Despite COVID-19 pandemic, Mars missions all over the world are on a roll due to this big reason – Jagran English

This perfect alignment comes every 26 months, when Mars and Earth happen to be on the same side of the sun and are closer than usual.

The summer of 2020 was supposed to witness multiple space launches all the way to Red planet, which we desis love to regard as the Mangal (literally meaning auspicious). And unlike everything that the COVID-19 has placed a brake on this year, most Mars missions are continuing to accelerate at their designated pace, and schedules.

A total of four space missions were supposed to get launched to Mars inn 2020, which includes three rovers from various space agencies all over the world.

Last week China launched its Tianwen-1 (carrying a rover) and United Arab Emirates launched its Hope Probe from Japan's Tanegashima Space Centre (TNSC). On Thursday, 30th July, NASA is scheduled to launch its Perseverance rover. However, the Mars mission of European Space Agency in collaboration with Russian space agency ROSCOSMOS had to be postponed due to Coronavirus pandemic.

How 2020 becomes so important for Martian space missions?

For comparison, the global favourite space exploration spot of 2000s the Moon had just six missions in total between 2000 and 2009. The obvious technological advancement ever since has its due role to play, along with some encouraging life-supporting evidences which the previous Mars missions have collected. But the reason goes much deeper than that which is pushing Space Agencies to launch their missions specifically in the summer of 2020.

The precise moment to fly from Earth to Mars comes every 26 months. This is because the planets do not move in circular orbits, they are more elliptical or oval shaped. And also, since the Martian neighbour (Jupiters gaseous composition) continues to affect the shape of Martian orbit, a near-perfect alignment becomes all the more important.

This perfect alignment comes every 26 months, when Mars and Earth happen to be on the same side of the sun and are closer than usual. Since Mars is closer to Earth during this time, it means fuel needs to be put on the spacecraft, drastically reducing the rare resources that Space Missions are supposed to employ for such probes. According to NASA, this launch window every 26 months last less than a month. For example, all four space missions mentioned above had their initial launch schedules between 20th July and 15th August. The currently postponed European Space Agency-ROSCOSMOSs Mars mission will now take off from Earth between August-October, 2022, when the next such launch window will come, CNN reported.

According to NASA, Mars will make its closest approach to Earth in October this year, at only 38.6 million miles from Earth, the greatest distance between Earth and Mars can reach as many as 249 million miles.

Indias Mars Mission

Seven years after its launch, ISROs Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), also called Mangalyaan, continues to be active. Interestingly, it was initially estimated to be active for just six months, but has survived more than two Martian years by smashing all skeptical anticipations.

Earlier this month, Mangalyaan captured the images of Phobos, the biggest Moon of Mars.

A follow-up mission Mangalyaan-2 remains in development, and is scheduled to be launched in 2024, which, according to ISRO, will reportedly have a greater scientific payload for more proficient exploration of the Auspicious planet.

Posted By: Abhinav Gupta

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Despite COVID-19 pandemic, Mars missions all over the world are on a roll due to this big reason - Jagran English

Second Stimulus Bill: Pentagon Programs Gutted By Trump For Border Wall Would Have Funding Restored By GOP – Forbes

TOPLINE

Buried in Senate Republicans new coronavirus package is hundreds of millions of dollars in funding for Pentagon projects that President Trump gutted to build his border wall, the Washington Post reported Tuesday, part of a string of unrelated expenditures included by GOP lawmakers in their relief bill.

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 24: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks before signing executive orders on ... [+] prescription drug prices in the South Court Auditorium at the White House on July 24, 2020 in Washington, DC. President Trump signed a series of four executive orders aimed at lowering prices that for prescription drugs in the United States. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Earlier this year, the Trump administration diverted $3.8 billion earmarked for military construction projects and counternarcotics funding on the border wall, several times what Congress allocated for the administration to spend.

The move ignited a back-and-forth with Congress, with lawmakers on both sides objecting while the Trump administration argued it had the power to reprogram money without congressional approval.

Appropriations Chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), along with other Senate Republicans, spearheaded the effort to restore the funding, packing hundreds of millions of dollars in funding into the GOP stimulus bill for Navy planes and ships and Air Force aircraft that were zeroed out earlier this year.

Lawmakers of both parties have criticized proposals to include funding for unrelated projects in the upcoming relief bill, including a pitch to include $1.75 billion for a new FBI headquarters that was pushed by the White House.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.)toldCNN that hes not particularly supportive of the funding for the FBI building and Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.)saidthere are a hundred problems with the plan, when asked about the FBI building.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) broke with the Trump administration on Tuesday, telling reporters hes entirely opposed to the idea of including funding for a FBI building.

The GOP proposal includes $260 million for a Navy Expeditionary Fast Transport ship, funding that the Trump administration had sought to almost zero out this year. The ship is built by Austal USA, a company thats located in Shelbys home state of Alabama, as the Post first reported.

$1 billion. The amount of money earmarked for the Navys P-8A Poseidon aircraft program in the GOP stimulus plan. The Trump administration had taken $180 million from the program earlier this year.

The bill also includes $720 million for the Air Forces C-130J Aircraft program and $686 million for F-35 aircrafts. The Trump administration had stripped $365 million and $156 million away from each program, respectively.

It protects all of the downstream supplier base and those are the place that are hurting the worst, a Shelby aide speaking on condition of anonymity told the Washington Post, defending the decision to include military funding in a relief bill.

Republicans included over $1 billion for NASA in the stimulus bill, including $818 million for space exploration.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) lashed out at Republicans for the military spending included in their relief package in a message on Twitter Monday:

GOP coronavirus bill replaces money for Pentagon projects Trump raided for border wall (Washington Post)

Trump Administration Diverts $3.8 Billion In Pentagon Funding To Border Wall (NPR)

Proposal To Use Covid-19 Funds For New FBI Building Draws Bipartisan Rebukes (Forbes)

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Second Stimulus Bill: Pentagon Programs Gutted By Trump For Border Wall Would Have Funding Restored By GOP - Forbes

Turkey to suspend research in waters disputed with Greece – Stars and Stripes

Turkey to suspend research in waters disputed with Greece

ISTANBUL Turkey will suspend research for oil and gas exploration in disputed waters in the Eastern Mediterranean that abruptly raised military tensions with neighboring Greece, a top Turkish official said Tuesday.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told his aides to "put this on hold for some time," presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin told Turkish broadcaster CNN Turk.

Last week, Turkey announced plans to dispatch research vessel Oruc Reis and two support ships to carry out operations through Aug. 2 south of the Greek islands of Rhodes, Karpathos, and Kastellorizo. The islands are close to Turkey's coastline.

The declaration on Navtex, the international maritime safety system, angered Greece and prompted criticism by the United States, France, and other European countries.

"Greece gave an extreme reaction after our Navtex as if we will go occupy Meis Island (Kastellorizo)," Kalin said on CNN Turk. He said the planned area of exploration stood about 180 kilometers away from the small island.

"Nevertheless, our president said 'since these negotiations are continuing, let's see what happens and put this on hold for some time," Kalin was quoted as saying.

NATO allies Greece and Turkey are at odds over drilling rights in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Turkey has accused Greece of trying to exclude it from the benefits of potential oil and gas finds in the Aegean Sea and Eastern Mediterranean, arguing that sea boundaries for commercial exploitation should be divided between the Greek and Turkish mainlands and not include the Greek islands on an equal basis. Athens counters that Turkey's position is a violation of international law.

"Everyone should continue working on their own continental shelves and conduct joint work in contested areas," Kalin said. He also said that bilateral issues with Greece should be solved through dialogue rather than through threats on Turkey's bid for European Union membership.

Kalin said: "Within the framework of our president's orders, we are ready to speak about all bilateral issues with Greece without preconditions: the Aegean, continental shelves, islands, air space, exploration and the Eastern Mediterranean."

In Athens, Greek government spokesman Stelios Petsas welcomed Turkey's decision. He described the latest research mission as "illegal" but added that he hoped the two countries could have substantive talks.

"This is a positive development," Petsas told private Skai television. "We want to have open channels of communication with Turkey and to discuss the issue that has been plaguing the two sides for many decades now: The demarcation of maritime zones. This is the issue, which of course needs the proper framework to move forward."

The two historic regional rivals have come close to war three times since the early 1970s, including over offshore exploitation rights, ownership of an uninhabited Aegean Sea islet. The most serious confrontation was in 1974, when Turkey invaded the Eastern Mediterranean island nation of Cyprus, following an abortive coup by supporters of union with Greece.

Germany has led a diplomatic effort between the two sides, and earlier this month hosted a meeting that included Kalin and the head of the Greek prime minister's diplomatic office. The meeting, held in Berlin, was revealed several days later by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

___

Derek Gatopoulos in Athens contributed.

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Breaking News – Discovery and Science Channel Partner with The Washington Post to Capture Live Splashdown Return of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Spacecraft…

DISCOVERY AND SCIENCE CHANNEL PARTNER WITH THE WASHINGTON POST TO CAPTURE LIVE SPLASHDOWN RETURN OF SPACEX'S CREW DRAGON SPACECRAFT AFTER HISTORIC SPACE DOCKING

'SPACE LAUNCH LIVE: SPLASHDOWN,' a Multiplatform Event, to Simulcast Live Coast to Coast on Sunday, August 2, at 1 PM ET/10 AM PT on Discovery and Science Channel

(LOS ANGELES) - Discovery and Science Channel announced today it will capture the incredible live splashdown return of the NASA launch of SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft after docking the past two months at the International Space Station (ISS). SPACE LAUNCH LIVE: SPLASHDOWN a multiplatform event, will air live on Sunday, August 2, at 1 PM ET/10 AM PT on Discovery and Science Channel.

This past May, Discovery and Science Channel worked with The Washington Post to document the first crewed mission from the United States since the end of the shuttle program in 2011. This successful NASA launch from Kennedy Space Center was a partnership between NASA and SpaceX, marking the first U.S. crewed mission to orbit on a privately built spacecraft. Astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley traveled to the ISS in the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft, propelled by the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. Discovery and Science Channel's coverage drove record ratings -- ranking as the #1 telecast for the entire day across major demos and the highest-rated telecast in the history of Science Channel.

"This is the type of coverage that viewers can only find on Discovery and Science Channel," said Scott Lewers, Executive Vice President of Multiplatform Programming, Factual & Head of Content, Science. "With the incredible access of The Washington Post, we spent over a year documenting SpaceX's journey to become the first private company to launch American astronauts into space and we're excited to see their safe return back to Earth. Our live coverage will take viewers inside their incredible journey home."

This live event, capturing the first landing at sea for U.S. astronauts since 1975, is also made in partnership with The Washington Post and staff writer Christian Davenport, whose depth of experience allowed him to gain inside access to key players. Davenport is one of the country's leading chroniclers of the space industry. His background and experience will add keen insight to the day's event, as a co-host of the live broadcast. Davenport joined The Post in 2000 and was on a team that won a Peabody Award in 2010 for its work on veterans with traumatic brain injuries and has been on reporting teams that were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize three times. He is the author of two books, "The Space Barons: Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk and the Quest to Colonize the Cosmos" (2018) and "As You Were: To War and Back with the Black Hawk Battalion of the Virginia National Guard" (2009). He has also served as a Public Policy Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and a fellow at the Alicia Patterson Foundation.

"The Post has long covered this industry and continues to bring readers in-depth reporting on the new space endeavors with unparalleled access and compelling storytelling," said Emilio Garcia-Ruiz, managing editor for The Washington Post. "We are excited to once again partner with Discovery to deliver coverage of this historic event and bring our journalism to a live TV audience."

"We are honored to continue our partnership with Discovery and The Washington Post, to share this exhilarating new era in space exploration," said Aaron Fishman, President of Unscripted at Storied Media Group. "The extraordinary cooperation we have received from NASA and SpaceX are reigniting enthusiasm in space among young and old audiences alike."

The spacecraft is scheduled to splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean and would successfully conclude NASA and SpaceX's Demo-2 mission. Temperatures on the return can spike up to 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit on the exterior of the spacecraft due to the friction caused during re-entry. Regarding the spaceship's return, SpaceX Founder and Chief Engineer Elon Musk noted, "I think there's an argument that the return is more dangerous in some ways than the ascent."

Discovery and Science Channel's live coverage will have unprecedented coverage of the spacecraft's return as well as expert commentary from current and former astronauts, including Mike Massimino and Garrett Reisman, top engineers and other special guests, including adventurer and avid explorer Josh Gates.

TV personality Chris Jacobs will pick up where he left off as host of the live return. Jacobs has a long history with Discovery network live events, reporting live on-the-ground for EXPEDITION UNKNOWN: EGYPT LIVE as well as serving as the digital host during Nik Wallenda's tightrope walk over the Grand Canyon in SKYWIRE LIVE and in Chicago for SKYSCRAPER LIVE. Jacobs was host for DISCOVERY LIVE: INTO THE BLUE HOLE, CHOPPER LIVE, GOLD RUSH LIVE and the live broadcast of the Barrett-Jackson Auto Auction for Velocity (now MotorTrend). In addition, he is the regular host for TLC's LONG LOST FAMILY and serves as host of the popular automotive makeover show OVERHAULIN' on MotorTrend.

Emmy Award-winning journalist David Kerley will also return as part of the reporting team. Kerley reported on aviation, railroads, the automobile industry and space for all ABC News broadcast and digital properties, including World News Tonight, Good Morning America, Nightline, ABC News Radio and ABCNews.com. His work has been recognized with Peabody and Edward R. Murrow awards as well as the prestigious Joan Barone award from the Capitol Hill Radio and Television Correspondents Association.

In addition to watching the return on Discovery and Science Channel, viewers can stream it live by downloading the Discovery GO app. Fans can also create photos and videos of themselves in space wearing life-like SpaceX helmets using Discovery's Space Filter on Facebook or Instagram.

Follow Discovery on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter for the latest updates and join the conversation on social media by using the hashtag #Splashdown.

SPACE LAUNCH LIVE: SPLASHDOWN is produced for Discovery Channel by Storied Media Group. Executive producers for Storied Media Group are Aaron Fishman, Todd Hoffman and Michael J. Miller. For Discovery and Science Channel, Executive Producers are Gretchen Eisele, Scott Lewers and Caroline Perez. To learn more, go to http://www.discovery.com, on Facebook at Facebook.com/discovery and on Twitter @Discovery.

About Discovery Channel

Discovery Channel is dedicated to creating the highest quality non-fiction content that informs and entertains its consumers about the world in all its wonder, diversity and amazement. The network, which is distributed to 100.8 million U.S. homes, can be seen in 224 countries and territories, offering a signature mix of compelling, high-end production values and vivid cinematography across genres including, science and technology, exploration, adventure, history and in-depth, behind-the-scenes glimpses at the people, places and organizations that shape and share our world. For more information, please visit http://www.discovery.com

About Science Channel

Science Channel, a multi-media business unit of Discovery, Inc. is the home of all things science around the clock, including series such as MYTHBUSTERS, OUTRAGEOUS ACTS OF SCIENCE, WHAT ON EARTH?, HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS, UNEARTHED, and MYSTERIES OF THE ABANDONED. Science Channel's programming also includes timely, expert-driven specials covering breaking science news and discoveries. Science Channel is the premiere TV, digital and social community for those with a passion for science, space, technology, archeology, and engineering, providing immersive, engaging, high-quality entertainment across all Science Channel assets including: Science Channel television network, available in more than 63 million homes in the U.S; complimentary Video On Demand offering; SCI Go app allowing viewers to catch up on full episodes of their favorite shows anytime; deep video, interactive storytelling and virtual reality at http://www.sciencechannel.com; and conversations on Science Channel's popular social platforms including Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat via @ScienceChannel.

About Discovery Communications

Discovery Communications (Nasdaq: DISCA, DISCB, DISCK) is the leader in global entertainment reaching 3 billion cumulative viewers in more than 220 countries and territories. Discovery satisfies curiosity, entertains and inspires viewers with high-quality content through global brands, led by Discovery Channel, TLC, Investigation Discovery, Animal Planet, Science and Turbo/Velocity, as well as U.S. joint venture network OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network, and through the Discovery Digital Networks portfolio, including Seeker and SourceFed. Discovery owns Eurosport, the leading pan-regional sports entertainment destination across Europe and Asia-Pacific. Discovery also is a leading provider of educational products and services to schools, including an award-winning series of K-12 digital textbooks, through Discovery Education. For more information, please visit http://www.discoverycommunications.com.

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Growth of Deep Space Exploration and Technology Market 2020-2025 | Airbus SAS, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Astrobotic, Bradford, Blue Origin – My…

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Growth of Deep Space Exploration and Technology Market 2020-2025 | Airbus SAS, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Astrobotic, Bradford, Blue Origin - My...

Ning Xu Selected Fellow of the American Chemical Society – Newswise

Newswise LOS ALAMOS, N.M., July 27, 2020 Ning Xu of the Actinide Analytical Chemistry group at Los Alamos has been selected as a member of the 2020 class of Fellows of the American Chemical Society (ACS). Xu is being recognized for her sustained contributions to actinide analytical chemistry in support of national nuclear defense, technical nuclear forensics, nuclear material safeguards and deep space exploration.

Being selected as an ACS Fellow is an incredibly prestigious honor and I cant think of anyone more deserving than Ning, said Jeanne Robinson, acting associate laboratory director for Chemical, Life, and Earth Sciences. She is committed to the future of chemistry at the Laboratory and gives tirelessly to the next generation of scientists through her ACS involvement.

Xu is widely recognized at Los Alamos and by the New Mexico Section of the American Chemical Society (ACS) for her dedication to students and mentoring. The ACS recognition acknowledged her for inspiring the next generation of scientists to pursue STEM careers through chemistry education outreach and for outstanding leadership of the ACS Central New Mexico Local Section. This award is particularly competitive, and Xu becomes only the eighth individual from Los Alamos to become an ACS Fellow since the program was founded in 2008.

Her division leader, T. Mark McCleskey says, Ning is an amazing person. She takes her passion and energy for science and uses it to inspire the next generation to take on STEM challenges.

Rebecca Chamberlin, a colleague of Xus for many years and herself a Fellow of the American Chemical Society echoes these sentiments. Ning exemplifies the spirit of the Fellows program in her contributions to the profession and her service to the ACS community. She is an exceptional analytical scientist and technical leader who consistently strives for positive transformation: increased productivity, worker hazard reduction, and pollution prevention.

Xu joined the Laboratory in 2006 after working for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency National Risk Management Research Laboratory. She is an expert on the analysis of trace elements in plutonium and uranium for nuclear forensics and plutonium pit production. She has received numerous awards for technical innovations that have improved the environmental, safety and health practices of actinide analytical chemistry.

Xu holds a Ph.D. from the University of Kentucky, a M.S. from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a B.S. from the Capital Normal University. Xu has been previously recognized with awards such as the National Nuclear Safety Administrations Sustainability Award, several Department of Energy Pollution Prevention Awards, and an Outstanding Reviewer Award from the Journal of Radioanalytical Chemistry. She has also served as the chair of the Central New Mexico Local Section of the American Chemical Society. Her Fellows award was announced on July 27th in the ACS journal Chemical and Engineering News.

About the American Chemical SocietyWith more than 150,000 members in 140+ countries, the American Chemical Society (ACS) is the worlds largest scientific society and one of the worlds leading sources of authoritative scientific information. A nonprofit organization chartered by Congress, ACS is at the forefront of the evolving worldwide chemistry enterprise and the premier professional home for chemists, chemical engineers and related professions around the globe. More about the American Chemical Society Fellow program.

About Los Alamos National LaboratoryLos Alamos National Laboratory, a multidisciplinary research institution engaged in strategic science on behalf of national security, is managed by Triad, a public service oriented, national security science organization equally owned by its three founding members: Battelle Memorial Institute (Battelle), the Texas A&M University System (TAMUS), and the Regents of the University of California (UC) for the Department of Energys National Nuclear Security Administration.

Los Alamos enhances national security by ensuring the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear stockpile, developing technologies to reduce threats from weapons of mass destruction, and solving problems related to energy, environment, infrastructure, health, and global security concerns.

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UAE Mars mission: Extraordinary feat shows how space exploration can benefit small nations – Space.com

This article was originally published atThe Conversation.The publication contributed the article to Space.com'sExpert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Ine Steenmans, Lecturer in Futures, Analysis and Policy, UCL

Neil Morisetti, Vice Dean (Public Policy) Faculty of Engineering Sciences, UCL

The United Arab Emirates (UAE)successfully launched its Mars missiondubbed "Al Amal," or "Hope," from theTanegashima Space Centerin southern Japan on July 20. This is the first space mission by the UAE, and the first Arab mission to Mars making the worlds first launch countdown in Arabic a moment for the history books.

The missions journey to its launch date has arguably been at least as remarkable as the launch itself. With no previous domestic space exploration experience, planetary science capacity or suitable infrastructure, the nation managed to put together a delivery team of 100% local, Emirati staff with an average age of under 35. And setting a deadline of six years rather than ten, as most comparable missions do, it pulled the launch off on time and within budget now proudly joining the small cadre of nations who have launched a mission to reach Mars.

But given these odds, and the fact that Mars missions are notorious fortheir high failure rates(about 30% since the early 2000s), why did the UAE aim for the red planet in the first place? Space programmes have historically been used as catalysts for geopolitical influence. Whats more, we often think of them as costly endeavours of scientific curiosity, with few immediate and tangible benefits here on planet Earth. Does this reflect the UAE journey?

Space missions typically depart trying to answer scientific questions, before they ask how their value can extend to the society behind it. The Hope mission, however, has inverted this traditional logic. Instead, its conception arose from a quest to fundamentally redirect a nations trajectory.

The UAEs mission has been timed to coincide Hopes arrival into Martian orbit with the nations 50th anniversary as an independent country. Through its design and execution, the mission aims to diversify UAEs economy from traditional activity, including oil and finance. Instead, it wants to inspire a young Arab generation towards scientific and entrepreneurial careers and away from other, less societally beneficial pathways.

Related: The United Arab Emirates' Hope mission to Mars in photos

Hope will also study the Martian atmosphere and gather data to generate the first truly holistic model of theplanets weather system. The analysis and insights generated will help us better understand the atmospheric composition andongoing climate changeof our neighbour planet.

What could other nations learn from this distinctive approach to space exploration? Can a space mission really transform a national economy? These are the questions at the heart of anexternal reviewof the Emirates Mars mission undertaken by a group of researchers at the Department for Science, Technology, Engineering and Public Policy at University College London.

Over the course of five months, we undertook a comprehensive evaluation of the impact and value generated by the mission less than five years after its inception. What we found was that theres already evidence that the mission is having the intended impact. The country has massively boosted its science capacity with over 50 peer-reviewed contributions to international space science research. The forthcoming open sharing of Hopes atmospheric data measurements is likely to amplify this contribution.

The nation has also generated significant additional value in logistics by creating new manufacturing capacities and know-how. There are already multiple businesses outside the realm of the space industry that have benefited from knowledge transfer. These are all typical impacts of a space mission.

But while that is where most studies of the value of space missions stop looking for impact, for the UAE this would miss a huge part of the picture. Ultimately, its Mars mission has generated transformative value in building capacity for a fundamentally different future national economy one with a much stronger role for science and innovation.

Through a broad portfolio of programmes and initiatives, in just a few years the Hope mission has boosted the number of students enrolling in science degrees and helped create new graduate science degree pathways. It has also opened up new sources of funding for research and made science an attractive career.

One of the lessons is therefore that when embedded within a long-term, national strategic vision, space exploration can in the short term generate major benefits close to home. While space may appear to primarily be about missions for science, when designed in this way, they can be missions for national development.

Hope will reach Martian orbit in February 2021. Only then will its scientific mission truly take off. But its message of Hope has already been broadcast.

This article is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article.

Follow all of the Expert Voices issues and debates and become part of the discussion on Facebook and Twitter. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher.

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Celebrate Space Exploration Day with a look at the 1st lunar landing [photo gallery] (July 20) – US Embassy in Georgia

Celebrate Space Exploration Day by looking up at the sky on July 20 and reflecting on human achievements in space andall thats to come.

On July 20, 1969, U.S. astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on the moons surface. Fellow astronaut Michael Collins flew the command module.

Here is a look back at the first moon landing:

All of the Apollo 11 crew had flown at least one space mission. Pictured from left: Neil Armstrong, commander; Michael Collins, module pilot; Edwin E. Buzz Aldrin, lunar module pilot, on March 30, 1969. (NASA/AP Images)

Neil Armstrong, waving in front, heads for the van that will take the crew to the rocket for launch to the moon at Kennedy Space Center in Merritt Island, Florida, on July 16, 1969. ( AP Images)

The 363-foot Saturn V rocket carrying the Apollo 11 crew launches July 16, 1969, from Pad A, Launch Complex 39, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (NASA/AP Images)

Left: The Chicago Cubs (foreground), Philadelphia Phillies and fans in attendance bow their heads in a moment of silent prayer in Philadelphia on July 20, 1969, hoping for the safe voyage of the Apollo 11 mission to the moon. ( Bill Ingraham/AP Images)

Right: Berliners stand in front of a TV shop and watch the Apollo 11 space mission on television July 16, 1969, in Germany. ( Edwin Reichert/AP Images)

Thats one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind, said astronaut Neil Armstrong as he became the first human to set foot on the moon, as shown in the image from television. (NASA/AP Photo)

Left: Buzz Aldrin leaves a footprint on the moons Sea of Tranquility. Photographs of the footprints were actually part of a planned experiment by Aldrin to study the nature of the lunar dust and the effects of pressure on the surface. (Buzz Aldrin/NASA/AP Images)

Right: Neil Armstrong took this picture of Buzz Aldrin, which shows a reflection of Armstrong and the Lunar Module in Aldrins visor. (Neil Armstrong/NASA/AP Images)

Left: This photo of Earthrise over the lunar horizon, taken July 20, 1969, from the orbiting command module, is one of the most famous images captured by the space program, although even the astronauts cannot remember who actually took the photo. (NASA)

Right: After lifting off from the lunar surface, the lunar module made its rendezvous with the command module. The Eagle docked with Columbia, and the lunar samples were brought aboard. (NASA/AP Images)

Left: The three astronauts and a Navy frogman, all wearing biological isolation garments, awaiting helicopter pickup and transport to the USS Hornet after the lunar module splashed down about 1,504 kilometers southwest of Hawaii at 16:50 UTC on July 24, 1969. They stayed in quarantine for three weeks. (NASA)

Right: NASA flight controllers at the Mission Operations Control Room in the Mission Control Center at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston celebrate the successful conclusion of the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission. (NASA/AP Images)

By U.S. Embassy Tbilisi | 20 July, 2020 | Topics: History, News, Science & Tech, U.S. Agencies | Tags: engineering, NASA, science, space technology

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Celebrate Space Exploration Day with a look at the 1st lunar landing [photo gallery] (July 20) - US Embassy in Georgia

Satellites uncover widespread illegal fishing in Pacific Ocean – Space.com

Satellite imagery has dragged "dark" fishing fleets out into the light.

Orbital observations have revealed extensive illegal fishing of Pacific flying squid (Todarodes pacificus) in the Pacific Ocean around Russia, Japan and North and South Korea in 2017 and 2018, a new study reports.

In fact, "extensive" may not be a strong enough word. More than 900 vessels of Chinese origin probably violated United Nations sanctions by fishing in North Korean waters in 2017, and another 700 did the same in 2018, the study found.

Related: 50 breathtaking images from Earth's oceans

These scofflaw ships likely hauled in more than 176,000 tons (160,000 metric tons) of Pacific flying squid over those two years, a catch worth about US $440 million, study team members said. That's nearly equivalent to the combined T. pacificus catch of Japan and South Korea over the same span.

"The scale of the fleet involved in this illegal fishing is about one-third the size of China's entire distant-water fishing fleet," said study co-lead author Jaeyoon Park, a senior data scientist at Global Fishing Watch, an international nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing ocean sustainability via greater transparency.

"It is the largest known case of illegal fishing perpetrated by vessels originating from one country operating in another nation's waters," Park said in a statement.

Park and his colleagues tracked fishing activity in the Pacific around the Koreas, Japan and Russia, a big patch of poorly monitored ocean.

Many of the vessels plying these waters are dark, meaning they don't publicly broadcast their positions and don't show up in monitoring databases. So the researchers got a bird's-eye view, studying the region using four different types of satellite information.

For example, the researchers pored through Automatic Identification System (AIS) data, which is designed to help ships keep tabs on traffic in their area and avoid collisions. AIS signals stream continuously from transponders on ships, and these signals are often detected via satellite. But many ships don't beam out AIS signals, and the ones operating illegally are very unlikely to do so.

The team also looked at optical imagery gathered by Earth-observing satellites operated by San Francisco-based company Planet. The researchers analyzed wide-field photos captured by Planet's shoebox-sized Dove cubesats, as well as targeted imagery from larger, sharper-eyed SkySats.

Related: Photos of Earth by Planet satellites

In addition, Park and his colleagues scrutinized data from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) instrument aboard Suomi NPP, a satellite operated jointly by NASA and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. VIIRS can spot brightly lit ships at night, which makes it well suited to hunt squid boats; these vessels usually operate after dark, drawing squid up from the depths with huge banks of very bright lights.

The researchers also used synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) imagery to hunt for large metal vessels in the region. The team used SAR data from several different satellites: the European Space Agency's Sentinel-1, the Japanese Space Exploration Agency's PALSAR-2, and RADARSAT-2, which is operated by the company Kongsberg Satellite Services.

Combining all of this information allowed the team to determine the extent of illegal fishing in the area something that had never been done on this scale, team members said.

"These novel insights are now possible thanks to advances in machine learning and the rapidly growing volume of high-resolution, high-frequency imagery that was unavailable even a couple of years ago," co-author David Kroodsma, Global Fishing Watch research and innovation director, said in the same statement. "We've shown we can track industrial fishing vessels that are not broadcasting their locations."

The new study, which was published online today (July 22) in the journal Science Advances, suggests that the illegal vessels pose a significant threat to the management of the T. pacificus fishery. That fishery is extremely valuable T. pacificus is the top seafood by production value in South Korea, and one of the top five seafoods eaten in Japan and it's on an unsustainable trajectory. Since 2003, reported catches of T. pacificus have dropped by 80% and 82% in South Korean and Japanese waters, respectively, study team members said.

"Global fisheries have long been dominated by a culture of unnecessary confidentiality and concealment. Achieving a comprehensive view of fishing activity is an important step toward truly sustainable and cooperative fisheries management, and satellite monitoring is a key part of the solution," co-author Quentin Hanich, an associate professor at the Australian National Center for Ocean Resources and Security at the University of Wollongong, said in the same statement.

"This analysis represents the beginning of a new era in ocean management and transparency," Hanich added.

The team also determined that about 3,000 North Korean ships fished illegally in Russian waters in 2018, likely pushed so far afield by competition with the illegal Chinese vessels in their own backyard. Most of the North Korean boats are small and made of wood, and therefore not designed for such long open-ocean voyages.

Indeed, hundreds of North Korean fishing vessels have washed up on Japanese and Russian shores in recent years, study team members said.

"The consequences of this shifting effort for North Korean small-scale fishers are profound, and represent an alarming and potentially growing human rights concern," study co-author Katherine Seto, an assistant professor of environmental studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said in the same statement.

Mike Wall is the author of "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

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Satellites uncover widespread illegal fishing in Pacific Ocean - Space.com

The National Space Society intends to bring the solar system experience to everyone through an online presence – 3rd Watch News

TheNational Space Societyintends to bring the solar system experience to everyone through an online presence. The agency hopes to televise or showcase the spaceflight and exploration experiences in an online stream.

The NSS chief executive of and media personality Geoffrey Notkin and the Apollo 11 veteran crew Buzz Aldrin will be narrating and displaying the past glory of exploring space. The two experienced space exploration proponents will also be thinking aloud about the future exploits of the solar system.

Space exploration advocate Alan Stern will stream and explain Plutos journey and even deeper to the planetary body Arrokoth which at first was called Ultima Thule. He will also be detailing the battles surrounding the New Horizon venture throughout the planetary systems. NSSs Senior Operating Officer Bruce Pittman will be explaining the joint venture of Wernher von Braun and Gerald ONeill to establish the National Space Society.

NewSpace financier Steve Jurvetson narrates the tales of cashing into SpaceX to help the Planet Labs R&D department. Additionally, Steve vows to give money to ensure the smooth exploration of space orbitals.

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The National Space Society intends to bring the solar system experience to everyone through an online presence - 3rd Watch News

Wilton Bulletin Board: Smores, voting, space – The Wilton Bulletin

Published 5:00am EDT, Thursday, July 23, 2020

The family can enjoy smores at Woodcock Nature Center and meet the resident animals on July 26.

The family can enjoy smores at Woodcock Nature Center and meet the resident animals on July 26.

Photo: Jena Ardell / Getty Images

The family can enjoy smores at Woodcock Nature Center and meet the resident animals on July 26.

The family can enjoy smores at Woodcock Nature Center and meet the resident animals on July 26.

Wilton Bulletin Board: Smores, voting, space

The Bulletin Board will publicize events that take place in person and electronically via videoconference, Facebook Live or other means. Send submissions to editor@wiltonbulletin.com by 5 p.m. Wednesday for inclusion in the next weeks edition of The Wilton Bulletin.

Thursday, July 23

Summer Poetry with Judson Scruton, 10:30 a.m.-noon, Wilton Library. Third of a four-week, online seminar on selected works of Coleridge, Whitman, Browning and Crane, augmented with commentary by the late Harold Bloom. Poetry is emailed in advance. Registration required: http://www.wiltonlibrary.org.

iPhone Photograpy for Teens, 3-4 p.m., Wilton Library. This is the second of a two-day, Zoom workshop for teens entering sixth through 12th grade. Must have an iPhone, preferably version 7.0 and up. Registration required: http://www.wiltonlibrary.org.

Sunday, July 26

Family Smores & more! 5-6:30 p.m., Woodcock Nature Center, 56 Deer Run Road. Enjoy smores and then visit the more than 30 resident reptiles and amphibians at the nature center. No dogs. Free, registration required at woodcocknaturecenter.org.

Monday, July 27

Stitch Time for Knitters & Crocheters on Zoom, 1-2 p.m., Wilton Library. Show off creations, seek advice, chat while working on a project. Registration required: http://www.wiltonlibrary.org.

Tuesday, July 28

Special Voter Enrollment Session, noon-2 p.m., Town Hall, 238 Danbury Road. The registrars will be correcting the list of Wilton electors. Residents may register, check their party enrollment, and if unaffiliated, may join a political party in order to vote in the primaries on Aug. 11.

Privatization and Partnership is the New Space Frontier, 5-6 p.m., Wilton Library. A virtual program on new developments in space exploration presented by David Mestre, planetarium director at the Discovery Museum in Bridgeport. Registration required: http://www.wiltonlibrary.org.

Thursday, July 30

Summer Poetry with Judson Scruton, 10:30 a.m.-noon, Wilton Library. Last of a four-week, online seminar on selected works of Coleridge, Whitman, Browning and Crane, augmented with commentary by the late Harold Bloom. Poetry is emailed in advance. Registration required: http://www.wiltonlibrary.org.

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Wilton Bulletin Board: Smores, voting, space - The Wilton Bulletin

Fortnite: soon space exploration in the game ? – The Saxon

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Atmosphere Star wars on Fortnite ! In fact, the game of Battle Royale comes to welcome a spaceship is stranded on the island.

Chapter 2 of season 3 of Fortnite arrives with a bang ! While we have had to deal with a recession, a spaceship shows the tip of his wing. MCE TV tells you everything from A to Z.

You talked about it already a little earlier : Fortnite welcomes a new place. In fact, whilewe are waiting for the next recession, a new island has just made its appearance.

Finally, it is still under the waves, but should soon land. It is thanks to a leaker that we have been able to have this info, datamine in the files of the game.

We see, therefore, an astronaut, apparently trapped in its cockpit. It is known from the outset that there will be lots of missions to accomplish for the out of there.

It is therefore in the patch 13.30 we were able to discover this island, on which was stranded this spacecraft. A shuttle that has all the air to come out of Star Wars, for that matter !

It is next to Craggy Cliffs that we will be able to identify this new area, which we reserve a lot of surprise. And that will delight surely the players of Fortnite in search of new challenges.

Fortnite: soon space exploration in the game ?

With the arrival of the space ship, we also have to deal with the new rewards. But also a bunch of surprises like a loading screen on the theme of space.

You could also win a brand new glider in order to show off like an astronaut. FortTroy, the famous datamineur we in any case blast with this little teasing of what Fortnite we reserve.

On the steps of this new challenge, it may be that the next update of Fortnite we go find the old ship. Then, to recover the missing part, install it, and dto attend the launch of the shuttle.

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Fortnite: soon space exploration in the game ? - The Saxon

Buzz Aldrin: In the 51 years since Apollo 11, we have learned many lessons | Opinion – Florida Today

Buzz Aldrin, Your turn Published 11:24 a.m. ET July 22, 2020

If you live long enough, you see things come back around. New minds wrestle old problems.

Fifty-one years ago, Neil Armstrong and I walked on the moon thefirst humans to do so.Today, America is again headed for the moon and on to Mars. Americas new resolve is gratifying.There is a feeling of destiny to this moment.Having left prints on the moon, several thoughts sweep me.

Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin waves as he is introduced to the crowd on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing Saturday, July 20, 2019, at the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building at Kennedy Space Center(Photo: Craig Bailey/FLORIDA TODAY)

First, as Apollo 11 illustrated, Americans can achieve anything they put their minds to. We are an exceptional nation not one or two of us, but all of us. Our national past offers us courage, confidence, and a bearing for the future. We are right to have the moonand Mars again in our sights.

Second, while the past is an invaluable guide, history never repeats exactly. The Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs were driven by intense competition with our onetime adversary, the Soviet Union. We won that competition. Later missions were characterized by lunar exploration, advancing science, and international cooperation.

Third, America remains the undisputed leader in human space exploration. In the intervening five decades since Neil and I walked on the moon, no other nation has landed a man or woman on the moon. That said, leadership involves constant rethinking, a re-balancing of possibilities, and how best to gain worthy objectives.

Fourth, our new bipartisan commitment to putting a man and woman on the moon and humans on Mars will involve sustained, creative, honest leadership. As a nation, we must embrace risk, as space is a risky place. We will need mid-course corrections and willingness to make them. No risk, no reward. No accountability, no reliability.

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Finally, Americas exceptionalism, courage borne of achievement, historic leadership in space, and embrace of risk have practical implications. As never before, we must integrate public and private sector strengths, entertain greater international cooperationas after Apollo, and honestly reexamine our space architecture plans as they unfold.

The first two implications greater public-private coordination and international cooperation on a major issue might be made real by following President Eisenhowers Atoms for Peace example.

In a 1953 speech, President Eisenhower advanced the idea that nuclear technology what it promised and threatened might be better managed with international cooperation. From that speech grew the International Atomic Energy Agency and Treaty on Nuclear Non-Proliferation, making the world safer.

By comparison, this is the right time to configure a public-private international alliance tying together leading sovereign space agencies and top private sector space exploration companies.

Official photo of the Apollo 11 prime crew. From left to right are NASA astronauts Neil Armstrong, commander; Michael Collins, Command Module pilot; and Buzz Aldrin, Lunar Module pilot.(Photo: NASA, NASA)

The Administration has taken a first step by suggesting the Artemis Accords, a treaty for peacefully exploring and managing the moon, but more should be done to assure a peaceful human space exploration. By sharing information up front, and throughout future human space exploration missions, big problems can be averted.

The third implication, honestly reexamining our space architecture, is on us. Eisenhower warned of a military-industrial complex placing gain above national interest. Today, we must be wary of a military-industrial-space complex. We need to constantly reevaluate costs and benefits, balance corporate contributions, includingpublic and private thinking,and ask: Is this the best way to get to the moon and Mars?

In short, 51 years after Neil and I walked on the moon, with Mike Collins in the command module and 600 million watching us,we have a new chance to reach outward and do great things. As America looks forward, we should maximize lessons from half a century to inform and inspirefuture human space exploration.

There is a feeling of destiny to this moment. Onward!

On July 20, 1969,Buzz Aldrinbecame one of the first two humans to set foot on the moon as part of the Apollo 11 mission. He's 90 years old and lives in Brevard County.

Read or Share this story: https://www.floridatoday.com/story/opinion/2020/07/22/buzz-aldrin-51-years-since-apollo-11-we-have-learned-many-lessons/5486227002/

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Buzz Aldrin: In the 51 years since Apollo 11, we have learned many lessons | Opinion - Florida Today

Presidential Message on Space Exploration Day, 2020 – Whitehouse.gov

  1. Presidential Message on Space Exploration Day, 2020  Whitehouse.gov
  2. AI's Role In Space Exploration  Forbes
  3. Space Exploration Day 2020: History, Significance and NASAs role in fulfilling John F. Kennedys goal  The Financial Express
  4. Help NASA Design a Toilet for Artemis Astronauts on the Moon  HamletHub
  5. Russia isnt keen on Artemis, sides with China for Moon exploration  BGR
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Presidential Message on Space Exploration Day, 2020 - Whitehouse.gov

South Korea could partner with UAE in future space missions – The National

The president of South Koreas space agency said he would welcome the chance to collaborate with the UAE in missions to Mars and the Moon.

Cheolho Lim, from the Korea Aerospace Research Institute (Kari), said his country would benefit from the Emirates growing experience in the sector.

This week, the UAEs Hope probe took off from Japan's Tanegashima Space Centre en route to Mars to carry out a detailed study of the planet.

Mr Cheolho congratulated the Emirates on the successful launch and said he would encourage a partnership in space exploration between the two nations.

"I believe Korea can greatly benefit from the UAEs experience and accumulated knowledge in Mars, he told the UAEs state news agency, Wam.

"I hope that we share the experience [of Hope] and [its] scientific data, so we can open up a new chapter of our co-operation in space exploration.

South Korea is planning to launch a lunar orbiter to survey the Moon in July 2022.

In the past decade, Kari and the Emirates worked together in the development of Earth observation satellites.

The UAE has become the fifth country in the world to launch a Mars probe, Mr Cheolho said.

This means the UAE is one step ahead of Korea in terms of space exploration [and] I extend my heartfelt congratulations on the achievement.

I sincerely wish Hope probes safe arrival on Mars orbit and a successful completion of the mission.

Updated: July 22, 2020 05:05 PM

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South Korea could partner with UAE in future space missions - The National

Space exploration can pave the way for sustainability on Earth – The National

Millions of kilometres away from Earth is an amber-coloured planet called Mars, which has sparked the curiosity of multiple generations. To some it is a sphere of hope, while to others it is a new land that humans could colonise one day. Pictures of slopes and an ice slab suggest Mars may still have a vital life source water. This has prompted one to ask whether the "Red Planet" could be the manifestation of what Earth might become, if we do not take care of our home.

Back in 1972, the late Sheikh Zayed was given a piece of the Moon by then US president Richard Nixon. Looking back at those pictures, which date to before the Apollo 17 space mission, and now, only a few decades later, seeing Emirati engineers taking part in an UAE-driven mission to Mars, shows what a giant leap forward this relatively young nation has taken. This has proven to be an even prouder moment with the project of a young Emirati student, Alia Al Mansoori, being tested at the International Space Agency.

We are building on the legacy of our Founding Father and continuing to realise his vision through the UAE Space Agency.

The vast potential of the global space industry, which currently stands at $350 billion and is projected to generate more than $1 trillion in revenue by 2040, has understandably captured the attention and interest of innovators and entrepreneurs in the Middle East. In fact, one of the worlds largest space insurance underwriting agencies is based right here in the UAE.

But the question remains, why should we invest in space exploration when we need to save our own planet from the impact of climate change? The answer is multi-pronged.

Technologies used in space give us a better understanding of the world we live in, and contribute to our scientific knowledge. They also help to prevent illegal poaching and over-fishing, and monitor endangered species.

Among the many companies sending satellites into orbit to prevent illicit trade, UnseenLabs, a space start-up based in France, uses electromagnetic technology and real-time data to track ships attempting to go undercover by shutting their identification systems.

We are depleting our fisheries, causing 90 per cent of fish stocks to be considered fully or over-exploited. Indeed, illegal fishing is a major issue, causing long-term ramifications for our oceans.

The Hope probe was placed inside thispayload fairing last week and was transferred to building where the rocket is kept. Courtesy:Shoma Watanbe

The launch pad is ready to receive the H-IIA rocket, which will deliver the Hope probe to space. It will take 30 to 40-minutes for the rocket to be transported to the launch pad. Courtesy:Yoshiaki Sakita

The payload fairing, which is holding the spacecraft, has been mounted on top of the rocket. The structure is meant to protect the probe fromdynamic pressure and aerodynamic heating it experiences during its launch into an atmosphere. Courtesy:Shoma Watanbe

The probe was already fuelled with 800kgs of hydrogen for its seven-month-long journey to Mars. Courtesy: Emirates Mars Mission

The H-IIA rocket that will carry the Hope probe into space. Dubai Twitter account

All launch viewing events in Tanegashima have been suspended as part of the Covid-19 safety measures. Signs have been up in all of popular spots, asking the public to keep a 3km distance from the Tanegashima Space Centre on launch day. Courtesy:Yoshiaki Sakita

The most popular launch viewing site is the Rocket Hill. It is a five-minute drive from the main building of the Tangashima Space Centre and offers a clear view of the launch. It remains closed to the public. The National

The free bus tour and exhibition at the Tanegashima Space Centre has also been suspended in efforts to contain the Covid-19 spread. Signs were placed outside of the centre, alerting the public. Courtesy:Yoshiaki Sakita

Engineersat the launch site in Tanegashima island, Japan.Courtesy: Emirates Mars Mission

The completed Hope spacecraft. It will study the lower and upper atmosphere of Mars. Courtesy: Emirates Mars Mission

Satellites roam around our galaxy, providing essential services, particularly in the domain of telecoms and digital services. They are also providing us with pictures showing us how ecosystems are changing. This, in turn, is helping to monitor a wide spectrum of environmental indicators, from meteorological forecasting to investigating specific problems, such as "algae blooms" a rapid accumulation of algae in water systems that affect marine life, carbon emissions and even water levels.

Over the next decade, the number of satellites in our galaxy is projected to increase fourfold. Companies paving the way in this sector include Elon Musks SpaceX, which has launched more than 60 satellites to date and aims to launch 12,000 by 2027, and Planet Labs, which has 120 active satellites orbiting and taking photographs of our planet.

We live in a data-driven world that is going to become even more important, with the rise of big data, data analytics and artificial intelligence. It is through orbiting space technologies that we are able to receive critical information essentially billions of data points which gives us the foresight to better deal with natural disasters and manage resources. That we can access this information is driven by community spirit, whereby much of what is being created is open-source.

As we introduce new technologies and continue on our journey of space exploration, I am hopeful that the world will collaborate on charting these new territories. We only have to look at the International Space Station to realise how much stronger we are when nations work together.

The Covid-19 pandemic has affected every nation in many profound ways. It has especially created an unprecedented global education emergency. A recent report published by the UK-based humanitarian organisation Save the Children highlighted an alarming statistic: almost 10 million children may never go back to school.

In an increasingly connected world, mega-constellations orbiting our planet have the ability to provide high-speed internet access, thereby offering a viable solution to the learning deficit. As societies adapt to the concept of e-learning and online classrooms become the norm, the combination of affordable internet services and access to technology could be the missing link in resolving this issue.

In a world with finite resources, we can learn about the efficiency of materials used by the space sector to weather harsh conditions and threats, such as ultraviolet rays and X-rays from the Sun, solar wind particle radiation, thermal cycling, space particles and atomic oxygen.

A study published in the scientific journal Nature Climate Change has warned that the Middle East could become uninhabitable due to the effects of extreme temperature rises. By using materials normally utilised in space, we can build things to last and also learn to repair goods rather than dispose of them.

Products used in space have a myriad of purposes and, therefore, I believe we should focus on building a circular economy here on Earth. Researcher Mark Blenner, for instance, is studying how human waste can be used to create aircraft parts.

I am given to understand that futuristic water conservation technologies have been developed from space tech. The worlds first recirculating shower-head system, which conserves up to 90 per cent of water and 80 per cent of energy, is one example. This piece of technology could come in handy in water-scarce regions. With the right levels of investment, there is little reason to believe that it cannot be scaled-up.

Years ago, I met Sarah Al Amiri, Minister of State for Advanced Sciences and the woman leading the charge for the UAEs Hope Mars probe. During our meeting, I had the opportunity to lift Martian sand with a glove. It was a fascinating experience.

At the time, she came across as an ambitious and inspirational figure, worthy of being looked up to by other women. Today I am proud to see many others like her making their presence felt in traditionally male-dominated fields. Its worth pointing out that three out of the five top aerospace companies are now headed by women.

True to its name, the UAE's Mars mission is already offering us hope for a more sustainable world. Just as importantly, it will encourage and empower future generations regardless of gender to explore the unknown. Let us all work together to protect our planet, because this home is all we have.

Sheikha Shamma bint Sultan bin Khalifa Al Nahyan is chief executive officer of Alliances for Global Sustainability

Updated: July 16, 2020 08:15 PM

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Space exploration can pave the way for sustainability on Earth - The National

Miners on the Moon | airspacemag.com – Air & Space Magazine

The moon is barren, but its not dry. In 2018, NASA announced scientists had found evidence of surface ice in the shadows of craters in the polar regions.

Those dark, frozen places beckon future explorers. Ice can be melted into water; water can produce hydrogen and oxygen; hydrogen and oxygen can be made into fuel for spacecraft venturing to the moon, Mars, and beyond.

Im fond of saying that water is the oil of space, just like oil and petroleum products on Earth, says George Sowers, a professor of mechanical engineering at the Colorado School of Mines, who has 30 years of experience in the field of space transportation. You have diesel, you have various grades of gasoline, you can use it for creating plastics and all this other kind of stuff. In space, water can be used for all different kinds of propulsion demands, from low thrust to high thrust. It makes great radiation shielding. Its essential for life. You name it. I think the economy in space is going to run off of water.

Sowers isnt alone. A growing chorus of researchers, engineers, and entrepreneurs say the surest path to the final frontier is paved with ice harvested from the moon. The consensus is that an ice house on the moon feeding a space-based fuel depot can be set up without exotic, sci-fi equipmentmuch of the technology can be adapted from terrestrial analogs or is already in industrial use.

To be sure, the moon isnt a hospitable place for mining. A lot of its ice is in dark, cold places. And the initial tasks of confirming the precise locations of the water and then launching the mining equipment up and out of Earths gravity well are daunting. But the payoff, in the form of a self-sustaining space economy, would be tremendous.

One reason that Sowers is optimistic about the prospects for lunar mining is that he has crunched the numbers. If you had a lunar propellant available, at the prices I think that it can be offered for, then the cost to go from Earth to the lunar surface would be reduced by a factor of three, he says. And thats just by refueling en route. The cost to go from Earth to the Lunar Gatewaya proposed small spacecraft that would orbit the moon and serve as living quarters and a transportation hubwould be reduced by a factor of two. Sowers saves the best for last. The cost to come back from the moon, he says, would be reduced by a factor of 70.

If a company were to set up a lunar mining operation, after 10 years of operation, Sowers estimates, it would see returns of between 10 percent and 30 percent, depending on whether government agencies kick in some of the funding.

Id love to see commercial [players] kind of take the lead, with support from NASA as a customer, says Sowers. But the very first thing that has to happen is that we have to prove that theres really ice there in the quantities that we think it is, that we need it to be. The most likely places to go ice prospecting are the permanently shadowed regions at the north and south poles that never receive direct sunlight.

Because the moon tilts very little on its spin axis (1.54 degrees, compared to the Earths 23.5 degrees), its polar regions are bathed in near-continuous sunlight, except for deep depressions, such as the bottoms of craters. Between two and three billion years ago, ice began accumulating in those cold dark pits. Some of it arrived from water-rich asteroids and comets crashing into the lunar surface. Another likely source was volcanic ventsduring the earliest years of the moons formationthat spewed gases, including water vapor. And some of it is created when hydrogen particles in the solar wind react with oxygen bound in lunar rocks, forming molecules of hydroxide and water.

Over the millennia, meteors and comets continued to bombard the moon, smashing the ice and churning up the soil, so that ice near the lunar surface now exists in the form of tiny grains mixed with regolith and sand.

At least, thats the theory. What little we know for certain about the location of lunar ice is based on just two surveys. In 2009, NASAs Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) launched an impactor that slammed into the permanently shadowed region of Cabeus crater near the moons south pole, kicking up a plume of debris that contained some 26 gallons of frozen water. NASA says the missions data revealed that there is perhaps as much as hundreds of millions of tons of frozen water on the moon, enough to make it an effective oasis for future explorers. Then, in 2018, a team of researchers examined data gathered by a NASA instrument that flew aboard Indias Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft and found evidencebased, in part, on the distinct reflective properties of water and iceof frozen patches of water scattered across the surface of both polar regions.

Ice hunters will need follow-up missions to confirm how much water ice is on the moon and where its located. Unfortunately, satellite data wont do the trick, says Kevin Cannon, a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Central Florida who has written a paper for non-academics titled Ice Prospecting: Your Guide to Getting Rich on the Moon. Instruments aboard a satellite that rely on ultraviolet, visible, or near-infrared light to identify ice deposits can sense to only microns or millimeters. You really dont know if its just a very thin frost or if it extends deeper, says Cannon. On the other hand, he adds, orbiting instruments that could potentially detect ice deposits beneath the lunar surfacesuch as radar and neutron spectroscopyhave much lower spatial resolutions, so you cant really constrain where exactly on the surface the ice is.

If scientists and entrepreneurs want to get serious about water prospecting, theyre going to need boots on the groundor, more precisely, wheels on the ground. After the LCROSS data revealed the presence of ice in 2009, NASA began planning a mission to send a rover therewith mining instruments. By 2014, the Resource Prospector mission had a budget for instruments and launch, and NASA invited Japan and Canada to contribute the landing vehicle and the rover. Over the next few years, support for the Resource Prospector waned as the agency focused on Mars, and Japan and Canada withdrew. With the Trump administrations push to return to the moon, in 2019 Resource Prospector became a new mission, VIPER (Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover). NASA is building the rover and instruments; transportation and landing craft are to be supplied by one of the companies selected for the new Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, begun in 2018 to encourage private investment in moon exploration. VIPER is scheduled to land at the lunar south pole in late 2023. The golf-cart-size rover will survey and map ice deposits in the area, hopefully providing researchers with a larger pattern of ice distribution.

One of VIPERs instruments, originally developed for the Resource Prospector, is a one-meter drill called TRIDENT (The Regolith and Ice Drill for Exploring New Terrain). Building a drill capable of penetrating beneath the moons surface while operating in subzero temperatures has not been an easy task. Lunar regolith is dense and unforgiving. Over the few billion years it became extremely compacted through meteorite impacts, which create shock waves, explains Kris Zacny, the vice president of exploration technologies and principal investigator of VIPERs drill at Honeybee Robotics. And, if you add ice, it can be harder than concrete.

The biggest problem Apollo encountered during drilling was not actually drilling but pulling the drill out of the hole, Zacny says. Regolith is so compacted that it jammed the auger flutes. In fact, during the Apollo 15 mission, Commander David Scott sprained his shoulder while prying out the Apollo Lunar Surface Drill to obtain a core sample.

Machinistswhen drilling a hole in metalhave the same problem; thats why they developed so-called pecking, says Zacny. Peck drilling involves plunging the drill bit into metal some short distance and then retracting it to the surface to remove chips.

TRIDENT will do the same, drilling down 10 centimeters then retracting to bring back bites of regolith to the surface for study before drilling into the next 10 centimeters. Engineers say this approach has multiple advantages. For starters, since each sample comes from a known depth interval, the subsurface stratigraphy can be more easily preserved and studied. Also, the drill has time to cool off between bites, helping to ensure that the drill doesnt get so hot that it melts ice samples before they can be extracted.

On VIPER, the entire sampling system has been significantly simplified. We are no longer delivering samples to instruments (as is done on Curiosity, for example), but instead we are placing regolith on the surface, says Zacny. The drill has a spout through which the regolith gravity-flows onto the surface forming a cone. The side of the cone is viewed by the MSolo Mass Spectrometer and NIRVSS Infrared Spectrometer. These two instruments provide volatile and mineralogical data.

Since VIPER will spend a lot of time in permanently shadowed regions, it wont be able to rely on solar energy and will have enough power for only 100 days. Future options for prospecting missions might instead use the same technology that generates electricity for NASA deep-space probes that are too far from the sun to generate solar powerfor instance, a rover fitted with a rechargeable battery and a radioisotope thermoelectric generator, which provides electrical power by using heat from the natural radioactive decay of plutonium-238.

Cannon, though, doesnt think that drilling alone will provide the necessary information. Instead, he advocates digging a trench. The trouble with a drill is that, if you drill a hole, how representative are those results in three dimensions? he says. With a trench, youre getting that three-dimensional information that I think is really whats missing so far from our knowledge of the ice.

And, yes, NASA has been developing a rover capable of that kind of work. The Regolith Advanced Surface Systems Operations Robot (RASSOR) is being designed to dig and haul soil. While most rovers are mobile science labs carrying sensitive instruments, NASA describes RASSOR as its blue-collar robot because it does the hard labor.

RASSOR will excavate regolith with two counter-rotating bucket drums fitted with toothy digging scoops, each capable of holding 60 kilograms of soil. The barrels help solve a conundrum for NASA engineers. When you push a shovel into dirt on Earth, you remain on the ground since your weight acts as a counterforce. But thats trickier to pull off when excavating in lower gravity, especially since NASA wants the robot to be small and light enough to fly on a rocket from Earth. The rotating bucket drums solve that problem in a couple of ways. First, instead of pushing into the ground, the robot excavates a shallow trench as it moves along the ground. Also, since the two bucket drums are simultaneously rotating in opposite directions, each cancels out the digging force of the other. The technical term for all of this is a near-zero horizontal and minimal vertical net reaction force, and the technique keeps the robot on the surface even in low gravity.

Each pass of the RASSOR would excavate the top five centimeters of surface regolith. And while it can help search for ice as deep as one meter by passing over the same trench repeatedly, mining operations wouldnt necessarily have to burrow very far down, at least at first.

Instead, Sowers says, it would be best to begin by harvesting the ice that is most accessibleon the lunar surface. That ice is the equivalent of gold nuggets in the streams of Colorado, Sowers says. The first people in the Gold Rush came out, and they could pick nuggets up out of the streams. After a while, theyd run out of nuggets and theyd look back upstream for where the nuggets came from, and then theyd start finding the veins. Likewise, the surface ice is the first thing you do because its cheap and you can get product out that you can sell without breaking the bank on capital investment. Then later, he says, as the mining operation expands, you can dig for deeper ice deposits.

The simplest methodwhat Sowers calls the brute force approachwould be to dig up the surface regolith and extract the water by heating it in an oven. None of thats exotic technology. You could do that in your backyard with a shovel and a wheelbarrow, he quips.

While that would be the simplest method, it would be costly since excavation equipment is on the bulky side. (While the RASSOR might be good for prospecting, it cant haul enough for full-scale mining.) If we can get the ice out without digging up the dirt, our numbers show we can save around 50 percent on the mass, says Sowers. Thats significant because mass is dollars, especially in space.

Instead of digging, Sowers has proposed a process called thermal mining and has a NASA grant to develop it. Why dig up the ice when sunlight is available? Its much more cost effective to use mirrors to redirect that sunlight onto the surface of the permanently shadowed regions. By placing a dome over the area that is being heated, you can trap the vapor then collect it for further processing. If we can make that work, then you actually have a significant amount of cost savings, and that definitely helps in making it affordable and closing the business case, says Sowers.

If a mining operation were to also use conductive rods placed in the lunar soil, the heat from the sun could melt ice as deep as 1.5 meters. Any effort to go down farther would require excavation equipment. But by that time, the miners would have built an outpost with all the necessary infrastructure, including landing and launch pads, a chemical-processing plant that turns the water into propellant, and a power source. Once youve depleted the surface ice, you come in with a few additional machines at pretty low marginal costs, and you are still leveraging that investment you made in all that other infrastructure, says Sowers.

Another possible approach to thermal mining is being developed by Joel Sercel, a 14-year veteran of NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory and CEO of Trans Astronautica Corporation, which is dedicated to accelerating the process of human space exploration. Sercel and his partnersincluding Honeybee Robotics and Jeff Bezos Blue Originhave received phase two funding from NASAs Innovative Advanced Concepts program to develop plans for a lunar mining outpost that would include robotic rovers, called Beetles, which extract water through a patent-pending process called radiant gas dynamic (RGD) mining, which uses a combination of radio-frequency heaters, microwave, and infrared radiation to heat permafrost and other types of ice deposits.

According to Sercel, a fleet of Beetles would each traverse to a likely spot and lower a dome measuring five meters in diameter over an area of lunar regolith. Water ice would be extracted by means of radio-frequency heaterssimilar to those used on Earth to vaporize and remove chemicals from contaminated soil. Bombardment by microwaves would provide more focused heating while infrared radiation would heat the surface of the moon so that the water just doesnt re-condense there as the ice is melted, says Sercel.

The mining rovers would be part of a larger, self-sustaining Lunar Polar Mining Outpost in an ice-rich region of the lunar north pole that Sercel has dubbed New Mesopotamia, since he sees it as the moons equivalent of the Fertile Crescent on Earth. Power would be provided by towers a kilometer tall, called Sun Flowers, with their feet of solar arrays on the dark permafrost and their lightweight reflector heads in the sun. Since the nights there last only 100 hours per year, the towers would capture sunlight 97 percent of the year.

The Beetles would drop off the harvested water at the base, where some of it would be purified and set aside as drinking water for the astronauts managing the mining site, and some of it would be broken down into hydrogen and oxygen to provide both air and propellant. The robotic rovers would run on water fuel cells, so they would, in effect, be mining their own power sources. Fuel cells could also be used to power the base during the periodic blackouts throughout the year.

Both Sercel and Sowers see the development of fuel depots on the moon as an essential first step to Mars or beyond. In fact, wherever we go in the solar system, experts agree that we will first need to make space exploration sustainable. And that will begin with a deceptively simple-sounding task: Just add water.

Companies mining lunar ice confront a dilemma: An ideal place to extract ice is at the bottom of deep craters shrouded in perpetual darkness. But that darkness also deprives them of easy access to sunlight for solar power. Trans Astronautica CEO Joel Sercels solution is an array of towerseach a kilometer tallcalled Sun Flowers to power the outposts facilities. Their feetwhich are solar arrays that sit on the dark permafrostare bathed in sunlight reflected from lightweight disk-shaped heads high above in the sun. Robotic mining rovers, called Beetles, would run on water fuel cells.

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Miners on the Moon | airspacemag.com - Air & Space Magazine

Moon May Be 85 Million Years Younger than Thought | Planetary Science, Space Exploration – Sci-News.com

Earths only natural satellite formed 4.425 billion years ago around 85 million years later than previous estimates, according to a new modeling study by researchers from the German Aerospace Center (DLR), the Technische Universitt Berlin and the Institut fr Planetologie at the University of Mnster.

When the Moon formed into a sphere approximately 1,700 km in radius 4.425 billion years ago, its interior heated up considerably due to the energy released when it accreted. The rock melted and an ocean of magma, possibly more than 1,000 km deep, formed. Later, light rocks crystallized, which rose to the surface and formed a first crust on the Moon. This crust insulated the Moon from space, and the magma ocean beneath it cooled down slowly. Around 200 million years would pass before the Moon completely solidified. Image credit: NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center.

According to the giant impact hypothesis, the Moon was created out of the debris left over from a catastrophic collision between the proto-Earth and a Mars-sized protoplanet called Theia.

This collision produced a lunar magma ocean and initiated the last event of core segregation on Earth. However, the timing of these events remains uncertain.

The results of our latest modeling suggest that the young Earth was hit by a protoplanet some 140 million years after the birth of the Solar System 4.567 billion years ago, said lead author Dr. Maxime Maurice, a researcher at the DLR and the Technische Universitt Berlin.

According to our calculations, this happened 4.425 billion years ago with an uncertainty of 25 million years and the Moon was born.

The Moon was formed in a short time, probably in just a few thousand years, added co-author Dr. Doris Breuer, head of the Planetary Physics Department at the DLR Institute of Planetary Research.

The scientists determined when the Moon was formed using a new, indirect method.

Our calculations show that this most likely happened at the very end of Earths formation, said co-author Dr. Sabrina Schwinger, also from the DLR.

The lunar magma ocean quickly began to solidify and formed a crust of floating, lightweight crystals at the surface its interface with the cold space.

But under this insulating crust, which slowed down the further cooling and solidification of the magma ocean, the Moon remained molten for a long time.

Until now, scientists were unable to determine how long it took for the magma ocean to crystallize completely, which is why they could not conclude when the Moon originally formed.

To calculate the lifetime of the Moons magma ocean, the authors used a new computer model, which for the first time comprehensively considered the processes involved in the solidification of the magma.

The results from the model show that the Moons magma ocean was long-lived and took almost 200 million years to completely solidify into mantle rock, Dr. Maurice said.

The time scale is much longer than calculated in previous studies, said co-author Dr. Nicola Tosi, also from the DLR.

Older models gave a solidification period of only 35 million years.

To determine the age of the Moon, the team calculated how the composition of the magnesium- and iron-rich silicate minerals that formed during the solidification of the magma ocean changed over time.

The researchers discovered a drastic change in the composition of the remaining magma ocean as solidification progressed.

This finding is significant because it allowed them to link the formation of different types of rock on the Moon to a certain stage in the evolution of its magma ocean.

By comparing the measured composition of the Moons rocks with the predicted composition of the magma ocean from our model, we were able to trace the evolution of the ocean back to its starting point, the time at which the Moon was formed, Dr. Schwinger said.

The results show that the Moon was formed 4.425 billion years ago.

This age is in remarkable agreement with an age previously determined for the formation of Earths metallic core with the uranium-lead method, the point at which the formation of the Earth was completed.

This is the first time that the age of the Moon can be directly linked to an event that occurred at the very end of the Earths formation, namely the formation of the core, said senior author Dr. Thorsten Kleine, a researcher in the Institut fr Planetologie at the University of Mnster.

The results were published in the journal Science Advances.

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M. Maurice et al. 2020. A long-lived magma ocean on a young Moon. Science Advances 6 (28): eaba8949; doi: 10.1126/sciadv.aba8949

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Moon May Be 85 Million Years Younger than Thought | Planetary Science, Space Exploration - Sci-News.com

Indian firms must pay 18% GST to launch satellites on ISROs rockets, but foreign firms exempted, complain experts – Zee News

Chennai: While the Centre is working towards allowing end-to-end private participation in the countrys space sector, experts point out that Indias legal and policy hurdles are a serious hindrance. An Indian satellite-maker must pay 18 per cent GST to launch satellites on ISROs rockets, whereas a foreign customer can do the same without paying any GST," a panellist said during an online discussion on Unlocking Indias Private Space Sector: Legal and Policy Challenges organized by the NALSAR University of Law.

"The launch services provided to them (foreign firms) qualify as export of service which are exempt from the levy of GST. So it is cheaper for an Indian-origin company to register their business in a foreign country and launch using ISRO rockets as a foreign customer, said the panellist.

In his keynote address, Dr AS Kiran Kumar, former Chairman, ISRO stated that Indias requirements from space technology are rapidly increasing, hence necessitating a proportional scale-up in capacity. While he agreed that ISRO had laid the foundation in space technology for the country, the future needs must also be catered to.

They include energy requirements, space-tourism, space-exploration/exploitation, most of which gained more prominence after space was recognized as the fourth frontier. Governments want to reduce their focus in business and focus more on governance and thats why private players are being invited. However, the government needs to convince itself on how industry participation can be made more open, less risk-prone and more profitable, said Dr Kiran Kumar.

Even when Indias private firms have certain manufacturing capacity, it won't be easy for any of them to reap benefits from the international market. A case in point is that there are hundreds of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) in India who supply components to ISRO.

In many cases, ISRO also happens to be the biggest customer of these firms. But these very same firms cannot sell their products in the global market, as they dont have the Intellectual Property rights for what they manufacture. They only provide manufacturing support. For selling in the global market, they need their own independent design and products, said Narayan Prasad, Co-founder and Chief Operations Officer at Satsearch. He added that there was ambiguity in the term industry, as it could refer to a two-individual company or a firm with 5000 employees.

On the ease-of-doing-business in Indias space sector, Prasad said, Even if satellites are made here in India it is too expensive to launch them on ISRO rockets as we are required to pay 18% GST. Alternatively, it is easier, cheaper to register the same company as a foreign entity for tax exemption(GST in this case) and launch using ISRO rockets via the export of service route.

Adding to the ease-of-doing-business woes are the complex formalities and lack of clarity in even seeking approvals for various space-related business activities. Legal consultants working in the field say that is a serious need for single-window clearance. This can be made possible only if and when the regulatory agencies work with private entities to understand their grievances.

A simple query on whether or not a frequency range is available for satellite operations requires us to look into multiple policies including the National Frequency Allocation Plan, 2018. Even after such detailed inquiry, we are only able to conclude what frequency range is not yet auctioned to the private sector, rather than finding a definitive answer. When policies are silent on what parameters will be considered while judging applications seeking licenses for space activities, it makes it difficult for private space companies to attract investors and ensure a sustainable business model, said Ashok GV, Partner, Factum Law. He emphasized on the need for freedom of commerce and business promotion.

Another crucial aspect of space law and policy involves liability, particularly about who/which entity undertakes the liability(financial) in case of a mishap. What can be defined as a mishap and which would be the agency looking into these issues? In several Western countries with an evolved private space industry, there is a cap on liability and the financial damages that need to be paid. In India, there is no cap on the financial liability and the law also mentions 1-3 years of imprisonment with payment of a fine. So how does this instil confidence in a private player who wants to enter the space industry in India? Poorvi Kantroo, Doctoral Candidate, Centre for AeroSpace & Defence Laws NALSAR University pointed out.

Indias Space Activities Bill, is a laudable initiative but has much ground to cover. Specific areas relevant to commerce such as licensing criterion for space activities are left open-ended for further rules, regulations and guidelines.

Furthermore, in the past, there have been instances where private companies(one American and another Indian) have launched satellites into space through foreign launch service providers when their satellites lacked domestic clearances. While the International Telecommunication Union(ITU) regulations require the responsible state, in which such private sector is domiciled, to notify all domestically cleared satellite missions to the ITU, the Indian bill does not impose upon launch service providers including ISRO to verify such notification at the ITU level before offering launch services to a foreign customer. Such simple omissions in the bill could possibly cause immense complications.

It has the potential to enable private enterprises to avoid complying with critical international regulations designed to mitigate space debris and improve space situational awareness. So from the point of view of both national interests and the interests of the industry, the Space Activities Bill must be revamped to ensure the needs of the present and future generation of space activities and entrepreneurs.

Thus, it becomes imperative for the relevant government agencies to henceforth work with stakeholders from the private sector while formulating laws & policies in the Space sector, which holds immense potential and significance for India and the world in the coming times.

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Indian firms must pay 18% GST to launch satellites on ISROs rockets, but foreign firms exempted, complain experts - Zee News

Global Earth Observation Satellite Market Insights Report 2020 with COVID-19 Pandemic Analysis & Future Growth Analysis by 2026 OHB SE, Boeing…

Earth Observation Satellite: Regional and Global Market Opportunities Key Competitors, COVID-19 Impact Analysis, Industry Segments, and Strategic Analysis, 2020-2026

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Key market players across the global Earth Observation Satellite market include OHB SE, Boeing Defense Space & Security, JSC Information Satellite Systems, Lockheed Martin, Orbital ATK, Space Systems/Loral, Thales Alenia Space, Space Exploration Technologies etc. The high profile companies in the Earth Observation Satellite market are dedicated to product improvement, value-added production, advanced manufacturing facilities and premium product offerings in order to appeal the business on an international level that exhibits the potentials customer base. The market also encompasses international brands functioning through a robust distribution network across diversified markets.

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This market study fragments the global market for Earth Observation Satellite based on key product types, applications, and regions. The global market for Earth Observation Satellite has been divided based on product type as Altitudes below 500-600 kilometers, Altitudes above 600 kilometers. Based on the application/end-user, the Earth Observation Satellite market is categorized as Infrastructure, Environment Monitoring, Energy, Natural Resources Monitoring, Maritime, Disaster Management, Others. The Earth Observation Satellite market study examines the market based on key geographies such as Asia Pacific, North America, The Middle East and Africa, Europe, and Latin America.

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The present study also provides competitive analysis in terms of various parameters such as direct competition, indirect competition, strengths and weaknesses of major competitors, entry barriers, and opportunity windows. The market study by application includes the analysis of the availability of the total customer base and potential customers across untapped markets. For value chain investigation of the Earth Observation Satellite market covers upstream suppliers of raw materials, equipment, downstream marketing channels, client survey, and buyers segments. Market proposals and development trends, which more precisely contain valuable facts and statistics on Earth Observation Satellite key types and applications, key market regions and consumption level, key worldwide distributors, contact information for these upstream and downstream participants.

Competitive Analysis

It includes detailed summaries of leading market performers, unique business model analysis, and examination of their latest developments. The data is extracted over primary interviews with top business executives in addition to analysis of company published annual reports. The market study also delivers a wide-ranging analysis of key tactics employed by major Earth Observation Satellite companies and their financial investigation for different geographical regions.

Please Visit the Earth Observation Satellite Market Report at https://www.syndicatemarketresearch.com/market-analysis/earth-observation-satellite-market.html

Important Takeaways of Research Report:

1. Market Value and Volume Size for Historical and Forecast Period2. Market Growth Trends for Forecast Period3. Y-O-Y (Year On Year) Growth Rate for Various Market Segments4. Market Entry Barriers, Opportunities, Possible Threats, and Alternatives5. Qualitative Market Analysis through various tools such as Porters Five Forces Model, SWOT Analysis, and PESTLE Analysis

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Global Earth Observation Satellite Market Insights Report 2020 with COVID-19 Pandemic Analysis & Future Growth Analysis by 2026 OHB SE, Boeing...