Thunderclouds Make Gamma Rays–and Shoot Out Antimatter, Too (preview)

Feature Articles | More Science See Inside

Thunderstorms give out powerful blasts of gamma rays and x-rays, shooting beams of particlesand even antimatterinto space. The atmosphere is a stranger place than we ever imagined

By Joseph R. Dwyer and David M. Smith | August 6, 2012|

Image: STEPHEN ALVAREZ Getty Images

Soon after the space shuttle atlantis launched a new observatory into orbit in 1991, Gerald Fishman of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center realized that something very strange was going on. The Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO), designed to detect gamma rays from distant astrophysical objects such as neutron stars and supernova remnants, had also begun recording bright, millisecond-long bursts of gamma rays coming not from outer space but from Earth below.

Astrophysicists already knew that exotic phenomena such as solar flares, black holes and exploding stars accelerate electrons and other particles to ultrahigh energies and that these supercharged particles can emit gamma raysthe most energetic photons in nature. In astrophysical events, however, particles accelerate while moving almost freely in what is essentially a vacuum. How, then, could particles in Earth's atmospherewhich is certainly nowhere close to being a vacuumbe doing the same thing?

See more here:

Thunderclouds Make Gamma Rays--and Shoot Out Antimatter, Too (preview)

Barrios employee named Space Flight Awareness honoree

Barrios employee Zane Goff was recently honored as a Space Flight Awareness (SFA) honoree for his work in support of NASAs International Space Station (ISS) programs at Johnson Space Center. As part of the SFA award, Goff traveled to Kennedy Space Center in Florida to view the recent arrival of the Orion Exploration Flight Test (EFT-1) flight vehicle on July 2.

Mr. Zane Goff, a Friendswood resident, was selected to receive this award for his outstanding technical leadership on the International Space Station Enhanced Processor and Integrated Communications (EPIC) development. The new EPIC card development and testing enhanced and increased the processing speed and memory capability of the ISS on-orbit Command and Control System computers. Goffs citation stated that he provided exemplary integration support for the EPIC hardware and was instrumental in resolving hardware/software integration issues that arose by providing workable solutions.

I am honored to be recognized for these efforts, said Goff. I am very proud to work in this program and with many dedicated friends and teammates. Space is no longer a dream because we build the machines that make it a reality.

As an SFA honoree, Goff traveled to Kennedy Space Center where he attended the ceremony celebrating the arrival of the Orion EFT-1. The Orion EFT-1 spacecraft, which will fly an uncrewed flight in 2014, will undergo final processing at KSC, including application of heat shielding thermal protection systems, avionics and other subsystems.

The SFA Program is a NASA managed motivational program geared at ensuring that every employee involved in human space flight is aware of the importance of their role in promoting astronaut safety and mission success in the critical, challenging task of flying humans in space by communicating and educating the government and industry workforce about human space flight.

See the article here:

Barrios employee named Space Flight Awareness honoree

Interview With Scott Braun About NASA's Upcoming Hurricane Campaign

Scott Braun is the Hurricane Severe Storm Sentinel (HS3) mission principal investigator and a research meteorologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. Scott studies hurricanes from the inside out. HS3 is a five-year mission specifically targeted to investigate hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean basin.

In his role as Principal Investigator, Scott leads a diverse team of hurricane and instrument scientists to design and conduct experiments using NASA's two Global Hawk unmanned aircraft to understand better the meteorological conditions that favor storm formation and often lead to the development of major hurricanes.

The campaign is set to take to the sky this September from Wallops Island, Va. Scott recently answered some questions about the HS3 mission:

Q: What is the biggest difference between past NASA hurricane field campaigns and HS3? Will the two Global Hawks have different instruments onboard?

A: The key differences from previous NASA hurricane field campaigns is that HS3 is a multi-year (2012-2014) rather than single year effort.It will utilize two of the unmanned Global Hawk aircraft flying from the U. S. east coast rather than one Global Hawk flying from the west coast as was the case during the Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes (GRIP) campaign in 2010. (For information about GRIP, go to: http://www.nasa.gov/GRIP).

Three of the instruments flying on the HS3 mission had flown in GRIP, but on two separate aircraft. Now they will fly together on one Global Hawk (called the over-storm aircraft) to observe the inner-core region of hurricanes. The second Global Hawk (called the environmental aircraft) will be equipped with instruments that were not part of previous campaigns and will sample the large-scale environment of storms to see if conditions are favorable for storm formation and intensification.

Q: How will the mission work? Every time a hurricane is approaching, will the Global Hawk fly to meet it? How far and how long the planes will fly?

A: We will not be flying every storm, but will select storms that are likely to yield the best science. We are in the field for only five weeks and have science flight hours for only about 10-11 flights. Depending on how we use the flight hours, we could do five flights each for two storms or two flights each for five storms, or something like that.

A lot will depend on the storms that occur and whether we think they are events from which we have a lot to learn. In previous campaigns with manned aircraft based in a specific location, we had to wait for storms to come close to the U.S.

Because the Global Hawks can fly for up to about 26-28 hours and have a range of more than 12,000 miles, we can reach anywhere in the Atlantic Ocean basin, so we can either choose to spend a smaller amount of time over a storm in the Central Atlantic or spend a great deal more time over storms in the Western Atlantic, Caribbean, or Gulf of Mexico.

Continue reading here:

Interview With Scott Braun About NASA's Upcoming Hurricane Campaign

NASA bypasses ATK for manned space flight contract

This artist's rendering provided by Sierra Nevada Space Systems shows the company's Dream Chaser spacecraft docking with the International Space Station. NASA has picked three aerospace companies to build small rocketships to take astronauts to the International Space Station. This is the third phase of NASA's efforts to get private space companies to take over the job of the now-retired space shuttle. The space agency is giving them more than $1.1 billion. Two of three ships are capsules like in the Apollo era and the third is a lifting body that is closer in design to the space shuttle. (AP Photo/Sierra Nevada Space Systems)

Alliant Techsystems plan to use its Liberty rocket to eventually transport astronauts and cargo to the International Space Station was left unfunded on the launch pad Friday.

Instead, NASA announced Boeing Co. received a $460 million award; Space Exploration Technologies Corp., a Hawthorne, Calif.-based company also known as SpaceX and led by billionaire Elon Musk, got a $440 million contract to develop spacecraft capable of carrying astronauts into orbit; and Sierra Nevada Corp., based in Sparks, Nev., won a contract valued at $213 million.

ATKs Liberty rocket system

What is it? Its a 300-foot-tall, two-stage rocket system designed to be a low-cost method to put people and equipment into space. It was developed by Alliant Techsystems.

How it would be used It was designed with a crew module and originally scheduled to shuttle astronauts to the International Space Station.

The team The Liberty team spans 10 states, including Utah, and was expected to sustain thousands of jobs and create 600 new jobs, according to ATK.

First flights It was originally scheduled to conduct its first unmanned test flights in 2014 and 2015, followed by the first manned flight in late 2015. If it had been selected by NASA, it would have made its first commercial flights to the International Space Station in 2016.

Future of the project ATK says it needs to be debriefed by NASA before it can make any decisions on the long-term prospects for the program.

View post:

NASA bypasses ATK for manned space flight contract

FAA: Commercial Space Flight Lifting Off

August 1-The opportunity to travel into space may be here sooner than many people thought according to a study the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and Space Florida released today. Based on a market forecast for reusable suborbital rockets, more than 10,000 commercial opportunities may be available in the next decade for a person to experience weightlessness through space travel and to see the curvature of the earth.

Suborbital Reusable Vehicles (SRVs) are rockets designed to travel into space without achieving orbit. To date, existing types of suborbital vehicles have taken hundreds of component and test flights. Already, five new designs are being developed, with initial operations planned to begin in 2013 and 2014.

The FAA is responsible for licensing, regulating and inspecting SRVs. To help the industry, the FAA and other government agencies meet future SRV market demand, the "Ten Year Forecast of Suborbital Reusable Vehicles" analyzes emerging SRV markets and identifies drivers of growth.

The study includes three scenarios of demand for the SRV market based on modest, decreased and significant growth. Looking at the most favorable "Growth Scenario," the study finds the number of available seats would increase from 1,096 seats in the first year to 1,592 seats in the 10th year. The study also indicates that over a 10-year period, SRV flights could bring in an estimated $300 million to more than $1.6 billion in economic impact.

Based on the market study, SRVs have the potential to offer more than just opportunities for space tourism. Although the leading market is expected to be commercial human space flight, the study also shows that other potential markets include: aerospace technologies testing and demonstrations; educational opportunities; basic applied research; media and entertainment; as well as, small satellite deployment. In fact, one day SRVs may also help in earth imagery and point to point transportation.

A fact sheet on the study is available at http://www.faa.gov/news/fact_sheets/news_story.cfm?newsId=13792

Please follow SpaceRef on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.

View original post here:

FAA: Commercial Space Flight Lifting Off

Armadillo's reusable rocket licensed for launch

ARMADILLOS don't often get permission to travel into space.

Last Thursday the US Federal Aviation Administration awarded Armadillo Aerospace of Heath, Texas, a launch licence for its suborbital rocket Stig-B. It is only the third licence issued so far for a reusable launch vehicle. SpaceX's Falcon 9, which famously sent the first private craft to the International Space Station, isn't yet reusable.

The US government is liable for any damages caused by private launches, so applications to reach the high frontier are carefully scrutinised. Founded in 2000, Armadillo has carried out more than 200 test flights at lower altitudes, including sending its Stig-A rocket 95 kilometres up in February. The firm hopes the first Stig-B will launch by the end of August.

The goal for firms such as Armadillo is to develop a low-cost, refuellable rocket that is robust enough to fly repeatedly, like a jet plane. "The licensing of Stig-B shows that such a vehicle is ready to fly and to start making money," says Clark Lindsey of space industry blog HobbySpace.com.

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

Only subscribers may leave comments on this article. Please log in.

Only personal subscribers may leave comments on this article

Subscribe now to comment.

All comments should respect the New Scientist House Rules. If you think a particular comment breaks these rules then please use the "Report" link in that comment to report it to us.

If you are having a technical problem posting a comment, please contact technical support.

Read more here:

Armadillo's reusable rocket licensed for launch

Canadian Space Agency 'Eyes' Hubble's Successor

The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) on Monday said that it has delivered its contribution to the James Webb Space Telescope (Webb), successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. The instrument arrived at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Baltimore, Maryland, Monday morning, where it will be integrated into the largest, most complex and most powerful telescope ever built. Scheduled to be launched in 2018, the Webb is a joint project between NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the CSA

"I'm very pleased-and privileged-that the Canadian Space Agency is supporting NASA and ESA on such an amazing international project," said Steve MacLean, President of the CSA. "There is a critical difference between Hubble and the Webb. The Webb telescope will be located 1.5 million kilometres from Earth- too far away to be serviced as we did with Hubble. At that distance, the technology simply has to work. So the work done by the Canadian team has to be exactly right."

The Canadian two-in-one instrument is the second of Webb's four instruments to be delivered. It consists of the Webb's Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS), which will direct the telescope precisely, and the Near-Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (or NIRISS) science instrument. Both were designed, built and tested by COM DEV International in Ottawa and Cambridge, Ontario, with technical contributions from the Universit de Montral and the National Research Council of Canada, and under the leadership of the FGS science team. The CSA's contribution guarantees Canadian astronomers a share of observing time once the telescope launches.

The FGS consists of two identical cameras that are critical to Webb's ability to "see." Their images will allow the telescope to determine its position, locate its celestial targets, and remain pointed to collect high-quality data. The FGS will guide the telescope with incredible precision, with an accuracy of one millionth of a degree. NIRISS will have unique capabilities for finding the earliest and most distant objects in the Universe's history. It will also peer through the glare of nearby young stars to unveil new Jupiter-like exoplanets. It will have the capability of detecting the thin atmosphere of small, habitable, earth-like planets and determine its chemical composition to seek water vapour, carbon dioxide and other potential biomarkers such as methane and oxygen.

"Scientists across the world must remember when they get their data from the Webb telescope, all of those results bear the imprint of the successful hardware contribution that Canada is providing today, because none of it would be possible without the FGS's capabilities," said Dr Eric P Smith, Deputy Program Director for the Webb telescope at NASA. "We thank the team and celebrate the effort of the CSA, its primary industrial partner, COM DEV, and the Canadian academic community for their delivery of this critical component for the James Webb Space Telescope."

The FGS-NIRISS science team is jointly led by Dr John Hutchings of the National Research Council Canada and Professor Ren Doyon from the Universit de Montral, Director of the Mont-Mgantic Observatory and member of the Centre de recherche en astrophysique du Qubec (CRAQ). The team includes astronomers from: COM DEV; the National Research Council Canada; Saint Mary's University; the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI); the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich); the Universit de Montral; the University of Rochester; and the University of Toronto.

Link:

Canadian Space Agency 'Eyes' Hubble's Successor

Barbara Cohen to Talk Mars Exploration

PRESS RELEASE Date Released: Tuesday, July 31, 2012 Source: Marshall Space Flight Center

Barbara Cohen to Talk Mars Exploration

What: On Aug. 2, Dr. Barbara Cohen, a planetary scientist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., will talk about the history and future of NASA's exploration of Mars as part of the U.S. Space & Rocket Center's Pass the Torch Inspiration Lecture Series. The event is free and open to the public.

The lecture will highlight NASA's successful series of Mars rovers, from Pathfinder, to Spirit and Opportunity, to the Mars Curiosity rover. Curiosity is scheduled to land on the Red Planet at 12:30 a.m. CDT Aug. 6. The event will be broadcast live on Ustream: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/nasa-msfc

Who: Dr. Barbara Cohen is a science and operations team member for the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity, which continue to explore Mars after eight years. Cohen's science interests focus on the formation and evolution of the Earth, moon, Mars and asteroids. At Marshall, she helps plan new planetary robotic missions and develops new techniques to understand planetary samples in the laboratory and robotically.

When: Thursday, Aug. 2, 5 p.m. CDT

Where: U.S. Space & Rocket Center's Davidson Center for Space Exploration 3D theater

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 in the Marshall Public & Employee Communications Office at 256-544-0034 no later than 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 1.

For more information about the Mars landing, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/mars

News from Moon Today

More here:

Barbara Cohen to Talk Mars Exploration

Sally still rides

With the nation's space shuttle fleet retired and humans of all races and genders permanently in space aboard the International Space Station, the thrill, novelty and danger of space flight has receded a bit from the public imagination.

The death this week of Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, offered a reminder of a time when each new flight was marked by great anticipation and milestones were marked not only by scientific advancement, but by human progress.

In the months leading to Ms. Ride's first flight, billboards across the land proclaimed the event with the famous line from "Mustang Sally" - "Ride, Sally Ride!"

That bravado hearkened to the earlier days of the program, when astronauts were converted test pilots and perceived as devil-may-care cowboys.

Ms. Ride was anything but. She was a scientist, the holder of four degrees from Stanford University, including a Ph.D. in physics.

Although her realm was science, she also embraced he role as a pioneer and used it to advance the cause of women in the sciences. She founded Sally Ride Science, a company dedicated to getting more women and girls involved in science study and enterprise.

Ms. Ride's death of pancreatic cancer is a loss to that cause and a reminder of what has been lost by the nation's diminished commitment to human space flight - the potential not just for scientific advancement bt for human greatness.

Read the original post:

Sally still rides

Sally Ride gave nation pride in human progress

With the nation's space shuttle fleet retired and humans of all races and genders permanently in space aboard the International Space Station, the thrill, novelty and danger of space flight has receded a bit from the public imagination.

The death this week of Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, offered a reminder of a time when each new flight was marked by great anticipation and milestones were marked not only by scientific advancement, but by human progress.

In the months leading to Ride's first flight, billboards across the land proclaimed the event with the famous line from "Mustang Sally" - "Ride, Sally Ride!"

That bravado hearkened to the earlier days of the program, when astronauts were converted test pilots and perceived as devil-may-care cowboys.

Ride was anything but. She was a scientist, the holder of four degrees from Stanford University, including a Ph.D. in physics.

Although her realm was science, she also embraced he role as a pioneer and used it to advance the cause of women in the sciences. She founded Sally Ride Science, a company dedicated to getting more women and girls involved in science study and enterprise.

Ride's death to pancreatic cancer is a loss to that cause and a reminder of what has been lost by the nation's diminished commitment to human space flight -- the potential not just for scientific advancement bt for human greatness.

Visit link:

Sally Ride gave nation pride in human progress

Sally Ride, first US woman in space, dies at 61

Expand Photo Uncredited | NASA

FILE - This undated photo released by NASA shows astronaut Sally Ride. Ride, the first American woman in space, died Monday, July 23, 2012 after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 61. (AP Photo/NASA, File)

FILE - In this July 28, 2009 file photo, former astronaut Dr. Sally Ride, with Jeffrey Greason in the background, comments during a public meeting of the Review of U.S. Human Space Flight Plans Committee, in League City, Texas. Ride, the first American woman in space, died Monday, July 23, 2012 after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 61. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Brett Coomer, File) MANDATORY CREDIT AP PHOTO/HOUSTON CHRONICLE, BRETT COOMER.

FILE - In this June 1983 file photo provided by NASA, astronaut Sally K. Ride, STS-7 mission specialist, communicates with ground controllers from the mid-deck of the earth-orbiting Space Shuttle Challenger. Ride, the first American woman in space, died Monday, July 23, 2012 after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 61. (AP Photo/NASA, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 29, 1983 file photo, astronaut Sally Ride poses at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Caneveral, Fla. Ride, the first American woman in space, died Monday, July 23, 2012 after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 61. (AP Photo/Brian Russell, File)

FILE - In this June 1983 photo released by NASA, astronaut Sally Ride, a specialist on shuttle mission STS-7, monitors control panels from the pilot's chair on the shuttle Columbia flight deck. Ride, the first American woman in space, died Monday, July 23, 2012 after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 61. (AP Photo/NASA, File)

FILE - This undated file photo released by NASA shows astronaut Sally Ride. Ride, the first American woman in space, died Monday, July 23, 2012 after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 61. (AP Photo/NASA, File)

See more here:

Sally Ride, first US woman in space, dies at 61

Sally Ride, America’s First Woman in Space, Dies at 61

Human space flight has always captivated the minds of the public, especially ever since man ventured into space; however, when a woman first traveled up into space (alongside man), the way we observed space travel was changed forever. The woman who took responsibility for being the first American woman in space was Sally Ride.

Sally Ride, a 32 year-old English and Physics graduate from Stanford University, was accepted into the space program at NASA after responding to a newspaper advertisement from the well-known space agency (Source: Nasa.gov). Ride then assisted as Capsule Communicator (CAPCOM) for various space shuttle flights, and also assisted with the shuttles robotic arm.

Rides first venture into space was on the Challenger in 1983, making her the first American woman to travel into space via NASA. Unfortunately, she was not the actual first woman in space. Two Russian women (Valentina Tereshkova and Svetlana Savitskaya) traveled into space prior to her assignment with NASA.

Recently, Ride was involved with a long battle of pancreatic cancer, and then lost her fight on July 23rd, 2012, at 61 years of age. NASA posted the following tweet regarding her passing:

Various celebrities and fans of Sally Ride tweeted their respects to Americas first woman in space:

See the original post here:

Sally Ride, America’s First Woman in Space, Dies at 61

Appreciation: Sally Ride, First American Woman in Space

An undated photo released by NASA shows astronaut Sally Ride. Ride, the first American woman in space, will be inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame, hall officials announced Friday, Dec. 15, 2006.

NASA via AP

Here's how Sally Ride knew she was special: The day she was assigned to her first space flight, she was summoned to meet with Chris Kraft. Kraft was the soon-to-retire director of the Manned Spaceflight Center in Houston. But that was just a title. Kraft was already as much NASA symbol as NASA official; he was the man who'd been choosing astronauts and managing missions since the days of Mercury. He was the man who made careers and, in the case of a few unfortunate astronauts who crossed him by fouling up in flight, the man who ended them. He scared the daylights out of any American who had any hope of flying in space.

Ride knew that she wasn't being called to see Kraft because she'd done something wrong. She was being called because she'd been chosen to be part of the crew of the space shuttle Challenger's June, 1983 mission making her the first American woman to fly in space, 20 years almost to the day after Russia's Valeltina Tereshkova became the first woman ever to do so.

(See pictures of Earth from space.)

"[Kraft] wanted to have a chat with me and make sure I knew what I was getting into before I went on the crew," Ride said. "I was so dazzled to be on the crew and go into space I remembered very little of what he said."

Ride, who died today at age 61 after a battle with pancreatic cancer, did not dazzle easily. She described her first view of Earth from orbit as "spectacular," a coin-of-the-realm adjective for astronauts. But beyond that, she kept things clinical, observational. Looking down at Earth from space was "a chance to see our planet as a planet," said the Stanford grad with the PhD in physics. She spoke not without appreciation for what she was given the opportunity to do, but with a scientist's conviction that that was an opportunity not to exult but to learn.

Ride flew a second time, in 1984, also aboard Challenger. It was thus fitting that she was named to the panel that investigated the death of her ship after it exploded during ascent in 1986. She was tapped again for mortician's duty in 2003, after Columbia disintegrated during reentry, and if that was more than even a scientist's heart could bear without cracking, she didn't say so. She left NASA in 1987 to return to Stanford and later to teach at the University of California, San Diego. In 2001, she founded Sally Ride Science, a company that developed science curricula for students.

Ride was not old enough to have applied for a spot at NASA in the days that women in the space community were either wives, daughters, groupies or spacesuit seamstresses. And that's a good thing, because the only way she could have made a mark in that world then would have been as a wife, daughter, groupie or seamstress. But she surely was old enough to understand the sting those woman felt; old enough to know that while the NASA of the 1950s made a pro forma gesture of considering female applicants for the astronaut corps, those same women were the object of eye-rolls at best, jokes or disdain at worst. Their applications were accepted simply as an act of bureaucratic box-checking.

By the mid 1970s that had changed just enough that Ride could apply to she shuttle program one of 8,000 astronaut candidates given consideration, By 1978, she was named part of an incoming astronaut class that included five other women and 29 men. They were referred to around NASA as "the 35 new guys," and if the six who didn't quite fit that description minded, they said nothing.

Go here to read the rest:

Appreciation: Sally Ride, First American Woman in Space

IRVE-3 flight hardware test sounding rocket

Public release date: 19-Jul-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

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

NASA will launch an inflatable aeroshell/heat shield technology demonstrator on a Black Brant XI sounding rocket July 22 from the agency's launch range at the Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.

The Inflatable Reentry Vehicle Experiment (IRVE-3) is the third in a series of suborbital flight tests of this new technology.

Technicians will vacuum pack the uninflated 10-foot (3.05 meters) diameter cone of high-tech inner tubes into a 22-inch (56 centimeters) diameter sounding rocket.

During the flight test an on board system will inflate the tubes -- stretching a thermal blanket that covers them -to create an aeroshell or heat shield. That heat shield will protect a payload that consists of four segments including the inflation system, steering mechanisms, telemetry equipment and camera gear.

###

AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.

Here is the original post:

IRVE-3 flight hardware test sounding rocket

Glenn Employee Recognized by NASA's Space Flight Awareness Program

CLEVELAND - Glenn Research Center employee Suzanne M. Quintile was honored by NASA's Space Flight Awareness Program for outstanding support of human spaceflight.

The program recognizes outstanding job performance and contributions in support of human space flight by civil service and contract employees throughout the year and focuses on excellence in quality and safety.

Quintile, of Brunswick, Ohio, is a budget analyst within the Office of the Chief Financial Officer. Working with the Space Technology Office within the Space Flight Systems Directorate, she serves as the lead resources analyst for five projects of various sizes crossing multiple NASA programs.

In recognition of Quintile's contributions, she was invited to travel to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida for the awards ceremony and a tour of the center.

The Space Flight Awareness Program Honoree Award is one of the highest honors presented to employees for their dedication to quality work and flight safety. Recipients must have contributed beyond their normal work requirements toward achieving a particular human spaceflight program goal; contributed to a major cost savings; been instrumental in developing material that increases reliability, efficiency or performance; assisted in operational improvements or been a key player in developing a beneficial process improvement.

For more about NASA Glenn Research Center, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/glenn

Please follow SpaceRef on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.

Read the original:

Glenn Employee Recognized by NASA's Space Flight Awareness Program

Branson and kids on board for Galactic’s first space flight

FARNBOROUGH, ENGLAND The first space flight of Richard Bransons Virgin Galactic venture will be a family affair: The billionaire adventurer confirmed Wednesday he will be joined by his two adult children.

The British tycoon behind the Virgin business empire that spans cable television, airlines and space tourism revealed that the three will make the journey 100 kilometres above the Earth aboard the SpaceshipTwo (SS2) next year. Some 120 other tourists who have signed up for the $200,000 two-hour trips into space over the coming years were also present at the Farnborough Airshow south of London.

Next year, Holly and Sam will be joining me for a first voyage into space, the thrill-seeker told a packed conference on the third day of the show. Going into space is a hard business. It keeps my mind buzzing.

Virgin says it has 529 paid passengers already one more than the total number of space travellers since the former Soviet Unions Yuri Gagarin became the first man to go into space in 1961.

The future space tourists glimpsed a replica of the SS2 set up outside the auditorium as the actual one undergoes flight testing in Californias Mojave Desert. It will take off from a spaceport in New Mexico that was designed by British architect Lord Foster. The craft is designed to seat six people as well as the two pilots.

The tourists will have to undergo a week of training at the spaceport before taking their flight.

I wanted to be the first Irishman in space and Im really looking forward to it, said 70-year-old businessman and author Bill Cullen, who said he was the first to sign up for the ride in 2004.

Grant Roberts, 36, said his dream of space flight came from his grandfather, who was a pilot for Britains Royal Air Force and flew on missions over Germany in World War II.

Branson also said a new launch vehicle LauncherOne would take small satellites into space at much lower cost than is now possible. The Virgin Galactic team said a number of companies were hoping to use LauncherOne, which is expected to begin operations in 2016 and can carry up to 227 kilograms of weight.

It will be a critical new tool for the global research community, enabling us all to learn about our home planet more quickly and affordably, he said.

Read more from the original source:

Branson and kids on board for Galactic’s first space flight