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Category Archives: Space Travel
Travel news: Stratford Festivals 70th season, Calgarys latest museum space and the Ritz-Carlton is getting into luxury yachting – Toronto Star
Posted: February 11, 2022 at 6:20 am
Ready for the spotlight
This year will mark the Stratford Festivals 70th season, as well as the pandemic-delayed grand opening of its Tom Patterson Theatre, which will kick off with Richard III; theatre lovers will also be able to book backstage tours of the new, 77,000-square-foot landmark on select dates. At the festivals other venues, the 2022 playbill will include Hamlet, Chicago, a new adaptation of Little Women, and world premieres of Hamlet-911 and 1939. Tickets go on sale online March 6 (members) and March 18 (general public), and if you prefer watching in a smaller, more distanced audience, select shows will be at reduced capacity.
Opening soon
Calgarys Glenbow Museum is closed for a major building reno until 2024, but next month will see the opening of a temporary satellite site: Glenbow at the Edison, which will turn an empty suite in an office tower into a gallery space and new downtown destination. The locations first exhibition will be Uninvited: Canadian Women Artists in the Modern Moment, a showcase of more than 200 works by women artists in early 20th century, organized by the McMichael Canadian Art Collection. Museum admission will be free for all throughout 2022.
Into the wild
Opening this spring in remote Bamfield, B.C., on the traditional territory of the Huu-ay-aht First Nations, Outer Shores Lodge isnt your average ecolodge. The five-acre oceanfront retreat is co-owned and operated by marine ecologists Scott Wallace and Russell Markel, who both led research programs on this site back when it was an outpost of the U.S.-based School for Field Studies. The property will also be the Vancouver Island home base for sister venture Outer Shores Expeditions, which means you can book an all-inclusive stay that comes complete with a small-group tour of the wild coast from aboard a classic wooden schooner.
Setting sail
The Ritz-Carlton is getting into luxury yachting, with plans to launch its debut voyages aboard custom-built cruisers this year. Small enough to access tucked-away ports that megaships cant go, each vessel will feature 149 suites, every one offering a private terrace for ocean views. Beginning in May, the inaugural itineraries will cover Mediterranean routes like Lisbon to Barcelona (with some island hopping in the Balearics), and Marseille to Rome (with stops in glamorous Monte Carlo, Cannes and Portofino).
Sign up at thestar.com/newsletters to get our weekly Travel Headlines newsletter in your inbox. The federal government recommends Canadians avoid non-essential travel. This article is meant to inspire plans for future travel.
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Dubai’s Museum of the Future will celebrate UAE’s pioneering spirit – The National
Posted: at 6:20 am
Dubai's Museum of the Future will embody the forward-thinking spirit of the UAE's founding fathers, said a senior Emirati minister on Thursday.
An eagerly-awaited attraction years in the making will swing open its doors to the public on February 22.
Mohammed Al Gergawi, Minister of Cabinet Affairs, said in Dubai that it would be much more than a museum serving as a "research lab" for the future.
It aims to bring together leading researchers and futurists from all over the world to offer insights into the innovations and technologies to drive development for years to come.
Mr Al Gergawi said the "Museum of the Future represents the thinking of the founding fathers of the UAE", because the UAE has always been future forward.
He said that the idea behind the museum is to "institutionalise future planning".
The museum will feature a dedicated space for children, helping to harness their love of learning.
The attraction has long been lauded as an architectural marvel and has already won global acclaim.
Omar Al Olama, Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, Mohammed Al Gergawi, Minister of Cabinet Affairs, and Khalfan Belhoul, chief executive of Dubai Future Foundation, outline plans for the Museum of the Future. Photo: Supplied
It was named one of the 14 most beautiful museums on the planet in a list compiled by National Geographic magazine in July.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, hailed it as the "most beautiful building on Earth" when revealing the launch date on Twitter.
Mr Al Gergawi said it has "an ageless design ... it will remain modern but the Arabic calligraphy on the building represents our history, our heritage and our culture, which will remain in our future".
Omar Al Olama, Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, said the stunning facility will take visitors on a journey to the future.
"This will be an iconic building ... bringing together human architecture with machine building,' he said.
"The journey in the museum will be simple, you first go to the future, then come back to the present."
Khalfan Belhoul, chief executive of Dubai Future Foundation, said the museum will celebrate humanity and its achievements.
"We are institutionalising future foresight," he said.
"The journey in the museum will begin with a trip to a distant future, going into space, then a trip to the more immediate future.
"The museum will stress the role of humanity, the importance of human interaction.
"The fourth floor of the museum will be dedicated to the environment and sustainability."
The Museum of the Future aims to attract one million visitors annually.
The building. which is 78 metres tall, is comprised of seven floors, three of which will be dedicated to space travel, one for children and one for sustainability.
It will include a meeting space to cater for 1,000 people.
The museum was constructed from 1,024 pieces, a fitting number since 1,024 bytes make up a kilobyte, and 1024 kilobytes equal one megabyte.
Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, offered a fascinating glimpse inside the Museum of the Future.
Sheikh Hamdan posted footage to his Twitter account of visitors admiring the array of hi-tech facilities housed in the stunning structure before its grand opening.
The video promises that the museum will open a window into an exciting future, featuring enterprising space travel and a chance to explore the mega cities of the future.
Guests are shown enjoying an immersive multimedia experience, brought to life using cutting-edge technology.
Each floor will resemble a futuristic film set allowing visitors to explore and interact.
The museum combines elements of exhibition, immersive theatre and a themed attraction to create scenes to show what is possible in the future.
Product, media, exhibition and experience designers have crafted the content.
Three floors of the museum will focus on possible scenarios for outer space resource development, ecosystems and bioengineering, health, wellness and spirituality.
Another floor will display near-future technology that addresses challenges in areas such as health, water, food, transport and energy.
There is also a dedicated childrens floor, where they can explore and solve challenges on their way to becoming future heroes.
Updated: February 11th 2022, 5:17 AM
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Ready to travel: new international museums for 2022 – ArtsHub
Posted: at 6:20 am
Last week we highlighted the new galleries, museums and theatres opening across Australia or in development during 2022. While the trend was more a geographic one for Australia, with projects largely sited in NSW, we take a look at how that perhaps fits within a global landscape.
What is clear, is that while the pandemic may have closed doors, buildings often rolled along with incentives propping up the building industry. This has meant that come the time when we are eager to embrace our cultural dose again it has expanded in volumes.
Further with international borders soon to open again, here are some of the major new museums joining the international cultural landscape in 2022, that might share your future itinerary.
Opened: 16 January
In 2021, a total of $24.9 billion was spent on NFTs, or non-fungible tokens. While it is still surprising that the trend warrants a museum, it seems a no-brainer for tech town, Seattle. Last month it opened a 3,000-square-foot space housing about 30 displays, each between 43 to 85 inches. The Seattle NFT Museum was founded by entrepreneurs Jennifer Wong and Peter Hamilton. The museum is located in the Seattle suburb, Belltown.
Read: Future of NFTs depends on who, not what
Opened: 2 February
Finlands first cultural and event venue dedicated to dance, Dance House Helsinki, opened its doors on 2 February 2022 at Cable Factory in Ruoholahti, Helsinki. More than 5,400 square metres are dedicated to dance, with 935 seats and the largest dance stage in the Nordic countries. It will also be known as Tanssin Talo.
Cost: AUD$128.2 million(68m)Opening: March
Reopening in March is Glasgows Burrell Collection, after being closed for the past five years. Architects John McAslan + Partners have led a major refurbishment of the 1970s building which houses an eclectic collection amassed by the late shipping magnate and arts patron William Burrell, and creating 35% more gallery space and adding a new entrance and learning centre. The revamped building is also more environmentally sustainable following demands of the day.
Opening: 22 February
Pragues former Zenger Electricity Substation has become a major new not-for-profit, and non-governmental institution. Established by the The Pudil Family Foundation, the Kunsthalle will offer a dynamic programme of short-term exhibitions aiming to connect modern and contemporary Czech and international art, and innovative educational activities. Designed by Czech architecture studio Schindler Seko, the space will span 5,700 square metres and include three large gallery spaces, a design shop, a bistro, and a caf with a terrace that features views of Petn Hill and Prague Castle.
After more than six exciting and challenging years of planning, reconstruction and programme development, we are thrilled to finally open the doors of Kunsthalle Praha to the public, said Ivana Goossen, Director of Kunsthalle Praha.
The inaugural exhibition titled Kinetismus: 100 Years of Electricity in Art, will be on view through 20 June 2022
Cost: AUD$34.2 million (21.5m)Opening: 14 July
This renovation has been seven years in the making, and has added a brand-new reception building designed by Bernard Desmoulin to the 15th-century house of the abbots of Cluny what is considered Frances National Museum of the Middle Ages, and is home to the famous Lady and the Unicorn tapestries, which travelled to the Art Gallery of NSW in 2018.
The Gothic chapel and Gallo-Roman thermal baths have also been extensively renovated, and the site has been finally made accessible to disabled visitors. The final phase of the works will overhaul the museums displays which date back to the 1950s. Key objects from the collection include stained-glass panels from the Sainte-Chapelle and 13th-century statues of the kings of Judah that were torn from the faade of Notre-Dame cathedral during the French Revolution and only recovered in 1977.
Cost: AUD$147 million ($US105m)Opening: April
The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego will reopen its La Jolla flagship gallery in April following a renovation and expansion overseen by SelldorfArchitects, who were engaged in 2017, with ground breaking and works commencing in 2016. The gallery first opened in 1941. Today it is a major museum on the edge of the ocean a stunning place to visit.
Cost: US$670mOpening: Opening 11 June
With a prime fjordside location in the centre of Oslo, when it opens in June, Nasjonalmuseet (National Museum) will be the largest museum in the Nordic region. It brings together the collections of three major Norwegian institutions under one roof the National Gallery, the Museum of Contemporary Art and the Museum of Decorative Arts and Design. The building has cost a massive NoK6.1bn ($670m) to realise German architects Kleihues + Schuwerk design. Its footprint spans more than half a million square feet the size we usually give to a major airport terminal or double the size of New Yorks Met Museum and it has been entirely state-funded. It will clearly be a destination, housing iconic artworks such as Edvard Munchs The Scream (1893) and Harald Sohlbergs Winter Night in the Mountains (1914), which has been voted Norways national painting.
A standout feature of the new build will be The Light Hall, an illuminated 2,400 square metre rooftop space for temporary exhibitions. The Nasjonalmuseet is part of the FutureBuilt programme that aims to develop carbon-neutral urban areas in Norway. According to a project statement, the museum has high environmental ambitions and is designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 50% while a heat pump utilising sea water will be used for cooling. The entire faade is covered in Norwegian slate.
Opening: 18 June
The Plateforme 10 arts district in the Swiss city of Lausanne will be completed on 18 June with the opening of a new building housing the relocated Muse de llyse, a leading photography museum, and a museum of design and contemporary applied arts called Mudac. It is part of a precinct reclaimed from old railway buildings, with the first building, Musee Cantonal des Beaux-Arts, that opened in late 2019.
Cost: cost $450mOpening: July
After the last November reveal of Hong Kongs M+ museum, this year we will see the Palace Museum, open within the West Kowloon Cultural District. The museum was announced by the Hong Kong government in December 2016, sparking controversy over the lack of prior public consultation. Designed by the Hong Kong-based architect Rocco Yim, the building will have nine galleries spanning 7,800 square metres, as well as a 400-seat theatre, educational spaces and nursery rooms, and will display around 800 artefacts and imperial treasures on loan from the Forbidden City in Beijing.
Read: International shows and art fairs in 2022
Opening: 8 October
In September 2019, Orange County Museum of Art (OCMA) broke ground on its permanent home at Segerstrom Center for the Arts, a new gallery designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Thom Mayne of Morphosis Studio. The new state-of-the-art 53,000 square foot building at Costa Mesa, California is double the size of the museums former location in Newport Beach.
Large sets of public stairs and a roof terrace are central features that connect OCMA to the Segerstrom Center for the Arts, which includes 25,000 square feet dedicated to galleries, a sculptural wing hovering over the lobby atrium, a 10,000 square foot education center that can be configured as a black-box theater. The building has a distinctive faade of undulating bands of terracotta panels that wrap the exterior and continue inside. Admission will be free for the next ten years, sponsored by Lugano Diamonds. Its inaugural shows will be the California Biennial 2022.
Cost: more than $1bnOpening November
This one has been on the list for a while but is promised to be delivered in November. The foundation stone for the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) was laid 20 years ago by late president Hosni Mubarak. Designed by the Dublin-based architects Heneghan Peng, it is believed to have cost around $1bn, but hey who is counting? Again at around 500,000 square metres rivalling Norway, with much of the funding coming from Japanese government loans. The Museum will house over 100,000 Egyptian artefacts, displayed in chronological sequence. It is located just outside Cairo, and within a short distance from the pyramids at Giza. GEM is expected to welcome more than 15,000 visitors per day.
Opening: late 2022
The Fotografiska chain of photography museums in Stockholm, New York and Tallinn is expanding to Berlin and Shanghai in the second half of 2022. Fotografiska Berlin renovates the Kunsthaus Tacheles, a former department store and Nazi party office that was saved from demolition in the 1990s by artist squatters. Fotografiska Shanghai takes over a former warehouse in the riverfront district of Suzhou Creek. Another new space is scheduled to open in Miami in 2023.
Founded by the Indian businessman and collector Abhishek Poddar, the Museum of Art & Photography (MAP) will open in Bengaluru (also called Bangalore, and the capital of Indias southern Karnataka state), at the end of 2022. Its collection includes more than 18,000 works spanning paintings, photography, textiles, graphic art and sculptures from the tenth century to the present. It has been designed by leading Indian architect, Soumitro Ghosh.
Opening: 22 February
The new Museum of the Future is being described as surreal / symbollic. The faade, conceived by the local architecture studio Killa Design, is covered in poetry phrases written by Dubais ruler Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, and the building is circular representing humanity; while its void represents the unknown future. The goal of this museum is to promote technological development and innovation, especially in the fields of robotics and artificial intelligence (AI).
The website explains: Each floor is like a film set from a future that you can inhabit, explore and interact with Topics featured include the future of space travel and living, climate change and ecology, health, wellness and spirituality. It is located in the Financial District of Dubai, and was founded by the Dubai Future Foundation.
Opening: late 2022
Seouls newest museum will be dedicated to all things robotics. Similar to Dubais Museum of the Future it has a futuristic sphere-like structure, designed by Turkey-based Melike Altnk Architects (MAA). It is also claimed to have been partially built by robots. They have been 3D-printing concrete and assembling the metal plates that cover its faade these past two years.
RAIM is going to be one of the buildings in the center of the renovation area the Changbai New Economic Center which is going to be a Cultural Center for Chang-dong in the northern part of Seoul and is going to be linked to the Photographic Art Museum (PAM) which is going to build next to Robot & AI Museum (RAIM)
Opening: American summer 2022
In Summer 2022 the first permanent museum dedicated to Broadway will open at 145 West 45th Street in the heart of Times Square. The Museum of Broadway is an interactive and experiential museum that celebrates Broadways rich history, the behind-the-scenes and its game changers.
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Ready to travel: new international museums for 2022 - ArtsHub
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One former NASA astronauts view on what is next in space exploration – PBS NewsHour
Posted: February 1, 2022 at 2:54 am
As the world of aerospace continues to expand to include private companies that are now able to send people into orbit, space tech can help life on Earth. The advancement of space and medical technology is something orthopedic surgeon, oncologist, chemical engineer, and astronaut, Robert Satcher knows about first hand.
A lot of the imaging technology we use on cancer patients: MRI, CT Scans owe part of that technology to what was developed at NASA, Satcher said during a conversation with PBS NewsHours Nicole Ellis. From modern day aircrafts, to cell phones, and video chatting services like Zoom and Skype that have become surrogates for human connection during a global pandemic, solutions initially sought to make interplanetary travel and communication possible are now integral parts of everyday life, Satcher said.
Watch the interview with Robert Satcher in the live player above.
The aerospace industry has become more commercially accessible in the years since Satchers NASA Mission to space in 2009. Non-astronauts can now visit space on privately owned and operated space ships through companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin. Its a good time to be a human being because, you know, these things are starting to open up and everybody is going to be able, or more people at least are going to be able to see what its like to be in space, Satcher said.
Despite companies like SpaceX setting its sights on building human settlements on Mars, our journey towards becoming a multi-planet species is in its infancy. Scientists are still figuring out how to make the 3-year journey survivable. However, one of the more significant developments in commercial space exploration is affordability by creating reusable spacecrafts.
Another crucial part of development over the years has been the diversifying of the aerospace field, while still slow, Satcher said that having people of different trades, genders, ethnicities and backgrounds will be an essential part of making our galaxy more accessible to humans. No particular group has a monopoly on either perspective or capability. So you got to get all of these different perspectives and everything to to really maximize what you get in terms of development and research and technical advancement, he said.
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A lunar return, a Jupiter moon, the most powerful rocket ever built and the James Webb Space Telescope space missions to watch in the coming months -…
Posted: at 2:54 am
2022 is set to be humanitys busiest year in space. CSA Images via Getty Images
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 launches and 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 orbit the 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.
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. Clarke as 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 firsts first spacecraft to hit the surface in 1959, first spacecraft to soft-land in 1966 and the first lunar rover in 1970 but 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 Starship the most powerful rocket ever launched will 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 US$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 moons Ganymede, Europa and Callisto. These moons are all thought to have subsurface liquid water, making them potentially habitable environments.
Additionally, in September 2022, NASAs Juno spacecraft which has been orbiting Jupiter since 2016 is 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 redshifted stretched to longer wavelengths by the expansion of the universe.
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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% 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, University Distinguished Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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Jessica Watkins is getting ready to be the first Black woman to spend months in space – NPR
Posted: at 2:54 am
NASA astronaut Jessica Watkins waves at the audience during the astronaut graduation ceremony at Johnson Space Center in Houston Texas, on January 10, 2020. Mark Felix/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
NASA astronaut Jessica Watkins waves at the audience during the astronaut graduation ceremony at Johnson Space Center in Houston Texas, on January 10, 2020.
After an enrichment program at Sally Ride Elementary School, a young Jessica Watkins realized what she wanted to do when she grew up: study the geology of other planets.
Today, at 33 years old, Watkins is training for a mission to do just that.
This April, Watkins is set to become the first Black woman to live and work on the International Space Station for an extended mission. She will arrive there onboard a SpaceX capsule and then spend six months on the ISS as part of NASA's Artemis program, a multi-billion dollar effort designed to return humans to the surface of the moon in 2025.
"We are building on the foundation that was laid by the Black women astronauts who have come before me," Watkins told NPR's Morning Edition. "I'm definitely honored to be a small part of that legacy, but ultimately be an equal member of the crew."
Of the roughly 250 people who have boarded the ISS, fewer than 10 have been Black. Prior to the inception of the space station, Mae Jemison, an engineer and physician, became the first Black woman to travel to space in 1992. Other Black women have followed, including NASA astronauts Stephanie Wilson and Joan Higginbotham.
NASA selected Watkins for its astronaut program in 2017. She holds a bachelor's degree in geological and environmental sciences from Stanford University and a doctorate in geology from the University of California, Los Angeles.
Watkins will cover a lot of ground on her mission: earth and space science, biological science and human research into things like the effects of long-duration spaceflight for humans. That's when the astronauts themselves become "the lab rats," Watkins told NPR.
Over the course of her six-month mission, Watkins will also observe and photograph geological changes on Earth.
Ahead of her journey, Watkins said she's done training on the systems of the International Space Station and how to fix anything if it isn't working properly. She's also practiced walking in space by wearing a puffy white suit in an underwater ISS mockup that's housed in a giant pool.
Watkins said the journey to space has wide-ranging implications on everything from medical research "with direct impacts into our daily lives," to international collaboration. Even amid tensions here on Earth between Washington and Moscow over Ukraine, she notes, the U.S. portion of the ISS is docked to the Russian segment.
"We are all coming together to accomplish this really hard thing that none of us would be able to do on our own," Watkins said. "I think that is just such a beautiful picture of what we can all do if we come together and put all of our resources and skill sets together."
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From civilian space travel to landing people on the Moon, China reveals ambitious space exploration plans – Sambad English
Posted: at 2:54 am
Beijing: China aims to strengthen its space infrastructure and develop a next-generation spacecraft for carrying people to space, as well as probe how to land people on the Moon, in the next five years, the media reported.
In a new white paper released on Friday, China has detailed plans for space exploration along with its achievements in the space sector since 2016, the Verge reported.
The achievements include expanding space capabilities, increasing the frequency and scope of its launches, and pushing into new areas such as the robotic exploration of Mars.
China has also mounted a long-term campaign of lunar exploration that entails sending a series of landers and rovers to the lunar surface every few years.
In 2019, the country became the first to land a rover on the far side of the Moon, and in 2020, China brought samples of the Moon back to Earth.
In 2021, the country also launched the core module of a new space station that will be built out in orbit around Earth. There are currently three astronauts living aboard the station, the report said.
In the next five years, China plans to send two additional robotic spacecraft to the Moon to study the lunar polar regions, areas of the lunar surface that are thought to be home to water ice.
The first probe will return lunar samples while the second will do a hopping detection in an area in permanent shadow, the report added.
The country is also going to study plans for its next lunar probe as well as work with international partners to build an international research station on the Moon, according to the white paper.
Besides Moon, China also hopes to launch probe to near-Earth asteroids in the next five years as well as study ways to send spacecraft to the Jupiter system and Mars again, with plans to bring back samples from the red planet.
Other space goals listed in the white paper include building Chinas space station, updating its satellite technologies, improving its space transportation and rocket systems, creating new rocket engines, among others, the report said.
(IANS)
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Flight of dreams of Kalpana had stopped on this day – News Track English
Posted: at 2:54 am
If anyone has the credit of flying India's skills and talents to space far away from the soil of India, then popular astronaut Kalpana Chawla is also included in it. Kalpana Chawla, who is known for the successful flights of several NASA Space Shuttles. But Kalpana did her Astronaut life as a team of 6 members of Space Shuttle Columbia flight STS 87. During this, Kalpana gave India a different identity, this success of Kalpana became the success of India's daughter apart from the success of NASA's space mission.
Kalpana's flight came to a halt with the crash of the Columbia Space Shuttle on February 1, 2003, but even today it is an example to the world. Kalpana Chawla was born on 17 March 1962 in Karnal, Haryana. Her mother was Sanjayoti Chawla and her father was Banarasi Chawla. In her family, Kalpana was the youngest of four brothers and sisters. Kalpana was fondly called Montu. Kalpana's early studies took place at Tagore Bal Niketan. Since childhood, Kalpana went ahead with the desire to become an engineer. However, the father wanted to make Kalpana a doctor. Kalpana used to think about space travel from the very beginning. Kalpana received her early education from Tagore Public School, Karnal. In 1982, she moved to the United States of America. Where she earned a degree in science in aeronautical engineering. She also obtained a licence for commercial aircraft operations for single and multi-engine aircraft.
Kalpana's Main Mission- Kalpana Chawla joined NASA's Astronaut Corps in March 1995. After this, Kalpana went on to move towards the pinnacle of success. On November 19, 1997, she was selected for the first space mission. She began her mission from flight STS-87 of the space shuttle Columbia. This mission was very important for the life of the Kalpana. With this mission, Kalpana has made India's mark fly all over the world. During her first voyage to space, she spent 372 hours in space and completed 252 orbits of the Earth.
Kalpana Chawla made the final journey of her space trip after her trip to India. During this time she spent a holiday with her husband and children, but after coming from the vacation, the mission of STS 107 in the year 2000 was the final mission for her. On February 1, 2003, in order to return to Earth, the vehicle broke down as soon as it entered the Earth's orbit. Six other astronauts were also killed along with Kalpana in the incident.
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Flight of dreams of Kalpana had stopped on this day - News Track English
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How looking at 4 billion years of Earth’s history changes you – Big Think
Posted: at 2:54 am
CHRIS HADFIELD: When we're born, we have a very small view of the world,.our mother's womb and the delivery room. And as you're raised, your parents are probably trying to control the environment that you're in, and so you end up with a very centralized tiny little view of the world, naturally. As you get older, as you travel more, as you read more, you start to understand a little more of the world around you. And all of those influences affect your choices in life. What are you gonna imagine that you could be? If you've never left Main Street, small town Ohio, then you're probably not gonna visualize yourself doing something that is wildly different than that. You're never going to be, uh, the head of a religious sect in, in Pakistan. You know, it's just, it's, it's not inside your worldview. You can only draw your own aspirations and hopes and decisions based on the things that you even know exist.
It's easier now to understand and see the world than ever in history. Our ability to communicate and our ability to travel has greatly improved. But space travel is sort of like the, the wildly exaggerated version of that where you can go around the whole world in the time it takes to eat supper and see everywhere, uh, see the whole world 16 times a day. That widens and deepens your worldview like nothing we've ever seen before in history. And it's very difficult to maintain, um, artificially drawn biases like, like nationalistic borders and, you know, my little tribe, my little street, my little gang, my little town, my little whatever when 15 minutes later you're over at the exact the same looking sort of town, but it's in Africa. And 40 minutes later the exact same looking sort of town and it's in Australia.
And then you come to Indonesia and you go, " Man, it's, it's all the same." They build the towns just like we build our towns. And, and what's, how, how are they, they then? It's just sort of all us. We're all doing this thing together, and everyone's got the same sort of hopes and dreams amongst themselves. And that pervasive sense of the shared collective experience of being a human being, that seeps into you on board a spaceship. Not the first time around. The first time is overwhelming. But somewhere, you know, 100 times around, 500 times around, suddenly, uh, the world becomes one place in your mind. It's not very big and, uh, and that, I think, is a really important worldview to have.
Life can be full of magnificent experiences. You know, um, being at the wedding of a loved one in a beautiful big house of worship somewhere, where there's the sound and the beauty and the structure, it affects how you feel that day. And, and you act a little bit differently. Or walking into a gigantic ancient redwood forest. Your, your head is naturally drawn upwards and, and you think a little different. It's not the same as just walking down your street. Well, imagine what it's like on spaceship where you're floating weightless at a window where you see an entire continent in, in the time it takes to drink a cup of coffee, where you go from L.A. to New York in nine minutes. And you see all of that history, and culture, and climate, and geography, and geology, and it's all right there underneath you. And you see a sunrise or a sunset every 45 minutes. You see the world for what it actually is. It has that same sort of, uh, personal effect you of a feeling of privilege and sort of a reverence, an awe that, uh, that is pervasive.
When we're floating in the, in the, the bulging window, the cupola of the space station, normally it's just one person 'cause everybody's busy. But if there's two of you in there, you talk in hushed tones to each other just because you feel like you're just wildly lucky to even be there to see this happening. And that sense of wonder, and privilege, and clarity of the world slowly shifts your view, of course. Your understanding of what is us and what is them? Um, what is old and what is new? What does four billion years actually mean? You know, where you can see where the ice ages were. You can see where the volcanoes were and the huge asteroid impacts and such. And it all starts to sort of shift in your head.
There was a fellow in the late '60s, early '70s who wrote a book sort of trying to capture that. He called it the overview effect. You can call it whatever you like. It doesn't have to be involved with space flight. It's more when you sense that there is something so much bigger than you, so much more, uh, deep than you are, ancient, um, has sort of a, a natural importance that dwarfs your own. But you're a person seeing it. You're a person that's interpreting it. You're, you're understanding it in your own way, and you'd have to be a stone to not have that affect you. It, it's, it changes how you think about things. But it's not the same for everybody and it's not instantaneous. It's not, it's not like, "Hey, I've gone over 60 miles an hour. I'm, you know, now done this thing." It's, it's very much a gradual creeping improvement in perception of the world around us. I think that's what the author was trying to talk about when, when he wrote about the overview effect.
Um, and some people are much more emotive and it affects them very deeply. Some people, they just have a better understanding of the world itself. Either way, it's healthy. It's a perspective of the world that allows us, hopefully, to make better collective global decisions about what's happening, less jealous, narrow, local decisions. And we need that type thinking if, if we're truly gonna have this many people and this standard of living for, for the foreseeable future. We just need to see the world as one place, the fact that we're all in this together, and that we are in the position to actually understand it and, and appreciate it, and therefore make different decisions about it.
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Space travel can cause lower red blood cell counts – Tech Explorist
Posted: January 19, 2022 at 10:47 am
Understanding the health implications of living in space is crucial to plan safe space travel. Since the first space mission, astronomers have reported about their anemia. However, the mechanisms contributing to anemia in space flight have remained unclear.
A world-first study from the Ottawa Hospital revealed that space travel could cause lower red blood cell counts, known as space anemia. The analysis changes whats known about space anemia.
Space anemia was previously considered a quick adaptation to fluids shifting into the astronauts upper body when they first arrived in space. Astronomers lose 10% of the fluid in their veins thusly.
Astronomers were thought to lose 10 percent of their red blood cells to restore the balance, and red blood cell control was normal after ten days in space.
For this study, astronomers analyzed 14 astronauts during their six-month space missions.
The human body creates and destroys 2 million red blood cells every second on Earth. Scientists found that astronomers bodies destroyed 54 percent more red blood cells in space or 3 million every second. These results were the same for both female and male astronauts.
Scientists collected astronauts air and blood samples three months before the space mission for the study. Four times onboard the ISS and serially after landing. They then precisely measured the tiny amounts of carbon monoxide in the breath samples from astronauts. One molecule of carbon monoxide is produced every time one heme molecule, the deep-red pigment in red blood cells, is destroyed.
Although the red blood cell production was not measured directly, scientists assume the astronauts generated extra red blood cells to compensate for their destroyed cells. Otherwise, the astronauts would end up with severe anemia and would have had significant health problems in space.
Lead author Dr. Guy Trudel, a rehabilitation physician and researcher at The Ottawa Hospital and professor at the University of Ottawa, said,Thankfully, having fewer red blood cells in space isnt a problem when your body is weightless. But when landing on Earth and potentially on other planets or moons, anemia affecting your energy, endurance, and strength can threaten mission objectives. The effects of anemia are only felt once you land and must deal with gravity again.
Five out of 13 astronauts were clinically anemic when they landed one of the 14 astronauts did not have blood drawn on landing.
Scientists noted, Space-related anemia was reversible, with red blood cells levels progressively returning to normal three to four months after returning to Earth.
After returning from the space mission, scientists found that red blood cell destruction was still 30 percent above preflight levels. The findings indicate that structural changes may have happened to the astronaut in space. This changes red blood cell control for up to a year after long-duration space missions.
The findings have multiple implications:
These are the first published results from MARROW, a made-in-Ottawa experiment looking at bone marrow health and blood production in space.
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