Coffee Shop | Space


Previous 10 | Next 10 
To: FUBHO who wrote (2996)5/20/2012 6:30:53 PM
From: Road Walker   of 3741
 
Me too.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Giordano Bruno5/22/2012 10:44:14 AM
2 Recommendations   of 3741
 
New Zealand and Australia are experiencing abnormal UFO activity.

UFO reports skyrocket in North Island

nzherald.co.nz 

UFO North Island SHOCKER – WHY THE UFOS ARE VISITING NEW ZEALAND & AUSTRALIA

By Stan Hernandez According to reports, the UFO sightings have skyrocketed in North Island, New Zealand, but this is not the only location that is seeing an increase in activity. Australia is also reporting it. According to Suzanne Hansen, the director of Ufocus, “an object had land and it was definitely not an aircraft,” a quote that she got from a “reliable source.”

In two weeks, over thirty reports have been submitted in North Island, which is beyond any normalcy. The night skies are full of unusual crafts, which have included reports of saucers, cigar-shaped, and triangular in shape. Strange lights and even daytime sightings have gotten the public in frenzy, but the cover story is already coming into play.

The term “mistaken identity” is being thrown around, and that may apply to 70% of the people that aren’t familiar with military crafts and the different natural occurrences that can create some strange stuff, but the 30% that have some knowledge cannot be dismissed.

I spoke to Cameron Dale of North Island, New Zealand, about his UFO sighting. Dale stated that: “I saw a silver saucer. It remained silent and hovered over us for three minutes before disappearing. I know a thing or two about military crafts and I can say with certainty that this was not one. This was something else. This was seen by myself and about eight others that I know of. I would say that it was the same size as a B-1 Bomber.”

Why this is happening is still unknown, but there are plenty of UFO sightings being reported worldwide. As I have said before, these crafts are always here, flying at a frequency that we cannot see. Every so often they will change frequencies that the human eye can see and we get a glimpse. Why they are doing that now is still being investigated. I am currently investigating several key cases in both New Zealand and Australia. I will return with reports.

home.nzcity.co.nz 

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: FUBHO who wrote (2996)5/22/2012 10:48:13 AM
From: Road Walker   of 3741
 
Hope they are successful on Tuesday.

They're up, lets see how they do on the other end.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

From: TimF5/22/2012 5:21:48 PM
2 Recommendations   of 3741
 

This exoplanet could be slowly evaporating until there’s nothing leftBy Tecca | Today in Tech – 23 hrs ago


Exoplanet with a tail of dust and gas baffles astronomers

In a system 1,500 light years away from us, there may be a world so hot that its surface could have started evaporating, forming a tail of gas and dust escaping into space. Worlds end usually because their parent stars consume them, or because they collide into another planet or heavenly bodies like asteroids. But an evaporating planet that's dying an extremely slow death is something new to scientists.

Scientists identified the existence of the curious planet from the strange way its dusty tail affects the light coming from its star, as detected by NASA's Kepler telescope. Data from Kepler suggests that the planet is a Mercury-size world orbiting a sun smaller and cooler than ours. It's so close to its star that it makes a complete orbit in less than 16 Earth hours, giving it an infernal surface temperature of 3,300 degrees Fahrenheit. Think of it as a world made of magma with a tail of dust, similar to a comet.

Just the fact that Kepler was able to identify something as small as Mercury located thousands of light years away indicates that we're getting better at exoplanet hunting. However, more research is needed to confirm whether what was discovered is actually a dying planet or something else. If it's truly the former, then it still has roughly 200 million years left before it completely vanishes.

[Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech]

news.yahoo.com 

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Road Walker who wrote (2999)5/25/2012 10:07:27 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad2 Recommendations   of 3741
 
They're up, lets see how they do on the other end.
BBC News - Station grabs SpaceX Dragon ship

A robotic arm on the International Space Station has reached out to grab the visiting Dragon supply vessel. The arm will shortly move the ship to a free berthing port on the underside of the orbiting platform.


Applause!!! :-)))

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)

To: Lahcim Leinad who wrote (3001)5/25/2012 10:30:15 AM
From: J.B.C.   of 3741
 
Yes, great. This is about the 7th US company that's been involved in putting something in space and only about 15 nations can do it.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: Lahcim Leinad who wrote (3001)5/25/2012 10:30:23 AM
From: Road Walker1 Recommendation   of 3741
 
Applause!!! :-)))

Very cool... and very significant.

If we can move space exploration away from a government monopoly so much more is possible. Now the private sector has to figure out a way to make money (tourism, mining the moon?) without the government as the customer and we'll probably see a redoubled effort in space.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

From: TimF5/25/2012 4:27:17 PM
   of 3741
 
NASA Hosting $1.5 Million Autonomous Rover Contest

The competition will be held June 16, where NASA will award prize money based on how well the robots complete phase two

NASA is holding a competition for the creation of autonomous rovers in Massachusetts next month, which will ideally be used for planetary missions in the future.

The competition, called the Sample Return Robot Challenge, will allow private and public teams to compete in a contest for the best autonomous robot for future space missions. NASA is spending $1.5 million total on the contest, which will be held at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts.

NASA is looking for a team that can create an unmanned, smaller robot that is approximately 1.5 cubic meters and 175 pounds. The winning robot must be able to explore many types of environments, search for specific items and collect them. However, the robot cannot use GPS or an internet connection because these kinds of systems are restricted to Earth. It also cannot use air-cooling or ultrasonic rangefinders because of the lack of air in other planetary environments.

Phase one of the challenge is to have each of the competing robots collect a sample within a quarter of an hour. When this task is successfully completed, robots can move on to phase two, where they are expected to collect 10 separate samples in just two hours and return them to a certain area.

There are currently 11 final teams that will compete. Some of the contenders include the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Waterloo, SpacePRIDE, and True Vision. All teams are U.S. and Canada-based.

NASA is ultimately looking for an autonomous rover that can be sent on planetary missions in the future to collect certain items in varied terrains.

Last May, NASA bid farewell to its Mars rover named Spirit, which spent six years exploring Mars before falling silent for an entire year and finally being put to rest. Later, in November 2011, NASA launched a new Mars rover called Curiosity to the Red Planet in an effort to continue exploring the Martian surface.

NASA rover Curiosity is a $2.5 billion nuclear-powered machine meant for the exploration of Mars in hopes of finding evidence of microscopic life. It is the size of a Mini Cooper, and about four times as heavy as the Spirit and Opportunity Mars rovers. Curiosity has a large robot arm, a weather station, a laser that can vaporize rocks at seven meters, a percussive drill, and 4.8kg of plutonium-238.

The competition will be held June 16, where NASA will award prize money based on how well the robots complete phase two.

Source: MSNBC

dailytech.com 

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: TimF5/25/2012 4:29:24 PM
   of 3741
 
Team envisions exploring Mars with mini probes
Anne Trafton, News Office

MIT engineers and scientist colleagues have a new vision for the future of Mars exploration: a swarm of probes, each the size of a baseball, spreading out across the planet in every direction.

Thousands of probes, powered by fuel cells, could cover a vast area now beyond the reach of today's rovers, including exploring remote and rocky terrain that large rovers cannot navigate.

"They would start to hop, bounce and roll and distribute themselves across the surface of the planet, exploring as they go, taking scientific data samples," said Steven Dubowsky, the MIT professor of mechanical engineering who is leading the research team.

Dubowsky's team plans to test prototypes on Earth this fall and estimates that a trip to Mars is about 10 years away. He is now working with Penelope Boston, director of the cave research program at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, to create probes that can handle the rough terrain of Mars.

Scientists believe that lava tubes commonly seen on Mars are a promising location to search for signs of water. Lava tubes are tunnels left behind by underground lava flows. Signs of these tubes, which are also present in many locations on Earth, can be seen above ground.


The tubes could be entered through holes that formed on the Mars surface where sections of the tubes have collapsed, but these formations are too treacherous for today's rovers to explore. However, tiny bouncing probes could make their way inside the caves.

Mars also features canyons that could have once had rivers flowing through them. The canyons, too, are inaccessible to rovers, but small probes might be able to make their way down the canyon faces.

One of the major advantages of the mini probes is that losing a few out of hundreds or thousands of probes sent into a treacherous area would not derail the overall mission, Dubowsky said. "You would certainly be willing to sacrifice some of these 1,000 balls" to gather information from remote areas, he said.

Each probe would weigh about 100 grams (4 ounces) and would carry its own tiny fuel cell. "You could hop for a long, long time on a few grams of fuel," Dubowsky said.

Artificial muscles inside the probes could make them hop an average of six times per hour, with a maximum rate of 60 hops per hour. The devices would travel about 1.5 meters per hop; they can also bounce or roll. In 30 days, a swarm of probes could cover 50 square miles, according to Dubowsky.

Each probe would carry different types of sensors, including cameras and environmental sensors. The probes are made of durable and lightweight plastic that could withstand the rigors of Mars travel and the extreme cold. Their fuel cells will provide enough heat to keep their electronics and sensors operable.

One thousand of the probes would have the same volume and weight as the Spirit rover. "For the weight and size of Spirit you could certainly send more than 1,000 of these sensors up there, which would have much greater capability," Dubowsky said.

The probes would be able to communicate with nearby probes through a local area network (LAN). Data would be sent to a base station that would transmit information back to Earth.

Other possible applications for the small robots include search and rescue missions in collapsed buildings or other dangerous sites, and counter-terrorist activities (searching for terrorists in caves).

Last year, the researchers got funding from the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC). The NIAC grant is meant to help move the project from the concept stage to the prototype stage.

Other collaborators on the project include Jean-Sebastien Plante, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, and Fritz Prinz and Mark Cutkowsky of Stanford University.

web.mit.edu 

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Lahcim Leinad5/25/2012 5:43:59 PM
   of 3741
 
NASA - NASA Offers Guidelines To Protect Historic Sites On The Moon

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read
Previous 10 | Next 10 

Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.