What Would Happen if Cryptocurrency Became More Popular Than Cash? – Futurism

In BriefIt's not outlandish to think that our current financial systemwill soon be replaced by cryptocurrency, and the shift will bringabout some big changes to the global economy. The Flippening

For a time, Bitcoin seemed unassailable in its dominance of the cryptocurrency market,being the first digital currency to really take root and establish itself in the mainstream. Since then, a host of worthy competitors have emerged, and theres a real possibility that the balance of power could flip.

Many who have been regularly followingdevelopments in the cryptocurrency market refer to the tipping point where one digital currency supersedes another as the flippening We almost saw this occur in May 2017, when Ethereums market cap approached Bitcoins amid a surge in popularity.

When individuals have significant amounts of money invested in one cryptocurrency over another, its no surprise that tensions run high when they go head to head. However, these squabbles over which coin is best might be distracting us froma more pressing issue.

Some observers would argue that the true flippeningisnt a case of competition between two different forms of cryptocurrency at all. Thesea of change yet to come could have more far reaching consequences, if and when digital currency as a whole becomes more popular than conventional fiat currency.

There would be some major advantages to an all-cryptocurrency future: its value cant be manipulated as easy as fiat currency, and it lends itself to the concept of universal basic income.In fact, several different programs, such as uCoin and Cicada, are already using cryptocurrencyto distribute UBI.

In a future where our transactions with shops and services are likely to be handled by automated systems, cryptocurrency removes many of the intermediaries that would take their own cut. There are many benefits for the individual, but the flippening stands to pose some major challenges for the global economy in its current form.

Should cryptocurrency manage to jump ahead of fiat money in terms of usage, cash wont be able to close the gap. Thats the trick to the flippening once changeover takes place, the losing party loses value and cant do anything about it.

If everyone begins using cryptocurrency, infrastructure would need to bedevelopedwith that in mind. It might not take too long for cash to become incompatible. At this point,it remains to be seen whether established financial institutions could pivot to that new status quo in time.

At the highest level, governments will be hit hard, as they will no longer exercisethe same level of control over the countrys currency. The idea of printing more money has been raised time and time again in response to financial turmoil, but that option disappears once currency has to be mined.

The flip from fiat money to cryptocurrency is a very real prospect, and it could well change the face of how our society spends and saves.

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What Would Happen if Cryptocurrency Became More Popular Than Cash? - Futurism

Bitbay Exchange Enters Indian Cryptocurrency Markets – Bitcoin News (press release)

Bitbay has announced that it will enter the Indian cryptocurrency markets, with the companys Indian exchange expected to be operational before the end of August. Bitbay is Polands largest exchange by trade volume, and is set to become the first international bitcoin exchange operating within Indias cryptocurrency markets.

Also Read:Panel Recommends Indian Government Take Immediate Steps to Stop Bitcoin Use

Bitbay has announced that it will be launching its exchange platform for the Indian cryptocurrency markets. Bitbay will be the first cryptocurrency exchange to offer altcoin trading providing trading pairs for ethereum litecoin, lisk, monero, ash, and gamecredits.

From August 14 Bitbay will offer demo trading that does not involve using real money, before launching full operations on August 24th. In a recent interview with Money Control, Bitbay India Head, Rohit Dahda has stated we are taking all necessary steps to adhere prescribed rules for Bitbay India. In fact, we are offering demo trading for users before using real currency to bring a level of confidence in common people.

At a launch function for the newexchange, Bitbay CEO, Sylwestor Suszek, stated that Bitbay India has been conceptualized to provide innovative services, support and solution for cryptocurrency users in terms of fast and secure transactions. Our team consists of specialists and Bitcoin enthusiasts who are active in crypto community, attend industry conference events and support charity causes via meaningful fund donations to relevant Indian societies. An official press release states that the prime objective of Bitbay India is to remove all misconceptions related to cryptocurrency, drive more people towards digital currencies, attract potential investors from market and offer all round platform to trade as well as exchange multiple cryptocurrencies at Bitbay.

According to Coinmarketcap, Bitbay hosts the largest BTC/PLN market by volume, with Bitbays 24-hour volume sitting around $8.35 million at the time of this articles composition equating to roughly 0.26% of total global bitcoin trade. We are the number one in Eastern-Central Europe with more than 200,000 users. We are number 10 in the world and are in operations since 2014, Suszek told Moneycontrol.

Despite the nations current climate of regulatory uncertainty regarding Indias cryptocurrency markets, Bitbay plans to expand its presence in India over the coming months, including the introduction of up to 17 different altcoins. Very soon, we will be bringing more features on the platform to cater to requirements of common people on a day-to-day basis. We are following a high-security model and following two-fold authentication models for safe transaction, states Rohit Dahda.

What do you think about Bitbays entry into the Indian cryptocurrency markets? Share your thoughts in the comments section below!

Image courtesy of Shutterstock and Bitbay

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Bitbay Exchange Enters Indian Cryptocurrency Markets - Bitcoin News (press release)

Bitcoin Breaks $4000 – Fortune

At this point, cryptocurrencys year can only be described as ridiculous.

Bitcoin, the original and highest-profile distributed digital currency, has been on a sustained rally since last December. Now it has reached yet another all-time high, hitting $4044 on the CoinMarketCap index as of this writing.

That means an investment in Bitcoin made on January 1st, at a value of $973, would have produced a 315% return today or an annualized return of over 900%.

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The entire cryptocurrency sector has been on a tear this year, as major institutions pursue applications for the underlying blockchain security protocol: Bank of America has filed more than 20 block chain patents and Microsoft is adding blockchain tech to its cloud services. Meanwhile cryptocurrency startups have been raising huge amounts of money, both via traditional channels and through so-called Initial Coin Offerings (which the SEC recently signaled it would crack down on).

Bitcoins latest record high is particularly notable given that valuations for other cryptocurrencies, including stalwarts such as Ethereum and Litecoin, were down in recent days.

This discrepancy is actually a good thing, as it signals that cryptocurrency investors are making substantive choices between the competing systems. Bitcoins fundamentals have made major progress in recent weeks, and Segwit2x, a long-awaited and contentious software upgrade, is on its way to implementation.

Segwit2x will make Bitcoin more usable for individual transactions and as a financial backbone for secondary services. So while there's certainly plenty of dumb money flooding into Bitcoin, theres also more than just mania behind investors continued bullishness.

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Bitcoin Breaks $4000 - Fortune

Bitcoin surges past $4000, sets more records – MarketWatch

The price of bitcoin continued its meteoric rise Sunday, crossing the $4,000 mark for the first time.

After cresting as high as $4,200 earlier in the day, bitcoin BTCUSD, -0.62% was at $4,078.08 at 5 p.m. Eastern, up 4.1% for the day, according to Coindesk.com. The price of bitcoin is up more than 40% in August, and more than 280% this year.

It first passed the $2,000 mark in May, and topped $3,000 for the first time in June. Bitcoin has surged to a number of new records in the past two weeks, since the digital currency split and created a new currency, Bitcoin Cash.

Read: Confused about bitcoin? 10 things you need to know

The value of cryptocurrencies overall has gained $11 billion in market cap in just the past two days, according to Coinmarketcap.com, topping out Sunday at a record $137 billion. Bitcoins share of that is more than $66 billion, another record.

Asian investors were responsible for much of bitcoins weekend gains, as investors sought safe havens as tensions between the U.S. and North Korea heat up. The Japanese yen was behind about 46% of Sundays global bitcoin trade volume, according to Cryptocompare.com. South Korea and China each made up about 12% of global volume.

Bitcoins weekend gains came at the expense of its rival digital currencies. Ethereums ether was down nearly 5% to $295.42 on Sunday, according to Coindesk.com, Ripple declined almost 4% and Bitcoin Cash slipped 4.3%.

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Bitcoin surges past $4000, sets more records - MarketWatch

FOOTBALL: Eastern Comets preview – Kokomo Tribune

Eastern wants to take another step forward as a program this season: That means its time to put together a winning season.

The Comets feel they have the pieces in place to do so, but maybe more if everything falls in place.

Eastern graduated just four seniors off its 4-6 team from last year. So, if everyone stays healthy a problem in recent seasons the team could be in position for just the programs third winning season in 17 years.

We want to improve on last year, so we want to get to that winning record, Eastern coach Josh Edwards said. Thats where we want to get to this year. I think we can do more than that with this group. We only graduated four seniors from last year, so we feel pretty good. We feel like we can do some positive things if we stay healthy, which has been a struggle for us.

The Comets will be led at quarterback by junior Garrett Hetzner, who brings a fullback mentality to the position. Nolan Grubb will be the backup. Scott Mullenix was injured in Week 5 last season and Hetzner took over the starting role to finish the season, so he has experience at the position.

Hetzners leadership and toughness will not be a concern, Edwards said. If anything, he might need to be reeled in at times. They want him to be physical and tough, but to be smart and pick his spots.

Hed rather run you over than throw the ball, Edwards said, noting that attitude was on display in a recent practice. He wanted to lower his shoulder and run over a guy on one of the running plays. You like that mentality in the game, but at the same time you have to be smart about things. Were trying to get that under reins because hes going to give you 150 percent.

Easterns offensive line has two attributes that Edwards is excited about: physicality and intelligence. The offensive lines grade point average is probably the highest in recent years for that unit, which is translating to their ability to make adjustments from one play to the next.

Those playing on the offensive line will consist of Otis Smith, Isaac Mauer, Jake Nelson, Elijah Moon, Spencer Williams, Tyler Hurson and Blaine Kolb.

You can show 1,000 pictures in the film room and the white board, but as soon as the picture changes on the field, how are they capable of adjusting to that? Thats been our problem in recent years. Weve had very strong, physical kids, but weve had trouble adjusting to the changing picture on the field, Edwards said. Now, thats changing due to the work from the players and coaches. These kids are making the adjustments on their own. Theyre very sharp and making adjustments at a very high rate.

Eastern will still run a spread offense, but with some new wrinkles due to the group of running backs on the field this season. Braden Sparks, an all-Hoosier Heartland Conference wide receiver last season, will run from the F position in single running back formations. Junior Dontae Nolder, another all-conference receiver, junior Dakota Spencer and Tytus Morrisett will all be key contributors.

Were pretty blessed because we have four guys that are going to play there and really, the way were looking at it right now, were hoping each one of those guys can get 8 to 10 carries per game, Edwards said.

The group of running backs will offer some varying looks that will expand the offensive possibilities for the Comets.

A couple of those kids are more downhill runners, straight ahead, Edwards said. We want to be more physical with the running game this year. Ive got some guys that want to run downhill. Ive got some kids that are more of our zone scheme, then will take it and maybe wait, and then cut against the grain.

Eastern will likely play six wide receivers each game, along with tight end Luke Monize. The Comets will play anything from 2- to 5-wide receiver sets out of their spread looks.

Nolder and Sparks will continue to play wide receiver this season, along with getting carries as a running back. Tyler Gilbert, Eli Elkins, Logan McNeil, and Greg Black will fill out the rotation at receiver. Jake Cooper would also be getting reps, but will miss quite a bit of time after having a knee surgery.

The defense will be physical and aggressive. Theres a trend thats noticeable when Edwards talks about that side of the ball.

Theyre hitters, Edwards said. This group likes to hit. They hit. Thats something where you can coach it, you can preach it and you can push it all you want but a little bit of that is engrained in the brain. These kids have a very aggressive mentality.

Otis Smith, Tyler Hurston, Alford and Gilbert are the defensive linemen. Asher Walden and Monize are the middle linebackers, while Spencer and Hetzner are the outside linebackers. Morrisett and Caleb Price are backup outside linebackers.

Nolder and Cory Robinson are the safeties, while Elkins and Black will work at the cornerback positions, with Kayden McPhillips and McNeil serving as backups.

Easterns youth leagues have played games inside of Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the NFLs Indianapolis Colts. Now, the varsity will get its chance when the Comets meet Carroll on Sept. 16.

Its once-in-a-lifetime because you never know when you might get back there, Edwards said. You hope and pray you have a team that makes it there, but thats pretty rare for anybody. This is once-in-a-lifetime for the coaches and the kids.

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FOOTBALL: Eastern Comets preview - Kokomo Tribune

Knowledge a valuable asset for Kimevski, Comets – Suburbanite

Andy Harris The Suburbanite.com assistant editor

COVENTRY TWP. Theres a lot to be said for knowing what you have.

After tryouts early last week, Anna Kimevski and the rest of the Coventry volleyball team finally know what their roster will look like and who will be playing alongside them this fall. Tryouts took place Aug. 1 and the start of practices followed the next day, launching the Comets into what they hope will be a second consecutive winning campaign.

The first couple of days were really focused on getting our conditioning in and being in shape for the season, Kimevski said. We work our conditioning into drills so we keep our skills getting better for games.

One of the faces helping head coach Breanna Caslow and her staff get the Comets in top shape is Devon McAfee, who coaches football, boys basketball and track at the school, but is also working with the volleyball team before the season on conditioning.

McAfee, who serves as the high schools teacher in charge of students who are serving in-school suspensions, was a known face for Kimevski - not for ever having any kind of disciplinary issues, she noted with a laugh - but not for many other volleyball players.

Through his work with the team and the drills and sprints through which Caslow and her assistant coaches have put the team, it quickly became clear who had done their work and kept in shape during the offseason and who hadnt put in the time, according to Kimevski.

You can tell whos been to open gym, whos been doing the workouts when he gave to us and whos been pushing themselves, Kimevski said.

With tryouts in the rearview mirror, the senior hitter is excited to be able to focus on learning a new position and gelling with teammates old and new. Part of the teams conditioning program is running the mile in under eight minutes, which Kimevski admits is one of her least favorite parts of the process.

Anyone who doesnt make the eight-minute mark for tryouts has to keep running the mile on the schools track until they can reach that standard. Doing sprints in the gym is another way to boost cardiovascular conditioning and the first 20-30 minutes of each practice session so far have been devoted to running, sweating and repeating, all in the name of not getting tired when games start and the Comets find themselves needing to dig deep for a win in the fifth set of a close match.

Kimevski is also excited about a change in position after playing the libero - defensive specialist - role as a junior. Not long ago, the coaching staff confirmed that she would get to move to a new position, one to which shes been aspiring for a while now.

Im focused on settling in as a hitter after being a libero last year and now I can focus on a totally different position, Kimevski said. Ive known I was going to be a hitter for almost a month and I was happy about it because Ive wanted to be a hitter for a while, but Im really short so I knew I might not get to do it.

Height aside, her experience and court savvy should provided Kimevski with a chance to succeed in her new role. An offseason of work is winding down, classes will begin soon and it will be back to the normal schedule of classes followed by games or practices.

Now that the roster is mostly set, its a time to turn the focus to working with the pieces in place and developing the cohesion and chemistry it will take to repeat the winning mark of last season and chase an even high win total this time around. If knowledge truly is power, then Kimevski and her teammates have an added boost as they make the turn and head down the homestretch of the offseason.

Games will begin soon enough and when they do, knowledge will have to meet execution in order to keep the ball rolling.

Reach Andy at 330-580-8936 or andy.harris@thesuburbanite.com. On Twitter: @aharrisBURB

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Knowledge a valuable asset for Kimevski, Comets - Suburbanite

LIVESTREAM: Germany Allgu Comets @Marburg Mercenaries Aug. 13, 4p CEST (10a EDT) – American Football International

Photo: Sebastian Leis REDVISIONMEDIA

The Marburg Mercenaries are looking to improve their record to 8-3 when they face the 3-7 Allgu Comets Sunday at Georg-Gassman Stadium in Marburg in German Football League action.

The Mercenaries sit third in the GFL South but have lost two of their last three games while Allgu are coming off two straights wins. This is the first game in a back-to-back series between the two.

Nevertheless, the Mercenaries have to be considered favorites entering this one. They have only lost one game this season at home while the Comets have lost four of five of their away games.

This could be a game won in the air. Marburg quarterback Chad Jeffries is the fourth leading passer in Germany after only playing six games. He has thrown for 1,516 yards and 14 touchdowns, averaging 253 yards per game. Allgu has one of the most porous pass defenses in the league giving up an average of 242 yards per game.

The Comets will have to keep an eye on Marburg receiver Robert Johnson who leads the team with 635 yards in receptions. Versatile running backAndreus Lindley leads the Mercenaries in rushing with 493 yards while also catching 25 passes for 440 yards.

However, Comets quarterback Cedric Townsends offensive numbers are impressive. He has thrown for 1,657 and 19 touchdowns in eight games and rushed for 327 and four touchdowns. In other words, he has accounted for 23 of Allgus 31.touchdowns this year.

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LIVESTREAM: Germany Allgu Comets @Marburg Mercenaries Aug. 13, 4p CEST (10a EDT) - American Football International

Expert dispels myths about psoriasis – Gulf Times

The Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) has launched a campaign as part of Psoriasis Awareness Month this month. It is estimated that 3% of Qatars population is affected by the disease. Men and women develop psoriasis at equal rates. The condition is often diagnosed between the ages of 15 and 35, but it can develop at any age. The main goal of Psoriasis Awareness Month is to raise awareness, encourage research and advocate for better care for individuals who have the disease. The month is also an opportunity to educate the public about the disease and to dispel common myths. Psoriasis is a chronic, genetic autoimmune disease that causes red, scaly patches on the skin. It causes cells to rapidly build up on the surface of the skin. It typically occurs on the knees, elbows, and scalp but can affect the torso, palms and soles of the feet or any other part of the skin. According to Dr Ahmad Hazem Takiddin, dermatology and venereology consultant at HMC, there are a number of common misconceptions about psoriasis, ranging from the condition being contagious to occurring due to poor hygiene. Psoriasis is an autoimmune disease which affects the skin. The patches can crack and bleed and this causes some people to think the condition is contagious. This is not true. Genetics and the immune system of a person play a vital role in the development of the disease. In those with psoriasis, the immune system sends abnormal signals that significantly accelerate the growth process of skin cells, Takiddin said. He emphasised that psoriasis is not caused or worsened by poor personal hygiene. People with the disease have a genetic tendency to develop it. There are certain things that can trigger flare-ups, including skin injury, stress, hormonal changes, infections and some medications. Most people with the disease experience cycles of clear skin and outbreaks, he said.

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Expert dispels myths about psoriasis - Gulf Times

Travel the world on an ice cream tour in Los Angeles – PRI

Among life's pressing questions, which ice cream to have poses an eternal conundrum. There's coffee, obviously, and chocolate, but what about raspberry, pistachio, rum raisinand mint chocolate chip? Toppings are a further challenge sprinkles, whipped cream, hot fudge, the proverbial cherry on top?

So it's a relief to learn that Filipinos have an answer: halo-halo.

The name of the frozen dessert, also made in Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia, translates as mix-mix, explains Rachel Ozaeta, a barista at Leelin Bakery, in a district near downtown Los Angeles with a concentration of Filipino-American-owned businesses.

You can take mix-mixliterally. Ozaeta rattles off the list of today's ingredients as she fills a cup with them lecheflan, jackfruit, sugar palm fruit, coconut cream, mixed beansand Jell-O, topped with shaved ice and evaporated milk. It's the everything bagel philosophy applied to dessert, and it's crowned with ascoop of a gloriously purple ice cream called ube.

Ube, Ozaeta explains, is a tropical yam. It's sweet, slightly nutty andpurple. Prince purple. It's a staple inthe Philippines. In Los Angeles, it's a neighborhood hit, and not just for Filipino-Americans.

Latinos ... Indians, Koreans, they all love our halo-halo, Ozaeta says.

Immigrants and ice cream go way back. A French chef was churning it out in New York back in 1774.At Ellis Island in the 1920s, new arrivals made their own ice cream sandwiches.And at the 1904 World's Fair, it was an immigrant from Syria who rolled up a kind of waffle called a zalabia to make one of the first ice cream cones.

Indian immigrants did not invent the creamsicle, but they could have. India's traditional ice cream, kulfi, is creamy and solid, like a spiced caramel popsicle, without the stick. You can cut it with a knife and eat it with a fork.

You can put it back in the freezer and it's still kulfi, explains Smita Vasant, owner of the shop Saffron Spotin LA's Little India, located in a suburb of Artesia.

The difference with kulfi is how it's made. Compared to ice cream, which is churned to introduce air and a creamy texture, kulfi is frozen in molds. Vasant makes hers the traditional way stirring down a steaming pot of milk and cream on the stove for hours until it condenses, then adding sugar and spices like cardamom and saffron before freezing. It's a long, laborious process, she says.

Vasant grew up in Mumbai, eating ice creams made with tropical fruits and nuts, cardamom, saffronand fennel seed. In the US, she could never find ice creams that measured up.

We love vanilla, chocolate all of this ice cream here is delicious, she says.But you still have that memory of what you ate back home. So she left her job as a corporate health care consultant and started making her kulfi and ice cream with Indian flavors like mango, pistachio, lycheeand rose. Vanilla, chocolate and strawberry are her shop'sleast popular flavors.

For centuries, ice cream and its sweet frozen relatives have been a global phenomenon. While the notion of freezing sweetened cream dates back to the 16th century, and the royal courts of India and Europe, the ancient Persians were making iced desserts at least 1,000 years earlier. Faloodeh, a Persian dessert made of frozen rice noodles, rosewater and cherry syrup, is said to date back to 400 BC. Later, Iran jumped on the dairy bandwagon too, and an ice cream maker named Akbar Mashti opened Iran's first ice cream shopin Tehran in the 1920s.

In Hollywood, Mehdi Shirvani and his brother Mashti are keeping Persian ice cream traditions alive at their ice cream shop, Mashti Malone, with recipes for faloodeh and ice creams like creamy rosewater, ginger rosewater and saffron gleaned from their uncle, who had an ice cream shop back in Iran.

Wielding ascoop, Shirvani leans into a freezer to make me one of his famous ice cream sandwiches Akbar Mashti-style saffron rosewater ice cream mashed between two thin crosshatched wafers, a memory of his childhood. He says he still eats one almost every day.

But there isso much more to taste: Mexican mango chile paletas, Korean bingsoo, or fine-shaved ice with sweet red beans, sesame and soybean powder, and Vietnamese avocado milkshakes. It is tough to get to them all, but there is one person who is an expert in the world of ice cream flavors and their availability in the US.Adrienne Borlongan is the founder and chief flavor master at Wanderlust Creameryin LA's San Fernando Valley, a shop that offers everything fromIcelandic rye bread ice cream and a Thai-style sticky rice and mango flavor to a Japanese-style Neapolitan with sesame and matcha.

I wanted to globalize people's palates, Borlongan explains. What better way to do that [than] with ice cream?"

It all comes back to ube. Borlongan is from LA, but her parents are from the Philippines, and she grew up eating the bright-purple Filipino yam.

But that is changing thanks toice cream makers serving up halo-halo, kulfi and Persian ice cream sandwiches. It makes me happy when I see a little kid and theyre eating a purple ice cream, knowing that theyre going to grow up and theyre going to know what ube is, she says.

However, ube would notbe the first imported tropical flavor to go mainstream. Check your freezer. If you havechocolateand vanilla, you can thank Mexico and Guatemala.

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Travel the world on an ice cream tour in Los Angeles - PRI

SpaceX’s next launch will send an HPE supercomputer to the International Space Station – The Verge

Tomorrow, SpaceXs Falcon 9 rocket is set to launch another batch of cargo and science experiments to the International Space Station, and that shipment will include a supercomputer from Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Called the Spaceborne Computer, the system is a joint project between HPE and NASA to see if a commercial computer can be designed to last in the harsh space environment. If successful, similar computers could be critical tools for future deep-space missions beyond Earth.

The space stations location in lower Earth orbit makes it an unfriendly place for computers. Because the ISS sits outside the majority of Earths protective atmosphere, its exposed to more radiation from solar flares and cosmic rays that originate outside the Solar System. This exposure can degrade technology over time, so computers that go to space have to be physically hardened with shielding in order to withstand this higher radiation environment. But this upgrading process takes a lot of time and money, and it adds weight to the computer, according to HPE.

Can a commercial computer last in the harsh space environment?

The Spaceborne Computer is an experiment to see if regular off-the-shelf computers can operate in space over long periods of time. The computer is also equipped to deal with radiation exposure differently, relying on software upgrades rather than hardware. It runs on an open-source Linux operating system and is programmed to recognize when a high-radiation event is occurring, for instance. It will then respond by throttling its systems and lowering its operating speed to save power and avoid damage, according to NASA.

The computer supposedly passed 146 safety tests and certifications to be approved for space travel by NASA, says HPE. Once it launches to orbit, the computer is supposed to last a year on the ISS. Overall, NASA wants to know just how much the computer will suffer from radiation exposure over time, and if these software patches can actually reduce any degradation. The results of the space-bound computer will be compared to an identical computer that HPE is keeping on the ground.

If the experiment works, similar software-hardened computers could be critical for future missions to Mars. Communicating with astronauts on the Red Planet will be a slow process, since a radio signal takes around 20 minutes to travel from Earth to Mars. That means round-trip communications could take upwards of 40 minutes. If Mars astronauts have to do complicated calculations in a hurry, they wont be able to rely on Earth; theyll have to use any computers they take with them and those systems will need to be able to withstand the heightened radiation on the way to Mars.

SpaceXs Falcon 9 rocket is slated to take off at 12:31PM ET from Cape Canaveral, Florida, with the Spaceborne Computer onboard.

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SpaceX's next launch will send an HPE supercomputer to the International Space Station - The Verge

Niwa’s number crunching supercomputer gets a $18 million upgrade … – Stuff.co.nz

MATT STEWART

Last updated13:07, August 13 2017

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF

Niwa's supercomputer - FitzRoy - has been involved in some of NZ's most important climate forecasting.

It'sthedata-crunching behemoth that helped forecasta scorching new climate for Wellington and Wairarapa by 2090, but Niwa's supercomputer - FitzRoy - is retiring and about to be usurped by a model many times more powerful.

The 18-tonne computer is housed in a specially-constructed room at the National Institute for Water and Atmospheric Research base at Greta Point on the edge of Wellington Harbourand is designed to withstand severe earthquakes, tsunami and fire.

Installed in 2010 the supercomputer has helped drive some of our most important climate forecasting, includingtwo years processing data to create ultra-long range models that predict a blazing, parchedWairarapa and Sydney-style heatfor the capital by 2090.

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF

Niwa high performance computing systems systems engineer Aaron Hicks with the retiring supercomputer dubbed FitzRoy.

Niwa's chief climate, atmosphere and hazards scientist Sam Dean said FitzRoy allows scientists to do high-resolution climate modelling that covers the whole country - a situation unique in the world.

READ MORE: *CuriousCity: The raw materials that have built Wellington *CuriousCity: The inner workings of Wellington's cable car *Wellington could beas hot as Sydney unless action is taken on climate change *Curious City: Oriental Bay's famous fountain under the spotlight

"We don't just run weather models - rain never did anything until it hit the ground or landed on a person's head - what we do is we join other models to that weather model."

MONIQUE FORD/STUFF

NIWA chief climate, atmosphere and hazards scientist Sam Dean said while it will take time for the science to catch up with the new supercomputer it will expand the institute's vision.

Thisincludes hydrological modelling keeping tabs on 66,000 waterwaysas well as storm surges, ocean levelsand wave action that is fused with weather forecasting, allowing meteorologists to forecast hazardous events like flooding, or high waves in the Cook Strait.

"It's a little bit like playing God - these models mimic everything the earth does - thathas a beauty whichis quite amazing and that really inspires me," Dean said.

But just as you might get a new PCafter seven years,a new - as yet nameless - $18 million suite of three supercomputers (equivalent to about 16,000 laptops) is set to take FitzRoy's place come November.

NIWA

NIWA's supercomputer has helped drive some of our most important climate forecasting, including two years processing data to create ultra-long range models that predict a blazing, parched Wairarapa and Sydney-style heat for the capital by 2090.

One of these - the Cray XC50 - has a theoretical peak equivalent to 1.4 trillion calculations per second and will keep Niwain possession of one of the world's top 500 supercomputers.

Another backup disaster recovery machine containing 1340harddriveswill be taken to Auckland with all of FitzRoy's existing dataon what Dean describes as "NZ'sbiggest USB stick"becausesending the data via the network would take fouryears.

At 23 tonnes the entire upgrade suite will be about 13times more powerful than FitzRoy, while using about two-thirds of the electricity, and will expand Niwa's forecasting to a higher resolution, all while giving a better handle on forecast precision.

"Every time we've bought a new supercomputer it's challenged our concepts of what's possible- it takes us a couple of years for our science to catch up with the technology - it expands our vision," Dean said.

-Stuff

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Niwa's number crunching supercomputer gets a $18 million upgrade ... - Stuff.co.nz

Ask the Doctors: Stem cell therapy may help worn-out knees – Bennington Banner (subscription)

By Robert Ashley, M.D.

A: "Worn out" is a good way to term what happens to the knee joint with prolonged use. Let's look at how this happens, starting with cartilage.

The lower portion of the knee joint (at the tibia) contains shock absorbers called menisci made of cartilage. You have one on the inner portion and another on the outer portion of each knee. The upper portion of the knee joint (at the femur) is lined with cartilage as well. All of this cartilage helps protect the bones at the joint but it doesn't heal or regenerate well due to limited blood supply. When severe, worn cartilage leads to arthritis of the knee. In knee X-rays of people over the age of 60, 37 percent have shown evidence of arthritis of the knees.

The intriguing thing about stem cells is that they have the ability to become any type of cell that the body needs. The cells used for stem cell injections in the knees are called mesenchymal stem cells, and they can differentiate into bone, fat or cartilage cells. These stem cells can come from the fat cells of your body, from your bone marrow or from the inner lining of your knee joint; they're then replicated in the laboratory and injected into the knee joint.

Here's what the research shows so far ...

In a 2013 study, 32 patients with meniscal tears of the knee were injected with a combination of stem cells, platelet-rich plasma and hyaluronic acid. The study reported improved symptoms and even MRI evidence of meniscal cartilage regeneration.

In a 2014 study, 55 patients who had surgery for meniscal tears of the knees were separated into three groups, with two of the groups receiving stem cell injections. Researchers found that, after six weeks, pain had decreased substantially in the two groups that received stem cell injections and that the decrease was even greater at one and two years after the injection.

In a 2017 study in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, researchers analyzed six studies that used stem cells for osteoarthritis of the knees. In five of the studies, stem cells were given after surgery to the knee; in the other study, stem cells from a donor were administered without surgery. All the studies showed reduced pain and improved knee function. Further, in three of the four trials, MRIs corroborated the cartilage improvements. However, the authors noted, five of the six studies were of such poor methodology that an overall conclusion about the stem cells' effectiveness could not be made.

In all these studies, the most common side effect was knee swelling and stiffness, which improved over time.

There may be benefit to stem cell injections for cartilage loss of the knees, but more data are needed, especially in those who aren't having surgery of the knee. I'd also like to see more data on this type of therapy as a preventive measure for younger patients before their knees are worn out.

Robert Ashley, M.D., is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles. Send your questions to askthedoctors@mednet.ucla.edu, or write: Ask the Doctors, c/o Media Relations, UCLA Health, 924 Westwood Blvd., Suite 350, Los Angeles, CA, 90095. Owing to the volume of mail, personal replies cannot be provided.

If you'd like to leave a comment (or a tip or a question) about this story with the editors, please email us. We also welcome letters to the editor for publication; you can do that by filling out our letters form and submitting it to the newsroom.

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Young Jews find spirituality outside the synagogue – The Jerusalem Post

NEW YORK Michelle Reyf isnt really a synagogue-goer. Until recently, the 28-year-old, who works for a Jewish nonprofit, was perfectly happy to get her spiritual fulfillment at Buddhist prayer services and meditation retreats.

Synagogue did not appeal to her for a variety of reasons she found the crowd to be older and the atmosphere to be impersonal. And as someone who identifies as queer, she felt distanced from the traditional values she encountered in many Jewish spaces.

But in January, a friend invited her to attend Shir HaMaalot, an independent minyan, or prayer community, in Brooklyn. There, Reyf found a place that had some of the very same qualities as the Buddhist community she was a part of and that she had not found in traditional Jewish settings.

It feels like finding a home, and it feels like Im not a bad Jew for wanting different things than were being offered in most synagogues and Jewish communities, said Reyf, a senior digital organizer for the Jewish social justice organization Bend the Arc.

I thought maybe Judaism isnt for me or maybe Im just not doing it right or maybe Im different or theres something wrong with me that I dont feel like I fit in wherever I go. And then I came to Shir HaMaalot and I was like, These are my people,' she told JTA.

Shir HaMaalot a volunteer-led, nondenominational minyan that defines itself as a traditional-egalitarian havurah meets once a month in Prospect Heights and Crown Heights in Brooklyn, often in space rented and subsidized by a local Reform synagogue, Union Temple of Brooklyn. Following a musical Shabbat service, participants join together for a vegetarian potluck meal. There is no rabbi, and community members take turns leading the services.

Reyf is part of a cohort of millennial Jews finding spiritual fulfillment at independent minyanim rather than in the traditional synagogue. Though the groups vary in prayer style, customs and demographics, many are egalitarian or support increased womens participation in services. They tend to draw a younger crowd than the average synagogue.

Independent minyanim appeal to people looking for a type of religious experience, said Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, the author of a book on independent minyanim and president of Mechon Hadar, a co-educational, egalitarian institution of Jewish learning based in New York.

In my experience the people who are not going to synagogue its not because theyre anti-synagogue its more that theyre looking for something and if the synagogue has it theyll go there, and if the synagogue doesnt they wont. And I think thats where Shir HaMaalot comes in, Kaunfer said.

Kaunfer said Shir HaMaalot, which was founded in 2011, has a reputation for its use of music. In addition, I think also a place gets its own reputation just by who starts going there, so when people think about Where am I going to go on Friday night? now they know they have an option thats appealing to people in their age demographic, and that can also build on itself.

There are over 100 independent minyanim across the country, and they are especially accessible to millennials who often have yet to make commitments to Jewish institutions, Kaunfer said.

What it boils down to in large part is people in their 20s and early 30s have more flexibility in terms of their social groups and commitments, he said.

The young crowd at Shir HaMaalot was a draw for Gabriela Geselowitz, a 26-year-old journalist and part time Hebrew school teacher. Geselowitz knew she wanted to be involved in a Jewish community after college but had assumed she would be the only young person there.

When I moved to Brooklyn, I said I wanted to be near a Conservative shul, because that is generally traditional egalitarian, and I was sort of prepared to be the only young person at things. I did go to local synagogue a couple of times, and I was the only young person, said Geselowitz, who started attending Shir HaMaalot three and a half years ago.

At Shir HaMaalot, Geselowitz found both an age-appropriate crowd and an atmosphere that she enjoys.

This was even better than Hillel in college in terms of enthusiasm and volume of people and what Im looking for. I didnt really expect to find a space that would hit all of my buttons in the way that Shir HaMaalot does, said Geselowitz, who lives in Brooklyn.

The mood described by Geselowitz was evident at a recent Friday evening service, which she attended with her husband Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein, a 27-year-old working to launch a media startup.

Around 75 people, mostly young professionals with a few older people and young families sprinkled in, sat in chairs set up in concentric circles around the prayer leader, who alternated between singing slow, soulful melodies and faster, more upbeat ones. At various points throughout the service, when the tempo quickened, a young man started playing a djembe drum and people clapped along to the beat. Afterward they gathered around tables in an adjacent room as they ate the buffet-style potluck and talked.

The majority of Shir HaMaalot attendees are young, said Russ Agdern, one of the minyans founders and a member of its organizing team.

It skews towards 20s and 30s, but its certainly not exclusively that, and thats certainly not our intention, said Agdern, 39, who works as director of recruitment and outreach for the Jewish social justice group Avodah.

Before the minyan was founded in 2011, there were not really any egalitarian spaces with full Hebrew liturgy in this part of Brooklyn, said Agdern, adding that the founders wanted to create a community-driven davening space.

The founders were active participants in the National Havurah Committee, a network of nondenominational grassroots Jewish communities. The organization has its roots in the havurah, or fellowship, movement, of the late 1960s and 1970s, when an earlier wave of young people sought to create Jewish prayer experiences outside of traditional synagogue settings.

Tobin Belzer, a sociologist of American Jewry at the University of Southern California, believes that the difference between the havurah movement and the independent minyanim is their attitude toward the Jewish mainstream. Because it was purposely positioned outside of mainstream institutions, the havurah phenomenon was often referred to as the Jewish counterculture. Participants published books and articles criticizing American Judaism, she wrote in a study of the two movements.

By contrast, minyanim represent a subculture, not a counterculture. Independent minyanim are not outside of the Jewish mainstream; they are on the margins of it, writes Belzer. In fact, many independent minyanim have strong ties with Jewish institutions. Some receive funding from Jewish foundations, others gather in borrowed spaces in synagogues, and still others use Torah scrolls loaned from area congregations.

Though communities affiliated with the havurah movement vary in terms of practice and affiliation, they are united in the fact that they are egalitarian, mostly volunteer-run and promote wide participation by community members.

Spitzer-Rubenstein likened Shir HaMaalots atmosphere to that of services at Jewish summer camps.

I went to Reform summer camp in California, and it was a similar sort of joy and celebration in praying, he said. I feel like there are a lot of Jewish spaces where praying isnt seen as something that should be fun, and one of the things that I really like about Shir HaMaalot is that people care about and make it something significant.

For Geselowitz, Shir HaMaalots energy reminded me a little bit of teenage Jewish youth group.

The participatory aspect of the minyan appeals to Andrea Birnbaum, a 27-year-old medical student who has been attending Shir HaMaalot for four years.

Its not performative in the sense that sometimes you go to synagogue and theres someone on the bimah [podium] who has the most energy, and theyre trying to get the crowd moving but the crowd has a low energy, said Birnbaum. Its not like that. This is participatory we rotate every time someone leads the davening, the prayer.

For now, Geselowitz and Spitzer-Rubenstein, who attend other independent minyanim in Brooklyn when Shir HaMaalot doesnt meet, dont feel like they are missing anything by not belonging to a synagogue.

Shir HaMaalot is free were happy to donate to it, but there arent synagogue dues. At this point in my life I actually like having a lay-led community rather than a single rabbinic authority, Geselowitz said. Participants are also attracted to Shir HaMaalots progressive values.

What also was really cool was that there were a lot of different gender expression, people who werent necessary [conforming to the gender] binary, and for me as a queer person that was really important to see that it isnt a heteronormative place where the gender binary was being enforced, Reyf said.

On its website, Shir HaMaalot encourages people to add your preferred pronouns to your name tag.

Pluralism is an important goal for the minyan, said Gregory Frumin, a 35-year-old social worker who serves on the minyans organizing team.

One of Shir HaMaalots core values is inclusive pluralism. We want to create an accessible and welcoming space for people of diverse backgrounds, identities, accessibility needs, he said.

At the potluck dinner after services, food is served on three different tables vegetarian, vegan and vegetarian cooked in a strictly kosher kitchen. Participants are also asked to list allergens on a spreadsheet prior to services.

I think its also important that Shir HaMaalot takes their religious observance seriously while still being welcoming to basically everyone, said Spitzer-Rubenstein.

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Young Jews find spirituality outside the synagogue - The Jerusalem Post

Hot Reads Minister of Defense: Ashland’s Cline leans on spirituality, speed – The Independent

ASHLAND Unbeknownst to him, Tony Love supplied a headline to any story that might be written about Willie Cline.

He has the minister-of-defense kind of thing going,said Ashlands fifth-year head coach.

Feisty, gritty, tenacious and religious, Cline offers a well-rounded utility option for the Tomcats.

Inside the locker room, Cline isnt a Bible thumper, but he makes teammates and coaches well aware of his beliefs.

Said Love, who is entering his 24th year on Ashlands staff:Idont think Ive ever come across a more spiritual kid.

I try to spread the gospel through football and stuff,said the 5-foot-10, 175-pound senior. Id say, its like, my biggest concern.

Since Aug. 20, 2016, the day Cline became a Christian, his thirst for connecting with a higher power is ever-increasing, he indicated.

Im motivated mostly just from reading the Word and keeping my eyes on Christ, not focusing on the problems of the world and complaining,Cline said. Itry not to complain so much. I try to set the example. I dont want to do nothing to ruin my testimony around them and all that.

Cline became an integral component of last years defensive success. The Tomcats allowed 14 or fewer points in nine of their 13 contests with Cline, whom Love dubbed a Tasmanian devil,regularly among the D-line.

Cline used a Gideon-like approach out of the Old Testament to ultimately thwart any doubts based on his diminutiveness.

You can make up some deficits by having great effort,Love said. Weve had quite a few of those kids who, looking at them, theyre small. You wouldnt know theyre a football player, let alone a lineman, but this is such a speed game. If youre going to give 100 percent out there and youre going to run the ball, then you can play defense.

Cline will be prompted to play up front and in the middle as a linebacker this fall. Hell carry out of the backfield, too.

Cline has a louder voice than hes exhibited in the past, but hes composed when delivering spiritually toned messages.

He may not be quoting scripture, but hell sit back and hell talk about salvation,Love said. He studies the Bible, just one of those dudes. Hell share what he knows with all of them. ... Its kinda cool to listen in from around the corner.

Fellow linebackers Vance Krueger and Marcus Daniels playfully poke, prod and pose questions, sometimes challenging ones.

Willies my man,Krueger prefaced. ... Last year, me and Marcus liked to play around with him with the Christian thing, have a little debate with him every morning when we got done lifting. Then hed give us a ride over here to the school, so there was always a little bickering.

At the end of the day, though, theres hugs and stuff like that,Krueger said.

Krueger said theyve discussed a variety of topics, including the Big Bang theory.

Hes quick on the answers; it shocks me every now and then,Krueger said.

Theyll often spark debates at sunrise and not settle them until nightfall.

Theyll have some fiery debates, at times, which is good,Love said. It gets kids thinking something positive.

Marty Gute, an assistant who serves as the teams chaplain and always leads prayers, said preaching could be his lifes calling. Gute said he watched Cline preach to Ashland Baptist Churchs congregation on Facebook.

Hes not ashamed of his faith at all,Gute said. Hes well-versed. Willie hit the ground running. It was like God transformed his life and he let everybody know about it.

Cline daily clings to 1 Corinthians 10:31 (NIV):So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God.

Thats what Itry to live by,he said.

(606) 326-2664 |

asnyder@dailyindependent.com

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Spirituality, Narcissism & the Quest for Enlightened Humility – HuffPost

I've been thinking a lot about spirituality and narcissism -- and why it's such a seductive and dangerous combination.

For what is spirituality anyway?

The best way I can explain it at this moment is that it's the direct experience of personal transformation. The yuck of trying to share this amazing phenomenon with others is that all too often, the ego slips in and appropriates the process especially when we try to share our experience of spirituality via a professional persona. That is when we are most at-risk of becoming the spiritual narcissist.

For pretty soon, once again, the self becomes the object of focus instead of the surrender to the intelligence beyond it; and the result is that we stop transforming. We become fixated on our own beauty, prestige, and cosmic perfection as the vehicle to promoting our mission of being the person who "gets it," because maybe one day we felt our kundalini rise in our shoulder blade or because we drink algae for breakfast, hang out in a cool clique with good vibes, and our menstrual cycle aligns the moon.

None of this bad or wrong. In fact, it's desirable. We no longer need to view the spiritual path exclusively through the lens of monasticism and asceticism.

Our spirituality becomes about our senses, identity and version of truth, rather than a practice that is based in the caliber of our behavior, on the Hippocratic Oath of "doing no harm" and compassionately relating to those who are the most vulnerable and different from us.

Absent of this, others will still overlook our shadows and accolade us for our enlightenment, for our image conforms to the cult of self which this society worships. We learn to monetize our divinely transmitted gifts and develop a fan base of people who believe in their pain and desperation that someone else has the power heal them. In a world where most people suffer from some kind of self-esteem and insecurity issue, it seems like these gurus have the answer. However, the spiritual perfection they have found in moments of illumination that was once the salve becomes the poison. For as soon as we stop seeking to find and acknowledge our own devious impulses, we start taking advantage of those around us.

Think pedophilia in the clergy. Yoga teachers who make advances on young female students. Embezzlement of religious donations. To have a spiritual message and practice for the world while navigating the organized power structures humans have created for ourselves and the very immature nature of the subconscious mind requires an intricate embodiment of integrity that few can execute, and no incarnated human form all of the time.

All this said, we need guides.

We need messengers to direct us toward another way. We need mentors and people who can model for us a different approach to life that alleviates our psycho-emotional baggage and integrates ancient wisdom and timeless transformative energies into contemporary society.

Some people make their lives about mastering these facets of the human experience for their own betterment and also for others. If you feel called to be these people, as I so often do, than please shine your light! But keep the magnifying glass pointed inward, for people's hopes and feelings and openness to healing themselves are on the line.

People think we're ready for spiritual college, when we need to go back to kindergarten.

My most influential and practical teachers have always had a background in the traditions of AA and 12 step programs, which promote a daily, living, fearless moral inventory. Its a spiritual practice that encompasses the overlapping lessons of every major religion. It is a process of emotional maturation that is grounded in our flaws and the making of amends, under the premise that perhaps we become better at love by acknowledging the ways we're unloving. We overcome the grip of the self by shape-shifting for the sake of collective inspiration and harmony.

Show me a person who can admit to their bullshit without shame and alter their patterns to respect others, and I say, Show me the way.

I'm not asking for your perfection. Just a trustworthy companion as we mutually engage in this universal learning process.

Spirituality is about living our humanity - always. And it is a tough tightrope to navigate

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Spirituality, Narcissism & the Quest for Enlightened Humility - HuffPost

SpaceX set for supply run to space station on Monday – CBS News

The launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket Monday to carry supplies to the International Space Station kicks off an exceptionally busy few weeks in space, with a Russian spacewalk on tap Thursday, a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 flight Friday, the 40th anniversary of the Voyager program's first launch on Sunday and a coast-to-coast solar eclipse the next day.

SpaceX plans another launch, this one from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, on August 24 to boost an Earth observation satellite into orbit for Taiwan, followed by the launch of a solid-fuel Orbital ATK Minotaur rocket from Cape Canaveral on August 25 carrying a military satellite.

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The newest class of American astronauts will train for two years before qualifying for space travel. That could include missions aboard commercia...

Three space station crew members return to Earth on September 2. Then, another Falcon 9 -- this one carrying an X-37B Air Force space plane -- is expected to launch from Florida around September 7 and another ULA Atlas 5 is scheduled for takeoff September 11 to boost a classified military payload into space. The next day, three fresh space station crew members take off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan to boost the lab's crew back up to six.

The surge begins at 12:31 p.m. EDT (GMT-4) Monday when SpaceX launches its 39th Falcon 9 rocket, its ninth flight from historic pad 39A at the Kennedy Space Center and its 11th flight overall this year. Forecasters are predicting a 70 percent chance of good weather.

Mounted atop the slender rocket is a Dragon cargo ship loaded with more than 3 tons of cargo, supplies and research equipment bound for the International Space Station. Assuming an on-time launch, astronaut Jack Fischer, operating the station's robot arm, will snare the Dragon early Wednesday so it can be pulled in for berthing.

Because of the time needed to catch up with the station, limited shelf life for several on-board experiments and the Russian spacewalk Thursday, SpaceX will not have a second launch opportunity Tuesday. If the flight is delayed for any reason, it will slip to sometime after the Friday launch of the Atlas 5.

SpaceX test fired the first stage engines of a Falcon 9 rocket last week to clear the way for launch Monday on a flight to deliver supplies to the International Space Station.

William Harwood/CBS News

But with generally good weather expected, mission managers were optimistic about sending the Dragon on its way Monday.

"We've loaded Dragon with 6,400 pounds of cargo and I'm happy to say 75 percent of that total mass is headed toward our research community," said Dan Hartman, deputy manager of NASA's space station program. "It sets a new bar for the amount of research we've been able to get on this flight."

Packed away in the Dragon's pressurized cabin will be needed computer gear, crew food and clothing, station hardware, research equipment and test subjects (including 20 mice) on board as part of a project to learn more about the long-term effects of weightlessness.

Mounted in the Dragon's unpressurized trunk section is a 1.3-ton cosmic ray detection experiment known as CREAM -- Cosmic Ray Energetics and Mass -- that has logged 191 days aloft during earlier high-altitude balloon missions.

It will spend three years attached to the space station, flying 10 times higher than the balloons, to measure high-energy cosmic rays and how they trigger cascades of particles during collisions with atoms and molecules in the upper atmosphere.

"By utilizing the space station, we can increase our exposure by an order of magnitude," said Eun-Suk Seo, CREAM principal investigator at the University of Maryland. "Every day on the station we will increase the statistics, and the statistical uncertainties get reduced, and we can detect higher energies than before.

"It's a very exciting time for us in high-energy particle astrophysics, and the long development road of CREAM culminating in this space station mission has been a world-class success story."

Because the Dragon is bound for the space station's relatively low orbit, the Falcon 9's first stage will have enough propellant left over to attempt a landing back at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station about eight minutes after launch.

SpaceX has successfully recovered 13 stages in 18 attempts, five at the Air Force station and eight aboard off-shore droneships. Monday's landing attempt will be the company's first since a droneship landing June 25.

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NASA video shows the SpaceX Dragon cargo capsule arriving at the International Space Station to deliver 6,000 pounds of supplies and equipment.

But as with all SpaceX missions, landings are a secondary objective. The primary goal of the fight is to deliver cargo to the space station in SpaceX's 12th operational resupply mission.

With the Dragon berthed at the Earth-facing port of the forward Harmony module, space station commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy plan to float outside the complex Thursday, starting around 10 a.m., to manually deploy five small satellites and carry out routine inspections and maintenance on the Russian segment of the station.

Then on Friday, at 8:03 a.m., United Launch Alliance plans to launch NASA's $408 million TDRS-M communications satellite atop a powerful Atlas 5 rocket, the latest in a series of agency-operated relay stations used by a variety of science satellites, rockets and the International Space Station.

On Sunday, planetary scientists will celebrate the 40th anniversary of Voyager 2's launch, the first of two identical spacecraft that explored the outer solar system. Voyager 1 studied Jupiter, Saturn and the ringed planet's giant moon Titan, while Voyager 2 flew past Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Both spacecraft are still sending back data as they leave the solar system and move into interstellar space.

Next Monday, Aug. 21, millions of Americans will enjoy a total solar eclipse, weather permitting, as the moon's shadow races from Oregon to South Carolina. Weather will not be an issue for the crew of the space station, who will see the sun partially eclipsed on three successive orbits.

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SpaceX set for supply run to space station on Monday - CBS News

New NASA Mission Going to the International Space Station –"To … – The Daily Galaxy (blog)

A new experiment set for an Aug. 14 launch to the International Space Station will provide an unprecedented look at a rain of particles from deep space, called cosmic rays, that constantly showers our planet. The Cosmic Ray Energetics And Mass mission destined for the International Space Station (ISS-CREAM) is designed to measure the highest-energy particles of any detector yet flown in space.

"The CREAM balloon experiment achieved a total sky exposure of 191 days, a record for any balloon-borne astronomical experiment," said Eun-Suk Seo, a professor of physics at the University of Maryland in College Park and the experiment's principal investigator. "Operating on the space station will increase our exposure by over 10 times, taking us well beyond the traditional energy limits of direct measurements."

Sporting new instruments, as well as refurbished versions of detectors originally used on balloon flights over Antarctica, the refrigerator-sized, 1.4-ton (1,300 kilogram) ISS-CREAM experiment will be delivered to the space station as part of the 12th SpaceX commercial resupply service mission. Once there, ISS-CREAM will be moved to the Exposed Facility platform extending from Kibo, the Japanese Experiment Module.

From this orbital perch, ISS-CREAM is expected to study the "cosmic rain" for three yearstime needed to provide unparalleled direct measurements of rare high-energy cosmic rays.

At energies above about 1 billion electron volts, most cosmic rays come to us from beyond our solar system. Various lines of evidence, including observations from NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, support the idea that shock waves from the expanding debris of stars that exploded as supernovas accelerate cosmic rays up to energies of 1,000 trillion electron volts (PeV). That's 10 million times the energy of medical proton beams used to treat cancer. ISS-CREAM data will allow scientists to examine how sources other than supernova remnants contribute to the population of cosmic rays.

Protons are the most common cosmic ray particles, but electrons, helium nuclei and the nuclei of heavier elements make up a small percentage. All are direct samples of matter from interstellar space. But because the particles are electrically charged, they interact with galactic magnetic fields, causing them to wander in their journey to Earth. This scrambles their paths and makes it impossible to trace cosmic ray particles back to their sources.

"An additional challenge is that the flux of particles striking any detector decreases steadily with higher energies," said ISS-CREAM co-investigator Jason Link, a researcher at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "So to better explore higher energies, we either need a much bigger detector or much more observing time. Operating on the space station provides us with this extra time."

Large ground-based systems study cosmic rays at energies greater than 1 PeV by making Earth's atmosphere the detector. When a cosmic ray strikes the nucleus of a gas molecule in the atmosphere, both explode in a shower of subatomic shrapnel that triggers a wider cascade of particle collisions. Some of these secondary particles reach detectors on the ground, providing information scientists can use to infer the properties of the original cosmic ray.

Technicians lower ISS-CREAM into a chamber that simulates the space environment during system-level testing at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in summer 2015. Credit: University of Maryland Cosmic Ray Physics Laboratory These secondaries also produce an interfering background that limited the effectiveness of CREAM's balloon operations. Removing that background is another advantage of relocating to orbit.

With decreasing numbers of particles at increasing energies, the cosmic ray spectrum vaguely resembles the profile of a human leg. At PeV energies, this decline abruptly steepens, forming a detail scientists call the "knee." ISS-CREAM is the first space mission capable of measuring the low flux of cosmic rays at energies approaching the knee.

"The origin of the knee and other features remain longstanding mysteries," Seo said. "Many scenarios have been proposed to explain them, but we don't know which is correct."

Astronomers don't think supernova remnants are capable of powering cosmic rays beyond the PeV range, so the knee may be shaped in part by the drop-off of their cosmic rays in this region.

"High-energy cosmic rays carry a great deal of information about our interstellar neighborhood and our galaxy, but we haven't been able to read these messages very clearly," said co-investigator John Mitchell at Goddard. "ISS-CREAM represents one significant step in this direction."

ISS-CREAM detects cosmic ray particles when they slam into the matter making up its instruments. First, a silicon charge detector measures the electrical charge of incoming particles, then layers of carbon provide targets that encourage impacts, producing cascades of particles that stream into electrical and optical detectors below while a calorimeter determines their energy. Two scintillator-based detector systems provide the ability to discern between singly charged electrons and protons. All told, ISS-CREAM can distinguish electrons, protons and atomic nuclei as massive as iron as they crash through the instruments.

ISS-CREAM will join two other cosmic ray experiments already working on the space station. The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS-02), led by an international collaboration sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, is mapping cosmic rays up to a trillion electron volts, and the Japan-led Calorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET), also located on the Kibo Exposed Facility, is dedicated to studying cosmic ray electrons.

Overall management of ISS-CREAM and integration for its space station application was provided by NASA's Wallops Flight Facility on Virginia's Eastern Shore. ISS-CREAM was developed as part of an international collaboration led by the University of Maryland at College Park, which includes teams from NASA Goddard, Penn State University in University Park, Pennsylvania, and Northern Kentucky University in Highland Heights, as well as collaborating institutions in the Republic of Korea, Mexico and France.

The Daily Galaxy via NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

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New NASA Mission Going to the International Space Station --"To ... - The Daily Galaxy (blog)

TAMUCC research project headed to the International Space Station – KRIS Corpus Christi News

CORPUS CHRISTI -

A research project put together by a Texas A&M Corpus Christi professor and her students is headed to the International Space Station.

?The experiment, dealing with a penicillin-based fungus, is part of the payload on a Space-X rocket that will be launched tomorrow.

The results of the experiment could potentially make medical history, in antibiotic research.

Morgan Sobol, a masters student working on the project, explains how fungi affect the environment.

It really contributes to the global cycles that we know of, said Sobol. So carbon cycles, oxygen cycles, nitrogen, all of those cycles on earth, the fungi when they are transforming nutrients, they contribute in that way.

The project is just one of 20 selected for the trip to space.

The launch is set for 11:30 tomorrow local time, and you can watch it live online at NASA.gov.

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TAMUCC research project headed to the International Space Station - KRIS Corpus Christi News

SpaceX rocket readied for space station resupply run – Spaceflight Now

File photo of a Dragon spacecraft on top of a Falcon 9 rocket before a previous mission. Credit: SpaceX

Ground teams at the Kennedy Space Center were packing last-minute cargo into a commercial Dragon supply ship Sunday, a day before the automated freighter is set for liftoff on top of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on a two-day trek to the International Space Station.

The final biological research experiments, including a habitat with 20 mice, were to be installed inside the crafts pressurized cabin before technicians close the ships hatch and raise the Falcon 9 vertical on launch pad 39A.

Working under contract to NASA, SpaceX is set to launch its 12th cargo delivery flight to the space station at 12:31:37 p.m. EDT (1631:37 GMT), roughly the time the research labs ground track intersects Floridas Space Coast.

The 213-foot-tall (65-meter) Falcon 9 rocket will turn to the northeast to align with the stations orbit, kicking off a 42-hour pursuit with 6,415 pounds (2,910 kilograms) of experiments, food, supplies and spare parts to replenish the space labs research backlog and stockpiles.

That figure includes the weight of packaging needed to secure items stowed inside the Dragon spacecraft.

Weve loaded Dragon with 6,400 pounds of cargo, and Im happy to say 75 percent of that total mass is headed toward our research community, and our continued expansion of the research envelope on-board the International Space Station, said Dan Hartman, NASAs deputy space station program manager. So with the internal and external payloads going up, it sets a new bar for the amount of research that we were able to get on this flight.

SpaceX plans to recover the Falcon 9s first stage booster a few minutes after the launch. After detaching from the Falcon 9 second stage around two-and-a-half minutes into the mission, the 14-story booster stage will flip around and reignite a subset of its nine Merlin engines twice to return to Landing Zone 1 at at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

A final braking burn by the first stages center engine will slow the rocket just before touchdown. A four-legged landing gear will unfurl at the base of the booster as it settles on the concrete landing zone, located approximately 9 miles (14 kilometers) south of the rockets departure point at pad 39A.

If successful, Mondays landing will mark the 14th time SpaceX has recovered one of its Falcon 9 boosters intact, either at sea or on land. SpaceX aims to refit and reuse the rockets in a bid to make spaceflight less expensive, and two of the companys flown rockets have made second flights to date.

The rocket flying Monday is a new vehicle, but the first stages landing legs were previously-flown, according to Hans Koenigsmann, vice president of flight reliability at SpaceX.

The boosters touchdown will come moments before the Falcon 9s second stage engine delivers the Dragon cargo capsule to orbit. The freighter is scheduled to separate from the rocket around 10 minutes after blastoff, and the Dragons two power-generating solar panels will extended a couple of minutes later.

Multiple thruster firings by Dragons on-board rocket jets will begin steering the capsule toward the space station.

The automated rendezvous will conclude Wednesday, when the ship will approach the station from below, using lasers and a thermal imager for the in-orbit linkup.

Astronauts Jack Fischer and Paolo Nespoli will unlimber the stations Canadian-built robotic arm to grapple the free-flying spacecraft around 7 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT) Wednesday.

The robot arm will maneuver the Dragon to a berthing location on the space stations Harmony module for a month-long stay.

SpaceX and NASA have just one try to launch the station cargo freighter, or else face a delay that could stretch a week or longer.

Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Sergey Ryazanskiy will release five small satellites during a spacewalk Thursday, and station managers want to ensure all of the spacecraft are well away from the complex when Dragon nears.

We do require good tracking on those, so we know where to help SpaceX fly Dragon when its approaching the ISS, Hartman said. Thats a big deal for us.

NASA does not want to launch the resupply mission and have the spacecraft loiter away from the space station until it is safe to approach. Some of the biological experiments inside Dragon are time-critical, including a nest of mice with limited food inside the capsule.

Could we loiter? Yes, at the expense of losing research because their samples have X amount of hours before they need to be offloaded and brought onto the station, Hartman said.

If the mission took off Tuesday, it would arrive at the space station Thursday, the same day as the spacewalk. Officials expect it to take several days to estimate the orbits of the five satellites released during the excursion, meaning the Dragon could not begin its two-day chase of the station until around Saturday, Aug. 19, Hartman said.

But there are other factors at play.

A NASA communications satellite is slated to launch from Cape Canaveral aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket Friday. ULA has reserved a backup launch opportunity Saturday, and it takes a couple of days to reconfigure the U.S. Air Forces Eastern Range between rocket flights.

An Orbital ATK Minotaur 4 rocket is being prepped for launch Aug. 25 from Cape Canaveral. The range is required for the Minotaur flight, set to loft a military space surveillance satellite, and for a comprehensive launch rehearsal scheduled early next week, a few days after the Atlas 5 flight.

Whether SpaceX could find a hole in the jam-packed range schedule remains unclear.

Im cautiously optimistic for this launch opportunity, Koenigsmann said. Better one than none, I would say, so well see how it goes.

Forecasters predict a 70 percent chance of good weather for Mondays one-second launch window. Meteorologists will watch for rain and cumulus clouds in the rockets flight path.

Once Dragon arrives, the stations six-person crew will enter the capsule and unload the payloads inside, overseeing a multitude of biological experiments before the ships departure and return to Earth next month.

Twenty mice heading into space Monday will be examined after their return to the ground to aid researchers studying how spaceflight affects vision and movement.

Were looking at two different biomedical issues, said Michael Delp, principal investigator for the rodent research experiment from Florida State University. The first is visual impairment that occurs in some of the astronauts. To date, it only occurs in male astronauts, so were looking at a couple of different aspects of how visual impairment may occur.

The mice will come back to Earth inside the Dragon capsule alive, and SpaceX will hand over their transporters to scientists upon return to port in Southern California.

Researchers will examine the blood vessels inside animals eyes and the blood-brain barrier that regulates fluid movement inside the skull.

The second thing that well be doing is really looking at the brain circulation, and how that affects blood pressure within the skull, Delp said.

Part of the rodent research team will look at how an extended stay in the space stations weightless environment affects movement.

In microgravity, you have a fairly severe physical inactivity, and that can affect a number of the organ systems, such as muscle and bone loss, Delp said.

One focus of the study will be on how much cartilage in joints degrade after spending time in microgravity. Mice have an accelerated metabolism and undergo changes faster than humans, so a month on the space station is roughly equivalent to a three-year expedition by an astronaut, according to Delp.

The space station cargo mission will also help biologists investigating Parkinsons disease, a chronic neurological disorder that affects a million people in the United States, and about five million worldwide.

Although there are medications that ammeliorate the symptoms, we dont have any therapies that reverse or slow down the progression of the disease, said Marco Baptista, director of research and grants at the Michael J. Fox Foundation, which funded the station-bound experiment.

Scientists are sending a protein that causes Parkinsons to the station to measure how it grows without the influence of gravity. The protein, named LRRK2, could be targeted with drugs and therapies in Parkinsons patients if doctors understand it better.

The next breakthrough we need is the solving of the crystal structure of LRRK2, Baptista said. This is important for two reasons. First, it will allow us a better understanding of the biology of LRRK2 and secondly may help industry optimizing LRRK2 kinase inhibitors or develop novel ways to target LRRK2.

Growing the protein in microgravity will lead to bigger crystals, more regular crystallization and crystals with higher intrinsic order, said Sebastian Mathea, the lead scientist on the LRRK2 experiment from the University of Oxford.

With those crystals, we hopefully will be able to collect data that allow us to solve the three-dimensional structure of LRRK2, which hopefully will push forward the understanding of the onset of Parkinsons, Mathea said.

Another science team awaits results from an experiment probing how microgravity affects the growth of new lung tissue, specifically bio-engineered material tailored to repair damaged organs or reduce the chance of organ rejection in transplant patients.

Scientists have trouble managing the expansion of bio-engineered lung tissue on Earth. The tissue has trouble moving through structures designed to help shape it, and stem cells used to produce the tissue are slow to replicate, according to Joan Nichols, professor of internal medicine and infectious diseases and associate director of the Galveston National Laboratory at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

Nichols said microgravity offers a more benign environment, aiding in cell dispersal to help form more uniform tissues.

Were getting two things out of this, she said. Were getting a better plan and a better strategy for how to manage production of tissues using microgravity environment, and were getting a model thats going to tell us what would happen in terms of lung repair on long-term spaceflight.

While astronauts get to work in experiments inside the stations lab facilities, the Canadian and Japanese robotic arms will remove a cosmic ray detector carried inside the Dragons external payload bay for mounting on a facility outside the stations Japanese Kibo module.

Derived from an instrument carried aloft on high-altitude balloons, the Cosmic Ray Energetics and Mass, or CREAM, payload will spend at least three years sampling particles sent speeding through the universe by cataclysmic supernova explosions, and perhaps other exotic phenomena like dark matter.

Scientists think the subatomic particles could hold the key to unlocking mysteries about the universe.

Four small satellites inside the Dragon capsule will be transferred inside the space station for deployment later this year.

The biggest of the bunch, named Kestrel Eye 2M, is a pathfinder for a potential constellation of Earth-imaging spacecraft for the U.S. military. About the size of a dorm room refrigerator, the Kestrel Eye 2M satellite was developed by the Armys Space and Missile Defense Command over the last five years.

While satellites the size of Kestrel Eye lack the fine imaging capability of large commercial and military spy satellites, they cost significantly less and could be spread around the planet in fleets of dozens or more.

Battlefield troops could connect with one of the satellites as it soars a few hundred miles overhead, ask it to take a picture of a nearby target, then receive the image, all within a few minutes.

The concept is to have warfighters to task and receie data directly from the satellite during the same overhead pass, said Wheeler Chip Hardy, the Armys Kestrel Eye program manager. The objective Kestrel Eye imagery data can be downlinked directly to provide rapid situational awareness to our Army brigade combat teams in theater without the need for continental United States relays.

From the space stations altitude around 250 miles (400 kilometers) up, Kestrel Eye 2Ms optical camera will be able to spot objects on Earths surface about the size of a car.

The Army has not approved development of further Kestrel Eye satellites. The demo craft set to launch Monday will be employed in military exercises with Pacific Command over the next few years, and Pentagon officials will evaluate its usefulness before deciding whether to press on with the program.

Three CubeSats will also be ferried to the space station for release from a ground-commanded deployer in the coming months.

The ASTERIA mission, developed by a team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, seeks to test miniature telescope components that could be used in future small satellites to observe stars and search for exoplanets. ASTERIA is about the size of a big shoebox and weighs around 26 pounds (12 kilograms).

Astronomers and engineers want to know if a CubeSat like ASTERIA can hold pointing to the precision necessary for stellar observations, and designers will also measure the performance of the focal plane inside an on-board telescope.

The Dellingr project spearheaded by NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland aims to prove out a new type of microsatellite design that is more reliable than conventional CubeSats.

Around the same size as ASTERIA, the Dellingr CubeSat, named for the mythological Norse god for the dawn, took around three years to design, build and test. Officials said the effort was not always easy, and managers had to define a balance between affordability and reliability.

Engineers tried using commercially-available components and software, but testing revealed many of the parts were inadequate for the level of reliability sought for Dellingr, which carries a sensor suite to study the suns influence on Earths atmosphere.

Its a new way of doing things, said Chuck Clagett, Dellingr project manager at Goddard. We were applying old ways to doing things to an emerging capability and it didnt work very well.

But officials said the extra testing paid off, and Dellingr is now ready to fly after helping reduce the risk of unforeseen problems on future missions NASA has approved work on a follow-up CubeSat incorporating Dellingrs design and lessons to make measurements of Earths ionosphere.

Another CubeSat named OSIRIS-3U from Penn State University launching Monday will study space weather.

Working in coordination with the Arecibo Observatory, a giant radar antenna in Puerto Rico, OSIRIS-3U will fly into a region ionosphere heated to simulate the conditions caused by solar storms.

OSIRIS-3U will collect data on the electron density, temperature, and content in the region of space stimulated by radar emissions, according to a fact sheet released by NASA.

The Dragon spacecraft is scheduled to depart the space station Sept. 17, bringing home more than a ton of research specimens and other gear for a parachute-assisted splashdown in the Pacific Ocean southwest of Los Angeles.

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SpaceX rocket readied for space station resupply run - Spaceflight Now

Rocket Lab finishes test flight inquiry, plans second launch later this year – Spaceflight Now

The first Electron rocket took off May 25 from a launch base in New Zealand. Credit: Rocket Lab

The inaugural test flight of Rocket Labs commercial small satellite booster in May fell short of orbit because a software programming error on a piece of ground equipment led a safety officer to send a premature termination command, and the company is planning to deliver the next Electron vehicle to its New Zealand launch pad in October.

Engineers identified no significant problems with the Electron rockets performance on the May 25 test launch, raising confidence in the chances the second flight could attain the velocity needed to reach an orbit around Earth, said Peter Beck, founder and CEO of Rocket Lab.

Were very happy with the performance of the vehicle, Beck said in an interview with Spaceflight Now. The flight was a heavily instrumented flight. It had something like 25,000 channels of data and instruments on-board, and the data that we were able to obtain was exceptionally good, and it enabled us to validate all the engineering decisions and performances of the vehicle, the thermal environment, the structural environment.

The collection of vibration, structural and environmental measurements was the primary goal of the May test flight, which lifted off from Rocket Labs privately-operated launch pad on Mahia Peninsula, a piece of land on the east cost of New Zealands North Island.

We captured all the data we needed, Beck said.

The Electron rocket soared to an altitude of 139 miles (224 kilometers) before a piece of ground tracking equipment faltered, erroneously leading a range safety officer to terminate the launch to ensure the launcher did not stray from its pre-approved flight path.

Beck said the tracking system was provided by an independent contractor, but he declined to identify the owner of the equipment. Alaska Aerospace Corp. provided range safety services for the Electron launch, but it was not clear whether they supplied and programmed the suspect tracking device.

The ground hardware was incorrectly programmed, according to Rocket Lab, causing position data it received from the Electron booster to be corrupted. The equipment was designed to translate radio signals into data for safety officials to track the rocket, the company said in a statement.

The contractor failed to enable forward error correction on the tracking device, Rocket Lab said.

The tracking hiccup occurred around four minutes after liftoff as the rocket climbed into space on a southerly trajectory from Mahia Peninsula. By that point in the flight, the Electrons nine Rutherford main engines, which generated more than 40,000 pounds of combined thrust at full power, had switched off and the first stage had jettisoned to fall into the Pacific Ocean.

The second stages single Rutherford engine ignited and the rockets payload fairing separated as expected before the tracking error led to the premature end of the mission.

Investigators determined that Rocket Labs own equipment did not suffer the same data loss during the mission, officials said. Engineers also replayed flight data recorded on launch day through the third-party tracking system when it was correctly configured, and the problem disappeared.

The flight safety officer inside Rocket Labs launch control center followed established procedures and sent the command to shut down the Electrons second stage engine after the data dropout.

Basically what happened is the contractor misconfigured the software, which resulted in the antennas losing track of the vehicle, Beck said. Of course, when that happens, the flight safety officers who are looking at a computer screen at their console, the rocket disappears off their console, so they had no other option than to terminate the vehicle.

Rocket Lab said it will deliver the results of its inquiry to the Federal Aviation Administration, the regulatory authority responsible for licensing commercial Electron launches.

With a launch base, control center and factory in New Zealand, Rocket Lab also has a headquarters in Southern California, where it is outfitting a second rocket assembly plant. Eventually aiming to launch as often as once per week, the U.S.-New Zealand operates under the regulatory umbrella of the FAA.

Even though the engine stopped (after the termination command), the vehicle didnt stop, Beck said. It went on and continued to do all its normal things as it would on orbit. We were able to test absolutely everything, even though we didnt make it to orbit. We tested all the RCS (Reaction Control System) and all the orbital systems, and unfortunately, we also tested the flight termination system, so we can say that we tested absolutely everything on the vehicle.

Some outside observers noticed the rocket develop a steady roll in video replays of the launch. That was intended, according to Beck.

The bottom line on that one is the guidance team didnt want to over-constrain the roll, Beck said. The roll is the least damped axis. When youve got nine engines on the bottom, theres a lot of plume-plume interaction. The nine engines sort of interact with each other, and its very easy to cause roll torques.

Rocket Labs guidance team opted to let the launcher roll to a pre-programmed rate, giving engineers a chance to study the torques generated by the interplay of the Electrons nine first stage engines.

On the next flight, we probably wont run that same algorithm, or well keep the vehicle in one attitude, but for us, it was all part of the test program to learn and to characterize all those weird torques that are impossible to try and learn on the ground, Beck said.

The Electron rocket was designed to deliver small satellites weighing up to 330 pounds (150 kilograms) to a circular sun-synchronous orbit around 310 miles (500 kilometers) above Earth. Standing 55 feet (17 meters) tall, the two-stage launcher burns a mixture of kerosene and cryogenic liquid oxygen propellants.

The company says it will charge $4.9 million per Electron flight, significantly less than any other launch provider flying today, and offer a dedicated ride for payloads that currently must ride piggyback with a larger payload.

With money from venture capital funds in Silicon Valley and New Zealand, along with a strategic investment from Lockheed Martin and the government of New Zealand, Rocket Lab completed the design and qualification of the Electron rocket with less than $100 million since the company was established in 2006, according to Beck.

A further round of venture capital financing early this year brought the total investment in Rocket Lab to $148 million, valuing the company at more than $1 billion.

Rocket Lab is one of several companies alongside start-ups and spinoffs like Virgin Orbit and the now-defunct Texas-based rocket developer Firefly that have been established in recent years to meet demand for launches in the small satellite market.

The second of Rocket Labs three planned test flights is scheduled later this year. If that launch goes well, the company will likely delete the third demonstration mission, and the first commercial Electron flight could be ready for takeoff by the end of December, Beck said last week.

Weve got the next test flight rolling out out to the pad in about eight weeks time, Beck said. If its a really good clean flight, well probably accelerate into commercial operations.

Once Rocket Lab delivers the next Electron rocket to the launch pad, ground crews will spend several weeks readying the booster, rehearsing countdown procedures, and verifying all of the vehicles sensors and instruments are functioning.

This vehicle, again, has on the order of 25,000 or 30,000 sensors, so for us these flights are all about gathering data, so theres a lot of go-no go criteria around those sensors, Beck said. Usually, it takes us a good couple of weeks to get all that buttoned up, and then well be ready to launch.

One of Rocket Labs first commercial missions is set to send a robotic lunar lander into space for Moon Express, a Florida-based aerospace developer vying to win the Google Lunar X-Prize, which requires a successful landing on the moon by the end of 2017.

Beck told Spaceflight Now that Rocket Lab will be able to support the launch for Moon Express this year, assuming the lunar payload is ready, but the company will not rush into the second test flight.

Im conscious that these are still test flights, and we operate in a very cautious manner, Beck said. So if something is looking a bit weird, then we just wont go.

Some changes are in store for the second Electron flight, which Rocket Lab has christened Still Testing. The maiden Electron launch was named Its a Test.

While the May 25 launch carried only an inert payload, the next mission will have satellites on-board, Beck said.

Its mainly instrumented, but we are flying some payloads up, and we developed our own CubeSat deployer, Beck said.

Rocket Labs CubeSat canister has completed ground testing, and engineers will evaluate how they work on the next test flight.

It just gives us a good oppportunity to qualify more components and more systems, Beck said.

Beck said Rocket Lab will reveal which small satellites will fly on the next test flight closer to launch.

No major changes to the Electron rockets basic designed are planned, but Rocket Lab will introduce several tweaks to components on the launcher.

We had lots of margins on some areas, so weve reduced some thermal insulation in some areas, and reduced some mass and complexity and optimized some things for production, but there are no major hardware changes, Beck said. Were not pulling out any subsystems or reworking any subsystems. There are some software tweaks, of course, as there always are, but its not like we had to go back and redesign anything for the next flight.

Rocket Lab has confirmed at least six commercial Electron flights in its backlog once the test campaign is completed.

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Rocket Lab finishes test flight inquiry, plans second launch later this year - Spaceflight Now