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Category Archives: Space Exploration

Aerospace peppers and astronaut robots: A town’s transformation reveals China’s ambitions in space – Los Angeles Times

Posted: May 11, 2017 at 1:04 pm

If you follow Chinas bold ambition to join the great space powers, it will eventually lead you here, to the neglected eastern edge of steamy Hainan island, in a speck of a village that doesnt appear on most maps.

Rocket replicas and signs for Wi-Fi welcome visitors past coconut trees and peppers grown from seeds bred in space. Guide maps show what this hamlet of about 50 residents might become, though the blacktop still looks fresh and most of the noise comes from the chicken coop. A robot in astronaut attire zips around an empty restaurant.

Local officials envision Haosheng as the start of a thriving tourist destination tied to nearby Wenchang Satellite Launch Center, much in the way Floridas Space Coast draws visitors interested in Cape Canaveral. Chinas newest spaceport opened for tours last year and just sent the countrys first cargo spacecraft into orbit.

Chinese officials have realized much as the U.S. did in the 1960s that a popular space program can serve as a rallying point for national pride, a notion key to President Xi Jinpings quest for national rejuvenation. The latest efforts help recast a clandestine military-led program into an entertaining, tourist-friendly initiative as China demonstrates its ascent and tests U.S. supremacy in space.

Space exploration is a standard mark of whether the country is developed, said Wumei Ling, 23, who assists at the visitors center, a shed filled with pamphlets of cuddly alien mascots.

The distance between the U.S. and China is shortening. Im very proud.

China still lags far behind the U.S. but is investing millions amid uncertainty about Washingtons priorities. Its also vying against ambitious private companies like Hawthorne-based SpaceX that assist NASA and seek to dominate frontier markets.

Xi has tethered space power to the countrys rise. Last year for the first time, China launched more rockets than Russia. The nation also undertook its longest crewed mission and completed the worlds largest radio telescope. It aims to land a rover on the far side of the moon next year, a first for any country, and put a probe on Mars by 2020.

Just 10 or 20 years ago, you could not imagine China doing what its done or plans to do, said Zong Qiugang, an astrophysicist at Peking University in Beijing, who has worked with the U.S and Chinese space agencies.

South of Haosheng, launch towers jut into the horizon. The government embedded the three other spaceports deep in the interior. That makes this one located a half-hour drive from the coastal city of Wenchang in Chinas southernmost province the most accessible.

Hundreds of people climbed on top of buildings and lined up along the beach late last month to watch the cargo spacecraft shoot into the atmosphere. Even more gathered in June for the centers first launch, the test flight of a liquid-fueled carrier rocket.

Its a major shift from a program that was owned by the military and covered in secrecy to one that is more open to the rest of Chinese society and looking towards the outside, said Gregory Kulacki, China project manager for the Union of Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit science advocacy organization.

When the U.S. put a man on the moon in 1969, China was busy condemning capitalist devils and closing colleges as part of the Cultural Revolution. The nation put its first astronaut in space more than three decades later.

The latest launch puts China a step closer to the orbiting space station it plans to complete by 2022, around the time the International Space Station which is largely operated by the U.S. and bans the communist country winds down. This would make China the only nation with a permanent presence in space.

But the days of a Sputnik-style race have ended. Chinas space goals are as much about cultural prestige, diplomacy and economics as they are about geopolitical tactics.

Efforts like Haosheng underscore that strategy.

It would be a pity not to play the aerospace card, Wenchang Mayor Wang Xiaoqiao told state media in January when he announced Haoshengs transformation. He described a region prosperous from tech advancements and aerospace training.

The village only recently opened as a space tourism destination, and Ou Rongdong, who is starting an open-air restaurant topped with fake ivy, serves as its de facto greeter.

The jovial 39-year-old, clad in jeans and a T-shirt, calls himself an honorary citizen, because hes from the mainland. Ou detailed the new plans as he lunched on duck in soy sauce with the towns artistic re-creators. The gazebo behind the restaurant rang with the clink of hammers.

Ou counted at least 25 companies that will work in the village, which until now, he said, consisted of fewer than a dozen households, all with the surname Zheng. He predicted more job opportunities.

My generation or the next generation is very interested in space, Ou said. The satellite dream adds to the Chinese dream of imagination, originality and everything else.

Hainan, sometimes referred to as Chinas Hawaii, has always drawn tourists. It pulls northerners eager to flee choking smog and Russians escaping Siberian winters. Situated on the edge of the South China Sea, its also a key spot for the nations main submarine base.

Physics too plays a role. The Earth rotates fastest at the equator, giving rockets an extra push. And any debris from a launch will more likely hit water than land.

Hainan is incredibly militarized and hugely strategically vital, said Dean Cheng, who studies Chinas space program at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington think tank.

Foreigners cant tour the launch center. They can, however, pay a fee to sit in a chair near the ticket entrance and experience a simulated spaceflight.

And they can visit Haosheng.

Zheng Yugan recognizes the tourism drive is altering his community but consented to the local government payoff: 30 chickens and a renovated home.

After the change, its very beautiful, said Zheng, who, like others in the village, is an aging farmer. He shrugged at mentions of space and resumed his crouch near the new turquoise exercise equipment.

Wenchang officials may have dreamed a little too big. They laid the foundation stone for a theme park in 2010; it still hasnt opened. Empty, half-built condos stare out at fields leading to Haosheng. A planned business district has yet to develop.

Still, real estate ads line the highway. Banners spread across bus stops in downtown Wenchang remind citizens about food safety and show a small rocket blasting off in a corner. A March race billed itself as the Wenchang Space City International Half-Marathon.

Residents see possibility for a forgotten part of the island.

Holly Chen and her mother folded clothes one morning in their tiny shop near the race route.

More and more people will visit, said the 20-year-old, who recently graduated from college and returned to Hainan. To send a rocket to space, we as locals feel honored.

She went back to folding T-shirts, fresh with logos of the solar system.

Nicole Liu of The Times Beijing bureau contributed to this report from Hainan.

Meyers is a special correspondent.

Twitter: @jessicameyers

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Aerospace peppers and astronaut robots: A town's transformation reveals China's ambitions in space - Los Angeles Times

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To Mars, and beyond: Buzz Aldrin describes vision for space exploration – The Guardian

Posted: at 1:04 pm

Nasa should aim to reach an important milestone on the way to Mars during Donald Trumps presidency, astronaut Buzz Aldrin told a conference on Tuesday.

Trump spoke of being ready to unlock the mysteries of space in his inaugural address and last month signed a Nasa funding bill containing the most comprehensive language yet in support of Mars exploration, setting a target of 2033 for a manned mission.

Aldrin, who recently met the vice-president, Mike Pence, at the White House, declared at the Humans to Mars Summit in Washington: I think we can all say with confidence that we are closer to Mars today than we have ever been.

The second man to walk on the moon laid out his longstanding vision of cycler spacecraft that, by 2039 or earlier, could carry astronauts on the three-month trip to Mars every two years. This commute, based on gravity-assisted trajectories and with refuelling done in Earth orbit, would be more cost-efficient than launching rockets from Earth every time, he argued.

Evidently aware of political imperatives, Aldrin suggested that one of the cyclers could be designed and tested before the first term of the president is out.

He told delegates at George Washington University: I think we can send a very early version to an asteroid. They dont get back until after the election of 2020, but at least there is an achievement of sorts that can be demonstrated.

The 87-year-old added: A fly-by of Venus can be done before 2024.

Eventually, the cyclers could send people to Mars to build a permanent settlement. We will be achieving continued occupation on Mars with international crews and this will require a presidential commitment, said Aldrin. I believe this nation within two decades will lead international crews to Mars to occupy; not to visit and come back and leave it empty, but to occupy before coming back.

Although grand ambitions of reaching Mars first may seem to chime with Trumps brand of nationalism and conjure images of the stars and stripes being planted on the red planet, Aldrin and other experts agree it must involve international cooperation.

A US-led coalition would include Europe, Russia, India, Japan and China, as well as emerging space nations the United Arab Emirates, South Korea and Saudi Arabia, Aldrin added. We can afford to go to Mars but we must have fiscal discipline. We must focus our limited resources on only those things that are really necessary to get to Mars. In my view, we are currently spending over $6bn on programmes we do not need to get to Mars. We need reusability, every element of the system.

Aldrin began and ended his speech with the phrases No flags or footprints this time and Get your ass to Mars! the latter a quote from the 1990 sci-fi film Total Recall. But his plan would require a massive concentration of money to build technologies and vehicles that do not yet exist.

Nasa is currently building its most powerful ever rocket, the Space Launch System, due for test flight in 2019. The agency is aiming for a 2033 launch of a crewed mission to orbit but not land on Mars. Similarly, the Apollo missions of half a century ago circled the moon before Apollo 11 allowed Aldrin and Neil Armstrong to walk on the lunar surface.

Aware of how John F Kennedys presidency is still associated with his vision of putting a man on the moon by the end of the 1960s, Trump may be alive to the political symbolism of pushing back frontiers in space. Hes much more proactive, said Jeff Bingham, a space industry veteran and retired US Senate staffer. His comments are more positive than the last administration.

Last month, during a video call with an astronaut aboard the International Space Station, Trump raised the issue of sending humans to Mars and said: Well, we want to try and do it during my first term or, at worst, during my second term, so well have to speed that up a little bit, OK?

Pascal Lee, chairman of the Mars Institute and director of the Nasa Haughton-Mars Project, said: The rumour I hear is that the president is wanting to do something thats going to be exciting in space, and the filter seems to have been: can it be done in his first term or second term? None of this that were talking about here, Mars, is really doable in that short of a time frame, although going into Mars orbit is potentially something that could be pulled off before the end of a second term.

But at the same theres no new administrator named yet. In that sense, were still in limbo, if not chaos. So where theres chaos, theres opportunity. This is why I think theres a sense of optimism here because were now overtly talking about going to Mars, but at the same time theres no clear commitment to going.

In last months bill, Trump and Congress retained most of Nasas funding, at about $19.5bn, although it slashed $200m for climate science, education programmes and an asteroid mission that it was hoped would pave the way to Mars.

The mood at the annual Humans to Mars Summit was upbeat. Chris Carberry, chief executive and co-founder of Explore Mars, a nonprofit organisation promoting the cause, welcomed Trumps positive words and said: Were not going to have an Apollo-like moment, or Kennedy-like moment, but I dont think we want to. That proved not to be sustainable after we beat the Soviet Union to the moon we had no reason to continue. There are many reasons why we should explore and thats what were trying to highlight.

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Space exploration: NASA’s 12 ideas for New Frontiers mission in our solar system – Blasting News

Posted: at 1:04 pm

Even before the latest Cassimi spacecraft #Mission to explore Saturn and its moons ends, NASA is already preparing for its next mission to explore our #Solar System. The current Cassimi spacecraft mission is already considered to be a great success since it found strong evidence that alien life may exist on Saturns moons Rhea and Titan. The space agency is very optimistic that its next mission will also collect valuable data and make more new discoveries..

The next #New Frontiers mission that will explore our solar system is expected to launch in the year 2025. It will be an unmanned probe spacecraft mission similar to Cassimi but it will have different objectives. Previous New Frontiers missions include the New Horizons probe spacecraft which passed by the planet Pluto in the outer solar system in 2015 and sent valuable data and detailed images, the Juno probe mission to Jupiter which is still in progress and the Osiris-Rex probe mission, the objective of which is to collect samples from the Bennu asteroid and bring them back to Earth.

NASA has been reviewing proposals for its next New Frontiers mission for quite some time. The space agency has announced that its scientists have narrowed down the list to just twelve candidates. Even though NASA has not yet announced the twelve candidates, we do know that it will be one of the following general themes:.

Asteroid surface samples return to Earth: Since there is already an ongoing mission with the same objective, this might have the least chances of being chosen. On the other hand, NASA is taking the threat of an asteroid impact on Earth very seriously. This is the reason that the space agency may eventually choose this one as a way to find out more about asteroids and find ways to prevent an impact from happening.

Lunar South Pole - Aitken Basin Sample Return: This will be interesting as we will learn more about our moon.

Exploration of possible ocean worlds that may exist on Titan and Enceladus: After the Cassimi spacecraft has found strong evidence that alien life may exist there, such an exploratory mission to actually give a definite answer to this question may just be the one that will be selected..

Saturn Probe: Cassimi is still exploring there so this might indeed have the least chances of being selected unless NASA wants to play it safe by choosing a mission that has the most chances of achieving its objectives.

Trojan Tour and Rendezvous: This would be a mission to explore the origin and evolution of the early solar system that can indeed provide a wealth of scientific knowledge and has good chances of being selected.

Venus in Situ Explorer: This would be a mission that would land on the planet Venus and provide scientific data about fundamental questions like what actually went wrong with the evolution of Venus and it became a place that can be described as resembling hell.

Whichever of the above is chosen to be the next New Frontiers mission, it will definitely provide a wealth of new data that scientists can analyze and use to reach better conclusions. At this moment, humanity does not possess the technology to explore worlds beyond our solar system. However, the exploration of our solar system will definitely give answers to many of our questions until we are ready to take the next step and go even further.

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Endless Space 2 Wants To Psych You Up For Space Exploration With This Latest Trailer – Bleeding Cool News

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Endless Space 2 Wants To Psych You Up For Space Exploration With This Latest Trailer - Bleeding Cool News

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Book review: ‘Wanderers’ looks at space exploration from various points of view – Florida Times-Union

Posted: May 8, 2017 at 12:09 am

THE WANDERERS

Author: Meg Howrey

Data: G.P. Putnams Sons, 384 pages, $27

The framework for Meg Howreys The Wanderers is space exploration, specifically the effects on three space travel veterans and those closest to them of an elaborate 17-month earthbound simulation of travel to Mars and back.

When you evaluate whether this novel would be a good choice for you, do something that will gain or lose it a lot of this is something I might enjoy points, depending on your perspective and mood. Assume, whatever the Martian motif or cover blurbs may suggest, that the book is NOT sci-fi or anything much like it. Instead, its literary fiction whose space-travel theme provides some special tools for examining human personality, identity, and relationships. Also, assume it is NOT plot-driven: the narrative framework IS the plot, and everything else is the exposition and evolution of the characters.

A few years into the future, privatization of space exploration is the accepted reality. The moon is an immediate target for mining, but the president of multinational Prime Space Inc. has his sights set on a crewed mission to Mars. Primes immediate project is to recruit primary and backup three-person crews for the fully automated craft, and quickly plunge the primary crew into a simulation so intense that even space veterans, as the crew all are, will not be able to find anything unrealistic about it.

Prime Space has opted for a three-person crew of American, Japanese, and Russian space travel veterans. They havent worked together before, but Prime Spaces personality-matching algorithms have been working overtime to pick a crew that will be compatible and complementary.

American Helen Kane is the ultimate astronaut, a technically ultra-qualified pragmatist who has worked hard to adapt her personality to politically or personally complex situations. In her 50s, she is thrilled and relieved to have an opportunity to return to outer space. Yoshihiro (Yoshi) Tanaka, the youngest crew member, is adaptable and has an artistic sensibility. Sergei Kuznetsov is a decisive character with a big personality. Perhaps to highlight what a capable three-way match Prime Space has pulled off, each of the crew is fluent in the native languages of the other two.

The story is told from seven points of view, those of Helen, Helens adult daughter, Yoshi, Yoshis wife, Sergei, one of Sergeis adolescent sons and a Prime Space family liaison employee. The daughter, the wife and the son each have developing life narratives apart, if not wholly detached, from what is happening with the Mars simulation.

Some of the individual chapters covering the non-crew characters read like stand-alone short stories. The narratives, in and out of the simulation, have themes that mirror each other: the limits of love, boundaries between human and artificial intelligence, and differences between the outwardly perceived and inner selves. The characters sometimes verge on becoming human-bodied avatars for specific character traits, but the author keeps them relatable.

If youre looking for a nail biter, this is not your book. If youre open to a space themed, humane and generally hopeful thought-provoker about humans on and potentially off of the home planet, give it a try.

Anne Payne organizes the Jax Freestyle Book Club for Real Readers at meetup.com.

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Senator Ted Cruz, NASA’s Acting Administrator Robert Lightfoot, Space and Mars Experts to Join The Atlantic’s Summit … – The Atlantic

Posted: May 6, 2017 at 3:48 am

Washington, D.C. (May 2, 2017) Space discovery has been an enduring source of national pride, since Project Mercury and the Vostok Program first competed to put men into orbit in the 1950s and 60s. In recent years, new players have taken prominent roles in ambitious missions, including space tourism and missions to Mars. At this junction in space exploration, The Atlantic will convene On the Launchpad: Return to Deep Space, a summit gathering policymakers, key players from NASA, and space industry experts to explore the future of extraterrestrial travel on Tuesday, May 16, at the Newseum in Washington, D.C.

Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX), chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Space, Science, and Competitiveness, will be interviewed at the event. Discussions will also include acting NASA administrator Robert Lightfoot on the future of NASA, and former NASA chief scientist Ellen Stofan on what it would take for the U.S. to launch a mission to Mars. Chris Carberry, the CEO and co-founder of Explore Mars, Inc and Dr. Robert Zubrin, founder of Mars Society, will discuss the science of getting to the red planet.

Additional speakers and agenda details will be available soon. For more information and a live video feed of the program on May 16, visit the event website; and join the conversation with @AtlanticLIVE and #AtlanticSpace.

The Atlantics Ross Andersen, Science, Technology, and Health editor, and Steve Clemons, Washington editor at large, will moderate discussions throughout the day. For The Atlantics latest science coverage, visit TheAtlantic.com/science.

The program will run from 1:30-4:30 PM EST, with a networking reception to follow, on Tuesday, May 16, at the Newseum (555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW). Media should RSVP directly to this email or reach out to Sydney Simon (ssimon@theatlantic.com, 202-266-7338) for more information.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise is the underwriter of On the Launchpad: Return to Deep Space.

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Senator Ted Cruz, NASA's Acting Administrator Robert Lightfoot, Space and Mars Experts to Join The Atlantic's Summit ... - The Atlantic

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NASA Marshall’s Paul McConnaughey Runs Toward Challenges of Space Exploration – PR Newswire (press release)

Posted: May 4, 2017 at 3:32 pm

HUNTSVILLE, Ala., May 3, 2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Exploration is all about experiencing new challenges, and Dr. Paul McConnaugheywould know. He's found a way to explore and discover new environments both professionally and personally.

Years of running and biking, of training for and recovering from marathons, duathlons, 5Ks and adventure runs around the world even on the Great Wall of China have given him a keen appreciation for planning, discipline and teamwork. All qualities he has used for more than 30 years in his day job at NASA helping guide the nation's space program.

He'll be sharing his sense of adventure of the space variety with other avid travelers during this week's Travel Blogger Exchange (TBEX) conference at the Von Braun Center in Huntsville, Alabama. It's all about chasing the challenge, experiencing different cultures and seeking out new experiences that keeps him going.

"Every day is different," said McConnaughey, the associate director, technical, in the Office of the Center Director at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville. He's been in the position since August 2015, serving as Marshall's chief technical officer, working to keep the talented teams at the center focused on delivering high-quality engineering capabilities, space systems, scientific research and emerging technologies.

That big picture role is particularly interesting now, as testing of flight hardware is underway at Marshall for NASA's Space Launch System the most powerful rocket in the world, designed to carry astronauts and equipment on exploration missions deeper into space than ever before, paving the way for our Journey to Mars. It's an exciting time in the space industry.

McConnaughey didn't imagine a career in space exploration but was intrigued by the sciences as he grew up in Winthrop Harbor, Illinois, a small town near Lake Michigan. His interests led him to earth and environmental sciences and to classes at the University of Montana in Missoula, then at Oregon State University in Corvallis, where he earned a bachelor's degree in soil science. McConnaughey received a fellowship to study at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and earned both master's and doctoral degrees.

He taught mathematics and soil physics for three years at Mississippi State University in Starkville, then got the opportunity to put his graduate school experience in computational fluid dynamics to use on spaceships instead of soil.

"You think, 'What do I want to do with the rest of my life? Go on and publish papers? Or do I want to go and actually create space hardware?'" McConnaughey said. "That ended up being a no-brainer space hardware."

He joined Marshall in 1986 as an engineer in the Systems Dynamics Laboratory, and has since worked on space vehicle technologies of joint interest to NASA and the U.S. Air Force. He's also served in the Exploration Systems Development Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington, where he oversaw the integration of SLS, the Orion spacecraft and Ground Support Development and Operations programs.

Through it all McConnaughey has been an avid runner and traveler. He was a finisher in the 2012 Boston Marathon, and in March was part of a team of 12 from Marshall completing a 195-mile relay race from Chattanooga to Nashville.

After a year of training, McConnaughey and his wife, Angie, trekked to the 20,200-foot summit of Stok Kangri in northern India, and three days later ran a marathon through dusty, high desert trails. They are now planning and training for a bicycle camping adventure along North America's Great Divide, from Banff, Canada, to Mexico a 2,700 mile trip.

"Training and qualifying for an event like this is similar to running a NASA project. You set a goal and a plan, work with a disciplined and diligent team, then execute," McConnaughey said. "Making the decision to participate is exciting and so is the event itself, but you've got the pain in between. There are a lot of things we do in NASA that are like that. All the hard stuff occurs in the middle, the essential 'grunge work' of development, testing and retesting, and we do that very well at Marshall."

Developing the knowledge, tools and vehicles for successful space travel is certainly difficult, but never boring. SLS will enable human exploration missions to deep space, and that's exciting even by NASA's cosmic standards.

"I'm here because I love my job. I feel like I can have a significant influence on the future of Marshall and the agency," McConnaughey said. "And, more importantly, to pass the torch to the next generation. Ultimately, a job is about the people you impact in your life, who they are and what they do after you're gone."

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nasa-marshalls-paul-mcconnaughey-runs-toward-challenges-of-space-exploration-300450787.html

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China and US should cooperate on space exploration – South China Morning Post

Posted: May 2, 2017 at 11:15 pm

There is every reason why China and the United States should work together in space. As the leading space powers, they are best placed to shape the rules that will be needed to cope with the ever-increasingly crowded cosmos. But as the launch of the first Chinese cargo freighter shows, cooperation is not even taking place at the most basic of levels. The ship, Tianzhou-1, will carry building materials and crew for the construction of Chinas space station, an inevitability given a US ban on involvement in the worlds only such project.

US lawmakers banned China from the International Space Station (ISS) in 2011 to prevent espionage. Driven by rivalry and mistrust, their justification was to protect national interests. But space is expensive to explore and scientists have no need for politics; it gets in the way of their thirst for knowledge and discovery. That is why the US, the main builder and operator of the ISS, has already invited aboard astronauts and scientists from 15 countries.

What is the Tianzhou 1 and why does it matter in Chinas ambitious space mission?

Space is, after all, increasingly important to most facets of our lives. Services like communications, navigation and data transmission are reliant on satellites and with growing demand and expectations, they need to be ever-more sophisticated. Improved technology makes new industries possible, with space tourism the most imminent, but ideas like asteroid mining and laser communications are now perceived as being close at hand. Space, by some estimates, already accounts for US$330 billion of business that employs more than one million people and the research and experiments that can be carried out in space make for ever-greater possibilities.

China being shut out of the ISS made development of its own space station inevitable. The successful launch of the Tianzhou-1 means work can start next year for a scheduled completion date in 2020. No nation has had such an ambitious space programme that has achieved so much so quickly; Chinas first manned space flight was just 14 years ago and since then, there have been two- and three-person crews, the mastering of space walking and orbital docking, the sending to the moon of multiple spacecraft including a lunar rover and plans are under way for a mission to Mars. In terms of know-how and investment, China and the US are the leaders.

Chinas first cargo spacecraft Tianzhou-1 docks as planned with orbiting space lab

The two nations should be, and need to be, cooperating. But their scientists and astronauts working together is only one element; the more crowded space gets, the greater the need for management to deal with disputes, debris and the threat of weapons, among much else. Investors will want predictability. China and the US can help formulate and shape regulations. But that will be difficult if they have no experience of collaboration.

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Space exploration takes center stage at Silicon Valley Comic Con 2017 – SpaceFlight Insider

Posted: at 11:15 pm

Jim Sharkey

May 1st, 2017

Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin speaking on Humanitys Future in Space on April 22, 2017, at the Silicon Valley Comic Con in San Jose, Calif. Photo Credit: Jim Sharkey / SpaceFlight Insider

SAN JOSE, Calif. This years Silicon Valley Comic Con (SVCC), held on April 2123 at the San Jose Convention Center, added space exploration to the events mix of pop culture and technology. Both NASA and the SETI Institute had large displays in a central area of the exhibit hall. Panels were held throughout the convention, with scientists and engineers discussing a variety of space-related topics. Other highlights included a talk by Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin and the SETI InstitutesSpaceBall Gala.

NASAs display at Silicon Valley Comic Con. Photo Credit: Jim Sharkey / SpaceFlight Insider

The SVCC event was great public outreach and just a lot of fun, said Chris McKay, the senior space scientist at NASA Ames Research Center. Talking about Mars exploration at the SVCC was a natural fit. I see a lot of overlap between the NASA missions and the world of comics.

NASA panels and exhibits were coordinated by the Ames Office of Education and Public Engagement. NASA provided 24 panelists who spoke on panels about the exploration of the Solar System and beyond, NASAs Journey to Mars, research aboard the International space Station, living in space, NASAs next technology, and Mars science.

NASAs booth on the exhibit hall floor included displays about laser communications technology, exoplanets, aeronautics research, space biosciences, human factors, and more. Staff from NASA Ames missions such as the planet-hunting Kepler spacecraft and the SOFIA airborne observatory answered questions and talked about the findings of those missions. SOFIA pilots were available to sign autographs and visitors could take pictures of themselves in a standing astronaut suit with a peek-through cutout in the helmet.

On Saturday, April 22, Buzz Aldrin spoke at the Civic National theater to a crowd of about 2,000 people about his career as a NASA astronaut, the Apollo 11 Moon landing, and his plan to land humans on Mars by 2035.

The SETI Institutes booth had a cutaway model of NASAs SOFIA flying observatory showing the aircrafts interior, as well as models of the Kepler spacecraft and the Allen Telescope Array (ATA). Visitors could talk to SETI Institute scientists and get a free pair of eclipse glasses. SETI scientists spoke on panels about the hunt for life beyond Earth and the search for extraterrestrial intelligence.

The SpaceBall Gala featured lightning space talks by researchers, theremin music, and a live auction. On Sunday, the SETI Institute presented a screening of the movie Contact (1997), complete with commentary by SETI Institute astronomer Jill Tarter.

Virgin Galactic was represented on the exhibit hall floor by a model of Cosmic Girl, the Boeing 747-400 carrier aircraft that will air launch the two-stage LauncherOne rocket carrying small satellite payloads into orbit. Scott Macklin, Propulsion Boost Stage Manager at Virgin Orbit, gave a talk about how Virgin Galactic and Virgin Orbit are trying to increase access to space for both humans and satellites.

I believe that there is an intrinsic good that can come from both crewed and uncrewed spaceflight, said Macklin, who is responsible for the design development and operation of the first stage of LauncherOne, including the rockets boost engine, NewtonThree.

After a brief summary of what the experience of a suborbital flight aboard SpaceShipTwo would be like, Macklin discussed the orbital LauncherOne rocket. The 747-400 carrier aircraft Cosmic Girl will carry the LauncherOne rocket to an altitude of about 35,000 feet (10,668 meters). The first stage of LauncherOne is powered by a single 73,500 pounds-force (326.9 kilonewtons) of thrust NewtonThree rocket engine. This engine would typically fire for about three minutes.

After stage separation, the 5,000 pounds-force (22.2 kilonewtons) of thrust NewtonFour rocket engine will carry a satellite payload weighing up to 661 pounds (300 kilograms) into orbit. The company is hoping to reduce development and production costs with innovative techniques for manufacturing carbon fiber propellant tanks and 3-D printed combustion chambers.

Model of Virgin Galactic 747-400 Cosmic Girl carrying 2-stage LauncherOne rocket. Photo Credit: Jim Sharkey / SpaceFlight Insider

Tagged: NASA SETI Silicon Valley Comic Con The Range

Jim Sharkey is a lab assistant, writer and general science enthusiast who grew up in Enid, Oklahoma, the hometown of Skylab and Shuttle astronaut Owen K. Garriott. As a young Star Trek fan he participated in the letter-writing campaign which resulted in the space shuttle prototype being named Enterprise. While his academic studies have ranged from psychology and archaeology to biology, he has never lost his passion for space exploration. Jim began blogging about science, science fiction and futurism in 2004. Jim resides in the San Francisco Bay area and has attended NASA Socials for the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover landing and the NASA LADEE lunar orbiter launch.

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Eaglets’ names honor U.S. space exploration | Local | qconline.com – Quad-Cities Online

Posted: at 11:15 pm

DAVENPORT -- The eaglets are branded.

The votes are in and the newest batch of young bald eagles being raised by Justice and Liberty in a tree at Arconic's Davenport Works now have names: Apollo, Gemini and Mercury.

"All names are from the U.S. space program, and all of those missions used aluminum produced here at Davenport Works," John C. Riches, Arconic spokesman,said in an email Monday.

Mr. Riches said there were about 4,000 votes spread between five different groups of names:

-- Apollo, Gemini and Mercury: 1,091 votes.

-- Scout, Braveheart and Hunter: 1,006 votes.

-- Orville, Wilbur and Amelia: 689 votes.

-- Valor, Nova and Journey: 509 votes.

-- Penny, Sheldon and Leonard: 504 votes.

In 2009, Liberty and Justice settled in the tree owned by Arconic, formerly Alcoa. Since then, they have returned annually and raised their offspring. If this year's trio survive, it will bring the total offspring fledged from that nest to 14:

-- 2010: Two eagles were raised but were not named because the contest and recording of the nest had not started.

-- 2011: One eaglet named Freedom fledged.

-- 2012: Faith, Hope and Spirit were the eaglets.

--2013:Honor and Glory fledged.

-- 2014: One eaglet this time. Rudy was picked for the name.

-- 2015: Liberty and Justice lost their eggs.

-- 2016: Another pair, Star and Sky, fledged.

Arconic's live video of the eagle nest is online atarconic.com/global/en/who-we-are/eagle-cam.asp. More about the early space missions can be found at nasa.gov/missions .

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