Aliens and outer space exploration – Harrogate Advertiser

Published: 10:10 Monday 07 October 2019

So says the message from the human race on the Voyager spacecraft. But is there anyone out there? Alex went to speak to an astrophysicist to find out. This is what he learned: Stellar Wobble. The Mirror Test. The Drake Equation. Fermis Paradox. Capitalist chimps and murderous dolphins.

Somewhere between stand-up comedy and an astrophysics lecture, Third Angels production is a simple show about huge ideas: the story of how a three-hour conversation with an astrophysicist changed the way Alex understands the way the Universe works. 600 People explores how we think about evolution and intelligence, belief and invention and space travel.

Alexander Kelly, co-artistic Director of Third Angel, said: The show was inspired by a conversation I had with astrophysicist Dr Simon Goodwin in 2013.Simon convinced me 99.5 per cent that there is no other intelligent alien life in our galaxy. Ive long been drawn to the idea of the Voyager space craft as messengers from humanity to other life forms, and I was surprised to discover how disappointed I was by this news.

The production is on at Harrogate Library on Tuesday October 29 at 7.30pm. Tickets from Harrogate Theatre.

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UFO or space station? The best way to spot the ISS without a telescope – CNET

The ISS has been in orbit over 7,000 days.

When my husband rushed me onto the back porch claiming we would be able to see the International Space Stationpassing over our house one night, I didn't exactly believe him. We're far enough out in the country to see stars, but we haven't completely escaped the city's light pollution. Still, I looked up. While I didn't expect to see the ISS taking up half the sky, I couldn't see anything different happening above us.

My husband was looking at his phone, the screen illuminating his face in the outdoor darkness. He told me he'd found an app that could track where the ISS was around the world. After a few moments of silence, he turned and pointed above our roof.

"That's it," he said, as what looked like a bright, rapidly moving star shot over the top of our house.

We watched the ISS speed across the sky and disappear into the clouds. No sooner had we lost sight of the light, my husband told me it was already over New York. That's some hustle.

Space travel has been making headlines this year. This past July marked the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission to the moon. Just before the anniversary, NASA announced plans for the first all-female spacewalk in history but later nixed it due to a suit-sizing issue. The first space crime was even said to have been committed by NASA astronaut Anne McClain, who was accused of identity theft (she denied the allegations).

The ISS, about the size of a five-bedroom house, serves as a laboratory in space while housing astronauts. The first piece of the Station launched in 1998 and has been constructed by astronauts in its entirety since human arrival in 2000. While orbiting the Earth, astronauts perform unique research, developing plans for the future of space exploration and keeping a consistent human presence in space. Space tourism for the wealthy could also become a possibility in the near future.

While the ISS has been in orbit over 7,000 days, it's captured some truly stunning images as it travels around the Earth.

If you want to keep up with the ISS's location around the world, you can check out NASA's Spot the Station feature on its website or download the NASA app. For more focused space station tracking, you can download the ISS Detector app for any phone, which its developers claim is the most-used satellite tracking app. Here's how it works.

The app works for iOS and Android. Use those links or search for ISS Detector in the Apple App Store and ISS Detector: See the Space Station in the Google Play Store.

The ISS Detector asks for access to your location. This is so it can tell you when the station will be over your area.

The ISS Detector app shows a wide range of data to help you keep up with the space station.

Once you plug in your location, the app can tell you how often you can expect to see the ISS in the sky. For example, residents of Louisville, Kentucky will typically be able to see the ISS between about 7:57 p.m. and 9:37 p.m. each night for about 30 seconds to a minute and a half. A fleeting window, right? That's because the ISS is traveling at about 17,500 miles per hour.

I found the display was best viewed on a tablet versus a smartphone. The app displays lots of numerical information on a dashboard, and it's easier to digest if it's spread out. The ISS Detector will tell you the upcoming sightings for the next 10 days, potential weather conditions, elevations, latitude and longitude, direction, the current location of the ISS is and more.

The app also keeps track of how long until the ISS will pass over your location and how long it'll be visible. On average, it looks like the ISS is visible in a given area one to two times per day over the course of a week. Whether it's day or night depends on your geographical location.

You can also set up a notification so you don't miss the sighting. Just tap the alarm bell in the corner.

Set up a notification for the next sighting, have a snack and go to sleep. If the ISS just flew over, you won't see it again until the next day. While you're waiting for the ISS to pass over your area, you can keep tabs on where it is around the world for free.

If you're a space enthusiast and don't mind spending a few bucks, the app has a few extensions that enhance the experience. If you watch an ad, you can also get the extensions free for five days.

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UFO or space station? The best way to spot the ISS without a telescope - CNET

Review: Cantus offers well-sung songs of stars and space – St. Paul Pioneer Press

While the concert programs of the Minneapolis-based male vocal group Cantus can sometimes get off theme, the one that opens its 2019-20 season is pretty consistent: One Giant Leap is a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, and, in a broader sense, the ability of the stars to inspire us to stretch our boundaries.

And there is some impressive stretching going on in the programming, as the concerts feature four world premieres and another U.S. premiere. Asking audiences to accept so much unfamiliar fare is a giant leap indeed, but it was clear that the crowd at Minneapolis Westminster Concert Hall Thursday evening was in full support, judging from the way audience members started shouting, whooping and clapping the moment the last syllable of each song left the singers lips, often disrupting meditative moods.

This admirably focused program is full of homages to science and the sky, wonder and discovery. And all eight voices were consistently strong in the group, the harmonies as warm and inviting as the down comforter youre breaking out this weekend.

Never more so than on Stars by Latvian composer Eriks Esenvalds, which required the eight singers to run their fingers over the rims of half-filled (half-empty?) glasses to produce an eerie soundscape. It proved a haunting performance, as did the groups reverent reading of Vicente Chavarrias Follow the Drinking Gourd, a 19th-century song full of Underground Railroad information for Canada-bound escaped slaves.

The expertise that Cantus demonstrated last summer in trading tunes on a Franz Schubert song cycle was shown not to have dissipated a bit by a lively quartet on the composers Flucht. And there were no works more transporting than the two by Minneapolis composers that closed the main program: Catherine Daltons Silver Deity of Secret Night and Cantus bass Chris Foss Beyond, a setting of a Katharine Lee Bates poem that sounded as if it may have been the anthem of exploration around which the whole program was built.

That songs awestruck wonder made the absence of such a quality from some other pieces all the more noticeable. While there was brisk energy in Camille Saint-Saens Aux Aviateurs, it didnt bring the concerts first half to the kind of climactic close one may desire. And one rapidly pattered movement from Mohammed Fairouzs A Source of Light gave short shrift to that composers gifts.

While I enjoyed the groups return to the lush sound on which it was founded 24 years ago at Northfields St. Olaf College on a new work by a St. Olaf student, Grace Brigham (Discoveries), the concerts encore left me saddened. By yukking it up through a mocking version of Space Oddity David Bowies tale of an astronauts existential despair I felt the performance not only disrespected Bowies memory, but threw the concerts whole premise into question. While offering lip service to some of the tragedies that have accompanied space exploration in between-song speeches, the music contained no sense of the risk, loss of innocence or questioning of the quest that are surely part of it. By evenings end, this look upward had come to seem quite an incomplete picture.

Who: Cantus

What: One Giant Leap

When and where: 3 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran Church, 115 N. Fourth St., Stillwater; 11 a.m. Thursday, Colonial Church of Edina, 6200 Colonial Way, Edina; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 19, Ordway Concert Hall, 345 Washington St., St. Paul; 3 p.m. Oct. 20, Wayzata Community Church, 125 Wayzata Blvd. E., Wayzata

Tickets: $43-$10, available at 612-435-0046 or cantussings.org

Capsule: The fine singing inspires, but this Leap doesnt go deep.

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Review: Cantus offers well-sung songs of stars and space - St. Paul Pioneer Press

Why NASA received stern warning over Mars mission from scientist Bill Nye: Focus! – Express.co.uk

On October 8, 2015, NASA published its strategy for human exploration and colonisation of Mars. The concept operates through three distinct phases leading up to fully sustained civilisation on the Red Planet.The first stage, already underway, is the "Earth Reliant" phase. This will continue to use theInternational Space Stationuntil 2024, validating deep space technologies and studying the effects of long-duration space missions on the human body.The second stage, "Proving Ground," moves away from Earth reliance and ventures intocislunar spacefor most of its tasks, to test deep space habitation facilities, and validate capabilities required for human exploration of Mars.

Finally, phase three, the Earth Independent stageincludes long-term missions on the lunar surface with surface habitats that only require routine maintenance, and the harvesting of Martian resources for fuel, water, and building materials.

NASA hopes to complete all three sometime in the 2030s, but Bill Nye is not impressed with the ambiguity of the space agency.

Speaking to BigThink in 2017, the popular science communicator said: Well, I'm the CEO of The Planetary Society so what I have encouraged the staff to do is focus on our mission.

Our mission is exploring the planets, to know the cosmos and our place within it, empowering citizens of the world to be space explorers.

So by focusing on your core mission I think it will enable us to work together to make the world better.

Now when it comes to NASA, we are very hopeful that we will acknowledge that NASA is a fantastic brand for the United States.

People everywhere no matter how they feel about the United States respect what NASA is able to accomplish.

Dr Nye went on to explain why he hopes the space agency will set a date for their future endeavours.

He added: First of all when it comes to exploring Mars, which is what we all want to do, everybody talks about it all the time, let's not have a reset, let's not cancel existing programmes for the sake of some imagined or proposed new programme, let's finish all the projects.

JUST IN:BRITAIN IS GOING TO THE MOON! Space tech firm will have rover on lunar surface by 2021

Let's do everything all at once in the human spaceflight and stay focused on getting to Mars by setting a date.

One of my favourite blues songs is Set A Date, and he's talking about getting married, but if we set a date for when we would be on Mars we would be much more likely to achieve it than to continually suggest decades from now.

And as you may know the Planetary Society did an analysis that shows we could be in orbit around Mars, which would be analogous to the Apollo 8 orbit of the moon in 2033, without changing anything about the NASA budget just adjusting it for inflation.

But if people got excited and wanted to go a couple of orbits early in 2028 that would be fantastic.

Dr Nye continued his point, applying it to other areas of space exploration.

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He continued: The other thing that we at the Planetary Society very much want NASA to stay focused on are these extraordinary planetary missions.

We have Juno in orbit around Jupiter and we have many spacecraft in orbit around Mars.

We have New Horizons data is still coming back from I guess it just finished bringing data back from Pluto and now it's onto the next destination in deep the space in 2019.

Keep those missions going because that's where new things happen, where these innovations happen in technology.

So acknowledge that NASA is a great international brand as well as a source of national pride and technological achievement.

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Why NASA received stern warning over Mars mission from scientist Bill Nye: Focus! - Express.co.uk

UC San Diego alum fulfills lifelong dream of going to space – University of California

NASA astronaut Jessica Meir has wanted to travel to space since she was a child. This lifelong dream became a reality on Sept. 25, when the alumna of Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and two multinational crew members launched to the International Space Station (ISS) on a Russian Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft. Her next goal? Completing the first all-female spacewalk with colleague Christina Koch, scheduled for Oct. 21.

"It feels like home already," Meir told NASA in a live interview just moments after entering the space station located more than 200 miles above Earth. "It's going to be an amazing six months."

During her six-month mission aboard the ISS, Meir and her colleagues will conduct hundreds of experiments to study the physiological effects of long-duration human spaceflight. This research is crucial for NASA to achieve its goals for the Artemis program, which intends to land the first woman and the next man on the Moon by 2024, and its longer range goal of sending astronauts to Mars.

Meir is no stranger to conducting science in extreme environments. While a graduate student in the marine biology program at Scripps Oceanography, Meir researched the physiology of deep-diving animals including emperor penguins in Antarctica and elephant seals in Northern California. A trained scientific diver, she studied emperor penguins above and below the ice in Antarctica during four research expeditions to the remote, icy continent.

In an interview with This Week@UC San Diego several weeks before the launch, Meir discussed her journey from UC San Diego to space, noting that soon shell come full-circle in terms of her physiology research.

I'm very excited to be contributing to all of the amazing science that we have up there. Now, I'll be the animal in the extreme environment, just like the penguins and seals and birds that I've studied, said Meir.

She discussed some of the planned experiments to study how human physiological systems are affected by microgravity and the spaceflight environment.

One of the hot topics right now is looking at the health of the eye and some vision problems that we're seeing in some astronauts post-flight and changes in the retinal layer, said Meir. We're not sure if this is caused by the increase in pressure due to the fluid shift that we have when we're in space or what exactly is going on here. But we're looking more into that.

The astronauts will also be studying cardiovascular health, as recent studies have shown that the walls of carotid arteries get stiffer and thicker in space. A six-month mission is even the equivalent of about 20 years of aging on the ground, noted Meir.

A number of other research projects with human health applications are already underway, said Meir, including studies of protein crystal growth. NASA astronauts will be looking at diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and obesity in terms of this protein crystal growth.

You can actually grow bigger and more perfect crystals without gravity, so determining the structure of these proteins can lead to the development of inhibitors for diseases, she said.

In addition to contributing to the amazing science at the ISS, Meir said she is really excited by the strong possibility that shell conduct one or more spacewalks when an astronaut gets out of a vehicle while in space.

That was always the personal vision that I had in my head of floating out there in your own little self-contained spacecraft, which is your spacesuit, which you're depending on for life support for everything, and looking back at the earth, said Meir.

During one of the planned spacewalks, Meir and her colleagues will repair a critical pump on the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a particle physics detector thats mounted on the ISS.

This instrument was something that was not designed to be fixed by anyone in a spacesuit, said Meir, noting the intense training required to work in the puffy suit and perform tasks while wearing large, thick gloves. Now we have to do it.

UC San Diego has a history of producing alumni who have pursued successful careers at NASA. Meir is among three alumni all women who have become NASA astronauts. Megan McArthur, who holds a Ph.D. in oceanography from Scripps, traveled to space in 2009 and helped repair the Hubble telescope. Kate Rubins, who studied microbial biology as an undergraduate, became the first person to sequence DNA in space.

UC San Diego and Scripps are really just powerhouse institutions when it comes to research, said Meir, discussing her shared background in science with McArthur and Rubins. Those are the types of backgrounds especially if you look at Scripps of people that are selected to be astronauts.

Meir believes that her research experience in extreme environments coupled with her scientific expertise helped her secure a spot in NASAs class of astronaut candidates in 2013. The mental and physical challenges she encountered in Antarctica as a Ph.D. student helped her learn how to adapt to any situation or environment, and it showed her the value of working as part of a team. For example, if a big storm came through, the group would have to cancel its planned activities and instead shovel snow all day or repair an instrument. Other days were devoted to conducting research experiments or diving in the freezing water.

I think when I'm most challenged like that, whether it's diving under the ice or now, this job as an astronaut, is really kind of the epitome of that mental and physical combination, said Meir. Something about that just really captures my spirit and makes me really feel the most fulfilled.

Growing up in rural Maine, Meir was often surrounded by nature, from dense forests to dark starry skies. She thinks that being immersed in this environment is what initially sparked her interest in the natural world. She credits her parents, particularly her Swedish mother who has a natural connection to nature, with supporting her path to science, and ultimately, to space.

Her budding interest in NASAs astronaut program was further strengthened by support from her Scripps advisors, Paul Ponganis and Jerry Kooyman. Meir stressed the value of mentorship for early career scientists, something that helped her immensely as she navigated graduate school.

Not only are they at the top of their field and amazing scientists, but they're just really great people, Meir said of Ponganis and Kooyman. And I think for me, especially as a graduate student starting out, that made a huge difference because they treated me like a person and they also cared about me as a person. They weren't only focusing on the science.

Kooyman and several others from Scripps who are close to Meir traveled to Kazakhstan to see the launch from the ground. Meanwhile at Scripps, Ponganis joined nearly 100 people in Meirs orbit including family, friends, and former colleagues for an early morning launch viewing party at the Surfside student lounge, one of Meirs favorite spots on campus.

The event featured an acoustic performance by recording artist Grace Potter, a close friend of Meirs, and an immersive VR experience of the ISS recorded by Flix & Paul Studios. Commemorative cookies, Tang, and freeze-dried Space Ice Kream were served to guests, who also received a custom patch designed for Meir, representing her journey from Scripps to space.

Cheers erupted as the rocket blasted off from the ground at 6:57 a.m. PDT, and again when it reached orbit.

Today has been a culmination of Jessicas aspirations and work for a long period of time. I always had full confidence when she was here at Scripps that she would eventually get into the space program, said Ponganis. It fills me with satisfaction and pride that we were able to assist her in reaching this goal. Its a very happy day.

Alyssa Griffin was one of several Scripps Ph.D. students who attended the launch party. Griffin said shes had the pleasure of meeting Meir twice over the past few years when she visited Scripps and participated in student meet-and-greet lunches.

What I love about Jessica's story is her unwavering determination towards a lifelong dream of becoming an astronaut and going into space. It was deeply inspiring to see her achieve that dream this week, said Griffin. The emotions of Jessica's friends, family, and UC San Diego family at the launch party was a beautiful reminder that space exploration brings all of us together through the contemplation of our collective place in the universe.

During her down time in space, Meir plans to spend some time in the Cupola, a dome-like observatory module with seven windows that provide a birds eye view of Earth.

I think it's something that obviously never gets old, to have the entire planet below you, especially coming from an oceanography school, said Meir. I mean, come on! That's a lot of ocean to look at down there.

Meir is looking forward to sharing her space journey with those of us here on Earth, and plans to post updates to her Twitter and Instagram accounts.

What I'm so excited to do is really share this with everybody because I'm the one that's lucky enough to get to do it, said Meir. But I wouldn't be here at all if it weren't for all the people along the way who helped me get where I am.

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UC San Diego alum fulfills lifelong dream of going to space - University of California

Playmobil Is Going Back to the Future in 2020! – Space.com

NEW YORK Great Scott! Dust off your DeLoreans, sci-fi fans because Playmobil will launch three new sets from the "Back to the Future" films in 2020 that will have you channeling your inner Marty McFly.

Playmobil, which released a full line of Mars exploration sets this year, will follow it up with a line of Back to the Future sets that feature the iconic time-traveling DeLorean and characters from the 1985 science fiction film (and its two sequels). The toy company unveiled the new Playmobil sets last week here at New York Comic Con.

Related: Astronaut Reveals First Playmobil Figures in SpaceMore: New York Comic Con 2019: Amazing Space Cosplay Photos!

The new Playmobil playsets will include a hero set with the Delorean, 1985 Marty McFly and Doc Brown, as well as Doc's dog Einstein and their accessories. The line will also include a two-pack featuring the figures of 1955 Doc Brown and Marty.

Finally, a set of collectible 6-inch Doc Brown and Marty characters will round out the sets. Playmobil has not release prices yet for the new sets, but they will be available in May 2020.

Here's a look at the new sets as seen at Playmobil's NYCC booth.

Playmobil unveiled its new Back to the Future sets in a glass display case at New York Comic Con 2019. The main set comes with Marty, Doc Brown, Einstein the dog, plutonium and case and the iconic Delorean time machine.

(Image credit: Future)

The gull wings of Back to the Future's DeLorean swing open for Playmobil's Marty and Doc to climb inside.

(Image credit: Future)

The lightning rod to power Marty's trip "back to the future" from the first film is installed on Playmobil's DeLorean in this display.

(Image credit: Future)

Playmobil's DeLorean looks sleek in this head-on view.

(Image credit: Future)

In addition to the main set, Playmobil has this two-pack of 1955 Doc and Marty, complete with newspaper and a guitar, just what Marty needs for the Enchantment Under the Sea dance.

(Image credit: Future)

Playmobil has also created these large 6-inch collectible figures for its Back to the Future line, featuring 1985 Marty and accessories, and Doc Brown with his DeLorean remote control.

(Image credit: Future)

Playmobil's Back to the Future line follows the company's "Ghostbusters" line, another 1980s franchise. The company unveiled a set of new collectible 6-inch Ghostbusters figures for 2020 at NYCC.

Email Tariq Malik attmalik@space.comor follow him@tariqjmalik. Follow us@SpacedotcomandFacebook.

Need more space? You can get 5 issues of our partner "All About Space" Magazine for $5 for the latest amazing news from the final frontier!

(Image credit: All About Space magazine)

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Playmobil Is Going Back to the Future in 2020! - Space.com

Investing In The Final Frontier – Benzinga

Could space exploration be the next $1 trillion industry?

A number of organizations are focused on space. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASDA, receivesfunding from the annual federal budget passed by Congress. Since its inception, it's estimated the U.S. has spent $601.31 billion on NASA.

The European Organization for Nuclear Research, CERN,on the outskirts of Geneva has been facilitating the exchange of information between researchers working on the primary mission to discover the laws of the universe.

Over the years, Canada, India, Japan, Russiaand the U.S, none of which are part of CERN, have donated materials with values in the tens of millions of dollars.

There's so much more to discover, but that requires funding.

95% of the universe in still unknown, Fabiola Gianotti, the director general of CERN, said in a presentation to the World Economic Forum.

"We are all driven by a shared passion for knowledge."

Andrew Chanin,the CEO of ProcureAM, an ETP product issuer based in New York,highlights figures from the Space Report, published by the nonprofit Space Foundation, which states that the global space economy reached $414.75 billion in 2018.

By 2040, Morgan Stanley estimates that value will nearly triple to $1.1 trillion, which presents a huge opportunity for investors to get in on the ground floor of the space revolution.

A number offactors are driving the growth of the space economy, including declining launch costs, advances in technology and increased government spending, Chanin said.

"Similar to how the first railroads widely expanded the interconnectivity of people and physical goods across the U.S., space-based systems have the potential to dramatically expand our access to digital goods and assets."

Space transportation systems could lead to the discovery and eventual settlement of new territories.

"This is largely made possible by recent decreases in launch costs. Many types of satellites can now be manufactured relatively inexpensively, and developments like reusable rockets have made launches vastly more cost-efficient," Chanin said.

"By investing in this infrastructure today, we have set the groundwork for advanced space exploration and transportation in years to come."

Advancements in technology will be instrumental to establishing permanent bases in space and potentially expanding our civilization beyond the confines of Earth, he said.

"One of the main concerns of space exploration today is the risk posed to humans. We can combat this with the development of more sophisticated drones, robots, rovers, etc. We could even see the rise of autonomous vehicles, 3D printing technology and transportation services that would electronically build the resources humans would require to survive in space."

Governments are starting to recognize space as the next domain to be colonized, Chanin said.

The Procure Space ETF (NYSE: UFO)was up 1.31% at the close Friday.

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Investing In The Final Frontier - Benzinga

The Infinite composites and AGM and have combined to develop the material for the space exploration – Industry Reporter

Graphene materials maker Applied Graphene Materials (AGM) and weight vessel producer Infinite Composites Technologies have teamed up to build up a composite material for space investigation.Preceding this headway, AGM and Infinite Composites directed an across the board item improvement and testing program.The association saw the utilization of AGMs graphene innovation in two gum frameworks for cryogenic weight tanks.These vessels are as of now being investigated by NASA for use in a few spaceflight missions, just as International Space Station Experiments (MISSE), Artemis and Lunar Gateway programs.The consolidation of AGMs graphene innovation has helped the compartments in finishing their first fluid oxygen stacking test at - 300F.The utilization of AGM innovation brought about the expulsion of almost all microfractures in tar tests.Checking electron magnifying instrument procedures were utilized to perform point by point assessments of the composite structure.Applied Graphene Materials CEO Adrian Potts stated: "AGM is pleased to work with the Infinite Composites group on this energizing improvement exertion to help the eventual fate of room flight and practical transportation."In requesting applications, for example, this, where disappointment isnt an alternative, it is satisfying that our graphene scatterings are driving the exhibition of composite materials. We compliment the Infinite Composites group and anticipate adding to encourage triumphs."In July, Infinite Composites won Oklahomas Small Business Innovative Research award contract from NASA.Under the Nasa MISSE program, the proposition will test Infinite Composites materials for cryogenic tanks outside the ISS.

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The Infinite composites and AGM and have combined to develop the material for the space exploration - Industry Reporter

Virgin Orbit Is Planning An Ambitious Mission To Mars In 2022 – Forbes

NASA's MarCO spacecraft became the smallest satellites to reach Mars last year.

Richard Bransons Virgin Orbit, a sister company to the space tourism-focused Virgin Galactic, has announced today it intends to launch an ambitious mission to Marsas soon as three years from now opening a new window into interplanetary Solar System exploration.

In a statement released today, the company said it was working with the Polish company SatRevolution to develop a mission to send the worlds first dedicated commercial small satellite mission to Mars. The mission would launch on LauncherOne, an air-launch rocket being designed by the company to operate from its modified Boeing 747 plane, called Cosmic Girl.

We have already seen the incredible utility of small satellites here in Earth orbit, and were thrilled to start providing dedicated launches to deep space, Virgin Orbits Vice President of Business Development Stephen Eisele said in the statement.

Working with SatRevolution and a handful of Polish universities as part of a Mars consortium, Virgin Orbit said it would be designing three scientific missions to travel to Mars, with the first launch expected no sooner than 2022.

Details on the missions havent been revealed yet, but the company noted that spacecraft as small as 50 kilograms would be used to image Mars and its moon Phobos, analyze the Martian atmosphere, and even look for subsurface water.

California-based Virgin Orbit has yet to launch one of its LauncherOne rockets to orbit, but it hopes to do so for the first time later this year. The company plans to operate from multiple spaceports including the Mojave Air and Space Port in California and the under-development Cornwall Spaceport in the U.K.

With a lifting capability of up to 500 kilograms to orbit per launch, the two-stage LauncherOne vehicle measuring 16 meters long is known as a smallsat launcher, comparable to the Electron rocket operated by Rocket Lab from New Zealand. However, a spokesperson for the company said deep space missions such as this were possible with the addition of a third stage, despite the small size of the rocket.

Using a small third stage it is possible to mount missions to Mars, Venus, and the asteroid belt, the spokesperson noted in an email. We believe this could be used to put something in orbit [around Mars], not just a flyby.

LauncherOne will launch from the company's Cosmic Girl plane.

Its understood that owing to the amount of fuel required to reach Mars, only about 10% of the rockets lifting capability could be taken up by the satellite. That should be enough to launch a small satellite to Mars, however, and such missions are not unprecedented.

In November 2018, NASAs InSight lander touched down on Mars, aided by two small CubeSats that had traveled with the mission called MarCO-A and MarCO-B. These small spacecraft weighing 13.5 kilograms each relayed data from the lander back to Earth, giving mission operators rapid information on the successful landing.

Getting to Mars will be no mean feat, but if Virgin Orbit can successfully place small satellites into orbit around the Red Planet, it would open up a huge swathe of possible missions to companies and universities. Already some researchers are looking at ways such small spacecraft might make the journey to Mars using novel propulsion technologies.

Polish scientists and engineers are ready to develop the first-ever interplanetary scientific CubeSat mission, Grzegorz Zwoliski, the president of SatRevolution, said in the statement. The project will accelerate the development of small satellites and of lightweight space science instrument technology.We want Poland to be the go-to country for small interplanetary spacecraft.

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Virgin Orbit Is Planning An Ambitious Mission To Mars In 2022 - Forbes

Space pianos and upside-down shoes: innovations for life in space – CBC.ca

Space, animminent frontier? Sands Fish, a scientist and researcher, thinks so.

And so do many others who work with him at the MIT Media Lab's Space Exploration Initiative in Boston.

In the lab, Fish and a team of artists, scientists, engineers and designers work on innovative design projects with the goal of translating life on Earth to life in space.

These projects must take into account factors like zero gravity and the quirks of human interaction, among other things.

It's not all complicated technology, either. Things we take for granted in our everyday lives like furniture, shoesand even our hairstyles would have to be altered in order to live comfortably in the great beyond.

On Monday, Fish spoke with Doug Dirks on The Homestretch.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Q: What's the MITMedia space lab all about and what do you do there?

A: The space exploration initiative at the Media Lab is basically a lab where we think about things that are not typically explored in space.

So you can imagine it takes a lot of safety concern, engineering and science to make what happens in space happen. But we're more concerned with all of the things that aren't typically researched in space. Things like art, design and culture.

Q: You did two test flights in zero gravity. What did you test on those particular flights?

A: [For the]first one, we built a musical instrument that's supposed to be performed in zero gravity, as opposed to on the ground.

If you think about a piano, it wouldn't work in zero gravity because it has counterweights that bring the keys back up once you press them.

We created a musical instrument that tries to capture that poetic motion that you see when things float around in zero gravity.

As the instrument floats around in microgravity, you get some notes that maybe are really low and quiet when it's moving slowly. But if you spin it around, it will spin in front of you without you holding on to it, then you'll get a crescendo and you'll get louder notes and then higher notes.

Q: What about the impact of gravity on things like roots and plants and how they grow?

A: Well, on a planetary surface, it depends on how strong the gravity is. In orbit and in microgravity, it's a little bit more complicated.

A lot of people have seen how water behaves [in space] and basically forms these spheres.

You can't really pour water in microgravity into dirt and expect it to saturate the soil, and so you get things like root rot.

Q: Your research involved interviewing a number of astronauts and one of them talked about hair being an issue. What's that about?

A: I was talking to CadyColeman, who is an astronaut who was up at the International Space Station, and I was asking her how she thought culture was going to evolve once we're living in space in a more long-term basis.

She immediately said that she thought hairstyles were going to change.

When she went up there, she wanted to grow her hair out really long so that it was absolutely clear in photographs that a woman was in space.

But when shebraided her hair to keep it kind of out of her own face and others', she realized the texture of the braid was the same texture as the Velcro that they used to keep everything down up there.

You can imagine what happened. She would get caught on something in the wall.

The simple solution I guess would be for everybody to shave their head, right? But I'm pretty sure that that's not the future of hairstyles.

Q: What about shoes? Will we even need shoes [in space]?

A: [Astronauts] usually wear socks, but they tend to complain about pain on the tops of their feet instead of the bottom.

[It] makes sense intuitively. We're not being pressed down against the floor, so we don't really need that.

If you want to stay in one place in zero gravity, you've got to hook your feet under metal bars or straps.

I designed some sneakers that actually inverted that design and basically put the sole on the top of the sneaker instead of the bottom.

That's something we're prototyping now and we tested out on the last zero gravity flight that we went on.

Q: What about the impact on furniture design?

A: There's no up and down in space. So in space architecture, the walls can be the ceilings, the floors can be the walls.

That fundamentally changes the assumptions that you use when you're designing for something like furniture.

Q: How important do you think all this is, addressing mental wellness in space?

A: It's so important to study design and culture and art and how that evolves in space because none of us really want to just work all day and then go to sleep and then get up and work again.

What are the mundane everyday details that we'll have as comforts in space? I think that we haven't studied that quite as much as we could have because we're more focused on scientific and engineering missions. But that's going to become more and more important as we spend more time in space.

Q: Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos would have us believe that we're all going to be going into space here in the next five to 10 years. What do you think?

A: That sounds a bit aggressive.

I'm suspicious of any one person that thinks they know exactly how the future of space is going to go.

I think I'm more interested in trying to build platforms and kind of democratize access to space so that more people can contribute to that vision.

Fish is in Calgary to share some of these ideas at the sixth annual Camp Festival at MRU, running Oct. 7-8.

The festival brings together renowned designers, artists, inventors and professionals to share ideas with a focus this year on the mental wellness of the creative mind.

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Space pianos and upside-down shoes: innovations for life in space - CBC.ca

Life on Mars, moon tourism and an interstellar ambush: What space exploration has in store – Haaretz

In the second half of the 20th century, humankind liberated itself from the shackles of gravity and went into space. By the end of the century its robot emissaries had visited every planet in the solar system: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. After running out of planets, space agencies shifted to smaller bodies: asteroids, comets and dwarf planets such as Pluto and Ceres. Now weve exhausted those, too. Humans want to be first, and the fact is that the 10th robot on Mars isnt as exciting as the first. Accordingly, in the years ahead well see initial missions to the moons of planets, with the emphasis on the ocean worlds that orbit the outer planets, which are among the leading candidates for the existence of life elsewhere in the solar system.

The decade ahead will also be devoted to the search for life, both simple and intelligent, on exoplanets planets outside the solar system with the aid of powerful Earth-based and space-based telescopes. If the rate of expansion of human range and human curiosity in the 20th century are anything to go by, by the middle of this century, humankind will launch a first mission to the neighboring star system, Alpha Centauri.

But space is not the exclusive preserve of robots. We humans, too, deserve to stretch our legs a little and enjoy the spectacular views and the dangers that attend a journey into the expanses of this vast universe. Here, though, our biology enters the picture and it cant keep up. So, in the decade ahead we shall see American, Chinese and Indian astronauts, along with regular tourists (not necessarily in that order) returning to, of all places, the moon, a little over 50 years since the first visit there, and the end of the next decade will find astronauts and pioneer settlers on Mars. In fact, the first permanent communities in space will likely be simply in space: in a low satellite orbit around Earth, or in an elliptical orbit around the moon.

2020: Methane on Mars

Because the window of opportunity for launching spacecraft to Mars which opens biannually lasts only two weeks, in March 2020 three new rovers (robotic vehicles to explore the surface of other worlds) will be launched to Mars: NASAs March 2020 (its still waiting for a permanent name), Britains Rosalind Franklin and, a first, a Chinese rover, HX-1. The rovers will conduct astrobiological experiments in the hope of finding signs of life on Mars, in the past or the present. But none of them will be equipped with sensors capable of solving the most urgent scientific riddle on the red planet: the source of its methane.

Here on Earth, methane gas is emitted primarily by microbes, and the suns ultraviolet radiation breaks up the gas relatively quickly. Which is why its seasonal presence in the thin Martian air is surprising. If the source is indeed biological, the phenomenon could be the swan song of bacteria that became extinct on Mars millions of years ago, with the methane they emitted into the depths now slowly being released onto the surface.

According to another scenario, Mars is still pulsing with life in the depths, which thaw with the advent of summer. The European-Russian orbiter ExoMars has been sampling the methane emissions since 2016, so that we can expect to get an answer during the coming year. If it also fails, and the new rovers dont succeed in finding samples of life on or near the surface, we will just have to wait patiently for initial physical samples from Mars, though they will not reach Earth before the 2030s.

At the same time, the China National Space Administration will launch the first section of what will become, by 2022, a large, manned space station, intended to compete with the International Space Station. The station will be based on the successful experiments of the Chinese with two smaller space stations, Tianzhou-1 and Tianzhou-2, and will provide long-term quarters for up to three taikonauts, as Chinese astronauts are called.

And Elon Musks SpaceX company is expected to complete its Starlink project: 12,000 satellites that will net the skies and provide internet to every person in every place on the planet and to future Mars settlers. Hot Televisions customer service isnt answering? Youre stuck in a volcanic crater and need to check your frequent flyer miles? Take out a phone and connect to the space-based internet.

2021: James Webb reports

In March 2021, following numberless delays, NASA will at last launch the James Webb Space Telescope, the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. The new telescope will be launched to Lagrange 2, a relatively stable point between the gravitational forces of Earth and the sun, 1.5 million kilometers from Earth. The advanced space telescope will be able to see galaxies more distant and ancient than anything previously known in history, and even supply us with a first direct photograph of a planet in another star system.

When the present author came into the world, the notion of exoplanets was only a theory. Now we know of 4,000 such worlds, some of them in the habitable zone at the right distance from their mother star to enable the existence of liquid water on the surface and of Earth size. After the Kepler and TESS 1 telescopes told us where the planets are hiding in the stars dazzling light, like coins under a flashlight, the next stage will be to understand what is going on there. James Webb which is named for an early administrator of NASA will be able to analyze the light refracted from the atmospheres of these planets, and perhaps even to confirm or deny the existence of life in their close proximity. JWST will be the pioneer of photographing the exoplanets, and in the third decade of the 21st century will be replaced by more advanced and more precise telescopes, whose entire purpose will be to analyze closely the reflection of the starsin the skies of foreign worlds.

2022: Juice on the ice

The European Space Agency will launch the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (aka JUICE, because every mission needs an acronym). It will explore the giant planets icy moons Europa, Ganymede and Callisto in order to determine whether they contain an environment that is appropriate for the existence of life as we know it. The three moons are worlds of water possessing an ice envelope. The gravity from gaseous Jupiter warms and nourishes the liquid water below the frozen envelope, and as we know, where there is water, there is life. The moons are considered the best candidates for life in the solar system, along with Mars, of course, and Enceladus and Titan, which are both moons of Saturn. JUICE will only reach Jupiters system in 2030, so if you absolutely must know whether there is life on Callisto, you should give up smoking until at least 2033.

NASA will also launch the initial section of the first manned moon-orbiting space station, Lunar Gateway, which will orbit Earths satellite elliptically at a distance ranging from 1,500 kilometers to 70,000 kilometers from the lunar surface. The station will serve as a transition point for astronauts and robots on the way to the moon, Mars and Venus. According to the plan, the first manned space ferry will dock at the station in 2024 and will enable the first Americans to make a return trip to the moon. In 2033, the Americans will use the station to refuel a first manned mission to Mars.

On the other hand, NASAs concept of duty-free in space has drawn heavy flak, with many scientists arguing that the shortest way between two points, such as Earth and the moon, or Earth and Mars, is simply a straight line. At the moment, the expensive program is well-financed, but its possible we will see a diversion of budgets in the direction of manned missions to the moon and Mars with a more competitive timetable, especially if the plans of the Indians and the Chinese to launch manned spacecraft prove viable.

2023: First space tourist

SpaceX will launch the first space tourist, the Japanese billionaire and art collector Yusaku Maezawa, who will enter into a lunar orbit.

2024: The race resumes

SpaceX will launch a first manned mission to Mars. In Elon Musks vision, the first settlers will arrive on Mars in 2025. Their task will be to prepare a base, and particularly the fuel, for those who will follow. How will it be done? The thin Martian air is rich in carbon dioxide (CO2), and the frozen Martian soil is not lacking in ice (H2O). From them, oxygen (O2) for breathing and methane (CH4) for fuel can be produced. The ultimate vision of SpaceX is a thriving city of a million people, who will travel from Earth to Mars in a thousand flights of 100 passengers each by the end of the 21st century.

Alongside the first manned mission to Mars, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, JAXA, will take advantage of the window of opportunity to send a first expedition to explore the small Mars moons, Phobos and Deimos. The mission, called Martian Moons eXploration, or MMX, will enter into orbit around Mars in 2025 and will land a German-French rover on one of the two moons, to explore its surface. Soil samples will be flown back and reach Earth labs in 2029 the first samples in history from the Mars system (but not yet the samples we need in order to determine conclusively whether there is or was life on Mars itself).

But 2024 is also zero hour for the new moon race. The United States has announced that it intends to land astronauts on the moon by 2024 as part of the new Artemis program, sister to Apollo. The Indians are hoping to beat the Americans to the punch and land astronauts on the moon as early as 2022. The Chinese, for their part, have stated that they intend to have taikonauts on the moon in the coming decade. Nongovernmental players, such as SpaceX and Blue Origin, the latter founded by Amazon owner Jeff Bezos, are also taking part in the new moon race, and have set 2024 as their target year. But they will likely act as NASA subcontractors in this race.

Finally, in 2024, the International Space Station is scheduled to conclude its scientific role when NASA ends its participation in whats said to be the most expensive project in human history. The station will probably be transferred to commercial companies, for example tourism and pharmaceutical firms. Beyond the terrific fun of floating in microgravity, the low air-pressure conditions in space allow for amazingly rapid experiments with medications, and the pharmacological giants are already ogling the white elephant thats floating in space. With the lifting of the limitation on profit-generating research studies in space, the International Space Station will become an extremely lucrative business for its founding partners.

2025: Europes water

The thermoelectric radioisotope generators in the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft, which produce power from radioactive decay, will no longer be able to supply electricity to scientific instruments. The two spacecraft, which were launched in 1977 and were the first to leave the solar system, will continue their interstellar voyage eternally (or until they collide with something), but communication with them will be lost and we wont hear from them anymore. Go in peace!

In parallel, NASA will launch the Europe Clipper, an orbiter that will map Jupiters ice moon. Below the ice covering of about 100 kilometers on Europa lies a global ocean, which is heated above the freezing point by the powerful tides of Jupiter, the gaseous giant. The missions purpose will be to find a landing zone for the European Space Agencys Europa Lander. It will be launched separately in 2025 and will touch down on one of the fault lines of the ice, where it will acquire a direct approach to water and analyze its composition in order to determine whether there is life below the surface whose astonishing smoothness is itself suspicious.

2026 Titans methane lakes

NASA will launch the rotorcraft Dragonfly to Titan, Saturns singular, intriguing moon. Since Titans atmosphere is four times as dense as ours, the eight-rotor drone will not be essentially different from unmanned aircraft that we see on Earth. Dragonfly will reach Saturns system in 2034, carry out dozens of flights in Titans sky, and land to take samples from a large number of sites, in its search for life on this rich, frozen world.

Titan, the largest of Saturns moons, is considered one of the leading candidates for the existence of life in the solar system. Its the only body in the solar system, with the exception of Earth, of course, on whose surface whole lakes have been found in a liquid state. The lakes on frozen Titan, however, consist not of water but of liquid methane. Here on Earth, all living creatures use water as a solvent (matter that it is capable of dissolving other matter) for their biochemical activity; however, alternative theories of biochemistry maintain that liquid methane can serve as a life-supporting solvent. Will we find methane-based life on Titan?

2028: Interstellar ambush

The European Space Agency will launch Comet Interceptor, a bold mission that will set a space ambush for a comet, asteroid or any other object that will infiltrate from another star system and will map it by means of three separate spacecraft. The mission was planned within the framework of drawing conclusions from the case of Oumuamua, the first object in history positively identified as having come from outside the solar system before passing through it, but which disappeared before it could be investigated. Comet Interceptors three spacecraft will lie in ambush at Lagrange 2 for the next interstellar guest, and will be hurtled toward it when it shows up, in the hope of getting a first close-up glimpse of an object that was formed in another star system.

2029: Closest asteroid

On April 13, 2029, the frightening asteroid Apophis will approach to within 31,000 kilometers of Earth a tenth of the distance to the moon and closer to the ground than some of our manmade satellites. The asteroid, which has a diameter of about 375 meters, is not expected to strike either Earth or the moon, but it will be close enough to be seen even without a telescope, including in the skies above Israel.

2035: Americas choice

NASA will launch the space telescope Habitable Exoplanet Observatory, or HabEx, to Lagrange 2. From there, the telescope will be able to scan thousands of exoplanets in a search for biological and technological signatures in the light reflected from the worlds atmospheres, such as a suspicious absorption of water molecules or emission of carbon dioxide. If simple or complex life exists in our neighborhood of the galaxy, HabEx will be able to identify it even where its predecessor, the James Webb Space Telescope, could not.

At the moment, HabEx is in competition with LUVOIR, a more expensive multipurpose telescope, which would be launched in 2039 and be capable of performing other tricks beyond searching for life, such as photographing ancient and remote galaxies from the beginning of the universe. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences and Congress are supposed to choose between these two projects immediately after next years presidential election.

2036: Different star system

Breakthrough Starshot, a space initiative of the billionaires Yuri Milner and Mark Zuckerberg and the scientists Stephen Hawking and Avi Loeb, will launch the first of thousands of nano-spacecraft toward the closest star system to us, which is 4.37 light years away. The spacecraft will be accelerated to a speed of about 20 percent of the speed of light by means of Earth-based lasers, and would be expected to reach the triple-star system of Alpha Centauri around 20 years later in 2056. The images that will be sent back from Alpha Centauri to the solar system will travel at the speed of light and will take four years to reach Earth, taking us to 2060. Members of Gen Y or Gen Z toddlers you are likely to be the first to feast your eyes on another star system.

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Life on Mars, moon tourism and an interstellar ambush: What space exploration has in store - Haaretz

The Future of Space Exploration: 50 Years of Innovation, Inspiration and Achievement Now. Powered by – Now. Powered by Northrop Grumman.

Our Legacy

Here Men From the Planet Earth First Set Foot Upon the Moon, July 1969 A.D. We Came in Peace For All Mankind Apollo 11 Plaque

On the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrongs giant leap, we celebrate the work dedicated to achieving the impossible.

NASA required craft capable of conquering Earths orbit for liftoff. Northrop Grumman heritage companies created Pioneer, the first commercially built spacecraft. Once in orbit around our nearest neighbor, astronauts needed a ride to the surface. The Grumman Corporation designed, assembled, integrated and tested the Lunar Module (LM). Heritage companies TRW and Westinghouse developed the lunar excursion model descent engine (LEMDE) and the lightweight, low-power camera used to capture humanitys first steps on the moon, respectively.

Across the sea of space, the stars are other suns. Carl Sagan

Apollo 11 marked a new era in exploration. Today, Northrop Grumman is developing the next generation of space exploration technologies. The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) has already discovered new exoplanets and supernovae, while the soon-to-launch James Webb Space Telescope will study every phase in the history of our universe from the Big Bang to the formation of life-supporting solar systems.

From the Sea of Tranquility to the origins of the universe, were pushing the boundaries of space exploration. Discover your future with Northrop Grumman.

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The Future of Space Exploration: 50 Years of Innovation, Inspiration and Achievement Now. Powered by - Now. Powered by Northrop Grumman.

Christine Hellweg: ‘Spread the Fascination of Space Exploration!’ – Asgardia Space News

PD Dr Christine Elisabeth Hellweg Heads the Radiation Biology Department in the Institute of Aerospace Medicine. As a prominent speaker at the first Asgardian Space Science and Investment Congress in Darmstadt, Dr Hellweg answered a few questions from Asgardia Space News

The impact of space radiation remains a major limiting factor for long-term human space flights, including those to Mars. Your most recent research focuses on the effects of space radiation on humans, could you share what radiation protection methods could become available within the next 10 years? What do you think about the protective properties of water (remembering the idea of Elon Musk to wrap Martian spacecraft with water bags)?

The upcoming Moon missions give an opportunity to test a radiation protection vest using female phantoms. This vest could reduce radiation exposure, especially during solar particle events. Furthermore, the Orion spaceship is designed for optimized radiation shielding and in case of a solar particle event, the crew can use the materials to build a radiation shelter. NASA will also test a solar particle event warning system. All these measures are essential to protect from high-dose rate exposure during unpredictable solar particle events.

Materials that are composed of elements with low atomic weight, like hydrogen and water, are preferable to shield energy particles from space radiation. Using the water supply as shielding can save weight.

For the chronic low-dose exposure by galactic cosmic rays, the situation is more complicated, and it is generally assumed that weight constraints prohibit efficient spacecraft shielding, but a habitat on a planetary or Moon surface could be constructed with sufficient shielding. So currently, radiation exposure in deep space can only be limited most efficiently by reducing mission duration.

AstroRad is a radiation protection vest developed by StemRad, a start-up company sponsored by the Israel Space Agency for NASAs Exploration Mission-1. Made of polyethylene to better block harmful protons, AstroRad will cover the phantoms upper body and uterus. Scientists aim to understand how to better protect future crews.

Various strategies to reduce the deleterious effects of galactic cosmic rays were tested in animal experiments, with quite interesting results. Currently, nobody knows whether e.g. dietary measures will be effective in humans, and they cannot be considered in risk assessment as a factor that might increase the number of 'safe days in space'.

In one of your investigations, you studied the influence of Aspergillus and Penicillium fungi on the ISS materials, as well as on the astronauts' life support systems. Tell us, how dangerous are fungi and bacteria for the ISS and the crew, as well as for future lunar and Martian bases, where we will not be able to air a room or wet clean it for disinfection?

The International Space Station (ISS) is on one of the most exceptional work and living places for astronauts and scientists, but, on the other hand, a very confined and isolated habitat in an extreme and hostile environment. This state-of-the-art small enclosed volume accommodates alternating astronaut crews, which face unique circumstances including work under high pressure, a pre-defined diet and restricted hygienic practices, microgravity and radiation. These factors affect the crews immune systems which increases their susceptibility to infection in space and in space analog environments. Therefore, to guarantee the health of the astronauts, serious prevention, monitoring and mitigation measures are implemented by the space agencies to control microbial contamination in human tended space stations. The microbial populations in these human-made environments mainly come from the crew (skin, upper respiratory tract, mouth, and gastrointestinal tract), but also the surrounding environment. This microbial population is further shaped both in diversity and mass by the unique combination of space-environmental factors. Although most of the microorganisms do not pose severe risks for healthy people, the hampered immune system of astronauts combined with limited treatment, isolation, and no immediate return to Earth reinforces the requirements to stringently control microbial contamination.

Some microorganisms might even pose a risk to the material integrity of a spacecraft: these so-called technophilic microorganisms, in particular fungi, are able to corrode alloys and polymers used in spacecraft assembly. Technophilic microorganisms have caused major problems on the former Russian space station MIR, partaking in damage to structural materials as well as malfunctioning of various space systems and equipment. Specifically, filamentous fungi such as Penicillium and Aspergillus species were associated with the progressive destruction of a window in MIR's descent module, and mold on wiring connectors was associated with electrical outages.

Recent analyses of theISSmicrobiome showed that theISS microbial communities are highly similar to those present in ground-based confined indoor environments and are subject to fluctuations, although a core microbiome persists over time and locations. The genomic and physiological features selected by ISS conditions do not appear to be directly relevant to human health, although adaptations towards biofilm formation and surface interactions were observed. Results from different studies allow to question and debate the direct reason of occurring microbial contamination for crew health concern, but a broad range of studies indicate the potential threat towards material damage and degradation due to biofouling or biofilm formation.

Since total inactivation of microorganisms and the inhibition of microbial biofilm formation are almost unachievable, certain sterilization procedures must be applied to reduce microbial contamination. A certain amount of time, power and effort are inevitably required for active reduction and prevention of microbial contamination. Antimicrobial metals like silver, copper and their alloys are the subject of investigation for various applications in the healthcare sector, food industry, as antifouling-surfaces in the marine environment, cosmetics and many more. These materials provide a long lasting, intrinsic antimicrobial effect, which does not require additional maintenance. These constraints render these types of materials ideal candidates for preventing microbial contamination on limited accessible research stations such as theISS.

Future research is needed to cover larger monitoring time series to better understand the microbiome dynamics and adaptation, but also possible transmission from and to humans, as well as to the unique environment in which they live in.

Traveling to the Moon and Mars has become a priority for the world's space powers today. It is also known that in order to maintain physical health of astronauts at adequate levels, a spacecraft travelling into outer space has to be equipped with an artificial gravity device. Tell us, what developments are being carried out in this directionat the Institute of Aerospace Medicine?

The human body is designed for efficiency, which is hardly surprising as its supply of food remained uncertain during many evolutionary stages and conserving strength was important. The result is that the body noticeably reduces all functions and resources that are rarely used or not used at all in the medium to long term. The loss of strength and decrease in muscle mass that amateur athletes start to feel after a few weeks without training can reach significant levels among astronauts living in a weightless environment during prolonged space missions. In the absence of gravity, a loss of considerable muscle and bone mass occurs, bodily fluids move into the upper part of the body and the strain on the entire cardiovascular system is reduced, leading to a drop in performance. In short, degeneration in space takes place in fast-forward mode compared with Earth.

The downregulation of the immune system, as well as muscle and bone mass reduction and vision impairment are common phenomena during long-term stays in weightlessness. There is still a lack of understanding of what the underlying mechanisms are. One explanation could be the lack of input of Earth gravity. Therefore, our studies investigate the effects of the periodic gravitational influences caused by the use of a centrifuge. For the first time, with the AGBRESA bed rest study the use of artificial gravity as a possible means of preventing the negative effects of weightlessness on the human body is being investigated. Effective countermeasures against bone and muscle atrophy must be developed if astronauts are to live in space or on the moon and Marsfor long periods of time. During the three-month AGBRESAstudy with 60 days of bed rest, two thirds of the test participants will therefore be 'rotated' each day while lying in the DLRshort-arm centrifuge in the:envihab aerospace medical research facility.

Within the AGBRESA study, 24 volunteers spend 60 days in the beds. They remain there for 89 days, including the pre-test and recovery phases. All experiments, meals, and leisure pursuits take place lying down during the bed-rest phase. The participants are restricted in their movements, so that the strain on muscles, tendons and the skeletal system is reduced. The beds are angled downwards towards the head end by six degrees. This simulates the displacement of bodily fluids experienced by astronauts in a microgravity environment.

Human physiological research in weightlessness or under simulated conditions is not only important for astronauts to be able to maintain their health and performance in space, but also for people on Earth. Space medicine therefore also encompasses health research for terrestrial applications, in all areas of prevention, diagnostics and treatment. Downregulation of immune system is a common phenomenon during long-term stays in microgravity. There is still a lack of understanding what the underlying mechanisms are. One explanation could be the missing input of earths gravity. Therefore the effects of periodic gravity inputs by using a centrifuge are investigated.

What conditions need to be created in space in order for humanity to procreate? And when do you think the first healthy child will be born in space?

Currently, a pregnancy in space is not in line with radiation protection regulations, based on the recommendations of international expert groups, as the dose limit for an unborn child is 1 mSv (meaning a 1 mSv organ dose to the uterus of the mother until the end of the pregnancy). During a 6-month ISS mission, a dose of around 100 mSv can be accumulated. If we imagine a pregnancy during a deep space mission, the exposure might amount to 500 mSvduring the nine months. Ideally, we have to reduce this dose by a factor of 500! And then, we have to tackle the microgravity effects

When do you think humanity will be able to live permanently on other planets?

Currently, we have no reliable data on this topic to make a prediction.

What in your opinion Asgardia can do to help humankind explore space?

Bring the involved scientists together and spread the fascination of space exploration.

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Christine Hellweg: 'Spread the Fascination of Space Exploration!' - Asgardia Space News

Kentucky aerospace industry’s work on rocket recognized by NASA – Courier Journal

D. Stewart Ditto II, Opinion contributor Published 6:44 a.m. ET Oct. 3, 2019

NASA Administrator, Jim Bridenstine, on the new lunar program 'Artemis'. It will face a funding fight this year that could affect the 2024 timeline. USA TODAY

Kentucky is known for many things, including horse racing, bourbon, automobile manufacturingand Kentucky Fried Chicken, but its a little-known fact that the aerospace industry is a big part of our commonwealth enterprise.

Recently NASAmade a visit to our great state to recognizethree companies that contribute to its new large rocket, the Space Launch System, called SLS for short, which will launch within the next several years.

This new rocket will carry the Orion spacecraft, and together they will launch astronauts further into space than ever before. The first three missions of SLS and Orion are dedicated to first exploring space around the Moon and beyond and establishing a human presence on the moon, before venturing to further destinations. These three missions are dubbed Artemis 1, 2 and 3.

Kentucky is contributing a great deal to boost the Artemis program. Through Artemis, NASA is developing the core capabilities needed to establish a sustainable human presence on the moon and beyond, paving the way for human missions to Mars. Kentucky businesses have supported human space exploration for decades by supplying NASA programs with aluminum powders, high quality synthetic rubberand elastomer sealing used in multiple NASA programs.

Additionally, two NASA astronauts stem from Kentucky. Randy Bresnik was born on Fort Knox, and Terry Wilcutt was born in Russellville and attended Western Kentucky University.

McConnell: I'm committed to helping Kentucky's coal families. My record proves it

Below are some examples of the amazing work happening in Kentucky, by the companies visited by NASA.

Parker Hannifin Corporation is both an Orion and SLS supplier. The companys various divisions have supplied NASA with parts for many decades. Specifically, Parker Hannifin O-ring and Engineered Seals Division, based in Lexington, has been a key partner for NASAs elastomer sealing needs on many programs, including the Space Shuttle Program, from its inception all the way up to the Mars 2020 Rover and beyond.

American Synthetic Rubber Companywas built in Louisville in 1942. They began making synthetic rubber for use duringWorld War II in 1943and began making PBAA copolymer for NASA in 1957 and PBAN terpolymer in the 1960s. PBAN polymer was first used in the Minuteman I First Stage and the Polaris and Poseidon Missiles in 1960. PBAN was used for the space shuttle from 1977-2011. ASRC supplies HB polymer to Northrop Grumman for the Space Launch System rocket boosters.

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ECKART America Corporation has been manufacturing metallic pigments and powders since 1876. ECKART America produces the aluminum powder for Northrup Grumman for the SLS booster propellant at its site in Louisville. The Louisville site, then under different ownership, also manufactured the aluminum powder for the space shuttle program in the late 1980s.

I am proud of our more than 600 Kentucky companies in the aerospace and defense business that comprise 19,000 jobs in the aviation and aerospace cluster. Kentucky had more than $12.4 billionin aerospace and defense exports in 2018, making it Kentuckys No. 1exportand making Kentucky the No. 2 aerospace export state in the United States.

As we say at the Kentucky Aerospace Industry Consortium, We see limits and we test them. We see boundaries and we cross them. We think Kentucky is more than horses, bluegrassand bourbon. We see the future, and we're flying towardsit.

I feel honored to be a part of this great state, and I am excited to see our role in aerospace play out with NASA in the Artemis program. As the nation pushes the boundaries of space exploration, Kentucky will be there every step of the way.

If you want to see aerospace and aviation businesses in your region, see the map on the Kentucky Aerospace Industry Consortiums website.

D. Stewart Ditto II is executive director of theKentucky Aerospace Industry Consortium.

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Kentucky aerospace industry's work on rocket recognized by NASA - Courier Journal

How to call the International Space Station – New Scientist News

Does the ISS have a phone number? Do ISS astronauts have smartphones or handsets? And does anything in the space station ring when an audio call is set up? We spoke to the communications experts who help the world talk to astronauts on the orbiting International Space Station

By Sam Wong

Joel Kowsky/NASA via Getty Images

Two years ago,New Scientist invited European Space Agency astronaut Paolo Nespoli to speak to the audience at our science festival, live from the International Space Station. A handful of people at New Scientist Live in London got to put their questions to him directly, with some asking how the view of Earth has changed since he first went into space, and what advances in space exploration he anticipates in the next 20 years.Watch the video to see a recap.

As New Scientist Live 2019 kicks off next week, we were wondering how the process of setting up the video link worked. Do the ISS astronauts have smartphones or handsets? Does it ring when the call is set up? And does the space station have a phone number? To find out, we spoke to Chris Courtenay Taylor, a TV producer for World Wide Group who has worked for the European Space Agency for the past 20 years.

Unfortunately, it isnt possible to call, Skype or WhatsApp the ISS. It has no phone number in the traditional sense, and astronauts have to leave their smartphones at home. For private calls, the space station has an internet-connected phone system that works through a computer, which astronauts can use to call any number on Earth. Phones on the ground cannot call them back, however.

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Astronauts also have tablet computers that they can use to send emails, and although some do send tweets from orbit, these are normally emailed to their communications teams on the ground, who do the posting.

If someone does need to call the ISS, operators at mission control centres simply relay the audio through a telephone line to Houston into the very high frequency space-to-ground radio network. The phone number at NASA Johnson Space Center is +1 281-483-0123, but your chances of getting through to the ISS are slim.

When NASA sets up a video link to Earth like at New Scientist Live, astronauts only get to hear the audio side of the call. They dont get to see pictures from the event. But setting up the video link and broadcasting live pictures from low Earth orbit is no easy feat.

Since the space station crosses the horizon every 4 minutes, it is impossible to track using ground stations. To maintain the data link, NASA has a small constellation of satellites, known as Tracking and Data Relay Satellites (TDRS), which enable near constant communication between the ground and orbiting satellites. These have data rates similar to a home fibre internet connection.

NASA

Signals from TDRS are received at two NASA facilities on Earth: one at White Sands, New Mexico, and one on Guam in the Pacific. Both are connected by fibre to the main NASA communications hub.

For events in Europe, NASAs TV desk sends the pictures via a domestic satellite to Toronto, then via a transatlantic satellite to the venue.

The lag on the pictures at such events is around 5 to 6 seconds, as a result of three sets of satellite transmissions and a conversion between video standards between the US and Europe. Thats fine everybody expects there to be a delay, says Courtenay Taylor. Five seconds is not unmanageable.

Remarkably, it is rare for the connection to fail. Courtenay Taylor can recall only one such mishap in the past 10 years.

Communication and outreach is an important duty for astronauts, says Marco Trovatello at the European Astronaut Centre, but making time for link-ups like these is challenging. Our ESA astronauts schedules are packed with science and technology experiments, ISS operations such as extravehicular activities and maintenance, so finding the slots is difficult, he says.

It is an exceptionally busy period for the ISS right now, with three new arrivals on 25 September bringing the head count up to nine. The hectic schedule, featuring many vehicle arrivals and complex spacewalks, unfortunately made it impossible to arrange another link-up with this years New Scientist Live on 10-13 October.

However, we will have a talk by Ralph Dinz Dinsley as he explores the growth of space debris. If the growth of this space junk continues unhindered, we risk losing the most useful and economically vital orbital pathways around Earth which are used by satellites like the International Space Station.

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How to call the International Space Station - New Scientist News

‘Destiny 2: Shadowkeep’ Is Ready to Kill the Past – WIRED

The moon landscape was always the first Destiny game's best trick. While its sequel has moved more in the direction of space opera, the original had a foot firmly planted in retro-futurist space exploration aesthetics and the broad optimism that comes with them. Things might be bad in Destiny's far-flung future, and evil may lurk under the moon's surface, but space is full of possibility. It's a joyful place to be, and walking on the crisp lunar surface, you're meant to be reminded of humanity's real history of space exploration and the feeling of hope that it brings. In Destiny, the moon was a place of awe.

In Destiny 2: Shadowkeep, Bungie's first major game expansion since its break with Activision, the developer allows players to return to the moon. But Shadowkeep's moon isn't a place of awe. It's a place of trauma. In the marginalia of Destiny's storytelling, which is where most of its story craft has resided until now, there's an event called the Great Disaster that looms large over the moon's history. During the event, thousands of Guardiansthe same superpowered beings as the player characterdied during a failed invasion of the moon's enemy territory. In Shadowkeep, the Great Disaster has returned, as a host of ghosts from the tragedy dot the lunar landscape. The specters of these dead Guardians will ask for vengeance, cry out for salvation, or else just watch; shadows of your own character hanging dead in the sky, eyes down.

The past returns in Shadowkeep in more familiar ways, too. Old bosses from the first game's moon location and the raid set there, Crota's End, return. Much of Shadowkeep's storyline is a retread of familiar locales and foes. Instead of a nostalgic vacation to days of gaming past, Shadowkeep explicitly renders this, too, as traumatic. These are not resurrected enemies but weaponized memories, living nightmares that need to be vanquished in order for the storyline to move forward. Whereas many players remember these encounters fondly, in the game they're only considered as sites of horror. This gesture doesn't critique the violence of Destinythe fact that the game relies on killing things ad infinitumbut it does consider that, in the universe of Destiny, this violence leaves marks. The constant war the players fought on this moon for years has left an impression, and now that impression is back for revenge.

The decision to make Destiny 2's most blatant fan service into its first attempt at horror is a curious one, made more interesting by the way Shadowkeep changes how the game plays. Player power has been decreased almost across the board, with weapons generally doing less base damage and special abilities taking longer to charge up for use. Partially done for balance reasons, this is also an attempt to reset the playing field in order to introduce a more explicitly stat-based armor system, which allows players to customize their gear to more deliberately build the type of character they want to play. The amount of fine detail attached to this decision is immense, but suffice it to say that every returning player entered Shadowkeep to find themselves noticeably weaker. Matching that decision, Bungie has introduced more varied and clever difficulty to the game's encounters. Whereas before, combat in Destiny 2 typically fell into one of two categories, easy or impossible, there's now a legitimate sense of challenge. Campaign missions in Destiny expansions are often rushed through solo, and players doing that here will find themselves struggling against the moon's nightmares, outmatched for maybe the first time.

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'Destiny 2: Shadowkeep' Is Ready to Kill the Past - WIRED

Emirati researcher helps pave the way for future space exploration – The National

With Wednesdays stellar triumph of dispatching the first Emirati into space, all eyes are now firmly set on the UAEs ongoing exploration of the final frontier.

But while most of the attention surrounding the launch has rightly been focused on Hazza Al Mansouri, there are others equally hard at work behind the scenes.

Ibrahim Ahmad, 34, is a University of Cambridge graduate currently on secondment to the US space agency Nasa, in California.

He holds a doctorate in material science and while away from the UAE he is deep in research surrounding the use of complex gas sensors used in spacecraft.

The constantly evolving technology plays a vital role in missions, monitoring the concentration of gases such as oxygen, carbon dioxide and ammonia in shuttles.

If you have a room, you need to know what the level of oxygen and other gases like carbon dioxide is, Mr Ahmad told The National.

If you go to Mars, you want to know if its possible to live there. You need sensors whats the level of oxygen, of carbon dioxide?

To go to Mars, you need them [sensors] to be lightweight to save money. They [engineers] want materials that can save space.

If you use gold nanomaterials, theyre expensive, but if you use carbon, [the cost] its nothing.

Mr Ahmad is an expert on graphene, a hugely useful carbon material made up of a single layer of carbon atoms arranged hexagonally.

Since June, and supported by his employer, the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc), he has been working at the Ames Research Centre in the city of Mountain View in Silicon Valley.

Although Mr Ahmads work at Nasa could prove useful for the space sector, it could also be of value more widely, as graphene has potential applications in a range of industries, including oil and gas, lighting and telecommunications.

Graphene is chiefly seen as a crucial material owing to its strength and conducting properties; it is 200 times the strength of steel and can conduct heat and electricity.

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Emirati astronautHazza Al Mansouri gives a Q&A about life on boardthe International Space Station. Chris Whiteoak / The National

Sheikh Mohamed Bin Rashid talks with Emirati astronaut,Hazza Al Mansouri,during a live satellite feed from the International Space Station. Courtesy Dubai Media Office

The Emirati astronaut answers questions from the attendee's at the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre, Dubai. Chris Whiteoak / The National

A young boy dressed as an astronaut attends the live call withEmirati Maj Al Mansouri. Chris Whiteoak / The National

An attendee takes a photo Chris Whiteoak / The National

Hundreds were eager to hear from Maj Al Mansouri. Chris Whiteoak / The National

A young astronaut and her family at the space centre. Chris Whiteoak / The National

A girl waves the UAE flag. Chris Whiteoak / The National

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid chats to Maj Al Mansouri. Courtesy Dubai Media Office

Sheikh Mohamed Bin Rashid talks with Emirati astronaut,Hazza Al Mansouri,during a live satellite feed. Courtesy Dubai Media Office

People eat space food at the event. Chris Whiteoak / The National

Emirati astronaut, Hazza Al Mansouri, takes live Q&A from space and gives a station tour. Screengrab via Youtube Live

Emirati astronaut, Hazza Al Mansouri, takes live Q&A from space and gives a station tour. Screengrab via Youtube Live

Emirati astronaut, Hazza Al Mansouri, takes live Q&A from space and gives a station tour. Screengrab via Youtube Live

Emirati astronaut, Hazza Al Mansouri, takes live Q&A from space and gives a station tour. Screengrab via Youtube Live

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In his work at Nasa, Mr Ahmad is collaborating with researchers in China, South Korea and the United Kingdom, including scientists he worked alongside during his PhD studies, where he focused on substances made of polymers.

Some researchers are sending him graphene types to use in his research, with the hope he might jointly publish their findings.

I am trying to collaborate as much as I can, because theres no time to spend in the lab, Mr Ahmad said.

Mr Ahmad is in California thanks to Nasas international interns programme aimed at university undergraduates and postgraduates. He was supported in his application for the position by the UAE Space Agency.

Although he is classed as an intern, because he has recently completed a doctorate due to be awarded next month he can carry out research at a higher level than many others involved in the scheme.

Once he finishes at Nasa in October, Mr Ahmad will return to the UAE and take up a role with Adnoc.

He said that his time in the United States, where Teslas electric cars are a common sight on the roads, has focused his attention on the importance of transitioning to a less petroleum-dependent society.

It has also highlighted the key role that a material scientists can play in spearheading this.

We need to convert this oil and gas to something else, he said. This is what I would like to work on making our country a hub for [researching] these materials.

Updated: October 1, 2019 10:00 AM

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Emirati researcher helps pave the way for future space exploration - The National

Visually impaired kids at Space Camp learning beyond everyday world – WHNT News 19

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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - A group of students are working their way inside a new universe.

The U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville is hosting 182 children from 12 countries and 25 states. This Space Camp is geared specifically toward visually impaired students. They've been learning about rockets and outer space for the past six days.

A student from Long Island, New York is going to remember her Space Camp experience.

"Even though we can't see, or we can see, but not very well, we have all the same opportunities that those kids would have," Grace Schafer said.

Coordinator Dan Oats says it's so important for visually-impaired children to get the same opportunities as any other child.

"The kids can come here and not worry about what a shuttle looks like or what a rocket looks like, they can build one, they can crawl inside the crew cabin, they can go inside the space station, so that gives them a real hands on experience that they need to get the concept," Oats said.

Space Camp graduation is Thursday night at 8 p.m. They'll cross the stage at the Davidson Center for Space Exploration.

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Visually impaired kids at Space Camp learning beyond everyday world - WHNT News 19

Let the only local planetarium take you to the moon and stars with space shows – TCPalm

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Learn about Indian River State Colleges Hallstrom Planetarium and its upcoming shows with director Jon Bell at 4 p.m. Saturday at 3209 Virginia Ave., Fort Pierce.(Photo: LEAH VOSS/TCPALM)

The Treasure Coasts only planetarium is kicking off a year full of stars.

Learn about Indian River State Colleges Hallstrom Planetarium and its upcoming shows with director Jon Bell at 4 p.m. Saturday at 3209 Virginia Ave., Fort Pierce.

The event includes a live star talk that highlights the current evening sky, as well as telescope viewing with the Treasure Coast Astronomical Society, weather permitting.

Its the first of the planetariums free STEAM Talks on select Saturday afternoons. STEAM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math.

Topics of the 45-minute talks range from the stars to the seas. One talk includes updates on space exploration by Russell Romanella, former NASA director of safety and mission assurance. Another talk features a dynamic presentation about the story of chemistry by IRSC chemistry professor Paul Horton.

Laurie's Stories: Travel to planets, moons and stars at Treasure Coast's only planetarium

The planetariums Kid Space sky shows return 11 a.m. Oct. 19 and continues select Saturdays. Children take scientific voyages of discovery as they learn about the stars, constellations, Earth, moon, planets and exploration of outer space. All adults must be accompanied by at least one child ages 4-12. The cost is $5 each.

Learn about Indian River State Colleges Hallstrom Planetarium and its upcoming shows with director Jon Bell at 4 p.m. Saturday at 3209 Virginia Ave., Fort Pierce.(Photo: CONTRIBUTED PHOTO FROM IRSC)

The free Transit of Mercury sky-viewing event is Nov. 11. Experience guided views of the planet as it passes directly between Earth and the sun safely, through filtered telescopes.

The free Astronomy Day and Night open house is Feb. 1. It features telescopes, guest speakers, handouts, planetarium mini-shows and guided views of the sky.

Heres a list of the planetariums upcoming Starlight Series shows:

Planetarium shows are recommended for ages 10 and older. Bring a sweater or light jacket because the air temperature is kept at 72 degrees.

The cost for most planetarium shows is $5. To buy tickets online, go to irsc.edu. To buy tickets from the box office, call 800-220-9915 or go to the McAlpin Fine Arts Center lobby from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday.

The planetarium uses a 360-degree immersive digital OmniSTAR projection system and a state-of-the-art Spitz automated projector to recreate the sky, sun, moon and planets among the stars on the 40-foot dome ceiling during shows.

Laurie K. Blandford is TCPalm's entertainment reporter and columnist dedicated to finding the best things to do on the Treasure Coast. Read her weekly column,Laurie's Stories, on TCPalm.com.Follow her on Twitter at@TCPalmLaurieor Facebook atfaceboook.com/TCPalmLaurie.

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Let the only local planetarium take you to the moon and stars with space shows - TCPalm

Rugby World Cup 2019 reaches new broadcast heights in space! – Rugby World Cup 2019

Rugby-mad Italian astronaut will watch his beloved Azzurri take on South Africa from the International Space Station, thanks to a special broadcast feed from World Rugby.

TOKYO, 3 Oct -Rugby World Cup 2019 is setting new broadcast records on and off the planet.

No sooner had World Rugby confirmed a record single-market live audience for Japans stunning win over Ireland of 28.9 per cent, the governing body announced it was broadcasting the tournament to the International Space Station.

Italian European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano is a massive rugby fan and although he has taken over command of the International Space Station this week some 408 kilometres above Japan, he will be able to watch his beloved Azzurri take on South Africa on Friday thanks to World Rugby.

In what will be the first Rugby World Cup broadcast in space, World Rugby is providing a special feed for Parmitano, who believes that rugby has similar qualities to those required to run a successful space mission.

Rugby is a fantastic game that celebrates friendship and teamwork, he said.

Just like you have to work together to achieve a try, we on board the International Space Station have to collaborate with a team of astronauts and ground personnel from all over the world in order to achieve our objective, our try, which is space exploration, technology and science.

Celebrating sport, your sport of community, teamwork and competition in the name of sportsmanship we on board the station cooperate together to look for a better world.

Taking into consideration all the common factors that link our two worlds I wish to wish you again good luck for this championship and this important match!

Italy currently top Pool B and captain Sergio Parisse, who will be making his 142nd test appearance against South Africa to become the second most capped player of all time behind Richie McCaw, said: It is an incredible feeling to know that the test match on Friday will reach the space station rugby and Rugby World Cup truly are without borders.

It is the first time that a Rugby World Cup match is being shown in space and we are lucky to have an Italian supporter up there. We hope to be able to share the joy with you and hope to gift you some beautiful emotions.

Back on earth, Rugby World Cup is capturing the imagination of fans around the world with the latest broadcast figures demonstrating that the sport is reaching new audiences.

Japans second match against Ireland saw a peak audience figure of 28.9 per cent on NHK, a figure that is likely to have delivered a live audience of approximately 30 million given the prime-time slot.

In the UK, ITV recorded a 29.6 per cent audience share for the same match with 1.8 million watching despite the early hour, while 1.2 million watched the later South Africa versus Namibia match, demonstrating the popularity of teams beyond their own countries.

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Rugby World Cup 2019 reaches new broadcast heights in space! - Rugby World Cup 2019