July 10, 2007 24/7 News Coverage our time will build eternity
Thinking Big About Space Telescopes
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jul 10, 2007
NASA's next moon rocket is still on the drawing board, but already scientists are dreaming up big new things to do with it. "The Ares V rocket will be able to launch missions whose volume or mass or both can be handled no other way," says Philip Stahl, an internationally respected optical engineer now at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. Maybe, he says, we should use it "to launch big space ... read more
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    Northrop Grumman Helps NASA Shape Plans For Affordable Lunar Lander
    El Segundo CA (SPX) Jul 10, 2007
    The lunar lander that will carry NASA astronauts to the moon's surface by the end of the next decade will benefit from more than 50 years of technological change -- and more than 50 years of unique engineering and operational experience from Northrop Grumman Corporation, the designer and producer of the original Apollo Lunar Module. Since late 2006, the company has hosted a series of techn ... more

    Cassini Scientists Wring Out The Details On Spongy Hyperion
    Boulder CO (SPX) Jul 10, 2007
    Scientists on NASA's Cassini mission to Saturn now have a better understanding of why the odd moon Hyperion has such an unusual appearance. The crucial factor in creating the strange, sponge-like appearance of Hyperion appears to be its extremely low density, say Cassini scientists in a research paper being published in the July 5 issue of the journal Nature. The researchers examined Cassini sp ... more

    Summer Moon Illusion
    Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 29, 2007
    On Saturday night, June 30th, step outside at sunset and look around. You'll see a giant moon rising in the east. It looks like Earth's moon with the usual craters and seas, but something's wrong. This full moon is strangely inflated. It's huge! You've just experienced the Moon Illusion. Sky watchers have known for thousands of years that low-hanging moons look unnaturally big. Cameras don't see ... more

    NASA Selects Reynolds To Design Emergency Egress System For Orion Astronauts
    Jacksonville FL (SPX) Jun 28, 2007
    Reynolds, Smith and Hills, a leading facilities and infrastructure consulting firms whose client-centered program structure provides value-added solutions to clients around the world, announced it has been selected by NASA to design the Emergency Egress System for Orion, the next generation space exploration vehicle that is expected to launch in 2014. The new escape system will allow astronauts ... more

    Thinking Big About Space Telescopes
    Washington DC (SPX) Jun 27, 2007
    How big? Consider the following: Ares V will be able to place almost 130,000 kg (284,000 lbs; 8% more than the Saturn V rocket of the 1960s) into low Earth orbit. Designed to deliver cargo to the Moon, the rocket would be large enough to carry primary mirrors 8+ meters wide. For comparison, Hubble's mirror measures 2.4 m. "How does a typical astrophysicist work?" Stahl asks. ... more

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    Mirror, Mirror On The Moon -- The Most Powerful Telescope Of All
    Paris (AFP) June 20, 2007
    Desolate, airless and with no people around for hundreds of thousands of kilometers (miles), the Moon is a great place -- for astronomers, that is. Skywatchers have an enduring hope of one day building a lunar observatory, where gleamings from the earliest stars can be snared without the curse of man-made light pollution and Earth's atmospheric distortion. But making telescopic mirrors ... more

    China To Increase Payload Capacity Of Carrier Rockets
    Beijing (Xinhua) Jun 19, 2007
    China plans to develop a new generation of carrier rockets with an increased payload capacity in order to advance its lunar exploration program, according to the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation. The payload capacity of China's Long March series of carrier rockets will be increased from its current weight of 9.5 tons to 25 tons, an official with the corporation said. ... more

    Japan To Launch Lunar Orbiter On August 16
    Tokyo (AFP) June 13, 2007
    Japan will launch a lunar orbiter on August 16 to collect data for research of the moon's origin and evolution, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said Wednesday. The probe will consist of a main unit, which will circulate 100 kilometres (60 miles) above the moon, and two small satellites, the agency said. It will be launched from the Space Centre on the isle of Tanegashima off the southern ... more

    Vignette Helps NASA Make Giant Leap To The Moon And Beyond
    Austin TX (SPX) Jun 11, 2007
    Vignette's Next-Generation Web solutions are helping NASA engineers and scientists connect and share information online, as the federal agency designs its next generation of space vehicles for the Constellation Program. The Constellation Program is responsible for developing crew exploration and launch vehicles that will send humans back to the moon and then to Mars. ... more

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    Magnetic Field Uses Sound Waves To Ignite Solar Ring Of Fire
    Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 30, 2007
    Sound waves escaping the Sun's interior create fountains of hot gas that shape and power the chromosphere, a thin region of the sun's atmosphere which appears as a ruby red "ring of fire" around the moon during a total solar eclipse, according to research funded by NASA and the National Science Foundation (NSF). These results were presented May 29, at the American Astronomical Society Meeting in ... more

    No Plans To Join NASA Lunar Program Says Russian Space Agency
    Washington (RIA Novosti) May 28, 2007
    Russia will not participate in joint lunar exploration with NASA, but will assist the U.S. with its shuttle program until 2015, a spokesman for the Russian space agency said. After U.S. President George W. Bush announced his Vision for Space Exploration in 2004, a plan for new manned lunar missions, the country's National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) elaborated a program that ... more

    California Eco-Homes Offer Glimpse Of Lunar Future
    Hesperia (AFP) California, May 25, 2007
    They are eco-friendly, cost next to nothing to build, and in Nader Khalili's dreams, they might one day be housing the first settlers on the Moon. On a sun-baked fringe of arid California desert that in places resembles a lunar landscape, Khalili, an Iranian-born architect who came to the United States in 1971, proudly surveys his cluster of ceramic, domed homes. ... more

    Coasts And Drowned Mountains
    Pasadena CA (JPL) May 24, 2007
    On May 12, 2007, Cassini completed its 31st flyby of Saturn's moon Titan, which the team calls T30. The radar instrument obtained this image showing the coastline and numerous island groups of a portion of a large sea, consistent with the larger sea seen by the Cassini imaging instrument. Like other bodies of liquid seen on Titan, this feature reveals channels, islands, bays, and other fea ... more

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