Public library experiments with seeds that have been to space station – Roswell Daily Record

Tomato and chileplants are not unusual sights in Roswell, but the ones now growing at the Roswell Public Library have a purpose beyond adding some flavor to food.

The three groups of plants could lead to one day providing fresh, flavorful meals to astronauts on long-term missions on the International Space Station or even to Mars, Peggy Bohlin, science, technology, engineering and mathinstructor at the library, said.

The idea behind this is because we want to send astronauts to Mars, and it takes about a two-year journey, a year and a half, Bohlin said.

Theyre on Mars for about two years. Because of that timeframe, they cant put all that food on board, so they have to learn to grow plants so they can survive, she said.

Bohlin, who taught in Roswell Independent School District for 28 years, signed up for NASAs Tomatosphere project. The project provides two sets of tomato seeds: a control group of normal seeds and an experimental group of seeds that have been to the International Space Station. The experiment is a blind study, so Bohlin wont know which seeds were on the space station until it is over.

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Since the childrens department at the library is closed, Bohlin is growing the tomatoes in the window of the department, where the public can walk by and view the plants.

NASA is most interested in how many plants from each group germinate and on how many days from planting they begin to sprout, but Bohlin can also record other variables such as plant height, the rate of growth, number of flowers per plant and how many fruits each plant produces. Bohlin will also use different types of soil to grow the plants in. She will transfer them to pots after the seeds germinate.

Its going to be a really fun experiment, she said.

The other component of her space-oriented project is the Space Chile Grow a Pepper Plant Challenge, started by Jacob Torres, a NASA research scientist working with the University of New Mexico. Volunteers grow Martinez Chimayo Peppers in a controlled environment and vie to grow the hottest pepper.

In the ISS, when youre in space, your taste buds are not working. Food tastes bland up there, Bohlin said.

According to a NASA educational publication, that is because on Earth, gravity pulls fluids in the body to the legs. In the reduced gravity of Earths orbit, fluids are distributed equally through the body and can block the nasal passages and the ability to smell, which affects the ability to taste.

To compensate, NASA provides astronauts with condiments such as hot sauce and tortillas with extra spices mixed in.

The Martinez Chimayo Pepper is one candidate for a crop at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, according to the Space Chile challenge Facebook page.

Each grower will submit one sample pepper to UNM, where the capsaicin content will be analyzed. Capsaicin is the chemical compound in chile peppers that give them their heat.

Im excited to get some green chiles, Bohlin said with a laugh.

A new feature at the library will help people keep an eye on the International Space Station. ISS Above is a computer program that calculates where the space station is. A monitor near the periodicals shows information on the space station, including when and how to watch for it passing over Roswell.

Bohlin received the equipment through the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, the nonprofit organization that manages the space station, and donated it to the library.

Young patrons of the library will soon have the opportunity to conduct their own scientific experiments and observations through another project Bohlin has been putting together. Through the STEM at Home program, children will be able to take home kits that correspond to the topics of STEM-themed books from the childrens department. The books will have stickers on them letting patrons know there is a STEM at Home kit available.

Youve got them from biodiversity and humans to energy, youve got forces in motion, solar system, structure and function design, engineering problems and design solutions, Bohlin said.

The kits were developed based on the book Picture-Perfect Science Lessons by Emily Morgan and Karen Roerich Ansberry. Each kit has materials and worksheets children and their parents can use to conduct the experiments.

You want the parents to collaborate with the kids, you want them to have some good quality time together, Bohlin said.

The kits are designed for elementary school age students, but Bohlin said they could be used by older children as well.

City/RISD reporter Juno Ogle can be reached at 575-622-7710, ext. 205, or reporter04@rdrnews.com.

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Space station astronaut dons mask in prep for return to Earth – Digital Trends

After six months on the International Space Station (ISS), NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy has donned a face mask in readiness for his return to a planet that is still very much grappling with the coronavirus pandemic.

Masked up on @Space_Station! Cassidy wrote in a post on Twitter on Monday. Training myself for my new reality when I get home on Wednesday.

Masked up on @Space_Station! Training myself for my new reality when I get home on Wednesday. pic.twitter.com/vOyFe9UBj1

— Chris Cassidy (@Astro_SEAL) October 19, 2020

While the Covid-19 outbreak was already sweeping across the world when Cassidy and his two fellow space travelers departed for the ISS in April 2020, the situation was nowhere near as bad as it is now, with John Hopkins University data suggesting a global death toll of around 150,000 and 2.1 million recorded infections. As of this week, the pandemic has now claimed the lives of some 1.1 million people, with more than 40 million recorded infections.

Cassidy will return to Earth alongside Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner the same two Russian cosmonauts with whom he traveled to the orbiting outpost six months ago.

Visitors to the ISS always have to go into quarantine for a period of time before a launch to ensure that they dont take any conditions with them that could develop after arriving at the space station, putting themselves and other crew members in potential danger. With COVID-19 already spreading rapidly around the world last spring, these precautions were tightened, with Cassidy and his colleagues, for example, placed in quarantine for an entire month before lift-off, instead of a couple of weeks.

Cassidy has spent a busy time aboard the space station, carrying out various scientific experiments as well as performing essential maintenance during a total of four spacewalks. He also monitored some powerful storms from 250 miles up, started work to find an air leak on the station, and captured a cool shot of SpaceXs Crew Dragon spacecraft shortly after the capsule docked carrying its first-ever astronauts. And, importantly, Cassidy also installed a brand new toilet for future ISS visitors.

The return journey of the three Expedition 63 crew members will be livestreamed on NASA TV, from the undocking at around 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, October 21, to the landing back in Kazakhstan shortly before 11 p.m. ET.

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THIS WEEK @NASA: New Crew Arrives International Space Station, International Agreement on Artemis – SpaceCoastDaily.com

Latest Happenings around NASA

ABOVE VIDEO: New crew safely aboard the space station, a launch update on another space station mission, and an international agreement on Artemis a few of the stories to tell you about This Week at NASA!

New Crew Safely Aboard Space Station

NASAs Kate Rubins is safely aboard the International Space Station. She and Expedition 64 crewmates Sergey Ryzhikov, and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov, both of Roscosmos, were greeted by our Chris Cassidy and others aboard the orbital outpost on Oct. 14, just hours after launching from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

NASA, SpaceX Crew-1 Launch Update

NASAs SpaceX Crew-1 mission to theInternational Space Stationis now targeted for no sooner than early-to-mid November. This will give SpaceX more time to evaluate some issues observed during a recent non-NASA launch of its Falcon 9 rocket. The mission will be the first commercial crew rotational flight to the station with the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft.

NASA and International Partners Sign Artemis Accords

During a virtual meeting of the International Astronautical Congress on Oct.13, NASA and 7 partner countries signed the Artemis Accords agreement for international participation in our Artemis program, which includes sending the first woman and next man to the Moon in 2024.

Jim Bridenstine, NASA Administrator:The principles described in the Artemis Accords are what will create a bright and prosperous future that we all want for ourselves and for generations to come. These principles are grounded in the Outer Space Treaty.

The founding members of the Artemis Accords are Australia, Canada, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and the U.S.

OSIRIS-RExs Touch-And-Go Date with Asteroid Bennu

The OSIRIS-REx teams first Touch-And-Go (TAG) sample collection attempt with asteroid Bennu is targeted for Oct. 20. O-REx is attempting to be the first-ever NASA spacecraft to collect a sample of an asteroid and send it back to Earth for study.

NASA Announces New Space Tech Public-Private Partnerships

On Oct. 14, NASA announced the latest partnerships with space tech companies through a Tipping Point solicitation to develop commercial space capabilities, and to benefit future NASA missions. The agency also provided an update on space tech efforts to enable human and robotic exploration on the Moon and future operations on Mars. Learn more atnasa.gov/moontomars.

NASA Partner Blue Origins Launch Tests Precision Lunar Landing Technologies

A NASA-developedsensor suitethat could help robotic and crewed missions make precise, soft landings on the Moon was launched aboard a Blue Origin New Shepard suborbital rocket on Oct. 13. The rockets flight path provided a unique opportunity to further develop the sensors and algorithms for potential use onArtemismissions.

Thats whats up this week @NASA

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UCSD Grad One Of Three Astronauts Who Arrived At International Space Station – KPBS

Photo by Nicholas McVicker

Above: NASA astronaut Kate Rubins gives a talk at the 2017 BIO International Convention, June 21, 2017.

NASA astronaut and UC San Diego graduate Kate Rubins arrived aboard the International Space Station Wednesday, where she and two Russian cosmonauts will conduct research over the next six months.

Rubins, Sergey Ryzhikov and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov launched from Kazakhstan in the Soyuz MS-17 spacecraft and arrived at the station's Rassvet module at 1:48 a.m. PST following a two-orbit, three-hour flight, according to NASA.

The trio joined Expedition 63 Commander Chris Cassidy of NASA and Roscosmos cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner, who have been aboard the complex since April. Ryzhikov will become the commander when Expedition 64 begins Oct. 21 and Cassidy, Vagner and Ivanishin will depart for Earth.

The spaceflight marks the second for Rubins and Ryzhikov and the first for Kud-Sverchkov, who will live and work aboard the outpost for six months, conducting research in technology development, Earth science, biology, human research and more. NASA says research conducted in microgravity will help prepare for long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars, in addition to improvements for life on Earth.

According to NASA, Rubins became the first person to sequence DNA in space during her first spaceflight in 2016.

She earned her bachelor's degree in molecular biology from UCSD in 1999, and a doctorate in cancer biology from Stanford University's Medical School Biochemistry Department and Microbiology and Immunology Department in 2005.

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Hatches Open! New Arrivals Expand Space Station’s Crew to Six – SciTechDaily

(Front row from left) Expedition 64 crew members Kate Rubins, Sergey Ryzhikov and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov join Expedition 63 crew members (back row from left) Ivan Vagner, Anatoly Ivanishin and Chris Cassidy inside the space stations Zvezda service module.

NASA astronaut Kate Rubins and cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov of the Russian space agency Roscosmos joined Expedition 63 Commander Chris Cassidy of NASA and cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner aboard the International Space Station when the hatches between the Soyuz spacecraft and the orbiting laboratory officially opened at 7:07 a.m. EDT.

The arrival temporarily restores the stations crew complement to six for the remainder of Expedition 63.

Expedition 64 begins Wednesday, October 21, with the departure of Cassidy, Vagner, and Ivanishin in the Soyuz MS-16 spacecraft that brought them to the station on April 9. Cassidy will hand command of the station to Ryzhikov during a ceremony with all crew members that is scheduled for 4:15 p.m. Tuesday, October 20 and will air live on NASA Television and the agencys website.

The Expedition 64 crew will conduct research in technology development, Earth science, biology, human research and more. During Rubins first spaceflight in 2016, she became the first person to sequence DNA in space. Research conducted in microgravity helps NASA prepare for long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars, and contributes to improvements for life on Earth. Follow Rubins during her space mission on Facebook and Instagram.

This is the second spaceflight for Rubins and Ryzhikov. Kud-Sverchkov becomes the 241st person to visit the unique microgravity laboratory, and the trio will be aboard to celebrate the 20th anniversary of uninterrupted human presence since the Expedition 1 crew arrived Nov. 2, 2000. Humanitys home in space has hosted more than 3,000 research and educational investigations from people in 108 countries and areas.

During Expedition 64, the arrival of Crew-1 aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon on the first operational commercial mission to the space station will bring four more crew members, expanding a long-duration Expedition crew to seven people for the first time. Crew-1 is currently targeted for launch in November.

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Astronauts take shelter as space station dodges orbital junk – Space.com

The International Space Station just dodged a fast-moving hunk of orbiting junk.

Controllers maneuvered the station away from a potential collision with a piece of debris today (Sept. 22) at 5:19 p.m. EDT (2119 GMT). They did so by firing the thrusters on a Russian Progress cargo spacecraft that's docked to the orbiting lab's Zvezda service module, NASA officials said in an update today.

The three astronauts currently living aboard the station NASA's Chris Cassidy and cosmonauts Anatoli Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner sheltered in the station's Russian segment during the maneuver to be closer to their Soyuz spacecraft, the NASA update stated.

This was done "out of an abundance of caution," the update said. "At no time was the crew in any danger."

Related: 7 wild ways to clean up space junk

The trio's stay near the Soyuz, which will bring them back down to Earth next month, was quite brief.

"Maneuver Burn complete. The astronauts are coming out of safe haven," NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine tweeted at 5:25 p.m. EDT (2125 GMT) today, just six minutes after the Progress thruster firing.

Space junk is a growing problem in Earth orbit. Nearly 129 million pieces of debris are whizzing around our planet at the moment, about 34,000 of which are more than 4 inches (10 centimeters) wide, according to estimates by the European Space Agency.

At the International Space Station's altitude, roughly 250 miles (400 kilometers) up, material zooms around Earth at about 17,500 mph (28,200 kph) so fast that a collision with even a tiny shard of debris could do serious damage to the orbiting lab.

Hence today's evasive action. The 150-second-long Progress burn boosted the station above the trajectory of the unknown piece of debris, which would have taken the junk within 0.86 miles (1.39 kilometers) of the orbiting lab at 6:21 p.m. EDT (2221 GMT), the NASA update stated.

Junk-dodging maneuvers are far from unheard of for the orbiting lab. The station has now made three such moves in 2020 alone, Bridenstine said today in another tweet, stressing that "debris is getting worse!"

And in January 2012, controllers moved the station to avoid a potential collision with a piece of junk generated by a much-criticized 2007 Chinese anti-satellite test.

This story was updated at 7 p.m. EDT on Sept. 22 to include information from another tweet by Jim Bridenstine.

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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Contestants will compete for a SpaceX trip to the International Space Station in new reality TV show – TechCrunch

Theres a reality TV competition show in the works that will feature a 2023 trip to the International Space Station as the grand prize, Deadline reports. The production company behind the show, which will be called Space Hero, has booked a seat on a SpaceX Dragon crew spacecraft set to make the trip to the ISS in 2023, and will make it the reward for whoever comes out the winner in a competition among everyday people from any background who share a deep love for space exploration, according to the report.

The competition will be an ersatz astronaut training program of sorts, including physical challenges, as well as puzzles and problem-solving tasks, as well as emotionally challenging scenarios, according to Deadline. That will lead up to what producers are currently planning will be a live episode featuring a global viewer vote about who ultimately will win. The show will also include documenting the winners ISS trip, including their launch and 10-day space station stay, as well as their return journey and landing.

To bring all these pieces together, the production team is working with Axiom Space, a private space travel services provider and mission operator, as well as NASA, with which its discussing what might be done in terms of STEM education add-ons for this planned programming.

Deadline says that Survivor creator and reality industry giant Mark Burnett has previously tried multiple times to create a reality show with a trip to space as the main component. One such effort, an NBC-based program called Space Race, was created in partnership with Richard Branson and focused on Virgin Galactic, but it was ended after that companys fatal testing accident in 2015.

Theres also a movie production in the works thats bound for the space station as a filming location, and those efforts are being spearheaded by Tom Cruise, who will star in the yet untitled project. NASA has repeatedly said it welcomes increased commercialization of low-Earth orbit and the ISS, and it also intentionally sought out private partners like SpaceX for its U.S.-based astronaut launch vehicles, in the hopes that they would be able to book other, private clients for flights to help defray mission costs.

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Contestants will compete for a SpaceX trip to the International Space Station in new reality TV show - TechCrunch

SpaceX Sending Tom Cruise To The Space Station In 2021 – Hackaday

Several months after NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine confirmed the project was in the works, sources are now reporting that Tom Cruise and director Doug Liman will officially be making the trip to the International Space Station in October of 2021 to film scenes for an as of yet untitled movie. Cruise and Liman previously worked together on the science fiction spectacle Edge of Tomorrow in 2014, which may give us a hint at what the duo are planning for their trip to the final frontier.

Industry insiders claim that the two film makers and potentially a female co-star will fly aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule under the command of Michael Lpez-Alegra, a veteran astronaut who currently holds the American record for number and duration of extra-vehicular activities (EVAs). The mission is being organized by Axiom Space, which previously announced they would perform a series of privately funded flights to the ISS as a precursor to constructing their own commercial expansion to the orbiting laboratory.

Of course, with more than a year before liftoff, anything could happen. SpaceX has been linked, officially or otherwise, to several private trips to space that literally and figuratively never got off the ground.

Mars-One was touting concept art that showed a fleet of modified SpaceX Dragons on the Red Planet as far back as 2012, and Elon Musk himself once announced that the Falcon Heavy would send private passengers on a trip around the Moon by the end of 2018. But to date, a pair of NASA astronauts have been the only humans to actually fly on SpaceX hardware.

Undoubtedly, some will see this flight of fancy as a waste of valuable resources. After all, theres no shortage of scientists and researchers who would be more deserving of trip to a space than Jerry Maguire. But according to Bridenstine, the hope is that a big budget Hollywood film featuring scenes shot on the ISS could do for NASA what Top Gun once did for the Navy:

There was a day when I was in elementary school and I saw Top Gun. From that day, I knew I was going to be a Navy pilot. If we can get Tom Cruise to inspire an elementary kid to join the Navy and be a pilot, why cant we get Tom Cruise to inspire the next Elon Musk? Thats what we need.

While we might not all agree on who the next generation of engineers should look to for inspiration, the impact that Top Gun had on Navy recruitment in the 80s and 90s is well established. If sending Tom Cruise to space for a few weeks might help inspire more kids to look into a STEM education, its probably worth a shot. Though it seems like Tom Hanks and his fellow Apollo 13 crew mates did a respectable enough job celebrating the incredible engineering behind NASAs greatest triumph without actually going into orbit themselves.

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See the International Space Station, 3 planets in tonight’s sky – 69News WFMZ-TV

Over the weekend, we had record-setting lows in the Lehigh Valley.

While the nights have been chilly, the cold has lead to the best stargazing conditions we've had in months.

Cold air is dry air, and light travels easier in dry air, which is why the night sky looks so nice the past few nights.

This is also why the sky has looked so blue the last few days.

The have looked very blue the last few days because our air is drier than usual.

On Monday night*, here's what you can see:

The sunset is now in the 6 PM hour, toward the end of the 6 PM hour.

*While this article was written for Monday, September 21, you can still see all of these planets in the night sky. Saturday, October 3 is the next time to see the space station.

Jupiter and Saturn will be in the southern sky, and they'll be right next to each other. At dusk, Jupiter is the brightest object in the sky. Saturn is to the left of Jupiter.

Both are somewhat low in the sky. They set (dip below the horizon) around 1 AM.

Look for Jupiter and Saturn in the south sky.

Mars is spectacular. It's the brightest and biggest object in the night in the middle of the night (12-4 A.M.). You'll definitely notice its orange color. It's high in the southern sky then.

It rises in the east sky at dusk, and it's not as big. It still looks orange, though.

Mars is high in the south sky.

The International Space Stationwill cross over us again on Saturday, October 3 for four minutes at 7:43 P.M. It'll first appear in the west sky, near where the sun sets. Then, it'll travel low in the sky to the northeastern horizon. But, before it reaches the northeast horizon, it'll suddenly vanish!

The International Space Station flew over us on Monday, September 21 at 7:31 P.M. It looked an airplane, and it will look like that again on Saturday, October 3.

The International Space station will look like an airplane flying across the sky. It will have a smooth, steady motion. You'll know you saw it if it vanishes before reaching the horizon.

This happens because the International Space Station runs into the darkness of the Earth's shadow. We see the space station in the first place because it's reflecting sunlight.

If you want to see the space station, get the exact time for your community here. It's best to go out when it'll be in the sky for four minutes or longer.

The Moonis in the night sky right at sunset for only a few hours. It will set at 10 P.M. tonight, leaving very dark skies for the rest of the night.

If you see the moon, it'll be a crescent shape because we just had a new moon last week. The moon gets half full later this week.

Watch the International Space Station fly over you Monday night.

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See the International Space Station, 3 planets in tonight's sky - 69News WFMZ-TV

The Elusive Peril of Space Junk – The New Yorker

For decades, the International Space Station has been hovering over Earth, in an orbit somewhere between two hundred and three hundred miles above sea level. Its massive rectilinear structure, resembling an Eisenhower-era TV antenna, contains hundreds of thousands of solar cells and a series of pressurized modules that can support life and equipment, all of it weighing close to a million pounds. Since 2000, people have been living on the station, in an area comparable to a six-bedroom house: humanitys most expensive real estate. The station is also the fastest structure a person can live in. It orbits the planet at more than seventeen thousand miles an hour, many times faster than the Earths rotation. A day on the station, from sunrise to sunrise, lasts just ninety minutes.

In the early hours of July 16, 2015, members of the U.S.Air Force noticed an alarming development involving the I.S.S. Since the Cold War, the military has maintained an extensive space-surveillance network. Every minute, tracking stations across the globe relay a cascade of data to the Cheyenne Mountain Complex, in a bunker carved deep beneath two thousand feet of granite in Colorado. Some of the information is set aside for NORAD and other national-security organizations. Other portions are forwarded to the 18th Space Control Squadron, in California, which works to prevent collisions in the sky.

Sometime before three that morning, the surveillance network glimpsed a hunk of debris hurtling toward the I.S.S. A well-known piece of space trash, it had been labelled Object No. 36912 in an extensive inventory of orbital artifacts known as the NORAD catalogue. It had broken off of a Soviet military weather satellite, which was launched in 1979 from a Cold War facility near the Arctic Circle. The cylindrical satelliteresembling an old-fashioned boilerwas designed to work for less than two years. In the ensuing decades, it had been shedding fragments. That April, another piece of it had threatened the space station.

Object No. 36912 was likely a torn-off piece of thermal shielding; it appeared to be relatively light, and no bigger than a large dinner plate. For years, it had circled safely above the I.S.S. But its mass and shape made it highly sensitive to atmospheric dragits orbit shifting dramatically as the atmosphere expanded and contracted in response to solar activity. Several weeks earlier, the atmosphere had ballooned, causing Object No.36912s orbit to suddenly decay.

As the debris spiralled downward, gathering speed, the Air Force was keeping a close watch, but small things in space can easily evade detection. The object was visible to just two radar stations, in Alaska and in Floridaand then it went entirely dark for more than a week. On July 16th, when it reappeared, Air Force analysts quickly updated their predictions: the object would make a close pass of the space station at 5:29A.M. (Mission Control time, in Houston). It would clear the spacecraft by about fourteen miles, but penetrate a safety zone around the I.S.S. called the box. Then it would loop around the globe, falling farther, and come within striking distancerisking impact, or a conjunction. If the chance that something in the box will collide with the I.S.S. is greater than one in ten thousand, the condition is red. With Object No. 36912, the probability was more than one in a thousand.

At 2:44 A.M., the Space Control Squadron notified Jim Cooney, the I.S.S.s trajectory-operations officer. Cooney, a NASA veteran, was asleep at home, but an app on his phone triggers a high-volume alarm for such alerts. Your brain gets engaged really fast, he told me. He had become accustomed to late-night calls. Only a month earlier, NASA had adjusted the spacecrafts trajectory to dodge a fragment of a Minotaur rocket: a former intercontinental ballistic missile repurposed to ferry cargo into space.

These maneuvers have been performed more than two dozen times, and can be executed without much trouble if Houston has five and a half hours notice. But, when Cooney called the Air Force, he learned that Object No. 36912 would make its closest approach in about four hours. I had them repeat the information to make sure I was doing the math right, he recalled. Never before had the I.S.S. faced such a high probability of collision on such short notice. Moving the station was out of the question.

Instantly, he relayed the news to Houstons flight director, Ed Van Cise, and then rushed to Mission Control, where he joined a tense meeting to discuss the options. There was only one: instruct the crew to lock down the stationclosing hatches between modulesand then shelter in the Soyuz capsule, a Russian vessel that can serve as a lifeboat. There were three people aboard the I.S.S.: one American, Scott Kelly, and two Russians, Gennady Padalka and Mikhail Kornienko. In the Soyuz, they could detach from the failing structure and return to Earth. In the stations history, its crew had sheltered in the Soyuz only three other times.

Van Cise reached out to Kelly, who was exercising on a treadmill mounted on one of the stations walls. Houston on Space to Ground Two, a voice barked, announcing the call. We are privatizing. This meant that the feed from Mission Control, which usually could be accessed freely by the ground crew, would be nonpublic. Kelly later wrote in an expedition log that his first thought was, Oh, fuck. In space, unscheduled private conversations portend bad news: in 2011, on an earlier mission, Houston had privatized the channel to inform him that his sister-in-law, the Arizona congresswoman Gabby Giffords, had been shot.

Hearing that the call was for NASA business, he was at first relieved. Then the enormity of the situation sank in. Fuck, he thought again. The privatized call was a courtesy, so that Kelly would be prepared once the alert was relayed publicly. The space station operates on Greenwich Mean Time; for the crew, the moment that Object No. 36912 either slammed into the structure or zoomed past it would be 12:01. Mission Control instructed Kelly to start closing hatches at 10:30 A.M., then retreat with the Russians to the Soyuz at 11:51, and stay there until notified. Kelly cut short his workout.

At ten oclock, Mission Control contacted Kelly again, to remind him that he and Kornienko had an interview scheduled with morning news programs in Florida and Kentucky. NASA reasoned that there was time to proceed: the interview would take less than twenty minutes, and lockdown was in half an hour. Seriously? Kelly wrote in his log. We have a satellite coming at us. But he and Kornienko got into their positions without protest. We are ready for the event, Kelly said, dryly, and glanced at his watch. Then he answered questions about the Kentucky Derby, performed zero-gravity stunts, and tried not to show that he was in a life-threatening situation.

As soon as the transmissions ended, Kelly began locking down hatches throughout the American modules. Calmly, he floated through the structurethe lab, the cupola, an air lockwith a flashlight in his mouth, to augment the stations dim lighting. He had asked Houston if the debris hurtling toward the space station would be visible; as he closed the hatches, he got a response. It will be in orbital night, Houston told him. So, no viewing opportunity.

How about relative velocity? Kelly asked.

Fourteen kilometres per second.

Copy, Kelly said, plainly, but the number was terrifying: the debris and the station were closing in on each other at a combined speed of thirty-one thousand miles an hour. In orbit, a one-centimetre bolt can have the explosive force of a hand grenade upon impact. Object No. 36912 was at least ten times larger. When the space stations shielding was being designed, a NASA astrophysicist named Donald Kessler had asked experts to shoot small objects at metal film cannisters at hypervelocities. The ballistics revealed that, even if debris penetrated the I.S.S. cleanly, it could leave a mangled hole upon exit. Object No. 36912 risked triggering a chain of failures that could destroy the entire structure.

Kelly focussed on procedure. Houston had told him to pick up a scientific instrument and a medical kit. He got those, and also some personal items, thinking of an American astronaut,Mike Foale, who had served on the Mir space station, in 1997. Foale had been living in a module called Spektr when a supply ship came in too quicklylike a shark, a cosmonaut onboard recalled, this black body covered in spots sliding pastand then smashed into it. To contain the breach, Spektr was sealed, forever separating Foale from his things, including gold pendants he intended to give his wife and children. You always think about what happened to him when youre closing a hatch with important stuff on the other side, Kelly told me.

After locking down the American modules, Kelly caught up with Kornienko and Padalka in the Russian section. Padalka, the commander of the I.S.S., strove to project confidence; when Moscow Mission Control had asked him about the mood onboard, he responded, Fighting spirit! Kelly noticed that none of the hatches on the five Russian modules were shut. (Padalka and Kornienko say that they remember this differently.) The Russians dont close their hatches like we do, Kelly wrote in his log. They think its a waste of timebasically thinking the two most likely scenarios are the thing misses, or catastrophic destruction. The stuff in-between is way too unlikely to care about.

Kelly was amazed to find the cosmonauts having lunch. We wanted to eat! Kornienko told me. Russians have a proverb, War is war, but lunch runs on time. The Soyuzs food supply was limited to three days, and who knew how long they might be stranded there? There were fourteen minutes to spare, so Kelly joined them for a can of Appetizing Appetizera dish that, he later recalled, resembled cat food, in appearance, consistency, and probably a little bit in taste.

In Houston, the crew at Mission Control waited tensely. A wall-size screen contained a depiction of the space stations orbit and a live feed of its interior. Ed Van Cise fidgeted with a computer mouse. One NASA official stared at a monitor with a hand over his mouth. Another sat with an emergency manual open; he told me, We know what to do, but we dont know what the outcome is going to be. This could be terrible, this could be a loss of life.

At 11:51, the three men in the space station climbed into the Soyuz capsule, a cramped vessel that looked like a pinched cylinder atop the station. It was packed with switches and knobs. Its dark outside, so its darker than normal inside, Kelly wrote in his log. Its cold. He was wearing a black NASA sweatshirt, and he had pulled the hood down nearly over his eyes.

The men were instructed to leave the Soyuz hatch sealed, but unlatchedin case the debris hit the capsule rather than the I.S.S. and they needed to rush back in. Kornienko focussed on the latch, imagining the steps he would take in a crisis. There were no wordssilence, he told me. Kelly, too, was struck by the sudden quiet, as each man retreated into his thoughts. He wrote in his log, I can only hear the sounds of the fans inside the Soyuz, my breathing.

With the tension growing, Padalka said, You know, it will really suck if we get hit.

Da, Kornienko said. Will suck.

A monitor indicated the time, and the men watched the minutes elapse, bracing for 12:01. Kelly noticed Kornienko gazing out a porthole. Finally, I said, Misha, youre not going to see anything, he recalled. That thing is going thirty thousand miles an hour, and its dark outside! Then I noticed that I was looking out the window, and listening, and tensing out, and then at some point you realize, We wouldnt even fucking know if we got hit. We just wouldve been vaporized!

The three men fell into silence again. For a while, Kelly listened to his iPod. As the time approached twelve noon and some odd number of seconds I started to grimace, Kelly wrote. Thirty seconds go by. A minute. At 12:01, nothing happened. Padalka got on the radio. Moscow, he said. Do you read?

Loud and clear. How are things?

Were getting into 12:02, Padalka said. Everything is very quiet up here. After nearly three tense minutes of radio silence, Padalka called in again: Moscow, do we keep waiting?

The radio crackled. Thats all, it finally said. Object No. 36912 had blown past the station. Later, the Air Force put its distance at less than a mile and a halfa gap it could have closed faster than the blink of an eye. Three weeks later, it incinerated in the atmosphere.

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The Elusive Peril of Space Junk - The New Yorker

Look up: Here are the best times to spot the International Space Station this week – The Cincinnati Enquirer

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The International Space Station will be visible in the Cincinnati sky for over 30 minutes between now and Tuesday, according to NASA's "Spot The Station" tracker.

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The International Space Station will be visible in the Cincinnati sky for over 30 minutes between now and Tuesday, according to NASA's "Spot The Station" tracker.

The station passes over Cincinnati frequently, but oftentimes is visible for only about one minute at a time, and sometimes less than that.

But NASA's tracker cites a total of 32 minutes of station visibility spread over the next six days.

You don't need anything more than your arm and fist todetermine where to look in the night sky.The horizon is considered zerodegrees, and directly overhead is 90 degrees. According to NASA, if you hold your fist at arm's length resting on the horizon, the top of your fist will be at about 10 degrees.

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Look up: Here are the best times to spot the International Space Station this week - The Cincinnati Enquirer

Made In Space is sending the first ceramic manufacturing facility in space to the ISS next week – TechCrunch

In-space manufacturing company Made In Space is pushing the envelope on what can, well, be made in space with its next mission which is set to launch aboard a Northrop Grumman International Space Station (ISS) resupply mission set for next Tuesday. Aboard that launch will be Made In Spaces Turbine Ceramic Manufacturing Module (aka CMM), a commercial ceramic turbine blisk manufacturing device that uses 3D printing technology to produce detailed parts that require a high degree of production accuracy.

A turbine blisk is a combo rotor disk/blade array that is used primarily in engines used in the aerospace industry. Making them involves using additive manufacturing to craft them as a single component, and the purpose of this mission is to provide a proof-of-concept about the viability of doing that in a microgravity environment. Gravity can actually introduce defects into ceramic blisks manufactured on Earth, because of the way that material can settle, leading to sedimentation, for instance. Producing them in microgravity could mean lower error rates overall, and a higher possible degree of precision for making finely detailed designs.

Made In Space, which was acquired earlier this year by new commercial space supply parent company Redwire, has been at the forefront of creating and deploying 3D printing technologies in space, particularly through its partnership with the International Space Station. The goal of the company is to demonstrate the commercial benefits of in-space manufacturing, and to commercialize the technology in order to create tangible benefits for a number of industries right here on Earth.

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Made In Space is sending the first ceramic manufacturing facility in space to the ISS next week - TechCrunch

Ellen Ochoa Shakes Hands with First Humanoid Robot to Head to International Space Station – SpaceCoastDaily.com

first humanoid robot to travel to spaceThen-NASA Johnson Space Center deputy director Ellen Ochoa poses for a photo with Robonaut 2 (R2) during media day in the Space Vehicle Mock-up Facility on Aug. 4, 2010.

(NASA) Then-NASA Johnson Space Center deputy director Ellen Ochoa poses for a photo with Robonaut 2 (R2) during media day in the Space Vehicle Mock-up Facility on Aug. 4, 2010.

R2 hitched a ride to the International Space Station with the STS-133.

It was the first humanoid robot to travel to space and the first U.S.-built robot to visit the station. R2 will stay on the space station indefinitely to allow engineers on the ground to learn more about how humanoid robots fare in microgravity.

Ochoa became Johnson Center director in 2012 and retired from that position in 2018. She is veteran of four space shuttle flights and holds a doctorate in electrical engineering from Stanford.

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Ellen Ochoa Shakes Hands with First Humanoid Robot to Head to International Space Station - SpaceCoastDaily.com

Why Washington and Baltimore are different colors from space – Greater Greater Washington

A view of the Washington (left) and Baltimore (right) regions from space. by NASA / International Space Station Expedition 63 Crew licensed under Creative Commons.

On July 15, the crew of the International Space Station posted a nighttime photo of our region from space on Twitter, likening Washington and Baltimore to two galaxies swirling near each other. This photo gives us the opportunity to make a number of observations about the region.

DC and Baltimore City are different colors at night

The first thing that stands out when one looks at the ISS crews photo nighttime lighting in our region is that the Washington region looks orange while the Baltimore region looks white. If they actually were galaxies, this would imply that Washington was significantly older and made up of mature stars fusing helium instead of hydrogen, or else that it was significantly further away and retreating at a high velocity. What is actually going on, however, is something more mundane: a difference in the Districts and Baltimore Citys street lighting choices.

Baltimore recently completed a program, called Bmore Bright, to replace all of the citys street lights with modern LED street lights, which are more energy efficient and have longer lifespans than the various types of high-energy discharge lamps that have historically been used for street lighting.

While the District is currently in the planning phases of a similar project, only 5% of the street lights in DC are currently LEDs, while 86% are high-pressure sodium high-energy discharge lamps. While LED street lights are designed to replicate the color distribution of sunlight, and so appear white, high-pressure sodium lamps have a distinctly orange glow, giving the District its orange appearance in the photo.

The Districts consistent use of high-pressure sodium lamps also helps the DC-Maryland border stand out fairly clearly in the map: the close-in Maryland suburbs are lit with a variety of types of street lights, unlike the Districts consistent orange glow. Likewise, in Baltimore, the Seagirt Marine Terminal and Mid-Atlantic Terminal port facilities stand out because their orange sodium-lamp illumination contrasts sharply with the citys white LED streetlights.

The Sparrows Point warehouse facilities facilities, on the bay side of the Baltimore Beltway Francis Scott Key Bridge, on the other hand, glow blue-white, suggesting that they are illuminated with LED, metal-halide, or mercury-vapor lamps.

A view of Chicago from space, taken 5 August 2016. by NASA / International Space Station Expedition 47 Crew licensed under Creative Commons.

This visualization of borders from street light colors is possible elsewhere in the county as well. In the photo above, the borders of the city of Chicago are clearly visible because Chicago also used orange sodium-vapor street lights when the photo was taken in 2016, while its suburbs did not.

Baltimore and Washington arent twin cities the way Dallas-Ft. Worth are

In the Twitter thread where the photo was originally posted, several people commented on Washington and Baltimore being twin cities or made comparisons to Dallas-Fort Worth. However, while the Washington and Baltimore suburbs do somewhat blend together with lines of continuous development in the US-1/I-95 and to a lesser degree Baltimore-Washington Parkway corridors, they are still visually very distinct in the view from space.

In comparison, Dallas and Fort Worth with downtown cores 30 miles apart, not much less than the 35 miles that separate downtown Baltimore from downtown DC really do blur together into one continuous area of development when viewed from space, as in the photo below.

While downtown Dallas is identifiable as the bright core in the lower right of the image and downtown Fort Worth is visible as a smaller bright core in the lower left, with the commercial core of Arlington, Texas in between them, it is hard to identify a clear boundary between what is Dallas and what is Fort Worth, and the only dark areas are several lakes and the parkland along the Trinity River, which connects the two cities.

A view of Dallas-Fort Worth from space, taken 3 January 2020. by NASA / International Space Station Expedition 61 Crew licensed under Creative Commons.

To help give a clearer view of the relative scales of our region and several of the USs largest metropolitan regions, I created an image showing the views of Baltimore-Washington, Dallas-Fort Worth, Los Angeles, and New York from space, all at the same scale and with all images rotated with north at the top.

In this image, we can see that the Dallas-Fort Worth region, which has roughly the same population as the Baltimore-Washington region, is also similar in size to our region, but with much more consistent density across a continuous area, while the density in our region is concentrated in the cores of the District and Baltimore, along with a few linear suburban corridors.

Clockwise from upper left, Baltimore-Washington, Dallas-Fort Worth, New York, and Los Angeles from space at the same scale. by the author.

New York, on the other hand, can fit its densest areas New York City, Newark, Hudson County in New Jersey, and southern Westchester and eastern Nassau Counties in New York in the space between the District and Baltimore, even though those areas combined have a significantly larger population than our region.

Meanwhile, the core regions of the Los Angeles metro area the Los Angeles basin proper, the San Gabriel and San Fernando Valleys, and the northern portion of Orange County with a smaller population than the core portion of the New York metro area, sprawl out over a significantly larger region.

The structure of the Baltimore-Washington region from space

This photo of our region gives a good view of the general structure of development especially commercial development, which is generally more brightly-lit and where street lighting is less obscured by trees in our region. While a number of well-lit suburban corridors extend from Baltimore, none are as prominent as the Rockville Pike/I-270 corridor that extends almost directly from the District to the top of the photo.

A view of the Washington (left) and Baltimore (right) regions from space, taken 15 September 2020. by NASA / International Space Station Expedition 63 Crew licensed under Creative Commons.

Other notably long corridors that extend outward from Washington include the Branch Avenue corridor to Waldorf visible in the lower left of the image and the Richmond Highway and the Beltway corridors in Fairfax County at the center left.

The Dulles Toll Road, which extends from the bright cluster of Tysons through Reston to an orange blotch that appears to be Dulles International Airport at the upper-left of the image is somewhat less identifiable, in part because the low-density development in the Difficult Run watershed produces a gap in illumination between Tysons and Reston.

The only traditional urban core besides Baltimore and Washington visible in the image is Annapolis, in the lower center: Frederick, which is at the northern end of the I-270 corridor, is just beyond the top edge of the image near the center. While the I-270 corridor from Washington to Frederick is very visible and the Governor Ritchie Highway corridor between Baltimore and Annapolis can be made out, the I-70/US Route 40 corridor between Baltimore and Frederick, like the US Route 50 corridor between Washington and Annapolis, goes through largely undeveloped areas and is not visible.

Interestingly, several different visible corridors link Baltimore and Washington. To the south, the Robert Crain Highway corridor through Gambrills and Crofton links the southern suburbs of Baltimore to Bowie and Upper Marlboro in Washingtons eastern surburbs. North of this is a very dark patch, consisting of the research farmland of the USDA Beltsville Agricultural Research Center and the forests of the Patuxent National Wildlife Refuge.

The main connection between Baltimore and Washington, however, consists of four closely-spaced and roughly parallel roads: from north to south Columbia Pike, the Beltway, US Route 1, and the Baltimore-Washington Parkway link the two metro areas. Of these four, only two are clearly visible in the image. Columbia Pike can be made out as a series of patches of light that appear to correspond to development at White Oak, Briggs-Chaney, and Burtonsville in Montgomery County and Scaggsville, Columbia, and Ellicott City in Howard County. The US Route 1 corridor is more consistently illuminated between Baltimore and Washington, with a downward-pointing corridor of light along Laurel-Fort Meade Road connecting it to the orange patch of sodium vapor lamps at Fort Meade.

A close-up view of Washington

A close-up view of the District and its inner suburbs shows DC as four concentric rings with different lighting patterns. At the very center, the National Mall and the undeveloped land around the White House form a dark corridor shaped like an inverted letter T.

They are surrounded, however, by the brightest (and least orange) part of the District: the commercial core of Downtown, Capitol Hill, Foggy Bottom, and the Federal offices in Southwest near LEnfant Plaza. This, in turn, is surrounded by a shell of less-brightly lit residential areas, roughly corresponding to the boundaries of the LEnfant City but stretching almost to Silver Spring along 16th Street and Georgia Avenue.

Finally, the residential areas west of Rock Creek Park, the residential and industrial areas in Northeast, and the residential areas east of the Anacostia make up a fourth, even less-well-illuminated shell.

A close-up of DC and its inner suburbs from space. by Close-up of a portion of an image taken by NASA / International Space Station Expedition 63 Crew licensed under Creative Commons.

While the suburbs are less-consistently illuminated, a number of bright cores are recognizable within them, connected by well-lit arterial roads. In Montgomery County, Bethesda, White Flint, and the Montgomery Mall area all stand out north of the very-recognizable Wisconsin and Connecticut Avenue corridors in the District, while downtown Silver Spring is probably Montgomery Countys single brightest cluster.

In Prince Georges County, on the other hand, roughly continuous commercial development along the Beltway is fairly visible (in Montgomery County, much of the Beltway runs through parkland), but the Baltimore Avenue corridor through College Park, the University of Maryland, and Beltsville is quite visible, as is University Boulevard from the University of Maryland to Langley Park. Further south, development along US-50, Pennsylvania Avenue, and Branch Avenue stand out, as does National Harbor.

In Northern Virginia, Tysons (near the top left of the image, with Dunn Loring-Merrifield just south/left of it) is, unsurprisingly, the regions brightest suburban cluster. Development along Richmond Highway, starting with Crystal City and continuing past National Airport and Alexandria to the Richmond Highway corridor in Fairfax County is also quite prominent. The route of the Beltway, with Virginia Route 7 and Duke Street/Little River Turnpike within it is also quite recognizable, as is, to a lesser degree, development along I-395.

A close-up view of Baltimore

A close-up view of Baltimore at the same scale shows a smaller brightly-illuminated core and a spiderweb-like network of bright development along radial roads. The brightest of these, running toward the upper-right corner of the photo, is the Towson-Timonium-Lutherville corridor along York Road and I-83 in Baltimore County north of the city.

A close-up of Baltimore and its inner suburbs from space. by Close-up of a portion of an image taken by NASA / International Space Station Expedition 63 Crew licensed under Creative Commons.

A number of major corridors run northeast, toward the right side of the image, but the brightest area is the White Marsh area along the I-95/US-40 corridor. At the top of the photo, two bright corridors are visible: the brighter is the Reisterstown Road and I-795 corridor while the dimmer is the Liberty Road corridor. The lower-left of the photo, in the direction towards Washington, has less visible radial orientation, perhaps because radial roads in this area have to cross parkland and the valleys of Gwynn Falls and the Patapsco River. The bright orange blotch in this area appears to be development around Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport.

What else do you see?

Do you see other interesting features of our region in these images? Please let us know in the comments!

DWRowlands is a human geography grad student and Prince Georges County native, currently living in College Park. More of their writing on transportation-related and other topics can be found on theirwebsite.They also write on DC transportation and demographic issues for theDC Policy Center, where they are a Fellow. In their spare time, they volunteer for Prince Georges Advocates for Community-Based Transit.However, the views expressed here are their own.

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Why Washington and Baltimore are different colors from space - Greater Greater Washington

Why now is the most exciting time in space in 50 years – Fast Company

The essential parts of an economy are intertwined by their very nature. Theres no point in having a food market if there are no farmers to supply food. But theres no point in growing food until there are markets where you can sell it. And what is the right moment to go into the food transportation business, carting the freshly harvested produce from the field to the store? Weve seen this in our own era: What was the point in creating high-speed internet service if there was no content online that required such speeds? Why bother creating YouTube if no one has the bandwidth to watch and upload videos easily?

This is exactly the moment were in with human space travel. Why bother creating the technology to launch people into space when theres nowhere in particular to go? But why create destinations in space when theres no affordable way to get to them?

Yet its precisely because of this moment that now is the most exciting time in space in 50 yearsstretching back to the moment when we were landing on the Moon.

What does it cost to put a single person into orbit? The Russians have been charging NASA $80 million, or more, to send a single U.S. astronaut to the space station, since we sent our space shuttles to museums. No company can afford to spend $80 million to send a single person to space. Theres no work to be done in spaceno way to make money that would justify that. But what if you could send a person to space for $1 million? $250,000? $100,000? Companies spend that kind of money all the time to move staff around the world, and to equip them for research, for manufacturing, for production. Thats also a 99% reduction in the price of launching a person.

Thats the price Elon Musks SpaceX and Jeff Bezoss Blue Origin are aiming fornot immediately, but in the next decade.

Where will SpaceX and Blue Origin be delivering space travelers? The space station is fully staffed with six people, three on the Russian side, three on the American side. Robert Bigelow is ready to solve that problem. He has been for years. Bigelow is a Las Vegas real-estate and low-cost-hotel entrepreneur, and although he has no formal space or engineering training, he became obsessed with the idea of providing in space what he has provided on Earth: living and working space for rent.

In 1999, he founded Bigelow Aerospace and licensed out a nascent technology from NASA itself: Space habitats that are made of superstrong high-tech fabrics that can be launched folded up and then expanded to full size once in space. What so captivated Bigelow was a simple idea: With hard-sided space moduleslike those used to make the International Space Stationyou can never have a space that is bigger across than the rocket that launched it. That has given space stations a cramped air, from Skylab onward. The modules of the space station are 14 feet in diameter, which quickly gets tighter when you start mounting equipment racks on the walls.

The advantages of expandable space habitats are dramatic. The design of Bigelows basic orbiting space modulethe company calls it the B330is 22 feet across, but compressed for launch, it fits easily on existing rockets. The pressurized volume of the entire space station, after 19 years of assembly, is 915 cubic meters. It took 41 space shuttle flights to put the hardware into orbit to assemble it. Three Bigelow B330seach one 330 cubic meters insidewould get you 990 cubic feet of working space.

Three launches to a space bigger than the ISS.

Bigelow has a factory in Las Vegas with 365,000 square feet of manufacturing space ready to make B330s. Bigelowwho has put his operations on hold during the pandemichas been waiting (impatiently) for his fellow entrepreneurs, Musk and Bezos, to get their transportation system goinghes ready to provide spec real estate to NASA, to some nation that wants its own space station (Japan? Israel? France?), to a pharmaceutical or technology company that wants to figure out zero-gravity manufacturing, to a hospitality company that wants to offer an orbital hotel. Transportation hub, laboratory, observatory, resortthats the beauty of the B330. Bigelow will build to suit.

Although space tourism gets a lot of media attention, a robust human space economy will be built on doing things in space that cant be done practically on Earth but that benefit life on Earth. One of the earliest tests of manufacturing in space, for instance, involves a California company called Made in Space making a kind of optical fiber, in a self-contained module on the space station, that can be made in microgravity with a purity thats not possible on Earth. The space-made fiber could increase the speed of data transmission back on Earth by many timesand its exactly the kind of lightweight, high-value product that could make sense to manufacture in orbit and then transport back to Earth.

What will sustain interest and innovation in space isnt a government program or even a half-dozen government programs. What will sustain interest and vibrancy in space is a real, self-sustaining space economy. I believe that we are sitting on the edge of a golden age of space exploration. Right on the edge, says Bezos. The thing that I would be most proud of, when Im 80 years old, is if Blue Origin can lower the cost of access to space by such a large amount that there can be a dynamic, entrepreneurial explosion in spacejust as weve seen over the last 20 years on the internet.

Bezos has said he expects to refine Blue Origins ultimate operations enough that there will be regularly scheduled launches twice a weekthe Monday and Thursday Blue Origin flights to orbit. That would give Blue alone 100 launches a year. In the five years from 2014 through 2019, the entire world averaged 95 launches a yearincluding both satellite and crewed launches.

Theres nowhere near the demand right now for a single company to double the launch capacity of the worldbut thats at the current prices. Who knows what people will imagine doing, who knows what people will be able to do, when the price comes down 90%, or 99%?

Thats why this is the most exciting moment in space travel in 50 years. Because for the first time its really possible to imagine that space travel will begin to be mastered in the way that, for instance, passenger jet travel has been. Theres nothing easy about sending a jet with 250 people on it from New York City to London, but for a passenger paying $300 for the trip, all the challenging parts, all the complexity, all the elaborate supporting infrastructure, is invisible. For the first time ever, if you want to go to space, ten years from now, its quite likely youll be able to.

Its the most exciting moment in space travel in 50 years because if you want to help create this new space age, you can join up right now and do it. Creating the space infrastructurelike creating the interstate highway system, or the air traffic control system, or the internetwill take thousands and thousands of people, and those will be good jobs, demanding, challenging, gratifying.

Imagine being given the chance to work with Henry Ford on the Model T in the 1910s. Or to join Google as it was getting started in 2000. Thats the moment were in with space right now.

This is an excerpt from One Giant Leap: The Impossible Mission that Flew Us to the Moon, the New York Times best-selling book by Fast Company contributor Charles Fishman. The book comes out in paperback today, with an all-new concluding chapter titled, The Most Exciting Time in Space in 50 Years, from which this is excerpted. Last summer, Fishman wrote 50 stories for Fast Company about what it took to get us to the Moon in the 1960s, collected here.

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Why now is the most exciting time in space in 50 years - Fast Company

Western Australia space tracking station to cut ties with China – The Guardian

China will lose access to a strategic space tracking station in Western Australia when its contract expires, the facilitys owners said, a decision that cuts into Beijings expanding space exploration and navigational capabilities in the Pacific region.

The Swedish Space Corporation (SSC) has had a contract allowing Beijing access to the satellite antenna at the ground station since at least 2011. It is located next to an SSC satellite station primarily used by the United States and its agencies, including Nasa.

The Swedish state-owned company told Reuters it would not enter into any new contracts at the Australian site to support Chinese customers after its current contract expires. However, it did not disclose when the lease runs out.

Given the complexity of the Chinese market, brought about by the overall geopolitical situation, SSC has decided to focus mainly on other markets for the coming years, the SSC said in an emailed response to questions.

The site is owned by SSC subsidiary, SSC Space Australia.

The Australian government did not immediately respond to questions on Monday.

The Chinese foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The expansion of Chinas space capabilities, which includes the growing sophistication of its Beidou navigation network, is one of the new frontiers of tension between the US and China, who are clashing on everything from technology and trade to Chinese activities in the disputed South China Sea.

Australia has a strong alliance with the United States, which includes working together on space research and programs, while Canberras diplomatic and trade ties with Beijing have also been fracturing.

China last used the Yatharagga Satellite Station, located about 350 km (250 miles) north of the Australian city of Perth, in June 2013 to support the three-person Shenzhou 10 mission which completed a series of space docking tests, SSC said.

The SSC said the current contract supports Chinese scientific space missions within its program for manned-space flights for telemetry, tracking and command services.

Ground stations are a vital part of space programs given they create a telecommunications link with spacecraft. While stations have different capabilities, they can be equipped to co-ordinate satellites for civil-military Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) such as Beidou, Russias GLONASS, the European Unions Galileo system and US-owned GPS.

Chinas space program has been increasing its access to overseas ground stations in recent years in line with the expansion of its space exploration and navigational programs.

Generally speaking anywhere you put a GNSS monitoring ground station will improve the accuracy of positioning for that region, said Joon Wayn Cheong, a senior research associate at the University of New South Wales School of Electrical Engineering.

Christopher Newman, professor of Space Law and Policy at Northumbria University in Newcastle, England, said China wants to remove its dependence on GPS as part of broader plans to expand its global influence.

GPS could be made unavailable to them in a military conflict. An independent secure system is crucial for the capabilities of the Peoples Liberation Army in respect to targeting, weapons, navigation, Newman told Reuters.

Beijing last year re-established diplomatic ties with the small Pacific island nation of Kiribati, where it has a mothballed ground station in the central Pacific Ocean

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Western Australia space tracking station to cut ties with China - The Guardian

Dazzling Photo of Chinese Port Cities at Night Taken by an Astronaut on the International Space Station – SciTechDaily

By NASA Earth ObservatoryAugust 9, 2020

September 12, 2019. (Click image for full view.)

This photograph, taken by an astronaut from the International Space Station (ISS), captures the bright urban lights of two Chinese port cities. Xiamen and Quanzhou stand out amidst a complex network of roads and railways and the night-darkened waters of the South China Sea.

Inland areas are mountainous here, with less urban development to illuminate the landscape. Smaller towns and roads zig-zag through the valleys. Closer to the coast, several islands and small harbors make up one of Chinas most highly trafficked port regions. Offshore, two bright clusters of pixels are likely ships traveling to or from one of the harbors.

The ancient city of Quanzhou was once one of the most important ports along the Maritime Silk Road. Beyond its role as a major center of commerce and trade, Quanzhou remains a major manufacturing center in China.

Astronaut photograph ISS060-E-60237 was acquired on September 12, 2019, with a Nikon D5 digital camera using a 50 millimeter lens and is provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, Johnson Space Center. The image was taken by a member of the Expedition 62 crew. The image has been cropped and enhanced to improve contrast, and lens artifacts have been removed. The International Space Station Program supports the laboratory as part of the ISS National Lab to help astronauts take pictures of Earth that will be of the greatest value to scientists and the public, and to make those images freely available on the Internet. Additional images taken by astronauts and cosmonauts can be viewed at the NASA/JSC Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. Caption by Laura Phoebus, Jacobs Technology, JETS Contract at NASA-JSC.

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Dazzling Photo of Chinese Port Cities at Night Taken by an Astronaut on the International Space Station - SciTechDaily

SpaceX splashes down in the Gulf with UAB devices on board – Bham Now

The Polar unit, built by UABs EITD team is visible in images shared by NASA. Photo via UAB School of Engineerings Facebook page

The SpaceXs Crew Dragon Endeavour made its historic splash in the Gulf of Mexico near Pensacola on Sunday, August 2. Why is UABs Engineering and Innovative Technology Department (EITD) so excited? Find out!

The rocket didnt just carry astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley from the International Space Station back home to Earth. It also hauled science experiments and other cargo.

This cargo included two rapid-freeze devices, the Polar unit and the Glacier unit, designed and built by engineers at UABs Engineering and Innovative Technology Department. The designs were part of a $3.6M contract with with NASA.

When freezing biological samples as part of a scientific experiment, the most important thing is to freeze the samples as quickly as possible. With UABs devices, astronauts were able to do just that during their two-month mission that began on May 30, 2020.

Any time a rocket manages to blast in and out of orbit, its rather amazing, but there are several more reasons this particular mission is one of interest:

Interesting facts about the launch:

Now that the launch is complete, the fun continues for the EITD team at UAB as they refurbish the units for use in future missions.

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SpaceX splashes down in the Gulf with UAB devices on board - Bham Now

‘Away’ exclusive: Photos, trailer and Hilary Swank on her timely new Netflix space drama – USA TODAY

Oscar winner Hilary Swank's new mission to Mars drama "Away" premieres Sept. 4 on Netflix. USA TODAY Handout

Hilary Swank has always wanted to be among the stars. But we're not talking Brad or Leo.

"I wanted to be an astronaut before I wanted to be an actor, which was about the age of 9," Swank says. "It still has the same feeling for me now as it did then,the whole idea of something bigger than us and the unknown. I still would love to go to space someday, but being an actor and playing an astronaut is second best."

Swank, atwo-time Oscar-winner, gets that chance in Netflix's drama "Away" (streaming Sept. 4), from producerJason Katims ("Parenthood," "Friday Night Lights").

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Emma Green (Hilary Swank) suits up for a mission to Mars in this exclusive first look from Netflix's "Away."(Photo: DIYAH PERA/NETFLIX)

Set in the near future, the 10-episode first season dramatizes the first human-led expedition to Mars, commanded by pragmaticAmerican astronaut Emma Green (Swank). Emma leads an international crew of scientists and astronauts, whose backstories and families we come to know over the course of the season. Members of the team initially question Emma's leadership abilities, while she wrestles with distance from and guilt over leaving her teenage daughter (Talitha Bateman) and husband (Josh Charles) back on Earth.

Here's an exclusive first look at Oscar winner Hilary Swank's new Netflix space drama "Away," premiering Sept. 4. USA TODAY Handout

The series is loosely based on a 2014 Esquire story by Chris Jones, about the first American astronaut to spend a year in space.

"I don't consider myself a space show guy, but there was something about this article that really gripped me," Katims says. "It was a different way of thinking about space: this very intimate look at what the human experience was like to be away for so long, how to stay connected to the world, and what it does to your mind and body. That seemed so different."

International space crew Yu (Vivian Wu, left), Kwesi (Ato Essandoh), Ram (Ray Panthaki), Misha (Mark Ivanir) and Emma (Hilary Swank) must learn to live and work together in close quarters in "Away."(Photo: DIYAH PERA/NETFLIX)

Shortly after launch, Emma's husband, Matt, suffers a strokecaused by a rare vascular disease known ascerebral cavernous malformation. Emma considers leaving the mission to help with Matt's recovery, but he and their daughter, Alexis, insist she press on. That story line especially resonated withAndrew Hinderaker, who created the show with Katims and executive producer Jessica Goldberg.

"There's a moment in the article that talks about an astronaut being up in the International Space Station when something really catastrophic happens to his family,and what that is to be so far away," Hinderaker says. "I'vebeen in a long-distance relationship with a woman who was diagnosed with a progressive disease just shortly before Jason had brought me the article, so that moment of finding out that someone you love is in trouble and needs you and you're away (working)was something that resonated really deeply."

Alexis (Talitha Bateman, left) helps care for her dad, Matt (Josh Charles), while Emma is in space.(Photo: DIYAH PERA/NETFLIX)

Charles, who's best known for CBS' "The Good Wife," says hefound the show's combination of cosmic and interpersonal drama "intriguing.(Director) Ed Zwick said that every marriage is like a mission to Mars. And while funny, it also really stuck with me. The potential of exploring this couple and this family during this trying time seemed rich."

To prepare for the role, Swank, 46,spoke extensively to former astronaut Mike Massimino and attended a so-called "boot camp," where she learned wire work for the series' zero gravity space scenes.

"We were on these wires all the time trying to learn to move gracefully, which is something I don't do. I'm kind of lumbering," Swank says. In addition to the stunts, "the most challenging thing was doing a monologue that's emotional while other people are floating by. You get kicked in the face and you just start laughing."

Hilary Swank, 46, won acting Oscars for "Boys Don't Cry" and "Million Dollar Baby," and now stars in Netflix space drama "Away."(Photo: Rachel Luna, Getty Images)

For Swank and the creators, the show's emphasis on science and teamwork couldn't come at a more apt time, as many of us continue to isolate at homewith family or others due to COVID-19. One particularly prescient episode finds Ram (Ray Panthaki), an astronaut from India, fallinggravely ill with a virus. He is quarantined from the rest of the crew, who wear protective gear and attempt to treat him from a safe distance.

"If someone had said this (pandemic) would be happening right when we wrapped filming (last winter), I wouldn't have been able to believe it," Swank says. "There's probably nothing more isolating than going to space for three years, but I think people (now) are going to relate to that more and understand it a little deeper. This pandemic has put into perspective what's important in life, which is our health and really being able to be with loved ones."

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'Away' exclusive: Photos, trailer and Hilary Swank on her timely new Netflix space drama - USA TODAY

The cure is out there: Miniature space labs are leading to scientific breakthroughs – CTech

The time is 4 a.m. The night watchman at the commercial center in Herzliya, which is half abandoned even in the middle of the day, is surprised to see the unusual gathering: a large group of children and their parents are excitedly lining up to enter the building. The location may be drab, opposite a beauty parlor, and a floor above a spy products shop, but what is taking place between the walls of the building is nothing short of revolutionary. It is here that the scientists of SpacePharma developed the new global technological frontline in medical experimentationan innocent-looking box that in fact functions as an autonomous laboratory launched via satellite to carry out experiments in outer space.

The ambitious Israeli startup has already launched four such boxes into space and on one night in late June, it appeared that it could finally carry out the fifth launch, following two delays in the past year and a failed launch a week earlier. The employees arrived with their families to watch the launch that was supposed to take place 10,000 kilometers away at the European Space Agencys launch site in French Guiana, in South America.

Cookies and other assorted refreshments were brought out of the kitchen while the children (who should have been waking up to go to school in a few hours) inflated blue and white balloons in one of the labs. Before long, the open space resembled a political party headquarters on election night. At the same time in the Sheba Medical Center, which is leading one of the experiments, another event is being held in parallel. The guest of honor is the new Minister of Science Yizhar Shai.

But then, while the workers were still adjusting the monitors to view the live launch and the minister was starting on his speech, clouds started to cover the skies above the exotic beach town of Kourou, the Monsoon winds rising from the Atlantic Ocean disrupting the celebration. The launch was once again postponed.

The following day, all the workers gathered again, this time without their families, with the hope that the launch had already gone ahead. But then a further delay is announced. The message arrived just seven minutes before the planned time, again because of those darn Monsoon winds.

The senior managers, who hadnt slept in two days, gather in the kitchen area and console themselves with the leftover cookies from the previous night. They try to figure out what to do and fret over the fate of the bacteria colony that is inside the mini-satellite, one of 53 that were loaded on the launch rocket. If the launch is delayed for too long, they will have no choice but to send the satellite back to the Netherlands, where the biological material is packed into the little box.

The original launch date for SpacePharmas DIDO-3 satellite launch was September 2019. However, a technical malfunction in one of the rockets of the launching company led to it being scheduled for March 2020, but then Covid-19 happened and forced everything to be postponed until deep into Guianas rain season.

The Israeli and Italian space agencies spent 2 million euros on the project and the delays came at a price tag of $300,000 more. The next launch date was scheduled for August 17, nearly a year after the original date, with the hopes that the weather will ease off by then.

The Israeli development that freed up NASAs bottleneck

Medical and physiological studies have been taking place in space since the 1950s when the Soviets sent Laika the dog into space to prove that living creatures can survive the conditions. In the 1970s NASA started using its space missions to host various experiments that required zero-gravity conditions, but due to the international space stations monopoly on space experimentation and the requirement to cooperate with NASA, the space experiment market is nearly completely concentrated in the U.S.

The problem is that astronauts time up there is limitedevery astronaut has a quota of tasks they need to complete while in spaceand therefore very expensive. Moreover, astronauts arent necessarily scientists and must be trained in advance in how to carry out the hosted experiments. The result is a major bottleneck: in the past year 300 applications for space station experimentswere submitted to the U.S. space agency, but it is only able to carry out 10% of the requests. This is where SpacePharmas development enters the game, aiming to make those problems history.

SpacePharma is doing for the drug industry what the electronics industry did to old computersit is converting massive equipment into small silicon plates. The wonders of nanotechnology were recruited to produce what they call lab on chipa tiny, centimeters large 3D printed silicon chip that contains miniature test tubes connected by pipes. The chip is fed by a complete system, which stores the materials needed to conduct the experiments, including bacterial cultures, DNA molecules, skin tissues and chemicals, all in tiny doses of a few milliliters. The system also includes a set of sensors, including a microscope the size of a fingertip. The full system constantly monitors what takes place within the diminutive lab.

All of that baggage is placed in a three-liter box, roughly the size of a shoebox, with a simple USB plug at the bottom. All the astronauts at the space station need to do is connect up the box with the stations computer and the experiment is set to go, managed by software that automates the process and controlled remotely by the folks at SpacePharma and Earthbound scientists. In the case of the current experiment, that keeps getting postponed, the astronauts wont even have to plug anything in. The experiment will begin automatically as soon as the lab reaches space and six times a day, when the little satellite that carries it passes over the companys communications center in Switzerland, the team members on Earth will be able to download data and send it new information. The scientists wont even need a sophisticated control center as they will be able to do it all via a smartphone app.

SpacePharmas first box was launched into space in 2017 aboard a nano-satellite. The experiment is over, but the satellite is still hovering in space until eventually it will fall into the atmosphere and burn up. Three other boxes that were sent up have since returned complete and one of them sits on display in the meeting room in Herzliya.

From a cancer research breakthrough to cracking the process of aging

Yossi Yamin, the CEO and founder of SpacePharma, founded the company seven years ago from his basement together with Ido Priel, who has since left the company. He is a retired lieutenant colonel , a former commander of the satellite unit of Israeli Military Intelligence, and has a bachelor of business administration from the University of Phoenix. In 2012, shortly after his discharge, he met with several of the heads of NASA who were visiting Israel and was inspired to found the company. According to Yamin, SpacePharm has raised $19 million from the likes of State of Mind Ventures, the Chief Scientists Office, the Israeli Space Agency, and the EUs Horizon 2020 initiative.

Why does the drug industry even need experiments in space? The answer lies in crystals. The operating mechanism of many drugs is based on crystalstiny solids that exist in liquids or gases, which due to their shape can easily penetrate or attach to the desired location in the body. The problem is that Earths gravity creates pressure on the crystals at the molecular level and warps them so that often the impact their original form would have had is botched.

In 200 Japanese researchers used zero-gravity to develop a drug to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). They shipped the protein that functions as the active ingredient of the drug to the space station and there, managed to produce a perfect crystal unwarped by gravity. The precision of the crystal together with the use of sophisticated sensory equipment enabled the scientists to see that a molecule of water that was in the active region of the protein disrupted its effectiveness and as a result, they were able to better design the proteins structure.

Research in zero-gravity conditions has also enabled a breakthrough in cancer research. This is because when artificial cancer tumors are produced in the laboratory, they grow two-dimensionally because gravity subdues them. But in space, it is possible to produce three-dimensional tumors that better mimic the way tumors develop in the human body. For that reason, experiments performed on tumors produced in space have allowed researchers to test the efficacy of drugs that penetrate the tumor more reliably. American pharmaceutical giant Merk was assisted in an experiment in the process of protein formation, which took place at the International Space Station in the development of the popular drug Keytruda, which is used to treat several types of cancer.

The field of medical experimentation is space is mostly built around collaborations between the pharmaceutical giants and technology companies like Nanoracks and Techshot, which provide the resources for the trials. No other company, however, offers a solution like SpacePharma, which removes the responsibility for the experiment from the astronauts.

SpacePharmas first experiments took place in 2017, testing the effect of zero-gravity on the formation of proteins in order to improve the use of inhaler medicines used by asthma patients. In the experiment, SpacePharma was able to form a crystal that in its pure form had the appearance of tiny needles that could lodge into an asthma patients throat and easily penetrate its tissue.

In SpacePharmas later experiments, the company provided the platform, while the experiments were conducted by other research bodies. For example, in the long-delayed fifth launch, there are supposed to be four experiments resulting from collaborations between Israeli researchers and Italian universities. The first, done by researchers from Sheba Medical Center, is set to examine the process of developing the resistance of bacteria to antibiotics in the absence of gravity; the second from the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, will monitor the rate at which the lysosome enzyme breaks down disease-causing bacterial residues, assuming that gravity slows the process down; The third, also by the Technion, will test how the protein albumin attaches to molecules in the blood as part of the activity of the immune system; while the fourth, conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, will test the aging process in human cells.

When a healthy young astronaut returns to Earth from a three-month stretch at the space station, he or she is incapable of walking. When you examine their bodies you see that they have physiologically aged by 10 years, explains Guy Samburski, the missions scientific manager and a former researcher at Teva. They lose muscle mass and bone density, they experience hormonal changes and changes in their blood pressure. Anywhere you look you will find changes.

A team led by Hebrew Universitys Professor Itamar Willner is examining the mechanisms that cause rapid aging in space and discovered that the blame is linked to telomeres, a region of repetitive nucleotide sequences at each end of a chromosome. The telomeres are responsible for chromosome replication, which when it occurs ages our body's cell to a small degree. The theory is that in the absence of gravity to keep them in place, the telomeres loosen and that affects the replication process. As long as the monsoons dont strike again and ruin the plans, the answer will be found in space.

From factories in space to storage facilities on the Moon

With all due respect for developing drugs, SpacePharm is already thinking of the future. After succeeding in carrying out experiments in space, the next natural step is to transition from experimentation to manufacturing. We are examining other fields, such as food and agricultural technology, which have never entered space and we have only now begun to touch upon, said Yamin. The conversation with him soars to the heights of imagination and the array of possibilities he suggests is vast. If we think of distant isolated locations, like deserts as suitable spots to store dangerous substances, perhaps the Moon is a better option? Yamin describes, in all seriousness, futuristic industrial zones that can house dangerous industries on the Moon or even Mars.

These are not pie-in-the-sky notions either. Just a few days prior to our meeting, it was reported that U.S.-based Mine in Space, which develops technology to mass produce solar panels and fibre optics in space, was acquired by AE Industrial Partners Redwire. In zero-gravity, materials can be made in their pure form, without all sorts of unnecessary molecular level blemishes, and thus produce fiber optics that can transmit much higher volumes than those that exist today, and solar panels that can generate more electricity from the sun.

SpacePharma, which has previously collaborated with Made in Space, wants a stake in this playground. Its next mission, scheduled for 2022, will shift from satellites to small production units that will operate in unmanned spacecrafts, blasting off with raw materials. The production process will be done in a space controlled remotely by SpacePharma personnel, and the finished products will land on Earth.

"The goal is to launch a soft drink containing an anti-aging polymer that will be produced in the unit within two years. At the same time, we are working on the production of crystals, antibodies for the pharmaceutical industry and even nerve cells and skin for transplants," Yamin said.

For that purpose, the company rented 100 kilograms on the Space Rider shuttle, the European Space Agencys flagship project, that will be wholly dedicated to space production. Their share makes up eight percent of the shuttles total capacity, most of which was leased by electronics and optical companies.

Mass production in space is the next challenge and it is much closer than we think, Yamin said. It wont be long before tiny spaceships will land in our homes delivering products we ordered directly from the factory in space.

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The cure is out there: Miniature space labs are leading to scientific breakthroughs - CTech