October 25, 2007 24/7 News Coverage MoonDaily Advertising Kit
NASA Offers 2 Million Dollar Lunar Lander Competition Prize
Washington DC (SPX) Oct 25, 2007
During the X PRIZE Cup Oct. 27-28, NASA's Centennial Challenges Program will offer prizes totaling $2 million if competing teams successfully meet the requirements of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge. The challenge will take place at Holloman Air Force Base, in Alamogordo, N.M. The purpose of the lunar lander challenge is to accelerate technology development leading to a commer ... read more
Subscribe to our email newsletter for free space news
  

About UsContact Us: Australia 24/7  (61)-448-005-219 or Email
   
  • RSS FEEDS - SPACE : EARTH : WAR : ENERGY : SOLAR : GPS
  • Wind Energy For NSW South Coast
    Memory Foam Mattress Review
    Solar Energy Solutions
  • Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison
  • Previous Issues Oct 24 Oct 23 Oct 22 Oct 19 Oct 18
    Chang'e-1 - New Mission To Moon Lifts Off
    Paris, France (ESA) Oct 25, 2007
    A bold new mission to the Moon was launched today by the Chinese National Space Administration (CNSA). Chang'e-1 blasted off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre, Sichuan, atop a Long March 3A rocket. Chang'e-1 represents the first step in the Chinese ambition to land robotic explorers on the Moon before 2020. Chang'e-1 has four mission goals to accomplish. The first is to make three-dimensi ... more

    China's Lunar Probe Chief Commander: Scientific Exploration, Not Competition
    Xichang, China (XNA) Oct 25, 2007
    China will not embark on any lunar probe competition "in any form with any country" and will "share the results of its moon exploration with the whole world" in its pursuit of a policy of peaceful use of airspace, said a chief commander of the country's first lunar satellite project. "The decision on the lunar probe was made completely in accordance with China's own conditions, which is not mean ... more

    New CU-Boulder Study Confirms First-Known Belt Of Moonlets In Saturn Rings
    Boulder CO (SPX) Oct 25, 2007
    A narrow belt harboring moonlets as large as football stadiums discovered in Saturn's outermost ring probably resulted when a larger moon was shattered by a wayward asteroid or comet eons ago, according to a University of Colorado at Boulder study. Images taken by a camera onboard the NASA Cassini spacecraft revealed a series of eight propeller-shaped "wakes" in a thin belt of the outermost "A" ... more

    China Counting Down To Launch Of Lunar Probe
    Xichang, Sichuan (XNA) Oct 24, 2007
    China is busy preparing for the launch of its first moon orbiter which is likely to take place on Wednesday evening. The rocket is now on the launch pad and all staff are in position at the site. Chinaview.cn will live telecast the launch of the orbiter. The preparations for the launch of the circumlunar satellite named Chang'e I are almost complete, according to a spokesman from the Xichang Sat ... more

    Goddard Instrument Makes Cover Of Science
    Greenbelt MD (SPX) Oct 24, 2007
    Goddard's LEISA instrument has become a first-rate photographer, contributing to this spectacular photo of Jupiter, which appeared on the cover of the October 12 issue of the journal Science. It is a montage of Jupiter and its volcanic moon Io, taken by the New Horizons spacecraft as it sped past Jupiter on its way to Pluto. The Linear Etalon Imaging Spectral Array (LEISA) instrument on Ne ... more

      lunar
  • China Likely To Launch First Moon Orbiter At 6pm On Oct 24th

    lunar
  • Japan's Lunar Explorer Enters Observation Orbit

    lunar
  • Our First Lunar Program: What Did We Get From Apollo
  •  
    Earth News, Earth Sciences, Climate Change, Energy Technology, Environment News  
    Cassini Pinpoints Hot Sources Of Jets On Enceladus
    Boulder CO (SPX) Oct 19, 2007
    A recent analysis of images from NASA's Cassini spacecraft provides conclusive evidence that the jets of fine, icy particles spraying from Saturn's moon Enceladus originate from the hottest spots on the moon's "tiger stripe" fractures that straddle the moon's south polar region. Members of Cassini's imaging team used two years' worth of pictures of the geologically active moon to locate the sour ... more

    USC Concept Synthesis Studio Colonizes The Moon With Bugs
    Los Angeles CA (SPX) Oct 19, 2007
    A lucky nine graduate students, ranging from industry participants to foreign nationals, spent the evening presenting their concepts and projects for some of the parts needed to land objects and colonize with man the moon above. I say lucky in that the audience contained some great space minds who were wry with commentary. The Space Concepts Studio: Space Exploration Architectures event was ti ... more

    Japanese lunar probe finishes critical phase
    Tokyo (AFP) Oct 9, 2007
    Japan's first lunar probe, launched more than a month ago, successfully finished its initial critical phase, the space agency said Sunday. "Both the Kaguya main satellite and its two baby satellites are in good health," the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said in a statement. The Kaguya probe, named after a fairytale princess, released two baby satellites after being launched f ... more

    Greeting A Living Legend: NASA's Cosentino Meets Childhood Hero Buzz Aldrin
    Edwards CA (SPX) Oct 18, 2007
    Nine-year-old Gary Cosentino watched the television with awe on July 20, 1969, as two men exited an odd-looking craft called the Eagle lunar module, climbed down a ladder and set foot on the moon. When astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first men to walk on the surface of the moon during the Apollo 11 mission, it was an event that went on to inspire Cosentino, like many others, ... more

      lunar
  • China moon probe to launch this month

    dragonspace
  • China To Launch First Moon Orbiter In Late October

    spacetravel
  • SAIC Awarded NASA Moon Mission Facilities Contract
  •  
    Energy News - Technology - Business - Environment  
    Inspiring Views Celebrate Cassini's Diamond Anniversary
    Boulder CO (SPX) Oct 16, 2007
    Ten years ago today, NASA's Cassini spacecraft departed planet Earth from Cape Canaveral, Florida, and embarked on a seven-year long, circuitous journey of several billion miles across the solar system to the planet Saturn. To celebrate this special occasion, the mission's imaging team is releasing today a spate of captivating new images and movies of the ringed planet and some of its most photo ... more

    New Lakes Discovered On Titan
    Paris, France (SPX) Oct 15, 2007
    Newly assembled radar images from Cassini provide the best views of the hydrocarbon lakes and seas on Saturn's moon Titan. A new radar image reveals that Titan's south polar region also has lakes. The southern region images were beamed back after a flyby on 2 October in which a prime goal was the hunt for lakes at the south pole. A new mosaic image comprised from seven Titan fly-bys over the las ... more

    Space Program Eyes Farther Frontiers
    Beijing, China (XNA) Oct 15, 2007
    Major breakthroughs are expected by 2010 in the country's ambitious space programs - from manned flights to the lunar probe - a senior space administrator said Thursday. Scientists are working toward astronaut space walks, and spacecraft rendezvous and docking procedures by the end of the decade, said Sun Laiyan, chief of the China National Space Administration. The deep space exploration progra ... more

    Cassini Mission To Saturn Celebrates 10 Years Since Launch
    Boulder CO (SPX) Oct 12, 2007
    Celebrating the 10th anniversary of its launch from Cape Canaveral, the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn is once again at the center of scientific attention. Its latest discoveries about the ringed planet are a leading topic of conversation among the nearly 1,500 scientists gathered this week at a major astronomy conference in Orlando, Fla. Cassini rode into space Oct. 15, 1997, atop a U. ... more

    24/7 news coverage of Your world at War.  
      saturn
  • Drizzly Mornings On Xanadu

    cassini
  • Cassini Pinpoints Hot Sources Of Jets On Enceladus

    outerplanets
  • Pluto-Bound New Horizons Sees Changes In Jupiter System
  •  
    Previous Issues Oct 24 Oct 23 Oct 22 Oct 19 Oct 18

    The contents herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy statement