May 22, 2008 | MoonDaily Advertising Kit |
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X PRIZE Foundation Holds Team Summit On Private Moon Race To Land A Robot Strasbourg, France (SPX) May 22, 2008 The X PRIZE Foundation today announced four new teams in the Google Lunar X PRIZE, a robotic race to the Moon to win a remarkable $30 million in prizes, bringing the total number of registered teams to 14. This international group of teams will compete to land a privately funded robotic craft on the Moon that is capable of roaming the lunar surface for at least 500 meters and sending video ... more DLR Scientists Produce An Atlas Of Saturn's Moon Dione Bonn, Germany (SPX) May 21, 2008 Like the cartographers of old, scientists working with images from the Cassini spacecraft of Saturn�s icy airless moons have carefully crafted detailed maps that one day may guide future explorers across the surfaces of these remote bodies. A team of DLR scientists alongside colleagues from the Freie Universit�t Berlin has produced an atlas of Dione, a moon of Saturn released today, 20 May ... more Wandering Poles Leave Giant Scars On Europa's Icy Surface Houston TX (SPX) May 19, 2008 Global mapping of unusual large circular features on the ice-covered ocean world of Europa has revealed that Jupiter's curious icy moon is even more unstable than previously thought. The features, arcuate troughs up to 40 kilometers (25 miles) wide and several hundred kilometers long, are some of the most enigmatic on the ice-shrouded moon. One of these troughs was glimpsed by Voyager duri ... more LIDAR Detector Will Build Three-Dimensional Super Roadmaps Of Planets And Moons Rochester NY (SPX) May 16, 2008 Technology that could someday "MapQuest" Mars and other bodies in the solar system is under development at Rochester Institute of Technology's Rochester Imaging Detector Laboratory, in collaboration with Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Lincoln Laboratory. Three-Dimensional "super roadmaps" of other planets and moons would provide robots, astronauts and engineers details ... more Science Channel To Broadcast Red Planet Landing Live May 25 Silver Spring MD (SPX) May 15, 2008 Science Channel will broadcast live coverage of mankind's next major step in Mars exploration with MARS LIVE: THE PHOENIX LANDS premiering Sunday, May 25, 2008, from 7-9 PM (ET) and 4-6 PM (PT). Originating LIVE from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. and the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, the program will give viewers a first look at photos sent back from ... more |
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Stennis MS (SPX) May 09, 2008 NASA engineers Thursday successfully completed the first series of tests in the early development of the J-2X engine that will power the upper stages of the Ares I and Ares V rockets, key components of NASA's Constellation Program. Ares I will launch the Orion spacecraft that will take astronauts to the International Space Station and then to the moon by 2020. The Ares V will carry cargo a ... more Inhaling For Exploration As Scientists Test Lunar Breathing System Houston TX (SPX) May 08, 2008 Imagine yourself hip-to-hip, shoulder-to-shoulder, inside a room the size of a walk-in closet for eight hours with five people you just met. Does that make you sweat? Or maybe make your breathing a little more animated? For three weeks, 23 volunteers dedicated time to do just that - sweat and breathe - inside a test chamber so NASA scientists at Johnson Space Center in Houston could meas ... more Send Your Name To The Moon With New Lunar Mission Washington DC (SPX) May 04, 2008 NASA invites people of all ages to join the lunar exploration journey with an opportunity to send their names to the moon aboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, or LRO, spacecraft. The Send Your Name to the Moon Web site enables everyone to participate in the lunar adventure and place their names in orbit around the moon for years to come. Participants can submit their information the we ... more A Glorious Saturn Steps Into The Spotlight In New York City New York NY (SPX) May 06, 2008 In the four years since NASA's Cassini-Huygens spacecraft arrived at Saturn and began snapping pictures, Cassini's cameras have sent nearly 140,000 images back to researchers on Earth. The data and images -- as well as data from infrared, radar and ultraviolet detectors on the orbiter and images from the Huygens probe on the surface of the planet's moon Titan -- have given researchers ... more |
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Beijing, China (XNA) Apr 28, 2008 Shanghai has developed a lunar rover that it hopes to be chosen for China's first moon landing in 2013, the city government announced yesterday. The Shanghai Science and Technology Commission said the key technology of the rover has passed a technical appraisal by the government. The technology mainly covers the rover's maneuverability and detection sensors. The rover, which hasn't been gi ... more China Blasts Off First Data Relay Satellite Beijing, China (XNA) Apr 28, 2008 Beijing, China (XNA) Apr 28, 2008 China launched the country's first data relay satellite "Tianlian I" Friday night. The satellite was launched on a Long March-3C carrier rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province at 11:35 p.m. (Beijing Time). The satellite will not go into function though until the Shenzhou VII mission scheduled for the second half of ... more QinetiQ North America Wins Contract For NASA Environmental Test And Integration Support Services II (ETIS) Fairfax VA (SPX) Apr 23, 2008 QinetiQ North America has announced its Missions Solutions Group (MSG) has been awarded a five-year, $190 million contract with the National Aeronautical and Space Administration. Under this contract, QNA will provide a wide range of environmental test and integration services to support projects at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Such projects include the Hubble Space Telescope, the ... more Moondust And Duct Tape Huntsville AL (SPX) Apr 22, 2008 At this year's Great Moonbuggy Race in Huntsville, Alabama, Prof. Paul Shiue of Christian Brothers University was overheard joking that duct tape was his team's "best engineering tool." Others felt the same way. The sound of gray tape being torn from rolls practically filled the race course as dozens of college and high school student engineers busily assembled and repaired their homemade moonbu ... more |
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