Branson sets date for space flight

22/02/2014 - 13:39:14Back to World Home

Businessman Richard Branson has reiterated his claim that the first Virgin Galactic flight into space will take place later this year.

The launch date for the much-delayed project has been put back repeatedly from the original 2007 forecast, but the Virgin entrepreneur has confirmed he will fly with his children on the inaugural flight later in 2014.

Celebrities including Hollywood actors Tom Hanks and Angelina Jolie have apparently reserved spaces to become space tourists, with tickets costing six figures and including brief periods of weightlessness during the two-hour trip to 62 miles above the Earth.

In an interview with the Guardians Weekend magazine, Sir Richard said: When I started Virgin Atlantic, I knew nothing about running airlines. I just felt somebody should be able to do it better than British Airways.

Then we got a lot of creative people who werent from the airline world to go and shake up the business. Starting a spaceship company is not that dissimilar.

According to the Guardian, Sir Richard said the first unmanned test flight will take place soon, and the newspaper said the inaugural flight due later this year will be televised live by American broadcaster NBC.

In a statement to the newspaper, it said: Without a doubt, Sir Richard and his children taking the first commercial flight into space will go down in history as one of the most memorable events on television.

Last month Virgin Galactics SpaceShipTwo made its third rocket-powered supersonic flight in the Mojave Desert, soaring to a record 71,000 feet.

The company says the reusable space vehicle was carried by aeroplane to 46,000 feet the day before, and then released.

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Branson sets date for space flight

Powerful New Next-Gen US/Japan GPM Satellite to Revolutionize Global Precipitation Observations and Climate Science …

Want to stay on top of all the space news? Follow @universetoday on Twitter

NASAs next generation Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) observatory inside the clean room at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, MD. Technicians at work on final processing during exclusive up-close inspection tour by Universe Today. GPM is slated to launch on February 27, 2014 and will provide global measurements of rain and snow every 3 hours. Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com

NASA GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER, MARYLAND - Weather researchers and forecasters worldwide are gushing with excitement in the final days leading to blastoff of the powerful, new Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory built by NASA in a joint effort with Japan.

GPM is a next-generation satellite that will provide global, near real time observations of rain and snow from space and thereby open a new revolutionary era in global weather observing and climate science. Therefore it will have a direct impact on society and peoples daily lives worldwide.

The team is counting down to liftoff in less than 5 days, on Feb. 27 at 1:07 PM EST from the Tanegashima Space Center, on Tanegashima Island off southern Japan, atop the highly reliable Mitsubishi Heavy Industries H-IIA rocket.

The GPM launch to low Earth orbit was delayed by both natural and manmade disasters namely the 2011 Fukushima earthquake in Japan as well as the ridiculous US government shutdown in Oct. 2013.

Visualization of the GPM Core Observatory satellite orbiting the planet earth. Credit: NASA Goddard

The $933 Million mission is a joint venture between NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Japans space agency.

The mission will significantly advance our understanding of Earths water and energy cycles and improve forecasting of extreme weather events.

It is equipped with an advanced, higher resolution dual -frequency precipitation (DPR) radar instrument (Ku and Ka band) built by JAXA in Japan and the GPM microwave imager (GMI) built by Ball Aerospace in the US.

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Powerful New Next-Gen US/Japan GPM Satellite to Revolutionize Global Precipitation Observations and Climate Science ...

Space Weather Around Venus Is Harsher Than That Around Earth

February 21, 2014

Image Caption: Giant perturbations called hot flow anomalies in the solar wind near Venus can pull the upper layers of its atmosphere, the ionosphere, up and away from the surface of the planet. Credit: NASA

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

According to a study published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, space weather around Venus is much harsher than what is experienced around Earth.

Scientists have discovered that the space weather around Venus can have such large explosions that they are bigger than the entire planet. They also said that these giant explosions can happen multiple times per day.

Not only are they gigantic. but as Venus doesnt have a magnetic field to protect itself, the hot flow anomalies happen right on top of the planet. They could swallow the planet whole, said Glyn Collinson, a space scientist at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

When the sun unleashes a large explosion of plasma, or a coronal mass ejection, it shoots out charged particles towards planets, creating space weather. Earths magnetosphere, the giant magnetic bubble surrounding the planet, helps to protect us from space weather. However, Venus doesnt have a chance to protect itself against such weather.

Venus is a barren, inhospitable planet that features an atmosphere so dense it can crush a spacecraft trying to land on its surface within hours. Because Venus has no magnetic protection, it makes it a great experiment for what Earth would look like without its magnetosphere.

Hot flow anomalies are unable to penetrate Earths magnetosphere to get down to the surface of the planet, and this releases so much energy just outside that the solar wind can be deflected and forced back towards the sun. However, the situation on Venus is much different than what is seen on Earth.

The only protection Venus has from the solar wind is the charged outer layer of its atmosphere known as the ionosphere. Scientists know that there is a sensitive pressure balance between the ionosphere and the solar wind, which can easily be disrupted by a big coronal mass ejection. The hot flow anomalies on Venus create dramatic, planet-scale disruptions, sucking the ionosphere up and away from the surface of the planet, according to the new study.

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Space Weather Around Venus Is Harsher Than That Around Earth

Astrobiology: Definition of life just keeps expanding (NASA scientist Dr. Pam Conrad) – Video


Astrobiology: Definition of life just keeps expanding (NASA scientist Dr. Pam Conrad)
Host Scott Simon speaks with NASA scientist Dr. Pam Conrad on the 50th anniversary of the space agency #39;s search for extraterrestrial life (October 23, 2010) ...

By: Adept Yogi

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Astrobiology: Definition of life just keeps expanding (NASA scientist Dr. Pam Conrad) - Video

Space History Photo: Dr. Robert Goddard

In this historical photo from the U.S. space agency, the Goddard Space Flight Center was named in honor of Dr. Robert Goddard, a pioneer in rocket development. Dr. Goddard received patents for a multi-stage rocket and liquid propellants in 1914 and published a paper describing how to reach extreme altitudes six years later.

That paper, "A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes," detailed methods for raising weather-recording instruments higher than what could be achieved by balloons and explained the mathematical theories of rocket propulsion. The paper, which was published by the Smithsonian Institution, also discussed the possibility of a rocket reaching the moon a position for which the press ridiculed Goddard. Yet several copies of the report found their way to Europe, and by 1927, the German Rocket Society was established, and the German Army began its rocket program in 1931. Goddard, meanwhile, continued his work.

By 1926, he had constructed and tested the first rocket using liquid fuel. Goddard's work largely anticipated in technical detail the later German V-2 missiles, including gyroscopic control, steering by means of vanes in the jet stream of the rocket motor, gimbal-steering, power-driven fuel pumps and other devices.

The National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (NACA) was a precursor to NASA. NACA was created by Congress in 1915.

Each weekday, SPACE.com looks back at the history of spaceflight through photos (archive).

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Space History Photo: Dr. Robert Goddard

Novel Ways to Protect Astronaut DNA before Entering Space Radiation Environments

How Personalized Medicine will transform Human Space Flight

Significant attention has been given to methods of shielding human space participants from radiation on missions. But what if some astronauts suffer from susceptible DNAbeforeentering the space radiation environment? Two American scientists have proposed that certain astronaut molecular profilesmay 1) reduce inherent DNA stability, 2) slow DNA repair, and 3) render DNA more susceptible to mutational events when exposed to the radiation of space.

Michael A. Schmidt, Ph.D. (Sovaris Aerospace) andThomas J. Goodwin, Ph.D. (NASA Johnson Space Center) have identified a novel approach to space radiation countermeasures, which is based on understanding the DNA stability, DNA repair capability, and oxidative susceptibility of individual astronautsbeforethey enter the space environment. This methodology is linked to individual genotype and micronutrient status, both of which are potentially modifiable by appropriate pre-flight and in-flight countermeasures.

For instance, common gene mutations affecting one carbon metabolism (MTHFR, MTR, MTRR) may result in the build-up of a faulty base (uracil) within the DNA backbone. This can lead to single strand DNA breaks and double strand DNA breaks, before astronauts enter space. The effect of this is amplified by folate and B12 deficiency.

Other common gene mutations (Hfe) trigger excessive iron accumulation, which creates unstable DNA through oxidative stress mechanisms, also before entering space. Magnesium is a central atom in most DNArepairenzymes. Significant serum, urine, and muscle loss of Mg has already been found in ISS astronauts on long missions, thus raising the question about whether we are already flying some astronauts with diminished capacity to repair DNA damage.

According to Schmidt, "We are examining how individual molecular influences affect DNA stability and repair before astronauts enter the elevated radiation conditions of space, and then how to manage those influences while they live in space. But we are looking well beyond DNA and into the vast network of molecular influences on astronaut physiology. We and our colleagues are using genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics to develop a platform for personalized medicine that will guide the present and future of human space flight. As the field evolves, we expect to increasingly be able to individualize countermeasures, so that each astronaut receives the protocol that is most suitable to him or her. This will be crucial for missions to the Moon, Mars, and beyond. Of equal importance, we use what we've learned from the complexity of space to translate these benefits to earth-based medicine."

Goodwin states, "In the end, it is about advancing the science and about developing solutions, which we see evolving in phases. Our goal, at minimum, includes: (1) establish the criteria for ''best evidence'' that can be used to develop individualized countermeasurestoday; (2) establish the criteria for best evidence that prioritizes research, clinical assessment, and individualized countermeasures to be developed in the near term; and (3) establish a deliberate discovery path that seeks to develop sophisticated and more complex models for long-term deployment of personalized medicine, as the future standard of preparation and care in human space flight."

Their paper, entitledPersonalized Medicine in Human Space Flight: Using Omics Based Analyses to Develop Individualized Countermeasures that Enhance Astronaut Safety and Performance, was recently published in the journalMetabolomics(Schmidt, MA, Goodwin, TJ.MetabolomicsDec 2013;9(6):1134-1156).

Michael A. Schmidt, Ph.D.is co-chair of the Advanced Pattern Analysis & Countermeasures Group. He and his team have ongoing collaborations with NASA Ames Research Center, NASA Johnson Space Center, and commercial space flight companies that are focused on human missions to the ISS, Moon, Mars, and elsewhere. Dr. Schmidt is the founder ofSovaris Aerospace, LLCand Chairman ofMetaboLogics, LLC, based at the Infectious Disease Research Complex at Colorado State University. Sovaris Aerospace, LLC uses pattern analysis, signal processing, and predictive modeling to develop molecular/physiologic assessment and countermeasure solutions for humans in space. MetaboLogics, LLC, applies these methods to earth-based medicine.

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Novel Ways to Protect Astronaut DNA before Entering Space Radiation Environments

Space weather explosions on Venus engulf entire planet

GREENBELT, Md., Feb. 20 (UPI) -- A common space weather phenomenon on the outskirts of Earth's magnetic bubble has larger -- much larger -- repercussions for Venus, NASA scientists say.

Giant explosions called hot flow anomalies in the solar wind can be so large when they encounter Venus they're bigger than the entire planet can happen multiple times a day, they said.

"Not only are they gigantic," Glyn Collinson, a space scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said, "but as Venus doesn't have a magnetic field to protect itself, the hot flow anomalies happen right on top of the planet. They could swallow the planet whole."

Collinson is the lead author of a paper based on observations from the European Space Agency's Venus Express, showing just how large and how frequent this kind of space weather is at Venus.

Earth is protected from the constant streaming solar wind of radiation by its magnetic bubble -- the magnetosphere -- while Venus, a barren, inhospitable planet with an atmosphere so dense spacecraft landing there are crushed within hours, Venus has no such magnetic protection.

At Earth, hot flow anomalies do not make it inside the magnetosphere, whereas on Venus they can create dramatic planet-scale disruptions, possibly sucking the planet's upper atmosphere up and away from the surface, the scientists said.

That suggests Earth without its magnetic field might be as barren and lifeless as Venus, they said.

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Space weather explosions on Venus engulf entire planet

ASRC Federal Space and Defense Awarded NASA METS II Bridge Contract

Beltsville, MD (PRWEB) February 20, 2014

NASA recently awarded ASRC Federal Space and Defense a two-year extension to the Multidiscipline Engineering and Technology Services II contract. The two-year bridge contract with an extension option has a maximum value of $110 million.

Under the METS II Bridge contract, ASRC Federal Space and Defense will continue to provide systems engineering support and guidance, navigation and control services for various projects at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., including the James Webb Space Telescope, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission, the Magnetosphere Multiscale mission and other critical Goddard missions.

The bridge contract award underscores excellent work performed by our ASRC Federal Space and Defense team on the current METS II effort, said Paul Dillahay, ASRC Federal president and CEO. We look forward to continuing our long-standing relationship with NASA Goddard and supporting the centers space exploration activities.

ASRC Federal Space and Defense will continue supporting several operating divisions in Goddard's Applied Engineering and Technology Directorate, including mechanical systems, software management, instrument systems and technology, electrical engineering and mission engineering, and systems analysis. Support provided to the operating divisions includes the formulation, design, development, flight and non-flight fabrication, integration, test, verification, and operation of components, subsystems, systems, science instruments and complete spacecraft for multiple projects.

About ASRC Federal ASRC Federal is a holding company with multiple subsidiaries, including ASRC Federal Space and Defense, which provide reliable, cost-efficient services to federal government agencies. Headquartered in Greenbelt, Md., ASRC Federal is a wholly owned subsidiary of Arctic Slope Regional Corporation. ASRC Federal Space and Defense delivers high-performance space systems engineering, integration and satellite operations services to civil and defense agencies. For more information about the ASRC Federal family of companies, please visit: http://www.asrcfederal.com.

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ASRC Federal Space and Defense Awarded NASA METS II Bridge Contract

NASA researcher finds planet-sized space weather explosions at Venus

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

20-Feb-2014

Contact: Susan Hendrix Susan.m.hendrix@nasa.gov 301-286-7745 NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Researchers recently discovered that a common space weather phenomenon on the outskirts of Earth's magnetic bubble, the magnetosphere, has much larger repercussions for Venus. The giant explosions, called hot flow anomalies, can be so large at Venus that they're bigger than the entire planet and they can happen multiple times a day.

"Not only are they gigantic," said Glyn Collinson, a space scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "But as Venus doesn't have a magnetic field to protect itself, the hot flow anomalies happen right on top of the planet. They could swallow the planet whole."

Collinson is the first author of a paper on these results that appeared online in the Journal of Geophysical Research in February 2014. The work is based on observations from the European Space Agency's Venus Express. The results show just how large and how frequent this kind of space weather is at Venus.

Earth is protected from the constant streaming solar wind of radiation by its magnetosphere. Venus, however, has no such luck. A barren, inhospitable planet, with an atmosphere so dense that spacecraft landing there are crushed within hours, Venus has no magnetic protection.

Scientists like to compare the two: What happened differently at Earth to make it into the life-supporting planet it is today? What would Earth be like without its magnetic field?

At Earth, hot flow anomalies do not make it inside the magnetosphere, but they release so much energy just outside that the solar wind is deflected, and can be forced to move back toward the sun. Without a magnetosphere, what happens at Venus is very different.

Venus's only protection from the solar wind is the charged outer layer of its atmosphere called the ionosphere. A sensitive pressure balance exists between the ionosphere and the solar wind, a balance easily disrupted by the giant energy rush of a hot flow anomaly. The hot flow anomalies may create dramatic, planet-scale disruptions, possibly sucking the ionosphere up and away from the surface of the planet.

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NASA researcher finds planet-sized space weather explosions at Venus

NASA's Marshall Center, U.S. Space & Rocket Center sponsoring 'Robots to Rocket City' on Feb. 23

What:NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., will cohost Robots to Rocket City with the U.S. Space & Rocket Center on Sunday, Feb. 23. At this event, area high school teams will demonstrate the robots they built to compete in upcoming competitions of FIRST -- For Inspiration and Recognition of Science & Technology.

NASA, through its Robotics Alliance Project, provides grants for high school teams and support for FIRST Robotics competitions around the country to address the critical national shortage in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics -- or STEM fields.

The event is open to the public. On Feb. 23, the Space & Rocket Center is offering a special admission price of $11 per person to those who mention "Robots to Rocket City." The ticket covers "Robots to Rocket City" and full museum admission, including simulators and the current feature exhibition, "Da Vinci: The Genius." Visitors will be able to try various robotics activities included in the centers new Space Camp Robotics Program. Demonstrations will include Lego NXT Programming and Engineering workshops, U.S. Navy Sea Perch underwater robotics, the Space Camp Robotics Challenge table and Kinect-controlled Robot Soccer.

FIRST is a national organization founded in 1989 by inventor Dean Kamen in Manchester, N.H., to inspire young people to pursue careers in science and technical fields.

Who:Students from more than half-a-dozen area high school FIRST Robotics teams will discuss and demonstrate their robots, including two NASA-sponsored "house teams": The Mad Rockers of Bob Jones and James Clemens High Schools in Madison; and Morgan County Mech Tech, comprised of Morgan County schools, including A.P. Brewer High School in Somerville. Also expected are students from schools involved in different robotics programs and grade levels, including the FIRST Lego League and a team from Madison County Schools' Central Elementary School participating in the VEX Robotics Competition.

When:Robots to Rocket City teams will begin demonstrations at 1 p.m., Feb. 23., beneath the Saturn V rocket on display in the Davidson Center for Space Exploration.

Where:U.S. Space & Rocket Center, One Tranquility Base, Huntsville, Ala.

To attend:News media interested in covering the event should contact Tim Hall at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center at 256-701-0916, or Angela Storey of the Marshall Public & Employee Communications Office at 256-714-4370 no later than 4:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 21.

More information about FIRST programs and competitions is available at:http://www.usfirst.org

More information about the Marshall Space Flight Center is available at:www.nasa.gov/centers/marshall

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NASA's Marshall Center, U.S. Space & Rocket Center sponsoring 'Robots to Rocket City' on Feb. 23

Florida Space Industry to Visit Capitol on March 12

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FL(February 19, 2014) Representatives from Floridas aerospace industry will visit Tallahassee on March12, 2014, to participate in Florida Space Day and share with legislators the opportunities the industry brings to Florida and the nations space program.

In Florida, aerospace means business, said Patty Stratton, chair of Florida Space Day 2014. Nearly all 67 counties contribute to this $9 billion industry, led by nearly 500 companies employing 30,000 residents; and space-related industries grow that amount to $19.2 billion, supporting 20,000 companies and 140,000-plus jobs.

It translates into high tech, high paying jobs, said Stratton. We want Florida to continue its aggressive stance to create a robust atmosphere for space exploration and business. Florida has the third largest space industry in the nation.

Former NASA astronaut Bob Crippen, pilot of the first orbital test flight of the Shuttle program and former NASA Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Director, will be making scheduled appearances throughout the event. Space-related exhibits will be available on the third floor Rotunda of the Capitol.

Florida Space Day participants include Abacus Technology Corp, AECOM Government Technical Service, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, ASRC Aerospace Corporation, Astronaut Scholarship Foundation, Astrotech Space Operations, ATK, Bionetics, The Boeing Company, Blue Origin, Brazil-Florida Chamber of Commerce, Craig Technologies, D3 Air & Space Operations, Delaware North Companies, Dynamac Corporation, Economic Development Commission of Floridas Space Coast, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Exelis, Florida Space Institute, Harris Corporation, InDyne Inc, Jacobs, Jacksonville Aviation Authority, LJT & Associates, Lockheed Martin, Millennium Engineering & Integration, QinetiQ North America, Space Coast Launch Services, Space Florida, SpaceX, United Launch Alliance and URS.

To learn more about Florida Space Day 2014, visitwww.floridaspaceday.com, join us on Facebook atwww.facebook.com/FloridaSpaceDayand follow us on Twitter at @FLSpaceDay.

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MEDIA CONTACT:

Margo Witcher

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Florida Space Industry to Visit Capitol on March 12