would leverage the capabilities of the growing satellite servicing industry, which is already trying to create servicing robots that can fix satellites in orbit around the Earth.

Quantum Spaces focus on deploying robots in cislunar space gives it a unique advantage, according to Jurczyk. Plenty of commercial space companies are focused on building passenger space stations that can live in Earths orbit, as NASA plans to eventually retire the International Space Station and move beyond that area of space to the Moon. Quantum Spaces outpost will only be robotic, so no people can live on board. And Jurczyk says there arent many companies with a history of building vehicles for the lunar environment.

Theres really no legacy systems to compete with there, says Jurczyk. we can sort of be a first mover to establish capabilities and services in cislunar.

Since Quantum Space is a fledgling company, theres still a long road ahead one that begins with fleshing out the design of their spacecraft. As for a budget, the initial seed funding is coming from one of the four co-founders, Kam Ghaffarian. Ghaffarian, CEO of investment firm IBX, has helped fund various other space ventures like Axiom Space, Intuitive Machines, and more.

Right now, the company is working toward a pathfinder mission that would send a test robot to the Earth-Moon Lagrange point as early as spring of 2024. The goal would be to demonstrate many of the capabilities that Quantum Spaces future outpost would do, such as Earth and lunar observations, communication capabilities, and more.

Its a lot to do within the next two years, but there may be quite a bit more time before NASAs exploration of the Moon picks up. The space agency was eyeing its first human lunar landing in 2024, but recently delayed that to 2025 at the earliest. With key rockets and hardware for Artemis facing repeated delays, there should be ample time to flesh out the cislunar space economy.

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4 Major Space Exploration Projects to Watch for in 2022 From NASA to SpaceX – Daily Beast

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Space travel is all about momentum.

Rockets turn their fuel into momentum that carries people, satellites and science itself forward into space. 2021 was a year full of records for space programs around the world, and that momentum is carrying forward into 2022.

Last year, the commercial space race truly took off. Richard Branson and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos both rode on suborbital launchesand brought friends, including actor William Shatner. SpaceX sent eight astronauts and 1 ton of supplies to the International Space Station for NASA. The six tourist spaceflights in 2021 were a record. There were also a record 19 people weightless in space for a short time in December, eight of them private citizens. Finally, Mars was also busier than ever thanks to missions from the U.S., China and United Arab Emirates sending rovers, probes or orbiters to the red planet.

In total, in 2021 there were 134 launches that put humans or satellites into orbitthe highest number in the entire history of spaceflight. Nearly 200 orbital launches are scheduled for 2022. If things go well, this will smash last years record.

Im an astronomer who studies supermassive black holes and distant galaxies. I have also written a book about humanitys future in space. Theres a lot to look forward to in 2022. The moon will get more attention than it has had in decades, as will Jupiter. The largest rocket ever built will make its first flight. And of course, the James Webb Space Telescope will start sending back its first images.

I, for one, cant wait.

Getting a rocket into orbit around Earth is a technical achievement, but its only equivalent to a half a days drive straight up. Fifty years after the last person stood on Earths closest neighbor, 2022 will see a crowded slate of lunar missions.

NASA will finally debut its much delayed Space Launch System. This rocket is taller than the Statue of Liberty and produces more thrust than the mighty Saturn V. The Artemis I mission will head off this spring for a flyby of the moon. Its a proof of concept for a rocket system that will one day let people live and work off Earth. The immediate goal is to put astronauts back on the moon by 2025.

Concept art for NASA's Artemis 1 mission.

ESA

NASA is also working to develop the infrastructure for a lunar base, and its partnering with private companies on science missions to the Moon. A company called Astrobotic will carry 11 payloads to a large crater on the near side of the moon, including two mini-rovers and a package of personal mementos gathered from the general public by a company based in Germany. The Astrobotic lander will also be carrying the cremated remains of science fiction legend Arthur C. Clarkeas with Shatners flight into space, its an example of science fiction turned into fact. Another company, Intuitive Machines, plans two trips to the moon in 2022, carrying 10 payloads that include a lunar hopper and an ice mining experiment.

Russia is getting in on the lunar act, too. The Soviet Union accomplished many lunar firstsfirst spacecraft to hit the surface in 1959, first spacecraft to soft-land in 1966 and the first lunar rover in 1970but Russia hasnt been back for over 45 years. In 2022, it plans to send the Luna 25 lander to the moons south pole to drill for ice. Frozen water is an essential requirement for any moon base.

While NASAs Space Launch System will be a big step up for the agency, Elon Musks new rocket promises to be the king of the skies in 2022.

The SpaceX Starshipthe most powerful rocket ever launchedwill get its first orbital launch in 2022. Its fully reusable, has more than twice the thrust of the Saturn V rocket and can carry 100 tons into orbit. The massive rocket is central to Musks aspirations to create a self-sustaining base on the moon and, eventually, a city on Mars.

Part of what makes Starship so important is how cheap it will make bringing things into space. If successful, the price of each flight will be $2 million. By contrast, the price for NASA to launch the Space Launch System is likely to be over $2 billion. The reduction in costs by a factor of a thousand will be a game-changer for the economics of space travel.

The moon and Mars arent the only celestial bodies getting attention next year. After decades of neglect, Jupiter will finally get some love, too.

The European Space Agencys Icy Moons Explorer is scheduled to head off to the gas giant midyear. Once there, it will spend three years studying three of Jupiters moonsGanymede, Europa and Callisto. These moons are all thought to have subsurface liquid water, making them potentially habitable environments.

Additionally, in September 2022, NASAs Juno spacecraftwhich has been orbiting Jupiter since 2016is going to swoop within 220 miles of Europa, the closest-ever look at this fascinating moon. Its instruments will measure the thickness of the ice shell, which covers an ocean of liquid water.

All this action in the solar system is exciting, but 2022 will also see new information from the edge of space and the dawn of time.

After successfully reaching its final destination, unfurling its solar panels and unfolding its mirrors in January, NASAs James Webb Space Telescope will undergo exhaustive testing and return its first data sometime midyear. The 21-foot (6.5-meter) telescope has seven times the collecting area of the Hubble Space Telescope. It also operates at longer wavelengths of light than Hubble, so it can see distant galaxies whose light has been redshiftedstretched to longer wavelengths by the expansion of the universe.

By the end of the year, scientists should be getting results from a project aiming to map the earliest structures in the universe and see the dawn of galaxy formation. The light these structures gave off was some of the very first light in history and was emitted when the universe was only 5 percent of its current age.

When astronomers look out in space they look back in time. First light marks the limit of what humanity can see of the universe. Prepare to be a time traveler in 2022.

Chris Impey is a professor of astronomy at the University of Arizona.

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New center launches with focus on early stars and galaxies – Arizona State University

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February 2, 2022

A new center at Arizona State University aims to help us better understand the history of early stars, galaxies and black holes to enhance our knowledge of the universe.

The Beus Center for Cosmic Foundations was founded in theSchool of Earth and Space Explorationthrough a generous gift by philanthropists Leo and Annette Beus.

We have witnessed great outcomes at ASU and are grateful to be a part of this new opportunity to advance cosmic exploration, said Leo Beus, co-founder of Beus Gilbert McGroder PLLC who has practiced law in the Valley for 51 years. This investment enables us to support highly skilled researchers in their quest to understand the beginnings of stars and galaxies.

In addition to establishing a new center, the $8 million endowed gift includes a named professorship and named chair.

This center provides a legacy we can leave to our children and grandchildren who love exploring the stars as much as Leo and I do, Annette Beus said. Its always rewarding to see how our investments advance the universitys mission.

The Beuses have made a lasting impact on Arizona State University through their philanthropic investments that include theBeus Center for Law and Society, Sun Devil Athletics, theBeus Compact X-ray Free Electron Laser (CXFEL) Labin theBiodesign Instituteand numerous scholarships to increase student access to a college education.

Leo and Annette Beus are longtime supporters of ASU and are critical to the universitys mission and success, ASU PresidentMichael M. Crowsaid.This recent investment will advance current research in star formation as well as ASUs world-renowned space program.

ASU researchers have access to the most advanced astronomical observatories globally and in Earths orbit. The Beuses investment will help researchers understand what first stars were like and how they interplay with their galactic environments. In conjunction with ASU engineers and instrument developers, the center unites a premier group in the development and deployment of technologies and techniques to enable transformational observations of the universe.

"The Beus Center for Cosmic Foundations will allow faculty and students at ASU to explore the origins of the universe like never before, saidKenro Kusumi, dean of natural sciences in The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. As a leader in cosmology and astronomy research, the School of Earth and Space Exploration continues to create new technologies that revolutionize our ability to understand the universe."

School of Earth and Space Exploration DirectorMeenakshi Wadhwasaid the center builds upon ASUs tradition of leading major advances in understanding the formation of galaxies and stars.

The Beus Center will help to advance this research into the next era of discovery through cutting-edge observational and theoretical astrophysics, as well as the development of innovative new technologies and tools for such research, Wadhwa said. In doing so, it will play a key role in advancing a core mission of our school by combining science and engineering for exploration and discovery.

Judd Bowman, professor in the School of Earth and Space Exploration, will serve as the inaugural endowed chair of the center and is recognized for his teams pioneering instrument, opening new views of the birth of stars that was named among the top 10 "Breakthroughs of the Year by Physics World.

This generous gift from the Beuses enables ASU researchers to make new discoveries into one of humanitys oldest questions: What is our place in the cosmos? Bowman said. Were looking forward to accelerating our research into one of the most mysterious events in the history of the universe the birth of the first stars.

Allison Noble, an assistant professor in the School of Earth and Space Exploration, will serve as the inaugural endowed professor.

There are still so many unanswered questions in the field of galaxy formation and evolution, and the Beus Center for Cosmic Foundations will bring together experts at ASU and attract researchers from around the world to investigate each transformational epoch in the history of the universe from the birth of galaxies at cosmic dawn, to their peak assembly at cosmic noon, and to their final stage today at cosmic dusk, Noble said.

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Ready for liftoff: UASpace launches satellite – The Crimson White – The University of Alabama Crimson White

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UASpaces BAMA-1, a small CubeSat satellite made by the company Astra, will launch into space this Saturday, Feb. 5.

Nine UA students are traveling to Cape Canaveral, Florida, to watch the launch in person. Members, advisers and supporters of UASpace can watch the launch through Astras livestream beginning at 11 a.m. CST.

BAMA-1 will launch from Rocket 3.3, created by Astra, a company founded in 2016 that makes low-cost rockets, and will orbit 312 miles above Earth. This will be the first rocket Astra has launched with a commercial payload and the first satellite launched into space by The University of Alabama.

In fall 2019 UASpace wrote a proposal to NASA to be part of the CubeSat Launch Initiative. In this program, NASA partners with schools and universities to launch CubeSats into space.

In 2020 NASA announced the satellites chosen to be part of the 11th round of the initiative; The University of Alabamas BAMA-1 was one of them.

BAMA-1, a satellite the size of a loaf of bread, is testing drag sail technology. This technology will eliminate excessive space debris and shorten the deorbiting time of satellites.

John Baker, the faculty adviser for UASpace and a professor of aerospace engineering and mechanics, said excessive space debris is a current issue.

The concern is that at some point in time you will get cascade collisions, Baker said. There will be so much debris that it will remove the ability to effectively use that orbit for satellites. Its important that we start deorbiting things when they are at the end of their useful life, and the drag sail will do that.

Ian Noonan, the president of UASpace and chief technical officer of BAMA-1, said a satellite with current technology deorbits in an average of five years, but he foresees that BAMA-1s drag sail technology will deorbit in anywhere from 50 days to five months.

Noonan, a fourth-year aerospace engineering and MBA student, joined UASpace, formerly a CubeSat club, in 2018 after hearing Baker encourage engineering students to join.

Im very proud of this group and the work we have accomplished, Noonan said. Im grateful to have been given this opportunity.

Baker said the goal of UASpace was not just to create the CubeSat.

The goal was also to inspire the next generation, especially in areas of Alabama that may not see the opportunity to go to college or participate in something like this, he said.

UASpace has worked with local middle and high schools to encourage space exploration and engineering. In March 2020, the group created educational YouTube videos and worksheets. The worksheets cover science and math skills while also explaining UASpaces CubeSat program for students in kindergarten through 12th grade.

Because the project has taken almost three years to complete, many students worked with BAMA-1 but graduated before the launch.

We are really proud of these students who have gone through this program and the teams that we have. We have hit roadblocks, but we have found solutions together, said Rohan Sood, a faculty adviser for UASpace and a professor of aerospace engineering and mechanics.

Mike Pope, an adviser for UASpace and a marketing professor, encourages students of all majors to join UASpace. In addition to learning about space exploration and engineering, students also learn program management and skills to communicate about technical subjects.

I think I am most excited for the students who have come through, supported the program and are in industry now, Pope said. Just to be at this stage is very gratifying. We helped, but most of it was on the students shoulders.

Abby Feeder, the project manager for the BAMA-1 CubeSat program, will graduate this spring with an MBA and masters degree in aerospace engineering. Feeder said UASpace is in the beginning phases of planning its next CubeSat, BAMA-2.

We are going to see how the [BAMA-1] launch goes, Feeder said. We are going to take that and make the next generation by adding in new technology, broadening the scope of what we want to do as its mission, and get as many students involved as possible.

Feeder said UASpace will work with members, NASA and industry partners to decide what mission is best for BAMA-2.

NASA funded the BAMA-1 CubeSats launch from Astras Rocket 3.3. Lockheed Martin, Linc Research and the Alabama Space Grant Consortium funded the creation of the BAMA-1 CubeSat. UASpace has also received donations from the UA aerospace engineering and mechanics department.

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