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Category Archives: Space Station

SPACE STATION HOAXES – Video

Posted: September 16, 2013 at 2:42 pm


SPACE STATION HOAXES
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SPACE STATION HOAXES - Video

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Space Station Live: Preparing for Cygnus – Video

Posted: at 2:42 pm


Space Station Live: Preparing for Cygnus
NASA Public Affairs Officer Dan Huot talks with Ray Bigonesse, Visiting Vehicle Officer for the International Space Station #39;s flight control team, about the ...

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Space Station Live: Preparing for Cygnus - Video

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Astronaut Chris Cassidy Talks About Conducting Space Station Experiments – Video

Posted: at 2:42 pm


Astronaut Chris Cassidy Talks About Conducting Space Station Experiments
Flight Engineer Chris Cassidy, who lived and worked nearly six months during Expedition 36 aboard the International Space Station, discusses experiments he c...

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Space Station Live: Cygnus Robotics Operations – Video

Posted: at 2:42 pm


Space Station Live: Cygnus Robotics Operations
NASA Public Affairs Officer Dan Huot talks with Billy Jones, ROBO flight controller for the International Space Station #39;s flight control team, about the upco...

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Kerbal Space Program – Part 15 – Docking to Space Station – Video

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Kerbal Space Program - Part 15 - Docking to Space Station
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Kerbal Space Program - Part 15 - Docking to Space Station - Video

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U.S. weighing future of international space station

Posted: at 2:42 pm

Originally published September 15, 2013 at 6:06 PM | Page modified September 15, 2013 at 6:15 PM

Long ago, in a dreamier era, space stations were imagined as portals to the heavens. In the 1968 movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, the huge structure twirled in orbit, aesthetically sublime, a relaxing way station for astronauts heading to the moon. It featured a Hilton and a Howard Johnsons.

The international space station of the 21st century isnt quite as beautiful as that movie version, and its not a gateway to anywhere else. Its a laboratory focused on scientific experiments. Usually there are six people aboard. When they leave, they go back home, down to Earth. Three came home Wednesday, landing in Kazakhstan.

The space station circles the planet at an altitude of about 250 miles. Faint traces of atmosphere exert a drag on it, so the station must be boosted regularly to stay in orbit. In the grand scheme of things, the space station simply isnt very far away. The station has a phone number with a Houston area code.

Advocates for human-space exploration insist that NASA must think bigger, developing missions beyond Low Earth Orbit, into deeper space perhaps back to the moon, or to an asteroid, and certainly to Mars eventually.

But NASA has been struggling for years to square ambitions with budgets. The space station is widely praised as an engineering marvel, but it didnt come cheap.

The United States has poured close to $100 billion into the program and is contributing about t $3 billion a year to the stations operation. Space-policy experts warn that, without a significant boost in budget, NASA will not be able to keep running the station and simultaneously carry out new, costly deep-space missions.

The United States and its partners need to make a tough call: Keep the station flying? Or bring it down?

Boeing, the prime contractor, is trying to prove that the stations components can hold up through at least 2028. Three years ago, Congress extended funding for the station through 2020, and NASAs international partners Russia, Japan, Canada and the European Space Agency have made a similar commitment.

But behind the scenes, NASA officials are working to persuade the White House to make a decision, pronto, to keep the orbital laboratory flying after 2020.

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U.S. weighing future of international space station

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Weather, glitch delay space station supply ship's debut

Posted: at 2:41 pm

The unmanned Cygnus spacecraft is set to launch one day later than originally planned, due to poor weather and a bad cable.

A combination of bad weather and a technical glitch have pushed a brand-new supply ship's debut test flight to the International Space Station back at least one day, to Wednesday (Sept. 18).

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The unmannedCygnus spacecraft, built by Virginia-based company Orbital Sciences, is now scheduled to blast off atop an Antares rocket from Wallops Island, Va., on Wednesday (Sept. 18) rather than Tuesday. Liftoff is set for 10:50 a.m. EDT (1450 GMT).

"The combination of yesterdays poor weather that delayed rollout of the rocket to the launch pad and a technical issue that was identified during a combined systems test held last night involving communications between ground equipment and the rockets flight computer drove the decision to delay the launch," Orbital Science officials wrote in an update Saturday (Sept. 14). [See photos of the new Cygnus spacecraft's launch pad trip]

"After comprehensive inspection and testing this morning, the problem was found and turned out to be an inoperative cable, which is being replaced," they added. "Orbital will repeat the combined systems test later today. Once that important test is successfully completed, the team will be able to proceed toward a September 18 launch."

The cylindrical Cygnus spacecraft and its Antares rocket are designed to launch cargo delivery missions to the space station for NASA. Orbital Sciences has a $1.9 billion deal with NASA for eight Cygnus delivery missions, but these flights can begin only after the company proves the spacecraft is ready to haul supplies to the orbiting lab.

Orbital Scienceslaunched the first Antares rocket test flight in April. But that demonstration carried only a mass simulator designed to mimic the weight of a Cygnus spacecraft on the rocket. Wednesday's planned launch will lift off from Pad 0A at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility.

The mission will mark the debut of a fully functional Cygnus cargo ship, Orbital Sciences officials said. If all goes well, the Cygnus supply ship will arrive at the International Space Station on Sept. 22 after a series of in-orbit tests, NASA officials said.

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Weather, glitch delay space station supply ship's debut

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Weather, glitch delays space station supply ship's debut

Posted: at 2:41 pm

The unmanned Cygnus spacecraft is set to launch one day later than originally planned, due to poor weather and a bad cable.

A combination of bad weather and a technical glitch have pushed a brand-new supply ship's debut test flight to the International Space Station back at least one day, to Wednesday (Sept. 18).

Subscribe Today to the Monitor

Click Here for your FREE 30 DAYS of The Christian Science Monitor Weekly Digital Edition

The unmannedCygnus spacecraft, built by Virginia-based company Orbital Sciences, is now scheduled to blast off atop an Antares rocket from Wallops Island, Va., on Wednesday (Sept. 18) rather than Tuesday. Liftoff is set for 10:50 a.m. EDT (1450 GMT).

"The combination of yesterdays poor weather that delayed rollout of the rocket to the launch pad and a technical issue that was identified during a combined systems test held last night involving communications between ground equipment and the rockets flight computer drove the decision to delay the launch," Orbital Science officials wrote in an update Saturday (Sept. 14). [See photos of the new Cygnus spacecraft's launch pad trip]

"After comprehensive inspection and testing this morning, the problem was found and turned out to be an inoperative cable, which is being replaced," they added. "Orbital will repeat the combined systems test later today. Once that important test is successfully completed, the team will be able to proceed toward a September 18 launch."

The cylindrical Cygnus spacecraft and its Antares rocket are designed to launch cargo delivery missions to the space station for NASA. Orbital Sciences has a $1.9 billion deal with NASA for eight Cygnus delivery missions, but these flights can begin only after the company proves the spacecraft is ready to haul supplies to the orbiting lab.

Orbital Scienceslaunched the first Antares rocket test flight in April. But that demonstration carried only a mass simulator designed to mimic the weight of a Cygnus spacecraft on the rocket. Wednesday's planned launch will lift off from Pad 0A at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility.

The mission will mark the debut of a fully functional Cygnus cargo ship, Orbital Sciences officials said. If all goes well, the Cygnus supply ship will arrive at the International Space Station on Sept. 22 after a series of in-orbit tests, NASA officials said.

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Weather, glitch delays space station supply ship's debut

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Three space station crewmembers land after 166-day mission. – Video

Posted: September 15, 2013 at 4:41 pm


Three space station crewmembers land after 166-day mission.
More Breaking News: http://smarturl.it/BreakingNews Subscribe: http://smarturl.it/reuterssubscribe Two Russian cosmonauts and a U.S. astronaut land after 166...

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Three space station crewmembers land after 166-day mission. - Video

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UFO NEWS ON SEPTEMBER 11 2013 TWO UFO SPOTTED AT THE ISS SPACE STATION – Video

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UFO NEWS ON SEPTEMBER 11 2013 TWO UFO SPOTTED AT THE ISS SPACE STATION
Hello everyone, here is the UFO news on September 11 2013.

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UFO NEWS ON SEPTEMBER 11 2013 TWO UFO SPOTTED AT THE ISS SPACE STATION - Video

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