LGBT people find home in interfaith spirituality – PinkNews

Since 1997 a ground-breaking UK Seminary has trained and ordained more than 600 ministers among them, high numbers of LGBT people who are not aligned to any specific religion, and are determined not to start another one.

They are part of the OneSpirit Interfaith Foundation, which, according to its website, is part of the awakening of an inclusive global spirituality, in ourselves and in the world, through training and enabling open-hearted men and women to serve people of all faiths and none in our diverse communities.

OneSpirit interfaith ministers are independent freelance ministers, without churches or temples or mosques. Many work leading ceremonies such as weddings and funerals, others take their work to volunteering in police services, prisons, or hospitals.

The Foundation particularly appeals to many LGBT people, who have felt disillusioned with their own religion, whatever that may be.

One interfaith minister is Ade Adeniji, who found OneSpirit after the end of a significant relationship made him question everything he thought he knew about his identity.

Religion was always in the background of my childhood. My parents came from a Muslim household, although my mother converted to Christianity. I drifted away from Christianity in my 20s, as I struggled to reconcile being gay with what I was hearing in church, says Ade Adeniji.

Ade Adeniji (OneSpirit Interfaith Foundation)

He felt restricted by the life hed created for himself, so resigned from his corporate job and became ordained. He now works freelance as a coach, facilitator and consultant.

I consider how I show up in my life as my ministry, Adeniji said. When manifesting this in my work, my core intention is to be a catalyst for healing and awakening. In every moment, every interaction.

Amy Firth is an Interfaith minister in London, and co-leads the OneLight Gathering, billed as Londons monthly interfaith ceremony.

Firth also helped to organise OneSpirits presence at this summers Pride Parade, where ministers, students, mates and lovers could march behind a banner proclaiming Love Unites.

Amy Firth (onelightgathering.co.uk)

This training if it calls to you will grab you by the ribcage and not let you go. It was both exquisite and excruciating, Firth said.

Its deeply enriching and exhausting work as you feel into the edges of your life and beliefs to reach an ever-deepening understanding of what you know to be True. I knew at once that I belonged in this circle and was loved for who I was.

Right now, more so than ever the world needs lovers, she said.

Ian Bonner-Evans said he understands why many LGBT people find a home in OneSpirit. Bonner-Evans was a Christian minister in the early 2000s when he did a lot of LGBT campaigning, but resigned when he became tired and disillusioned with what I then understood the religious or spiritual life to be.

Ordained as an interfaith minister over a decade later, in 2016, Bonner-Evans says he has been able to grow emotionally, psychologically and spiritually.

I was touched in the very core of my being and energized in a mysterious way for the life of service ahead.

A new group of trainee ministers will begin the two-year training this October. The training takes place over sixteen weekends, and also involves summer retreats, small study groups and personal assignments.

There are a number of scholarships available for applicants who represent or serve a disadvantaged or under-represented community.

Jackie Amos Wilkinson, the Foundations faculty lead, says the training involves each person exploring their own biography, developing skills in holding ceremonies, and also in spiritual counselling.

It is both profound and simple. It is a supported self-inquiry into some key questions: Who am I? Who or what is God? And how can I use my gifts to serve the whole?

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LGBT people find home in interfaith spirituality - PinkNews

The young American Jews finding spirituality outside the synagogue … – Haaretz

The U.S. has over 100 independent minyans with different styles, customs and demographics

Michelle Reyf isnt really a synagogue-goer. Until recently, the 28-year-old New Yorker, 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.

Like finding a home

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.

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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 minyans 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 minyans appeal to people looking for a type of religious experience, said Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, author of a book on independent minyans 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.

He noted that Shir HaMaalot, founded in 2011, has a reputation for its use of music. I also think a place gets its own reputation just by who starts going there, Kaunfer said, 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.

Over 100 nationwide

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

What it boils down to in large part is that 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 the minyan, Geselowitz found both a crowd around her age and an atmosphere 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.

Melodies, drums, potluck

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 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 for the potluck.

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, director of recruitment and outreach for the Jewish social justice group Avodah.

Community-driven davening space

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 origins 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 traditional synagogue settings.

Tobin Belzer, a sociologist of American Jewry at the University of Southern California, believes the difference between the havurah movement and the independent minyans 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, minyans represent a subculture, not a counterculture. Independent minyans are not outside of the Jewish mainstream; they are on the margins of it, writes Belzer. In fact, many independent minyans 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 practice and affiliation, they are united in being egalitarian, mostly volunteer-run and promoting wide participation by community members.

Spitzer-Rubinstein 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 it and make it something significant.

Jewish youth group energy

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 minyans in Brooklyn when Shir HaMaalot doesnt meet, dont feel like they are missing anything by not belonging to a synagogue.

No dues, just donations

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 was a lot of different gender expression, people who werent necessarily [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-Rubinstein.

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The young American Jews finding spirituality outside the synagogue ... - Haaretz

How Spirituality Can Benefit Your Health – Guardian (blog)

Everything you need to live well

The body, mind, and spirit are connected. The health of any one of these elements seems to affect the others.Positive beliefs, comfort, and strength gained from religion, meditation, and prayer can contribute to well being. It may even promote healing. Improving your spiritual health may not cure an illness, but it may help you feel better. It also may prevent some health problems and help you cope better with illness, stress, or death.

If you want to improve your spiritual health, you may want to try the following ideas. However, remember that everyone is different. What works for others may not work for you. Do what is comfortable for you.

Spirituality is associated with reduced mortality rates. Church attendance, is particularly linked to greater length of life.

One study followed a group of HIV-positive men and women for 17 years. Researchers found that the people who engaged in spiritual practices had a two to four times greater rate of survival. The spiritual thoughts and attitudes they determined were most beneficial included feelings of gratitude and forgiveness, overcoming spiritual guilt and spiritual empowerment.

Spirituality also helps cope with stress. Studies have shown that people with a higher level of self-reported spirituality have better regulated stress hormone levels than those who consider themselves non-spiritual.

A study looked at a group of people with sickle cell anemia, which can be a very painful condition. The people who attended church regularly reported significantly lower levels of pain. Their spiritual involvement seemed to help them cope with the pain more effectively. Spiritual beliefs can be said to help peoples ability to cope by giving meaning to difficult life circumstances and providing a sense of purpose.

Our spiritual beliefs can have a positive influence on our lifestyle choices. Many religious scriptures emphasize a persons responsibility to care for and nourish their physical body and may give guidelines on how best to do this. Smoking and drinking are discouraged, as is the consumption of caffeine and rich foods. Studies have shown that Seventh Day Adventists have longer lives than the general population in various countries. They also have significantly lower rates of cancer and heart disease.

Most research on religion and spirituality looks at mental health. The majority of studies say that people with spiritual beliefs show more positive emotion and high self-esteem. They usually have a lower risk of depression, anxiety and suicide, and enjoy a higher level of social stability and support. One study taught a group of adults a simple meditation technique to practice for 15 to 20 minutes twice daily. This brief meditation training improved the participants perceived stress levels, as well as their negative moods and emotions.

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How Spirituality Can Benefit Your Health - Guardian (blog)

Holy Yoga event will blend faith and meditation – News & Observer

Holy Yoga event will blend faith and meditation
News & Observer
Unity of the Triangle will host a two-day meditation and yoga retreat Aug. 19-20. The special guest for the weekend is Yogacharya O'Brian, a spiritual teacher, poet, writer and founding director of the Center for Spiritual Enlightenment in San Jose ...

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Holy Yoga event will blend faith and meditation - News & Observer

Dutch addiction experts warn of dangers of ‘trippy tea’ – Irish Times

Ayahuasca-infused tea being brewed in Peru: it is rapidly becoming big business in Amsterdam, with ayahuasca retreat weekends, ayahuasca healing, detox therapy, stress-busting and even shamanic inner evolution.

Ayahuasca therapy is the latest craze for those with cash to spend seeking quick-fix spiritual enlightenment but Dutch addiction experts have warned that it can be extremely dangerous, particularly to users who are psychologically unstable.

Known for its liberal drugs policy, particularly towards soft drugs such as cannabis, the Netherlands is rapidly becoming the go-to location in Europe for anything to do with this traditional spiritual medicine from South America, also known as yag or, more convivially, trippy tea.

Brewed using hallucinogenic plants from the Amazon rainforests, its rapidly becoming big business in Amsterdam, with scores of companies online offering high-end ayahuasca retreat weekends, ayahuasca healing, detox therapy, stress-busting, and even shamanic inner evolution.

On its home turf in Colombia, Peru and Brazil, ayahuasca is nothing new. Made primarily from the banisteriopsis caapi vine, its been used for centuries by indigenous cultures as an entheogenic drink, a brew believed to aid spiritual development and cleanse the psyche of underlying spiritual ills.

In the West, however home to spiritual tumult ayahuasca occupies a legal grey area.

While not illegal and made from a mix of plants, its active ingredient is DMT (dimethyltryptamine), a naturally occurring molecule that can be used as a powerful psychedelic drug which is a controlled substance, even in the Netherlands.

Its popular because of its reputation for inducing mind-expanding states faster than comparable psychoactive drugs, with intense hallucinogenic trances that can apparently last up to six hours.

The good news for trippy tea fans is that Dutch drug policy focuses on hard drugs, combatting international traffickers and rehabilitating addicts, with the result that such marginal concoctions unless they pose an immediate danger typically fall into the non-enforcement category.

But as the number of drugs tourists trying out ayahuasca rises, alarms are sounding at Trimbos the Netherlands Institute for Mental Health and Addiction which says many of those using the tea with mystical properties dont have the expertise to handle its potentially dangerous downsides.

Many of those trying ayahuasca regard it as a harmless treatment for depression, for example, but they dont realise that it should never be combined with anti-depressants, says Eva Ehrlich, a therapist at Trimbos.

Organisers of ayahuasca ceremonies may mean well but theyre rarely, if ever, equipped to deal with clients who are psychologically unstable or, worse still, with serious mental problems, whose equilibrium can easily be upset. In such a scenario, vulnerable people could die.

Joost Breeksema of the Open Foundation, which promotes research into psychedelic drugs, agrees: We know from hard experience that with any such psychedelic substances, professional training for staff, medical screening in advance, and appropriate aftercare, are absolutely essential for safety.

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Dutch addiction experts warn of dangers of 'trippy tea' - Irish Times

SpaceX is launching a supercomputer to the International Space Station – Ars Technica

Enlarge / Karen Nyberg, of Expedition 37, works with a plant experiment in the Destiny laboratory of the space station.

As it nears the end of its second decade, the International Space Station is starting to hit its stride. The large orbital laboratory offers private companies a chance to test business ideas in microgravity, serves as a testbed for astronaut health, and allows NASA to prove technologies for future missions into deep space.

One of the critical technologies NASA will need if it really does send humans beyond the Earth-Moon system within the next few decades is more powerful computers capable of operating in the deep space environment. Presently, the main command computers that operate the space station use Intel i386 processors. However, thatis fine for the station because all of its critical systems are monitored around the clock by ground-based flight controllers who can work in real time with the crew to fix any problems that arise.

If humans do travel to Mars, they will face increasingly long communications delaysstretching out to more than half an hourbetween Earth and their spacecraft. In that situation, the astronauts are likely to become more reliant on more powerful computers and artificial intelligence to make critical course corrections or decisions within seconds or minutes.

A "smart" spacecraft, however, will require a considerably more powerful and robust computer. So NASA andHewlett-Packard Enterprise (HPE) are taking the first step toward that by launching a "supercomputer" to the International Space Station. It will ride into space as early as Monday aboard SpaceX's next supply mission to the station.

"This goes along with the space station's mission to facilitate exploration beyond low Earth orbit,"Mark Fernandez, HPE's leading payload engineer for the project, told Ars. "If this experiment works, it opens up a universe of possibility for high performance computing in space."

For the year-long experiment, astronauts will install the computer inside a rack in the Destiny module of the space station. It is about the size of two pizza boxes stuck together. And while the device is not exactly a state-of-the-art supercomputerit has a computing speed of about 1 teraflopit is the most powerful computer sent into space. Unlike most computers, it has not been hardened for the radiation environment aboard the space station. The goal is to better understand how the space environment will degrade the performance of an off-the-shelf computer.

During the next year, the spaceborne computer will continuously run through a set of computing benchmarks to determine its performance over time. Meanwhile, on the ground, an identical copy of the computer will run in a lab as a control.

If the test is successful, it will open the door to the use of even more powerful computers aboard the space station and other spacecraft NASA is developing to send humans farther into space. Fernandez said HPE also envisions that scientists could eventually use an on-board supercomputer for data processing of their experiments on the station, rather than clogging the limited bandwidth between space and ground with raw data.

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SpaceX is launching a supercomputer to the International Space Station - Ars Technica

Space Station ‘Air Bed’: Astronaut Jack Fisher Gives Some Wild Answers in Live Interview – Space.com

The NASA podcast, "Houston, We Have a Podcast," conducted a Facebook Live interview with astronaut Jack Fischer. Here, Fischer is seen upside down, as he changed his pose after every question.

How's it going in space? Awesome, just like every day, said NASA astronaut Jack Fischer, speaking live from the International Space Station redefining the meaning of long-distance conversation.

Fischer joined the first live taping of NASA's "Houston, We Have a Podcast" on Thursday afternoon (Aug. 10). The spaceman spoke with two hosts, Gary Jordan and Dan Huot, and answered questions from the people who tuned in to the Facebook Live event, such as, "Do you get insomnia in space?"

The session appeared to be a natural extension for Fischer, who has a strong following on Twitter, at 88,000 followers. A reason he is such a favorite for so many is his unabashed way of expressing the wonders he sees aboard the ISS. Fischer was formerly an Air Force test pilot, and he said he was "lucky" to be selected from out among such a talented applicant pool to launch to the space station in April 2017 as a flight engineer for Expedition 51. This is Fischer's first trip to space. [Southern Lights Dazzle in Spectacular Time-Lapse Video from Space (Video)]

Expedition 51 Flight Engineer Jack Fischer of NASA is seen inside the International Space Station in his spacesuit during a fit check, in preparation for the 200th spacewalk at the station. It was also Fischer's first spacewalk, and occurred on May 12, 2017.

Although Fischer is living the astronaut experience for the first time, he is not shy about using funny phrases like "boats of yum" for floating space station meals, or "biggest slice of awesome pie I've ever seen" to describe the landmark 200th space station spacewalk that he had the honor of performing.

During the show, it seemed the hosts of the podcast were just as enthusiastic as the astronaut, and got quite animated about their chance to speak to a space station resident.

"Wrap your mind around it we are talking to somebody in space," NASA spokesperson Dan Huot said during the program's introduction. Two weeks ago, Huot witnessed a colleague in Baikonur, Kazakhstan, get a phone call from the space station, and shared during the live session that it is "so incredible [that] we live in this time."

Jordan's first question to Fischer was, "How's today in space?" and the astronaut, brimming with energy, replied, "It's awesome! Like it is every day!" After every question, Fischer floated into different positions, perhaps showing off his new mastery of moving in microgravity. He did add, "Don't ask Peggy [Whitson] how many things I've knocked over."

Fischer also revealed that in order to adjust to his new home in the best way, he studies which mannerisms the space crew have adopted, asking himself questions like, "How is Peggy cutting her food packet?"

Viewers also learned some less humorous, more personal details about Fischer. He said he's excited about the cancer-combating research the space crew is conducting because his own daughter battled the disease. The newbie astronaut also likes sleeping in microgravity ("like sleeping in an air bed") because on Earth he suffered from back pain as a result of his previous work as an Air Force pilot.

Previous episodes of "Houston, We Have a Podcast" are available on the NASA website.

Follow Doris Elin Salazar on Twitter @salazar_elin.Follow us@Spacedotcom,FacebookandGoogle+. Original article onSpace.com.

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Space Station 'Air Bed': Astronaut Jack Fisher Gives Some Wild Answers in Live Interview - Space.com

Watch live: SpaceX mission to resupply space station – Palm Beach Post (blog)

SpaceX is set to embark on its 12th mission to resupply the International Space Station on Monday from Kennedy Space Center.

The launch is scheduled for 12:31 p.m. from the centers historic pad 39A, which was the site of the Apollo 11 Saturn V rocket launch that took humans to the moon in 1969. It also saw the first and last space shuttle missions during the 30-year shuttle program.

Check The Palm Beach Post radar map.

Mondays mission will use a Falcon 9 rocket to launch the Dragon vehicle to the space station loaded with more than 6,000-pounds of supplies and experiments.

The Falcon 9s reusable first stage will attempt a controlled landing at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

The missions are broadcast live on SpaceXs website, and usually also available on NASA TV.

SpaceXs Falcon 9 and Dragon lift off from Launch Pad 39A on Feb. 19, 2017

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New mission going to the space station to explore mysteries of ‘cosmic rain’ – Phys.Org

August 11, 2017 by Francis Reddy From its new vantage point on the International Space Station's Japanese Experiment Module - Exposed Facility, the Cosmic Ray Energetics and Mass (ISS-CREAM) mission, shown in the inset illustration, will study cosmic rays to determine their sources and acceleration mechanisms. Credit: NASA

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.

CREAM was originally developed as a part of NASA's Balloon Program, during which it returned measurements from around 120,000 feet in seven flights between 2004 and 2016.

"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.

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.

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On Sept. 30, 2014, multiple NASA observatories watched what appeared to be the beginnings of a solar eruption. A filamenta serpentine structure consisting of dense solar material and often associated with solar eruptionsrose ...

The world's smallest space probe, conceived at Menlo Park's visionary Breakthrough Starshot, has phoned home.

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 ...

Scientists have helped solve the mystery of what lies beneath the surface of Neptune the most distant planet in our solar system. A new study sheds light on the chemical make-up of the planet, which lies around 4.5 billion ...

The universe is incomprehensibly vast, with billions of other planets circling billions of other stars. The potential for intelligent life to exist somewhere out there should be enormous.

In 1887, American astronomer Lewis Swift discovered a glowing cloud, or nebula, that turned out to be a small galaxy about 2.2 billion light years from Earth. Today, it is known as the "starburst" galaxy IC 10, referring ...

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New mission going to the space station to explore mysteries of 'cosmic rain' - Phys.Org

Ready For Launch: Deerfield Student Experiment Headed To Space Station – Patch.com


Patch.com
Ready For Launch: Deerfield Student Experiment Headed To Space Station
Patch.com
It's made up of five Deerfield High School students who won the top division at the inaugural Go For Launch! program last year, and the team is set to witness the launch of its student-designed experiment up to the International Space Station (ISS) on ...

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Ready For Launch: Deerfield Student Experiment Headed To Space Station - Patch.com

To infinity and beyond: Chan couple’s son heads to space station – SW News Media

After Sept. 13, you'll want to take a closer look at the International Space Station as it passes by in the night sky, because a Chanhassen NASA astronaut will be aboard.

Well, OK. Mark Vande Hei doesn't live in Chanhassen. But his parents Tom and Mary Vande Hei do.

Last Saturday, they proudly hosted a bon voyage party. He heads to the space station on Sept. 13, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. He'll be in space for five and a half months.

Before guests arrived, Vande Hei, 50, sat down to talk about his upcoming mission.

He flies to Russia on Saturday, Aug. 12, to prepare. Then Sept. 13, he and NASA astronaut Joe Acaba, and cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, will launch to the space station aboard the Soyuz MS-06 spacecraft.

Once there, they'll participate in scientific projects and experiments, and help with the operation and maintenance of the space station. He'll be living in zero gravity, bunking in a cubby about the size of a shower stall, and enjoying the greatest view of Earth from the cupola of the space station.

Vande Hei grew up in Plymouth, and is a Benilde-St. Margaret's School graduate. As a kid, he thought that being an astronaut "was cool," Vande Hei said. "You think of astronauts being super heroes, like Superman."

He graduated from St. John's University and was commissioned in the U.S. Army through ROTC. He was assigned to Italy, and later Iraq, as a combat engineer.

The Army sent him to Stanford University for a master's of science degree. In 1999, he became an assistant professor of physics at the United States Military Academy in West Point. It was there that Vande Hei switched his focus to space operations.

After a tour of duty in Iraq, he became a space operations officer. In 2006, he reported to Johnson Space Center as a capsule communicator in the Mission Control Center Houston. In 2008, NASA started asking for astronaut applicants with military backgrounds. His boss passed him an application.

"I thought that would be amazing, but the competition is so tough."

He credits his wife, Julie, for encouraging him.

"Mark, youve got to do it, otherwise youll never know," he recalled. "Without Julie, I may never have ever gotten off couch."

He passed NASA's thorough physical and a series of interviews and psychological testing, a process that winnows applicants down to 40 or 50 individuals.

Applicants undergo a round of interviews with a panel of up to 12 or 15 engineers, astronauts, flight directors and high-level managers from both Johnson and Kennedy space centers; if you're called back, the next round of interviews takes a week.

"The first interview " Vande Hei shook his head at the memory. "They said, 'Tell us about yourself.' Fifty-nine minutes later, I realized I had talked the whole time." But he made the cut, and paced himself. "I made the second interview more conversational."

Like any competitive situation, he and the other applicants would gather during their free time, comparing notes. "What questions did they askyou? You hear all the horror stories," Vande Hei said. "You don't know what questions they'll ask."

"By convincing myself I wouldnt get the job," Vande Hei said. "I looked at it as having a deluxe tourist pass into areas of NASA no other person would have an opportunity to see. I approached it with curiosity as opposed to 'My whole life rests on this entire hour,' especially if your dream was to become an astronaut."

He sees himself as enormously fortunate. When speaking to school kids, he's a little embarrassed admitting being an astronaut wasn't his No. 1 career goal.

"I didn't know what I wanted to be when I grew up," Vande Hei said. "But I kept saying yes to any opportunities that let me keep learning more."

Vande Hei was assigned to a mission in 2015, and has been in training for it ever since. He spends half his time in Russia and half in the U.S.

Training for his first flight into space has less to do with the physical effects of flight, but learning the instrument panel and controls that get you to the space station. Astronauts train in a space craft mock-up with full-scale models of the interior. Space walks are practiced underwater.

Astronauts conduct all types of science experiments during their time aboard the space station, using themselves as subjects for blood draws, muscle and bone density tests, and other physiological studies.

And they are trained as medics, mechanics, electricians, plumbers, and any other skill set necessary to ensure a well-run and maintained workshop and living quarters in the isolation of space. Vande Hei said they even learn dental procedures in the event an astronaut has a dental emergency.

It's a multi-team effort as all the training drills include the ground control team. "The space station is really flown by the ground crew," Vande Hei said, "and they become more and more important the farther we get from earth." Drills test not only the astronauts but even more crucially, mission control.

Earlier this year, Vande Hei had a raffle at his alma mater Benilde-St. Margaret's. He'll take the two winners' high school ID badges up to the space station with him, giving them bragging rights when he returns them in 2018. He plans on taking family photos with him that he'll shoot selfies with. And, of course, he'll have his wedding ring.

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To infinity and beyond: Chan couple's son heads to space station - SW News Media

SpaceX performs static fire, preps for Monday launch from Florida – Spaceflight Now

A plume of exhaust and steam erupts from pad 39A as SpaceXs Falcon 9 rocket fires its nine Merlin main engines during Thursdays static fire test. Credit: Spaceflight Now

Set to resume a brisk pace of launch activity after a nearly six-week respite, SpaceX test-fired its next Falcon 9 rocket Thursday at NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida ahead of a planned liftoff Monday with several tons of experiments and supplies for the International Space Station.

The Falcon 9 launcher rolled out to pad 39A at the Florida space base Wednesday evening and was raised vertical overnight. SpaceXs launch team, stationed in a control center about 13 miles (21 kilometers) to the south, initiated a computer-controlled countdown sequence Thursday morning that loaded super-chilled kerosene and liquid oxygen into the two-stage rocket.

After sailing through final preflight health checks, the Falcon 9s nine Merlin 1D main engines ignited at 9:10 a.m. EDT (1310 GMT) for several seconds, throttling up to around 1.7 million pounds of thrust as hold-down restraints kept the rocket firmly grounded.

Ground crews will lower the Falcon 9 rocket and return it to SpaceXs hangar at the southern edge of pad 39A, where technicians will mate a cargo-carrying Dragon capsule to the launcher. The robotic supply ship will deliver more than 6,200 pounds (about 2,800 kilograms) of experiments, food and spare parts to the space stations six-person crew.

The fully-assembled rocket will return to pad 39A some time Sunday, when workers will pack final time-sensitive equipment into the cargo capsule, including a habitat with mice to study the affects of long-term spaceflight on vision, a plant growth experiment, and several more biological research investigations.

Liftoff of SpaceXs 12th resupply flight to the space station is scheduled for 12:31 p.m. EDT (1631 GMT) Monday. If the launch takes off on time, the Dragon cargo freighter should complete its automated rendezvous with the orbiting outpost Wednesday.

Astronauts Jack Fischer and Paolo Nespoli will monitor Dragons final approach and grapple the commercial supply ship with the stations Canadian-built robotic arm around 7 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT) Wednesday.

The spaceship will spend about a month attached to the stations Harmony module, allowing astronauts to unpack its pressurized cabin, conduct experiments, and return specimens and other hardware to the capsule for return to Earth in September.

A NASA cosmic ray detector will be robotically transferred from the Dragon spacecrafts external cargo bay to a mounting plate outside the stations Japanese Kibo laboratory module. The instrument is designed to look into the origins of cosmic rays, tiny particles propelled across the universe at high speed by violent phenomena like supernova explosions.

The Dragon spacecraft set for launch next week is the final first-generation version of the cargo ship built by SpaceX. The company plans to deliver supplies to the station with reused capsules on future missions, until a new-generation vehicle is ready.

Mondays launch will be the 11th flight of a Falcon 9 rocket this year, but the first since July 5, the longest gap between SpaceX missions since the start of 2017.

The rapid-fire pace of Falcon 9 flights has allowed SpaceX to catch up on its launch manifest after groundings in 2015 and 2016 in the wake of two rocket failures, which combined to delay the companys schedule nearly one year.

Upgrades at the U.S. Air Forces Eastern Range led to the lull in launch activity in the last few weeks at Cape Canaveral, and no missions were ready for liftoff once the military range re-opened in mid-July. SpaceX took advantage of the downtime to accelerate demolition of disused shuttle-era structures at pad 39A, which the company leased from NASA in 2014 in a 20-year agreement.

The launch rate should ramp up again in the coming weeks if schedules hold.

A separate SpaceX crew at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California is preparing for a Falcon 9 launch Aug. 24 with Formosat 5, a Taiwanese Earth-imaging satellite.

Up to three Falcon 9 flights are on tap in September, beginning Sept. 7 with the launch from Florida of the Air Forces reusable X-37B spaceplane, an unpiloted winged spacecraft that has previously flown into low Earth orbit on United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rockets and returned for landings on a runway.

Another Falcon 9 mission from Floridas Space Coast is scheduled for no earlier than Sept. 27 with the SES 11 communications satellite, also known as EchoStar 105. It will fly on a previously-launched Falcon 9 booster, marking the third time SpaceX will reuse one of its first stages.

And the next batch of 10 next-generation Iridium voice and data relay satellites will fire into orbit from Vandenberg no sooner than Sept. 30.

Meanwhile, ULAs next Atlas 5 launch is on track for Aug. 18 from pad 41 at Cape Canaveral with NASAs TDRS-M communications craft to provide links with the space station and other orbiting scientific satellites when they are out of range of ground stations.

An Orbital ATK Minotaur 4 rocket is being stacked at Cape Canaverals pad 46 for an Aug. 25 blastoff with a military space surveillance mission.

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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SpaceX performs static fire, preps for Monday launch from Florida - Spaceflight Now

Final five ‘Grand Finale’ orbits will explore Saturn’s upper atmosphere – SpaceFlight Insider

Laurel Kornfeld

August 11th, 2017

This artists rendering shows Cassini as the spacecraft makes one of its final five dives through Saturns upper atmosphere in August and September 2017. Image & Caption Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Set to begin the final five of its Grand Finale orbits next week, NASAs Cassini spacecraft will conduct unprecedented close-up studies of Saturns upper atmosphere.

The probe began its 22 Grand Finale orbits on April 22, diving between Saturns innermost rings and the planet. Each orbit lasts about six-and-a-half days, always through uncharted territory.

At 9:22 p.m. PDT on Sunday, August 13 (12:22 a.m. EDT / 04:22 GMT on Monday, August 14), Cassini will begin its last fiveorbits around Saturn, which will take it as close as 1,010 and 1,060 miles (1,630 and 1,710 kilometers) above the planets cloud tops.

While the exact density of Saturns upper atmosphere remains unknown, mission engineers expect the region to be dense enough that the spacecraft needs to use its small rocket thrusters to stay stable during the approach.

Current expectations are that the thrusters will need to operate at a level between 10 and 60 percent of their capacity during the August 1314 flyby.

Depending on actual atmospheric conditions in the first three orbits, mission scientists and engineers have plans to adjust the spacecrafts altitude for its last two.

If the atmosphere is denser than predicted by computer models, engineers will conduct what is known as a pop-up maneuver using the thrusters to raise the probes altitude approximately 120 miles (200 kilometers).

Conversely, if that atmosphere is less dense than predicted, they might conduct a reverse move known as a pop-down maneuver lowering the spacecraft to a lower altitude of about 120 miles (200 kilometers).

At a lower altitude, science instruments such as Cassinis ion and neutral mass spectrometer (INMS) will be able to collect atmospheric data even closer to the cloud tops.

This view from Cassini shows the narrow band of Saturns atmosphere, which Cassini will dive through five times before making its final plunge into the planet on Sept. 15, 2017. Image & Caption Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Having flown through the thick atmosphere of Saturns largest moon Titan on many occasions, mission scientists consider themselves prepared for the more daunting dip into the giant planets atmosphere.

Cassinis Titan flybys prepared us for these rapid passes through Saturns upper atmosphere. Thanks to our past experience, the team is confident that we understand how the spacecraft will behave at the atmospheric densities our models predict, noted Cassini Project Manager Earl Maize of NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.

These final five orbits will accomplish the longtime goal of flying a spacecraft into Saturns upper atmosphere, explained project scientist Linda Spilker, also of JPL.

During these closest flybys, the probes science instruments will capture high-resolution images of Saturns auroras and study temperatures and vortexes at both poles.

At this range, Cassinis radar will be able to detect atmospheric features as small as 16 miles (25 kilometers) in diameter. This is almost 100 times smaller than features the probes radar could detect before the Grand Finale orbits.

The mission will end on September 15 with a final plunge into Saturns atmosphere. Scientists chose this option to avoid any contamination of potentially habitable Saturn moons Titan and Enceladus by microbes from Earth that inadvertently made their way onto the spacecraft.

A gravitational assist from distant Titan on September 11 will slow the probes orbit and put it on course for its final dive.

During that dive, Cassinis science instruments will be operational and will send back data in real time until the probe reaches an altitude where atmospheric density doubles, resulting in loss of contact with Earth as the thrusters become unable to keep the antenna pointed our way.

As it makes these five dips into Saturn, followed by its final plunge, Cassini will become the first Saturn atmospheric probe, Spilker said.

Video courtesy of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Tagged: Cassini Grand Finale Jet Propulsion Laboratory NASA Saturn The Range

Laurel Kornfeld is an amateur astronomer and freelance writer from Highland Park, NJ, who enjoys writing about astronomy and planetary science. She studied journalism at Douglass College, Rutgers University, and earned a Graduate Certificate of Science from Swinburne Universitys Astronomy Online program. Her writings have been published online in The Atlantic, Astronomy magazines guest blog section, the UK Space Conference, the 2009 IAU General Assembly newspaper, The Space Reporter, and newsletters of various astronomy clubs. She is a member of the Cranford, NJ-based Amateur Astronomers, Inc. Especially interested in the outer solar system, Laurel gave a brief presentation at the 2008 Great Planet Debate held at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab in Laurel, MD.

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Final five 'Grand Finale' orbits will explore Saturn's upper atmosphere - SpaceFlight Insider

Human Spaceflight Fast Facts – KTVQ.com | Q2 | Continuous News … – KTVQ Billings News

CNN Library

(CNN) -- Here's a look at human spaceflight programs in the United States and around the world.

Facts: The United States ended its human spaceflight program with the launch of Atlantis on July 8, 2011, and landing on July 21, 2011.

China and Russia are the only other countries to have independent spaceflight capabilities.

India and Iran have both announced their plans to send a manned spacecraft into space.

Timeline: October 4, 1957 - The Soviet Union launches Sputnik I, the first artificial satellite, which starts the "space race" between the Soviets and the United States.

October 1, 1958 - The official start of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

May 25, 1961 - President John F. Kennedy addresses Congress: "First, I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth. No single space project in this period will be more impressive to mankind or more important for the long-range exploration of space; and none will be so difficult or expensive to accomplish."

1958-1963 - NASA's Project Mercury. Its objectives are: - to orbit a manned spacecraft around Earth. - to investigate man's ability to function in space. - to recover both man and spacecraft safely.

April 12, 1961 - Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin is the first human in space aboard Vostok 1. He spends 108 minutes in space and makes one orbit around the earth.

May 5, 1961 - Project Mercury astronaut Alan B. Shepard is the first American in space aboard Freedom 7. He spends 15 minutes in sub-orbital flight.

February 20, 1962 - Project Mercury astronaut John Glenn is the first American to orbit the Earth, aboard Friendship 7. He spends four hours and 55 minutes in space and orbits the earth three times.

1962-1966 - NASA's Gemini program. Its objectives are: - to subject man and equipment to space flight up to two weeks in duration. - to rendezvous and dock with orbiting vehicles and to maneuver the docked combination by using the target vehicle's propulsion system. - to perfect methods of entering the atmosphere and landing at a preselected point on land. - to gain additional information concerning the effects of weightlessness on crew members and to record the physiological reactions of crew members during long duration flights.

June 16, 1963 - Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Vladimirovna Tereshkova is the first woman in space, aboard Vostok 6. She spends 70 hours in space and orbits the earth 48 times.

1963 -1972 - NASA's Apollo program. Its objectives are: - to establish the technology to meet other national interests in space - to achieve preeminence in space for the United States - to carry out a program of scientific exploration of the Moon - to develop man's capability to work in the lunar environment

March 18, 1965 - Soviet Alexei Leonov is the first man to walk in space.

June 3, 1965 - Ed White becomes the first American to walk in space, during Gemini 4.

July 20, 1969 - Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, Jr., and Michael Collins are the first humans to land on the moon. Armstrong and Aldrin are the first to walk on the moon.

April 1971 - Salyut, a manned orbiting space lab, is launched by the Soviet Union.

1972 - NASA's Space Shuttle program formally begins in 1972, under President Richard Nixon.

1973-1974 - NASA's Skylab program. Three missions are completed, with astronauts spending a total of 171 days in space. Its objectives are: - to prove that humans could live and work in space for extended periods - to extend our knowledge of solar astronomy well beyond Earth-based observations

April 12, 1981 - The Space Shuttle Columbia is the first to go to space and the first space shuttle to orbit the earth (STS-1).

June 18-24, 1983 - Sally Ride is first American woman in space aboard mission STS-7.

January 28, 1986 - The Space Shuttle Challenger explodes, killing the seven astronauts onboard, including Christa McAuliffe, chosen as the first teacher in space.

October 29, 1998 - A 77-year old John Glenn becomes the oldest human ever to go into space, aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery.

April 28, 2001 - Dennis Tito becomes the first "space tourist," paying $20 million to ride on a Russian rocket to the International Space Station.

February 1, 2003 - The Columbia breaks up upon re-entry during mission STS-107, killing all seven crew members. It is the second loss of a shuttle in 113 shuttle flights.

October 15, 2003 - Yang Liwei is first Chinese man in space aboard Shenzhou 5.

July 21, 2011 - With the landing of the 135th and final space shuttle mission, the US space shuttle program ends.

June 2012 - China plans to launch the Shenzhou 9, carrying three taikonauts/astronauts, on course to rendezvous with Tiangong-1, a mini-space station, in their first manned space docking venture. Two crews prepare for the mission, each with a female crewman; Major Liu Wang and Captain Wang Yaping, both Air Force fighter pilots.

June 16, 2012 - China launches Shenzhou 9 with a crew of three, Liu Wang, Jing Haipeng and Liu Yang, from the launch pad at Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in western Gansu province. Liu Wang is the first female taikonaut to go into space.

June 11, 2013 - The Chinese launch the Shenzhou 10 mission, their fifth and longest crewed space mission, with three crew members: Nie Haisheng, Zhang Xiaoguang and Wang Yaping.

July 29, 2016 - NASA places an order with SpaceX for a crewed mission to the International Space Station. It's the fourth and final order under a government-funded program that contracts with private companies with the goal of launching astronauts from US soil again. SpaceX has received two of those orders, and Boeing won the other two. The two companies are expected to launch astronauts within the next one or two years.

September 1, 2016 - A SpaceX rocket explodes at its Cape Canaveral launch pad during a test firing. The explosion destroys the rocket and the satellite it was due to launch September 3, 2016.

TM & 2017 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

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Virgin Orbit sign SITAEL contract for LauncherOne satellite launch – NASASpaceflight.com

August 11, 2017 by Chris Bergin

Virgin Orbits LauncherOne has signed an agreement to launch a SITAEL satellite developed in collaboration with the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Italian Space Agency (ASI). The all-electric propulsion microsat demonstrator called HETsat will be air-launched on a rocket carried under the wing of Virgin Orbits Cosmic Girl carrier plane. Virgin Orbit Launch:

The new air-launch system is yet to conduct its maiden flight, although progress towards that milestone is picking up the pace.

Just this month, Cosmic Girl, a Boeing 747-400 (747-41R) series aircraft (previous registration number G-VWOW), arrived at the companys Long Beach facility in California after initial retrofitting in San Antonio, Texas via a flow called Maintenance D.

Chosenvia an impressively clean operational history and excellent maintenance record, the aircraft undertook its first flight on 29 September 2001 and was delivered to Virgin Atlantic Airways on 31 October 2001.

She spent 14 years in service with Virgin Atlantic Airways primarily servicingthe companys London to San Francisco via New York City route until 29 October 2015.

The plane was officially delivered to Virgin Galactic on 12 November 2015 and re-registered as N744VG.

The main modification involves the ability to support the 24,947.58 kg (55,000 lb) LauncherOne rocket and its associated hardware.

LauncherOne will be capable of placing a 300 kg payload into a sun-synchronous orbit and a 450 kg payload into an equatorialorbit all for the same rough price of $10 million (USD). Notably, the company has begun to claim payloads of up to 500 kg, potentially relating to an increase in performance capabilities.

Carried by Cosmic Girl to around 35,000 feet, LauncherOne will enjoy the ability to launch polar and sun-synchronous missions from approximately 80.4 km (50 miles) off the west coast of Los Angeles, California, and a similar distance off the east coast of Cape Canaveral, Florida, for equatorial missions.

The first stage of the LauncherOne is the NewtonThree (N3) engine, which is a 73,500 lbf engine running with RP-1 and LOX. The second stage utilizes the NewtonFour (N4) engine that sports 5,000 lbfof vacuum thrust.

The system will only become financially viable via a healthy order book, with Virgin Orbit noting on Friday one such order, as it was selected to launch a SITAEL satellite developed in collaboration with the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Italian Space Agency (ASI).

Virgin Orbit and SITAEL signed the launch service agreement at the 31st AIAA/USU Conference on Small Satellite.

SITAEL will launch its HETsat via LauncherOne, a technical demonstration of a new electric propulsion system (based on the Hall Effect Thruster (mini-HET) concept) for ESA and ASI.

As a small satellite customer, we are very excited for our innovative SITAEL technologies to get the flexibility and service of a primary payload on a dedicated small launch vehicle by Virgin Orbit, noted SITAEL Chief Executive Officer Nicola Zaccheo.

The satellite, developed in partnership with Italian Space Agency and European Space Agency, is the first all-electric micro satellite ever in space, validating both the SITAEL bus (S-75 platform) and SITAEL low power Hall Effect Thruster (HT100). SITAEL is pleased to take advantage of Virgin Orbits unique capabilities.

The HETsat satellites launch mass is expected to be less than 60 kg, with about 15 kg allocated to mini-HET P/L (including Power Processing Unit, fluidics, tank and xenon propellant).

Opening access to space is an incredible opportunity to bring together governments around the world with commercial enterprises. Virgin Orbit is proud to apply our commercial solutions and innovation with SITAEL to support the European Space Agency and Italian Space Agency, Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart said.

Collaborative efforts like ours will enable cost-effective access to Low Earth Orbit missions and beyond.

No launch date was provided in the announcement, but it is expected to be one of the opening launches during the initial phase of commercial operations that are set to begin in 2018.

(Images via Virgin Orbit and SpaceTechExpo, Derrick Stamos for NSF (L2) and Nate Moeller for NASASpaceFlight.com andastro95media.com).

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Virgin Orbit sign SITAEL contract for LauncherOne satellite launch - NASASpaceflight.com

Lockheed Martin’s A2100 bus modernized and poised for new missions – SpaceFlight Insider

Jason Rhian

August 11th, 2017

Hellas-Sat-4/SaudiGeoSat-1 satellite after integration. Photo Credit: Lockheed Martin

Engineers with Colorado-based Lockheed Martin have finished integrating the first, modernized,A2100 satellite an upgraded version of a design that has been successfully deployed numerous times in the past. What will become theHellas-Sat-4/SaudiGeoSat-1 satellite will now undergo final assembling and testing and is slated to launch in the first half of next year (2018).

Weve modeled this activity in our virtual reality lab hundreds of times, but this is the first time weve performed the integration activity of our modernized A2100 satellite in a clean room, said Rick Ambrose, executive vice president of Lockheed Martin Space Systems via a release issued by the company. Mating the scalable modules together in a precise method was a critical step for the program, and the team did an exceptional job.

Two A2100 satellites Hellas-Sat-4/SaudiGeoSat-1 and Arabsat 6A are being produced on behalf ofArabsat and King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology located in Saudi Arabia. The satellites purpose is stated as providing advancedtelecommunications capabilities, including television, internet, telephone and secure mode communications, to customers in the Middle East, Africa and Europe.

The A2100bus utilizes a hybrid propulsion integrated with the payload module as well as transponder panels. The A2100 uses a combination of electrical Hall current thrusters as well as a liquid apogee engine. These will be used to place the Hellas-Sat-4/SaudiGeoSat-1 spacecraft into its final orbit (and will also keep the satellites in their intended orbit).

More than 40 spacecraft on orbit today are built on the A2100 bus, with Lockheed Martin in the process of producing five more of the modernized spacecraft for upcoming missions. The spacecraft also uses a reconfigurable processor which can be reprogrammed on orbit.

The contracts for theHellas-Sat-4/SaudiGeoSat-1and Arabsat 6A satellites were awarded on April 9, 2015, with separate launches for both spacecraft set for sometime in 2018 the former atop an Arianespace Ariane 5 ECA and the latter atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy. If everything goes as it is currently planned, the two spacecraft will provide services for some 15 years.

Video courtesy of Lockheed Martin

Tagged: A2100 Hellas-Sat-4/SaudiGeoSat-1 Lockheed-Martin The Range

Jason Rhian spent several years honing his skills with internships at NASA, the National Space Society and other organizations. He has provided content for outlets such as: Aviation Week & Space Technology, Space.com, The Mars Society and Universe Today.

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Lockheed Martin's A2100 bus modernized and poised for new missions - SpaceFlight Insider

Calling all redheads for world record bid | Daily Liberal – Daily Liberal

Reddy, steady, go ... the drive is on to gather more than 1672 redheads in one place at the one time.

Calling all Redheads the countdown to Oranges red letter day has begun.

REDDY: Redheads at Catherine MacAuley primary school promote the event.

There are only 50 days to go until redheads from all over are being urged to head to Orangeon September 30 and join in the fun.

It will culminate in an attempt to break the world record for the most redheads in the one place at the one time.

The current record stands at 1672members of the ginger army.

Organiser Rachael Brooking saidactor, writer and redhead Stephen Hallwould be the MC for the four-hour event from 11am-3pm.

She said she had lined up guests ranging from Ronald McDonald to singer Joel Leffler who would be releasing his new single Auburn Hair in September and the Honey Drippin Mudskippers Band.

It is going to be a fun family festival, she said.

All redheads are being encouraged to wear white for the event.

And while true redheads will only be allowed in the official count Mrs Brooking said non-redheads were encouraged to join in.

Were encouraging non-redheads to spray, colour or don a red wig for the event, she said.

And blokes with red beards, the festival is looking for you.

There will be a red beard competition, she said.

Well be looking for the longest, bushiest, most manicured and even the reddest, she said.

The red theme will be splashed through the food, drink and merchandise stands.

That would include red apples, toffee apples, orange juice, ginger ale and red slushies for sale plus red wig and redhead merchandise stalls.

Mrs Brooking said there would be a cliff hanger and jumping castle plus face painting to entertain the children.

The Rural Fire Service is bringing a shiny new red fire truck.

Red and orange vintage and custom cars will also be on show.

And your big day at the festival at Wade Park will be captured by photographer Chris Rehberg of Oatley Photography.

Mrs Brooking said he would be doing portraits and was looking to do a book to commemorate the day Orange turns red.

Mrs Brooking said there would be a gold coin entry fee with proceeds to go toward supporting familiesof people with Huntingtons Disease [HD] as September is HDawareness month.

She is also organising the screening of theThe Inheritance, which showsa familys journey with HD, on September 1, Walk for Hope Orange and Tea with Gatsby-High Tea4HD at Kenna Hall on September 16 to raise funds and awareness for HD.

Mrs Brooking said she was still looking for businesses and groups to be involved.

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Calling all redheads for world record bid | Daily Liberal - Daily Liberal

A ginger haired emoji is coming to a phone near you soon – BBC News


Her.ie
A ginger haired emoji is coming to a phone near you soon
BBC News
According to Unicode, redheads will be able to describe themselves in emoji form from June 2018 after the organisation's emoji subcommittee recommended 67 new characters. It's not just ginger emojis set to make their way to our fingertips though. There ...
We finally get to see what the red head emoji looks likeHer.ie
The ginger emoji is finally coming to your phone along with a few othersJOE.co.uk
A ginger haired emoji is to join the world of emoticons very soonBuzz.ie

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A ginger haired emoji is coming to a phone near you soon - BBC News

August 3, 2017 – LPOD

image by K.C. Pau, Hong Kong

Comparative planetology is a powerful approach to understanding processes on different worlds. It has been used since early observers compared lunar features to landforms on Earth. The first stage of such a comparison is simply noticing similarities in morphology. Here KC points out the curved shores of a small bay on the East coast of Hong Kong with the Bay of Rainbows on the Moon. KC does not imply that Sinus Iridum resulted from water erosion of less resistant rock, but the similarity of a lowland being surrounded on three sides and open on the fourth is striking. In fact, that is probably why Riccioli called it a sinus/bay about 360 years ago. If we look more closely we see that bays on Earth occur along interfaces of land and liquid. That is true on the Moon too, but we also notice that completed lunar bays (craters) occur away from interfaces of mare and highlands, but not on Earth. So we might conclude that different processes caused the three landward sides of the bay on the Earth and the Moon. But there is a similarity in that the sea sides have missing walls. Did erosion remove the sea sides of lunar bays? Maybe. Was it erosion by mare lavas that destroyed the western rim of Le Monnier or the northern rim of Letronne? Or were these simply craters that formed on the edges of basins that dipped (or faulted) down toward their centers? There is little evidence for lava erosion of crater rims, yet the walls of Flamsteed P and other craters in the maria are often missing. Looking at a beautiful bay in Hong Kong caused us to consider how bays form on Earth and Moon, and even though there are few similarities in the processes, the thinking has been informative.

Chuck Wood

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August 3, 2017 - LPOD

Visualize the Total Solar Eclipse with NASA’s 3D App – Space.com

Find out what the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse will look like from anywhere on the planet with a new interactive, 3D simulation app from NASA.

The Aug. 21 eclipse will cross the U.S. from Oregon to South Carolina along a path about 70 miles (113 kilometers) wide. The new NASA app, "Eyes on the Eclipse," simulates what the sun will look like as it passes through the sky on Aug. 21. Users can explore different locations along the path of totality where the moon will completely obscure the sun in a total solar eclipse, as well as areas that will experience a partial solar eclipse or no eclipse.

Eyes on the Eclipse is a part of the NASA's Eyes program, which allows users to follow missions such as Cassini, Juno or New Horizons through interactive apps. Eyes on the Eclipse can be used on any web browser, or by downloading the app to your computer or mobile device. [Total Solar Eclipse 2017: When, Where and How to See It (Safely)]

Partial solar eclipse simulation for New York City at 11:30 a.m. on Aug. 21. 2017, using NASA's "Eyes on the Eclipse" app.

To preview the Aug. 21 eclipse in the app, open the program through NASA's website and click anywhere on the image of Earth or choose from one of the five preset U.S. cities. To view a specific location, select the custom option and then enter the city and state, or latitude and longitude in decimal degrees.

The program offers a split-screen view, with a 3D model of the Earth on the left and a simulation of the sun as it will appear at the time and location selected on the right. By adjusting the time and location, you can see how much of the sun will be covered by the moon during the eclipse.

Total solar eclipse simulation for Kansas City, Missouri, at 11:30 a.m. on Aug. 21. 2017, using NASA's "Eyes on the Eclipse" app.

Locations along the narrow center line of the moon's central, dark shadow, also called the umbra, will experience a total solar eclipse, as the moon moves directly in front of the sun's disk and turns day to night. Areas outside the path of totality will still experience a partial solar eclipse, when part of the sun's bright light is visible. NASA reminds skywatchers to wear safe solar glasses when looking at a partial solar eclipse to prevent permanent eye damage.

Readers can download the Eyes on the Eclipse app here.

Editor's note:Space.com has teamed up with Simulation Curriculum to offerthis awesome Eclipse Safari appto help you enjoy your eclipse experience. The free app isavailable for AppleandAndroid, and you can view iton the web. If you take an amazing photo of the Aug. 21 solar eclipse, let us know! Send photos and comments to:spacephotos@space.com.

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Visualize the Total Solar Eclipse with NASA's 3D App - Space.com