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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Futura Mission docking at ISS replay #ESA – Video
Posted: November 25, 2014 at 3:49 pm
Futura Mission docking at ISS replay #ESA
The Soyuz TMA-15M spacecraft approaches the International Space Station. The spacecraft lifted off at 20:59 GMT on 23 November (21:59 CET; 02:59 local time 24 November) and reached orbit nine...
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Simple Space Station Tutorial | Kerbal Space Program – Video
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Simple Space Station Tutorial | Kerbal Space Program
Ever wanted to create a station... In SPACE? Well, with this tutorial, you can do it! Want more of my content? Subscribe today at http://tinyurl.com/Xenro66 Making Space Stations are easy,...
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Zanzibar Health & Air Quality – NASA DEVELOP Fall 2014 @ International Research Institute – Video
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Zanzibar Health Air Quality - NASA DEVELOP Fall 2014 @ International Research Institute
This project identified various environmental factors that allow for the presence of malaria in Zanzibar. To accomplish this, the ISERV camera system aboard the International Space Station...
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New crew arrives at International Space Station | Fox News
Posted: at 3:49 pm
Published November 24, 2014
November 24, 2014: The Soyuz-FG rocket booster with Soyuz TMA-15M space ship carrying a new crew to the International Space Station, ISS, blasts off at the Russian leased Baikonur cosmodrome, Kazakhstan. (AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky)
BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan A Soyuz capsule carrying three astronauts from Russia, the United States and Italy docked Monday with the International Space Station, less than six hours after launching from Russia's manned space facility in Kazakhstan.
The Russian capsule roared into the pre-dawn darkness just after 3 a.m. Monday (4:00 p.m. EST Sunday) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome with Russian Anton Shkaplerov, NASA's Terry Virts and European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti of Italy aboard.
The craft docked with the space station after a trip lasting five hours and 48 minutes, which the NASA television commentator noted was roughly the time it takes to drive from NASA headquarters in Houston, Texas, to New Orleans, Louisiana.
The three astronauts join three others already aboard the orbiting station, including Russian Elena Serova. Cristoforetti's arrival made it the second time in the station's 16-year history that two women have been aboard on long-term missions.
Shkaplerov, Virts and Cristoforetti will remain aboard the station until mid-May. The current crew of NASA's Barry Wilmore, Russian Alexander Samokutyaev and Serova will return to Earth in early March.
Since the retirement of the U.S. space shuttle fleet in 2011, Russian Soyuz spacecraft have served as the only means to ferry crew to and from the space outpost.
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Space station's 3-D printer pops out first creation
Posted: at 3:49 pm
43 minutes ago by By Marcia Dunn
The first 3-D printer in space has popped out its first creation.
The 3-D printer delivered to the International Space Station two months ago made a sample replacement part for itself this week. NASA says it churned out a replica of the face plate for the print head casing.
Space station commander Butch Wilmore set aside the small plastic creation Tuesday for eventual return to Earth. About 20 objects will be printed in the next few weeks for analysis back home.
NASA hopes to one day use 3-D printing to fix broken equipment in space.
A Northern California company called Made in Space supplied the 3-D printer. The European Space Agency plans to fly its own 3-D printer next year.
Explore further: 3-D printer powered up on the International Space Station
More information: NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html
Made in Space: http://www.madeinspace.us/
2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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First Female Italian Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti Arrives At The Space Station
Posted: at 3:49 pm
Italys first female astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti was welcomed aboard the International Space Station with smiles and hugs today.
Although Cristoforetti, who flew to the station in an agreement between her countrys space agency ASI and the European Space Agency, has yet to tweet from space, ESA has released a video clip of her entrance onto the ISS ISS
Cristoforetti and her crewmates Terry Virts of NASA and Roscosmos Anton Shkaplerov blasted off from Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on a Soyuz transport craft late last night local time and docked with the station just under six hours later.
They were welcomed aboard the orbiting science laboratory by NASA station commander Barry Wilmore and Russian cosmonauts Yelena Serova and Alexander Samokutyaev.
Cristoforetti will be living and working on the station for the next five months, during which the first half of Expedition 42 will set off home and Virts will take over command for the start of the overlapping Expedition 43.
The Italian astronaut was assigned to the mission more than two years ago and has spent that time learning how to control the stations robotic arms and perform all the scientific experiments for her tour, as well as how to handle any emergencies that might pop up. She also learned to fly the Soyuz capsule that took them to the ISS, a hurdle every crew member has to clear, and had to go through a two-week quarantine period before setting off.
According to ESA, Cristoforetti was one of the first women to apply as soon as the Italian air force opened to women and shes logged over 500 hours in military aircraft. She was one of six chosen from 8,000 applicants to join the ESA astronaut corps in 2009.
While onboard the station, her main tasks will be to run science experiments that cant be performed on Earth and maintain the microgravity lab that will be her second home. Her scientific programme includes experiments in biology and human physiology as well as radiation research and technology demonstrations.
She will also be the prime operator for the undocking of ESAs final Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV), the stations largest unmanned support craft. ATV Georges Lematre is the fifth in the series and was named after the Belgian astronome ISSThe space agency announced it would be discontinuing its ATVs back in 2012, as parts for the crafts became obsolete and European member states lost the appetite for the million-dollar spaceships.
For more on the ISS and other science and tech news, follow me on Twitter and Google +.
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The International Space Station officially has an espresso machine
Posted: at 3:49 pm
Now that the Soyuz TMA-15M spacecraft has successfully transported three people to the International Space Station, the space station has an espresso machine.
"'An espresso coffee is what I miss most aboard the International Space Station.' We have repeatedly heard this comment from the Italian astronauts who for 13 years have been at times working in the International Space Station," wrote Lavazza in June. Thus, the Turin-based coffee company teamed up with another Turin company, the engineering firm Argotec, to make a space-ready espresso machine.
Espresso machines typically rely on gravity to get water through coffee grounds, but they don't have much gravity at the space station. So the companies created the "ISSpresso," as it's called, that uses pumps that shoot heated water through a coffee capsule at the correct pressure level, according to The Guardian.
The company claims the espresso the machine makes meets the requirements of being considered a traditional Italian espresso, except the astronauts have to drink it through a straw that goes into a plastic pouch to avoid spillage.
The ISSpresso officially made it into the space station with Italian astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti on Monday morning.
2014 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.
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Thanksgiving in Zero-G: Space Station Astronauts Enjoy 'Traditional' Dishes
Posted: at 3:49 pm
Like most Americans back on the ground, astronauts aboard the International Space Station will celebrate Thanksgiving with a feast: NASA food scientists have created zero-g versions of classic Thanksgiving dishes for this week's celebration.
The American astronauts currently living on the orbiting laboratory 250 miles (400 kilometers) above Earth's surface commander Barry "Butch" Wilmore and flight engineer Terry Virts as well as Italian-born flight engineer Samantha Cristoforetti, will get a day off this Thursday (Nov. 27) to celebrate Thanksgiving. (Watch Wilmore deliver a Thanksgiving greeting in this video.) At mealtime, they'll gather for some "traditional" Turkey Day fare in zero-g form, of course.
The in-flight menu includes smoked turkey, candied yams, green beans and mushrooms, cornbread stuffing and cherry-blueberry cobbler. In addition, the crewmembers may enjoy some personal Thanksgiving favorites. [Space Food Photos: What Astronauts Eat in Orbit]
"I'm from Tennessee, so I grew up drinking sweet tea so I've got a little sweet tea as well," Wilmore said in his Thanksgiving video. "So, we're going to have all of that up here and try to share in the spirit of the season."
The astronauts will likely share the meal with their newly arrivedRussian shipmates, flight engineers Alexander Samokutyaev, Anton Shkaplerov and Elena Serova, who got to the station late Sunday (Nov. 23). The Russians do not have the day off, but crewmembers dine together most days. The orbiting laboratory frequently hosts an international crew, and astronauts generally join in the celebrations of their crewmates.
Food aboard theInternational Space Stationis either freeze-dried or thermostabilized (a process similar to canning, but with the food packed in pouches), so it has a long shelf life and can be stored without refrigeration. There are no microwaves or ovens on board the station, so food is heated using warm water. Such storage methods do not work well with all foods, so it can be a challenge to recreate specific dishes.
One Thanksgiving staple, sweet potatoes, may one day be grown in space, NASA officials said.Deep-space missions to Mars, or even more distant destinations, will likely require astronauts to grow their own food. According to NASA, sweet potatoes could be an ideal crop for these missions: They would provide astronauts with energy (from carbohydrates) and beta-carotene, they can adapt to a controlled environment with artificial sunlight, and in addition to the tuber itself, the side shoots from the potato are also edible.
Thanksgiving has been celebrated aboard the International Space Station since the first Americans came on board in 2001. The first Thanksgiving in space took place aboard the United States' first space station, Skylab, on Nov. 22, 1973, and was marked by American astronauts Jerry Carr, Bill Pogue and Ed Gibson. On that first extraterrestrial Thanksgiving, the astronauts did not get the day off.
Follow Calla Cofield @callacofield. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article onSpace.com.
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The first zero-g real coffee machine arrives at the Space Station (thanks to the Italians, of course)
Posted: at 3:48 pm
Yesterday morning, Italys first female astronaut arrived at the International Space Station, carrying well, more accurately, clutchingin her arms like a first-born child the first zero-g Certified Italian Espresso coffee machine. The machine, called the ISSpresso, was created by a couple of Italian companies after another Italian astronaut returned from the space station in 2012 and complained about the lack of good coffee while in Earth orbit. This might just seem like a very costly first-world frivolity at the expense of real science, but the introduction of a coffee machine to the ISS isnt just for fun: The good times that will be enjoyed over a hot plastic pouch of perkare expected togo a long way towards reducing the extreme isolation and stress that astronauts experience aboard the ISS.
The ISSpresso was developed by Lavazza and Argotec both based out of Turin, Italy, with the former being one of the topcoffee machine companies in Europe. The machine, which weighs in at a bulky 20 kilograms (44 lbs), was deliveredby the three Expedition 42/43 astronauts including Samantha Cristoforetti, Italys first female astronaut.
How the ISSpresso coffee machine works
While creating espresso is fairly simple here on Earth, forcing high-pressure water through coffee grounds is a complex and dangerous task when youre 300 miles above Earth, with no gravity assistance and only a few millimeters of easily-punctured aluminium protecting you from the infinite harshness of space.
The ISSpresso, then, is not like your Starbucks espresso machine. The astronaut starts by filling a pouch of water from the ISSs water reserve and connecting it to the ISSpressos input valve. The water is then aspirated, pressurized (to 9 bar), and heated to 94 degrees Celsius (201F) optimal espresso-making temperature. The water is then shot down a pipe that can withstand up to 400 bar, through a Keurig-like capsule of coffee grounds, and into another pouch. The astronaut then (carefully) drinks the coffee through a straw. According to Lavazza, the end result is a certified pouch of Italian espresso, and tastes pretty good though I suspect the lack of aroma (its a sealed system) probably detracts from the experience (and taste) somewhat.
ISSpresso, squirting espresso into a pouch
Due to the lack of gravity on board the space station, the ISSpresso cant yet produce a latte or flat white. On Earth, gravity is used to separate the steamed foam from the liquid milk up in space, theyd have to use a centrifuge, which might be taking things just a little too far. (Plus, without gravity, would the milk even float on the coffee anyway?)
The ISSpresso machine will be the centerpiece of the space stations new corner cafe, which will be a place for Expedition astronauts to kick back, unwind, and reflect over a pouch of coffee. Astronauts usually spend about six months on the ISS, which can be quite isolating when you absolutely cannot return to Earth to see your friends and family until the end of the mission. Living in odd conditions and carrying out space walks can obviously be rather stressful, too.
The first interplanetary coffee machine joins the first zero-g 3D printer, which was carried to the International Space Station back in September. Like the ISSpresso, the 3D printer serves a scientific purpose: Being able to build stuff in space, rather than brute-force launching everything from within Earths gravitational grip, would make deep-space exploration and eventual colonization a much more realistic prospect. Obviously, if theres a decent cup of coffee waiting on the surface of Mars, humanitys first interplanetary colonists might be a little more willing to leave home.
Now read:Caffeine: The science of why were all hooked
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Genetic Engineering: The Super Banana – Video
Posted: at 3:48 pm
Genetic Engineering: The Super Banana
Project for APES. By Sydney Hsueh and Jenny Lee.
By: Sydney Hsueh
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