Space debris expert warns of increasing CubeSat collision risk

2 hours ago by Glenn Harris

The increasing number of small 'CubeSat' satellites being launched combined with a relaxed attitude to debris mitigation could lead to hazards for all space users unless preventative measures are taken, warns a leading space debris expert from the University of Southampton.

Speaking today at the 65th International Astronautical Congress in Toronto, Dr Hugh Lewis said that this combination leads to a growth in space debris, as a result of collisions between CubeSats and other objects in orbit.

CubeSats are small satellites (around 10x10x10cm) that are providing opportunities for companies to break into the space data and communications industries. Despite many CubeSats not having any manoeuvring capability so they cannot avoid collisions during the mission or manoeuvre to a disposal orbit at their mission end, they are still perceived to have a low impact on the space debris environment.

However, despite guidelines requiring the satellites to deorbit within 25 years, some are being launched into high Earth orbits, which means their orbital lifetime could be much greater.

More than a third of all CubeSats launched to-date (around 160 between 2003 and 2013) are predicted to remain on-orbit for more than 25 years. Since 2005, CubeSats have been involved in more than 360,000 close approaches of less than 5 km with other orbiting objects.

Dr Lewis says: "To reduce the risks, some effort is needed to engage with the growing small satellite community. All space users, not just those in the CubeSat community, who are taking the right steps should be encouraged to continue and, ultimately, lead on sustainable practices and debris mitigation activities.

"Those who are not yet engaged with this approach should be encouraged to do so. It's probably a matter of changing their perceptions of the risks and helping them to understand that there is a collective responsibility to ensure that outer space activities are sustainable so that future generations have the same opportunities to use space as we do."

Dr Lewis and his team used their Debris Analysis and Monitoring Architecture to the Geosynchronous Environment (DAMAGE) model to simulate three future CubeSat launch traffic scenarios until the year 2043. By comparing these with close approach data from 2005 to 2013, the team found CubeSats are estimated to be involved in millions of close approaches over the next 30 years, with a handful leading to a collision.

Analysis of the close approaches found that most of the collision risk from CubeSats comes from high-speed encounters with large spacecraft. In addition, many of these encounters were in Sun-synchronous orbits that are popular with remote sensing and Earth science satellites.

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Space debris expert warns of increasing CubeSat collision risk

Miranda Kerr flashes her legs at Stuart Weitzman's Paris Fashion Week party

By Karishma Sarkari for Daily Mail Australia

Published: 02:33 EST, 30 September 2014 | Updated: 04:53 EST, 30 September 2014

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Proving why she's Australia's top model export, Miranda Kerr turned heads as she walked the red carpet at the Rock Roll Ride premiere in Paris on Monday night.

The 31-year-old looked her model best in a stunning high-fashion frock, which featured one sleeve and a high-low skirt combination.

The statuesque brunette accessorised with gold earrings and clutch to match her belt buckle.

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High-fashion frock: Miranda pulls off the one-sleeved black dress, which features a laser cut leather train, with effortless glamour at the Stuart Weitzman Rock Roll Ride premiere in Paris on Monday

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Water on earth originated outside the solar system, scientists prove

Human beings have always obsessed over whether they are alone in the universe. Now scientists say theyve proved that at least some of the water on Earth has to have originated from outside the solar system (and they add that its older than the sun).

The news has set the flying-saucer-sphere abuzz with the thought that other planets in the universe are therefore more likely to have had water, at some stage at least, and to therefore have developed life.

That however is not claimed by the paper published in Science Magazine on September 26, when life forms in Israel were celebration the new Jewish year.

It isnt news that water in the solar system is older than the sun, explains Prof. Morris Podolak of Tel Aviv Universitys Department of Geosciences, an expert on planetology and the evolution of comets: it had to be. What is news is that the water on earth cannot have originated in the protoplanetary nebular disk from which the planets, including Earth, formed.

It all started with the big bang

Current thinking is that the universe began with the big bang, which created mainly hydrogen and some helium, Podolak explains. Things like oxygen and other heavier elements were made in secondary processes, like inside stars, which threw out the material. Our sun is second-generation, made of material that originated with an earlier generation of stars, he says.

In other words, our sun was formed already including heavier elements such as carbon and oxygen made after the big bang but before the suns birth, Podolak explains.

Moreover, the universe has a huge amount of hydrogen, a lot of helium and the third most prevalent element is oxygen, says Podolak. Water consists of hydrogen and oxygen (two hydrogen atoms to one of oxygen, to be accurate).

So the interstellar void in which the solar system, and Earth, formed had water bobbing about that would by definition be older than the sun. We would expect water to be abundant in that void, says Podolak.

The weird thing discovered by the team headed by Ilsedore Cleeves of the University of Michigans Astronomy department is that the water on Earth doesnt have the same chemical signature deuterium-to-hydrogen enrichment as primordial water in the solar system. Nor could processes in that disk have created the signature of the water on earth, the team says. So the question is where it came from.

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MARS DRILL WATER: Curiosity Rover Hits Water: NASA Stays Silent. ArtAlienTV – MARS ZOO 1080p – Video


MARS DRILL WATER: Curiosity Rover Hits Water: NASA Stays Silent. ArtAlienTV - MARS ZOO 1080p
Days after the "Mars Traffic Light" the Curiosity Rover hits liquid water as it drills through rock on the Mars surface, in Gale Crater near Mount Sharp. The drill was dry on day one but the...

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NASA’S ORBITING BLACK CUBE AROUND OUR SUN DISCOVERY IN AFGHANISTAN STEP PYRAMID RUINS – Video


NASA #39;S ORBITING BLACK CUBE AROUND OUR SUN DISCOVERY IN AFGHANISTAN STEP PYRAMID RUINS
NASA #39;S ORBITING BLACK CUBE AROUND OUR SUN DISCOVERY IN AFGHANISTAN STEP PYRAMID RUINS CUBE IN ORBIT AROUND OUR SUN AFGHANISTANS ANCIENT MOUNTAIN AREA STEP PYRAMIDS SURFACE STONES REVEALS...

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NASA'S ORBITING BLACK CUBE AROUND OUR SUN DISCOVERY IN AFGHANISTAN STEP PYRAMID RUINS - Video

Nasa starts assembling Delta IV Heavy rockets needed to test the Orion capsule

Three Delta IV boosters collectively generate 1.96 million pounds of thrust Orion capsule will undergo first test flight in December Comes as Nasa bosses reveal private contracts for shuttle replacement so they can concentrate on the project

By Mark Prigg for MailOnline

Published: 14:27 EST, 29 September 2014 | Updated: 16:28 EST, 29 September 2014

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Blastoff for the spacecraft which could one day take humans to Mars is set for the final countdown as Nasa begins assembling the giant rockets that will propel it into orbit.

The huge Delta IV Heavy rocket has been put together for the first time at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Floridaahead of a first test flight of the Orion capsule in December.

It will blast the experimental capsule in orbit - although the rockets are then expected to be replaced by Nasa's even bigger Space Launch system.

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NASA photos show Aral Sea is now just a sliver

ASTANA, Kazakhstan, Sept. 30 (UPI) -- New photos from NASA are showing the Aral Sea as just a sliver with the entire basin diminished as a result of a Soviet-era irrigation diversion project.

The draining of the Aral Sea began in the 1960s when the Soviet Union began a project to divert the two major rivers that flowed into the basin, the Syr Darya and Amu Darya, to irrigate the deserts of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. The project successfully let farms and crops flourish in the arid terrain but sacrificed the Aral Sea.

A new series of photos from NASA show the devastation done to what was once the fourth largest lake in the world from 2000 to 2014 and compare them to the original size in 1960 -- marked by a black outline.

According to NASA's Earth Observatory, Kazakhstan built a dam in 2005 to separate the northern and southern parts of the sea to save it at least partially. It killed the southern sea, draining the basin. The dam has caused parts of the lake to rebound, but the results have been minimal.

2014 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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NASA TV Previews, Broadcasts U.S. Space Station Spacewalks

Three astronauts of the International Space Station Expedition 41 crew will conduct two spacewalks outside the orbiting laboratory Tuesday, Oct. 7 and Wednesday, Oct. 15 to replace a failed power regulator and relocate a failed cooling pump. NASA Television will provide comprehensive coverage, beginning with a preview briefing Friday, Oct. 3.

The preview briefing will be broadcast at 2 p.m. EDT from NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. Reporters may take part in the briefing at participating NASA centers. Media who wish to ask questions by phone must call Johnson's newsroom at 281-483-5111 no later than 1:45 p.m. Friday.

Briefing participants are: -- Kenny Todd, space station integration operations manager -- Scott Stover, NASA space station flight director -- Jaclyn Kagey, U.S. spacewalk 27 officer -- Kieth Johnson, U.S. spacewalk 28 officer

NASA Flight Engineer Reid Wiseman and Flight Engineer Alexander Gerst of the European Space Agency will exit the station's Quest airlock for the Oct. 7 spacewalk at about 8:10 a.m., both wearing U.S. spacesuits. NASA TV coverage of the planned six-and-a-half-hour spacewalk will begin at 7 a.m. Wiseman will be extravehicular crew member one (EV1) and will wear a suit bearing red stripes. Gerst will be EV2 and wear a suit with no stripes. The astronauts will move a failed cooling pump from temporary to long-term storage on the station's truss. They also will install a new relay system that will provide backup power options to the mobile transporter, which moves the large robotic arm around the out outside of the space station.

Wiseman will venture outside Quest again Oct. 15, with NASA Flight Engineer Barry Wilmore, a new arrival to the space station, for another six-and-a-half-hour spacewalk. The two-man team will replace a sequential shunt unit electronics box, a voltage regulator, on the starboard truss that failed in mid-May. Although the station has since operated normally on seven of its eight power channels, the voltage regulator replacement is considered a high priority.

Wiseman, again designated EV1, and Wilmore, who will serve as EV2, also will relocate external cameras and equipment to begin configuring the station for international docking adapters for future commercial crew vehicles. Coverage of this second spacewalk begins at 7 a.m. with the spacewalk expected to begin around 8:10 a.m.

The spacewalks will be the 182nd and the 183rd in support of station assembly and maintenance. All three astronauts will be conducting the first spacewalks of their careers.

For NASA TV streaming video, schedule and downlink information, visit:

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NASA rocket has six minutes to study solar heating

3 hours ago A view of the sun from Sept. 24, 2014 from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory shows bright spots representing magnetically active regions in the lower right quadrant of the sun. The VAULT2.0 mission will focus on this area to better understand what heats the solar atmosphere. Credit:NASA/SDO

(Phys.org) On Sept. 30, 2014, a sounding rocket will fly up into the sky past Earth's atmosphere that obscures certain wavelengths of light from the sunfor a 15-minute journey to study what heats up the sun's atmosphere. This is the fourth flight for the Very high Angular Resolution Ultraviolet Telescope, or VAULT, will launch from the White Sands Missile Range near Las Cruces, New Mexico.

The instrument, now called VAULT2.0, has been refurbished with new electronics and an imaging detector to capture images more frequently than before. While in space, VAULT2.0 will observe light emitted from hydrogen atoms at temperatures of 18,000 to 180,000 degrees Fahrenheit.

"That's the temperature range where the action is," said Angelos Vourlidas, the principal investigator for VAULT2.0 at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C. "These are the temperatures where the heating of the sun's atmosphere the coronareally takes place."

Understanding how the corona heats remains one of the great, unanswered questions on the sun. The solar surface itself is only about 10,500 F, but further up in the atmosphere, the temperatures rise to million of degrees Fahrenheit the opposite of what one typically expects when moving away from a heat source. Something heats up that corona, and VAULT2.0 will be watching.

The sounding rocket will fly up to about 180 miles in the air, just below the height where the International Space Station travels. It will fly in an arc, taking 15 minutes from launch to landing back on the ground. This allows for just six minutes of actual observations while it is above the atmosphere, during which VAULT2.0 will capture an image every six to eight seconds. Vourlidas plans to focus the telescope on active regions at the center of the sun areas of intense and complex magnetic activity, to understand the heating process there.

During the VAULT2.0 launch, three other observatories will watch the same area: NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS, the joint Japanese Exploration Agency and NASA's Hinode, and NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, or SDO. IRIS focuses in on solar material slightly hotter than does VAULT2.0, while Hinode can see solar material both cooler and much hotter. The temperatures also loosely correlate to heights in the atmosphere with the cooler temperatures at the bottom, and the hotter temperatures higher up. SDO will observe the larger scale structure of the solar atmosphere as well as the underlying magnetic field.

"Together the three telescopes will be looking at a sandwich of solar material," said Vourlidas. "We'll be looking at the layers from near the surface all the way up into the corona, the layers where the bulk of coronal heating is believed to happen."

VAULT's launch time is planned for 1:47 p.m. EDT on Sept. 30. Launch timing will depend on good weather conditions as well as optimum times for coordinating with Hinode satellite and IRIS spacecraft.

Explore further: NASA releases IRIS footage of X-class flare (w/ Video)

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NASA rocket has six minutes to study solar heating

The National Science Foundation Funds Three Penn State Teams to Study Two-Dimensional Materials

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Newswise Through the National Science Foundations Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (EFRI) program, Penn State has been awarded $4 million over the next four years to lead two teams of investigators and support members of a third team in the new field of 2D crystals and layered materials.

A material that is only a single atomic-layer thick can have completely different properties than its bulk counterpart. A new field of nanoscale science and engineering is emerging to study the wide variety of two-dimensional materials and what happens when they are stacked one on top of the other. Potential applications include energy harvesting and storage, sensing, electronics and photonics, and bioengineering.

There is a lot of interest in 2D materials beyond graphene, especially when considering stacking to form heterostructures because they can lead to phenomenal properties, said Joshua Robinson, Corning Faculty Fellow of Materials Science and Engineering and associate director of Penn States Center for Two-dimensional and Layered Materials (2DLM). I think we have a variety of excellent ideas in these novel materials, which is why we did so well with the EFRI.

The EFRI awards fund interdisciplinary teams of researchers in rapidly advancing fields of fundamental engineering research. The 2014 awards, called 2-DARE, for Two-dimensional Atomic-layer Research and Engineering, were awarded to nine teams in the U.S., three of which include Penn State researchers.

2D Crystal Formed by Activated Atomic Layer Deposition is led by Joan Redwing, professor of materials science and engineering and electrical engineering, with co-PIs Ying Liu, Nasim Alem, Thomas Jackson and Suzanne Mohney, all faculty at Penn State. The award is for $1,964,494.

Our project is aimed at developing Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) and Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) processes to synthesize 2D materials. The 2D crystal films will be explored for applications in thin film electronics and superconductivity, said Joan Redwing.

"Ultra-low Power, Collective-state Device Technology Based on Electron Correlation in Two-Dimensional Atomic Layers" is led by Joshua Robinson with Co-PIs Suman Datta and Roman Engel-Herbert of Penn State, James Freericks, Georgetown University and Eva Andrei, Rutgers University. The award is for $2,000,000.

This program will develop a post silicon transistor based on the principal of strong electron correlation and associated phase transitions in two-dimensional materials, said Robinson.

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Nano-engineering enhances charge transport, promises more efficient future solar cells

2 hours ago by Ingrid Sderbergh Nano-carbon device

(Phys.org) Solar cells based on semiconducting composite plastics and carbon nanotubes is one of the most promising novel technology for producing inexpensive printed solar cells. Physicists at Ume University have discovered that one can reduce the number of carbon nanotubes in the device by more than 100 times while maintaining exceptional ability to transport charges. This is achieved thanks to clever nano-engineering of the active layer inside the device. Their results are published as front page news in the journal Nanoscale.

Carbon nanotubes are more and more attractive for use in solar cells as a replacement for silicon. They can be mixed in a semiconducting polymer, and deposited from solution by simple and inexpensive methods to form thin and flexible solar cells. The hybrid material is easy to spread out over a large surface and the nanotubes have outstanding electrical conductivity, and they can effectively separate and transport electrical charges generated from solar energy.

Earlier this year, Dr. David Barbero and his research team at Ume University, demonstrated for the first time that if carbon nanotubes are connected to each other in a controlled manner to form complex nanosized networks, one can achieve significantly higher charge transport and electricity than had previously been possible using the same materials. This means that the transport of electric charges occurs with a very little energy loss.

Previous studies have reported that there is a percolation threshold for the amount of carbon nanotubes necessary to transport efficiently electric charges in a device. Below this threshold, the device become completely inefficient and no current can be generated.

In this new study, Dr. Barbero and his team at Ume University show that this threshold can be reduced by more than 100 times in a semiconducting polymer and still generate high currents and charge transport at very low nanotube loadings, thereby strongly reducing materials costs.

"Our results are important from a fundamental point of view, but also of practical importance. The purified semiconducting nanotubes, which are necessary for high-performance devices, are still quite expensive and time consuming to produce. Now, nano-carbon devices, such as carbon nanotube based solar cells, can be produced with a much smaller number of carbon nanotubes and therefore much reduced material costs," says David Barbero.

The new results are expected to accelerate the development of next generation of solution processed thin film nano-carbon based solar cells, which are both more effective in generating power and less costly to produce in comparison with today's solar cells.

Explore further: Nanotube composites increase the efficiency of next generation of solar cells

More information: Boulanger N., Yu J., and Barbero D.R: "SWNT nano-engineered networks strongly increase charge transport in P3HT." Nanoscale 2014. Issue 20 (6), 11633-11636. DOI: 10.1039/C4NR01542H

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Nano-engineering enhances charge transport, promises more efficient future solar cells

Improved legal aid services reaching out to more people in need

Published on September 29, 2014

Published on September 29, 2014

David Mahoney, a legal aid lawyer in Truro, is thrilled there are more services being offered through legal aid. The improvements will extend its reach to more people, he said. Monique Chiasson Truro Daily News

Published on September 29, 2014

Robert Moores, managing lawyer with legal aid in Truro, wants the community to know there have been many improvements to the legal aid system. Changes mean access to legal aid is available to more people. Monique Chiasson Truro Daily News

TRURO A number of changes have been taking place in legal aid for the better, say local lawyers.

Robert Moores, managing lawyer of legal aid in Truro, and David Mahoney, also a local legal aid lawyer, want the community to know there are new and ongoing changes to the system that will benefit people in many ways.

One of the improvements is attempting to increase the amount of access people have to legal representation.

Legal aid has traditionally been seen as providing services to a limited amount of core areas to the very poor, said Moores.

Now, Moores said, the service is being extended to the working poor, who are defined as people who have a full-time job but only have a little extra money; not enough surplus for lawyers fees, for example.

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Improved legal aid services reaching out to more people in need

Global Molecular Diagnostics Market Is Expected To Be Worth $8,020.1 million by 2020: Grand View Research, Inc.

San Francisco, California (PRWEB) September 30, 2014

The global market for molecular diagnostics is expected to reach USD 8,020.1 million by 2020, according to a new study by Grand View Research, Inc. Growing demand for personalized medicine and theranostics, and the subsequent introduction of advanced cancer diagnostic technologies are expected to be key factors driving market growth over the next six years. Moreover, the growing global base of geriatric population and chronic diseases such as cancer, coupled with disease triggering lifestyle habits such as smoking and excessive alcohol consumption will positively impact market growth.

View full reports with TOC at http://www.grandviewresearch.com/industry-analysis/molecular-diagnostics-market

Molecular diagnostic reagent products dominated the overall market, accounting for over 50% of global revenue in 2013. Reagent market revenue is expected to reach USD 4,739.9 million by 2020, growing at a CAGR of 9.9% from 2014 to 2020. High consumption rates of molecular diagnostic reagents and the growing number of research and development initiatives pertaining to the field of molecular diagnostics are two key drivers of this product segment. The point of care end-use market for molecular diagnostics is expected to be the fastest growing product segment, at an estimated CAGR of 13.3% from 2014 to 2020, on account of factors such as the growing demand for point of care diagnostic procedures as an effective diagnostic tool rendering rapid and accurate results and the introduction of government initiatives such as CLIA (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments) waived tests.

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Further key findings from the study suggest:

Browse all reports of this category at http://www.grandviewresearch.com/industry/biotechnology

For the purpose of this study, Grand View Research has segmented the global molecular diagnostics market on the basis of product and region:

Browse all upcoming reports by Grand View Research at http://www.grandviewresearch.com/ongoing-reports

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Global Molecular Diagnostics Market Is Expected To Be Worth $8,020.1 million by 2020: Grand View Research, Inc.