NASA Langley Ozone Sensor Set for Launch to Space Station – Space Daily

Brooke Thornton has devoted eight years to a project that aims to check on the atmospheric health of the Earth. Needless to say, when NASA's Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment III on the International Space Station (SAGE III on ISS) launches, she'll be among the many cheering and working for its success in space.

"After seeing SAGE III mature from concept, to development, to assembly and testing, and preparing for mission ops ... I'm excited to see it launch so we get the science we have worked so hard for," she said.

Thornton, of NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, is the mission operations manager for SAGE III on ISS, which is a key part of NASA's mission to provide crucial, long-term measurements that will help humans understand and care for Earth's atmosphere.

The instrument measures Earth's sunscreen, or ozone, along with other gases and tiny particles in the atmosphere called aerosols. SAGE makes its measurements by looking at the light from the sun or moon as it passes through Earth's atmosphere at the edge, or limb, of the planet.

The result is a thin profile of the atmosphere from the unique vantage point of the space station, which has an orbit ideal for SAGE measurements.

Thornton and her operations team will look after SAGE III once it is attached, via robotic arm, to the station - operating the payload remotely from the ground "to get the best science," she said.

'Humble beginnings' The first SAGE instrument began operations in space on Feb. 18, 1979, following a 1975 proof-of-concept experiment called the Stratospheric Aerosol Measurement (SAM) on the Apollo-Soyuz mission.

SAM, the first experiment of its kind conducted from space, proved the value of a technique called occultation. Through that method, scientists identify components of the air by studying sunlight as it beams through the upper edges of atmosphere and comparing it to light coming straight from the sun, with no atmosphere in between. SAM was followed by SAM II and then the SAGE instruments.

"Since those humble beginnings, scientists and the engineers here at NASA Langley have perfected the technique," said Michael Cisewski, project manager for SAGE III on ISS.

SAGE II was a part of the Earth Radiation Budget Satellite (ERBS) and was deployed by the crew of space shuttle Challenger in 1984. It operated and produced data for more than 21 years.

The first SAGE III was launched in 2001 on a Russian satellite, Meteor-3M while another SAGE III was safely stored away. After several years of storage and preparation for the current mission, the SAGE III payload was shipped from Langley to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, in November 2015, ready for launch, currently targeted for February from Kennedy on a SpaceX Falcon 9/Dragon Vehicle.

Upon arrival to the space station, the instrument will be robotically installed onto an ExPRESS Logistics Carrier (ELC) platform, ELC-4 to be exact, using the space station's primary robotic arm, Canadarm2.

"The station robot arm removes SAGE III from the Dragon trunk, and then rides along the ISS truss to our mounting location and then installs the payloads," Thornton said. The system is really amazing. The ISS robotics system is completely controlled from the ground, saving precious crew time needed to perform on-board science."

After meticulously checking out all payload systems and initial calibration and validation, SAGE III will begin taking routine science measurements. The data is downloaded daily to the ground for use by the international science community.

While it was led at NASA Langley Research Center, the project has many partners both within NASA and with private companies in the United States and internationally. Three NASA centers - Kennedy, NASA's Johnson Space Center in Texas and NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama - contributed to the project as well as Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colorado, the European Space Agency and Thales Alenia Space-Italia.

All about the data The SAGE data-collecting missions helped inform political actions on Earth. On Sept. 16, 1987, an international treaty, known as the Montreal Protocol, was signed by most nations of the world. The agreement called for phasing out production of many of the substances that were responsible for ozone depletion. The treaty has been in force since Jan. 1, 1989.

"The SAGE instruments showed the world that we were losing stratospheric ozone globally," said Joseph Zawodny, project scientist.

"The world did an amazing thing by limiting the chlorofluorocarbons through the Montreal Protocol," Thornton said.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a scientific organization under the auspices of the United Nations, announced in 2005 that their observations of the stratosphere showed that the global amount of ozone is stabilizing. The IPCC study indicates that the atmosphere layer is expected to begin to recover in coming decades under the current ban on ozone-depleting substances continues.

Earth-observing instruments like SAGE III that monitor climate and ozone levels are a key part in looking after the health of the Earth and can help spur positive changes. The SAGE flight on ISS now will provide key data letting scientists know if the ozone layer is on track to recover as predicted by current models.

"When you're working on a project with so many moving part like this, it can be difficult to appreciate how important it is or what kind of impact your work will have," Cisewski said. "SAGE III is not just important to Langley or the United States - it's important to the world."

Getting set for space This version of the SAGE instrument is equipped with powerful tools. The instrument uses a telescope, a grating spectrometer and a charge coupled device detector array that, together, act as a sophisticated camera.

"The combination of SAGE instrument capabilities and the solar occultation measurement technique make the instrument essentially self-calibrating," Thornton said. "The SAGE instrument has been called the gold standard for all other instruments that are looking at ozone."

Since the instrument arrived at Kennedy from Langley, engineers have assisted SAGE team members in preparing it for launch.

"We have such an amazing mission ops team that I'll be working with," Thornton said. "It's a very tight group and I think that will improve the quality of the data that we get."

"I am proud of what our team has accomplished," Cisewski said, adding it's like a family. "The team has been really first-class and put in the extra efforts to make SAGE a big success."

Cisewski will be on-site at Kennedy when SAGE launches, and will be watching with pride.

"We're doing our part to go ahead and provide the best data set for people that are trying to make decisions now," he said. "This data is going to be useful 50 years from now."

Those thoughts were echoed by Thornton.

"SAGE instruments have shown the whole story so far of ozone trends," she said. "Now, hopefully this instrument will be able to show the recovery of the ozone."

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Space Station sendoff finally arrives for Buffalo’s young ‘Spud Launchers’ – Buffalo News

When you take a glance at the night sky in the coming weeks, think about the "Spud Launchers" the three budding scientists from Buffalo, whose potato experiment will be orbiting up there somewhere inside the International Space Station.

The three Buffalo Public School students Gabriella Melendez, Toriana Cornwell and Shaniylah Welch will travel to Cape Canaveral, Fla., next week to watch the launching of the rocket that finally will carry their science experiment to the space laboratory.

The honor was bestowed upon the girls in 2015, when they were among the winners of a national science competition sponsored by the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education. The education center partners with NASA and NanoRacks, a leader in the commercial space industry, to inspire the next generation of scientists and space explorers.

The three girls who attended Hamlin Park School 74 together will test whether 20 tiny potatoes squeezed into a small, half-inch tube can survive space travel. Upon return to earth six weeks later, their experiment will be returned to them for planting inside a University at Buffalo greenhouse.

It's an area of interest, particularly with NASA cultivating the ability to grow food in space in preparation for longer space missions and hoping maybe one day to plant the crop in a controlled dome on Mars.

The rocket launch was supposed to happen last spring, but the three girls have been waiting patiently Toriana and Shaniylah are now in high school as a number of delays pushedback the mission to this month, said Andrew Franz, the Hamlin Park teacher who served as an adviser for the project.

Their experiment already has been shipped off in preparation for the launch and thanks to donations, the girls who call themselves the "Spud Launchers" will be there to watch. They'll head to Florida and be thereFeb. 13-16 with Franz, school Principal Patrick Cook and Ina Ferguson, liaison for WNY STEM Hub.

WNY STEM Hub, which coordinated the competition locally, is a nonprofit created to steer students toward the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

"It's a huge relief for the girls," Franz said. "We already put our tube with the potatoes in the mail and we won't see them again until March or April."

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Space Station sendoff finally arrives for Buffalo's young 'Spud Launchers' - Buffalo News

Texas Students to Speak to NASA Astronaut on International Space Station – PR Newswire (press release)

WASHINGTON, Feb. 7, 2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --Students from the Weslaco Independent School District in Weslaco, Texas, will speak with a NASA astronaut currently living and working aboard the International Space Station at 12:05 p.m. EST Thursday, Feb. 9. The 20-minute, Earth-to-space call will air live on NASA Television and the agency's website.

Expedition 50 Flight Engineer Peggy Whitson will answer questions from students assembled in Weslaco ISD's Performing Arts Center. More than 800 students in third through fifth grade, as well as the Weslaco East High School Astronomy Club, will be in the audience.

Media interested in covering the event should contact the Weslaco ISD Public Information Department at 956-969-6505. The Performing Arts Center is at 506 East 6th St. in Weslaco.

Whitson launched to the space station on Nov.17, 2016, and is scheduled to return to Earth this spring.

This in-flight education downlink is an integral component of the NASA Office of Education's efforts to improve science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) teaching and learning in the United States. Linking students directly to astronauts aboard the space station through the agency Office of Education's STEM on Station activity provides authentic, live experiences in space exploration, space study and the scientific components of space travel, while introducing the possibilities of life in space.

Get NASA TV streaming video, schedules and downlink information at:

NASA TV Live

Learn about videos and lesson plans highlighting research on the International Space Station at:

http://www.nasa.gov/stemonstation

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/texas-students-to-speak-to-nasa-astronaut-on-international-space-station-300403530.html

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NASA okays commercial airlock for space station – Spaceflight Now

Artists concept of the NanoRacks airlock attached to the space stations Tranquility module. Credit: NanoRacks

A commercial airlock built in partnership by NanoRacks and Boeing will be connected to the International Space Station in 2019, the companies announced Monday, after the proposed project won preliminary approval from NASA managers.

NanoRacks plans to deploy small commercial satellites and CubeSats from the airlock, reducing the workload currently occupying time on the smaller equipment airlock inside the Japanese Kibo laboratory module. Only half of the Kibo airlocks capacity is allocated to NASA and commercial clients the rest goes to Japan.

This partnership is an important step in the commercial transition well see on the ISS in coming years, said Mark Mulqueen, Boeings ISS program manager. Utilizing a commercial airlock to keep up with the demand of deployment will significantly streamline our process.

NanoRacks has arranged for the launch of more than 375 payloads to the space station since 2009, including more than 100 CubeSats released from a deployer mounted on the end of the Japanese robotic arm outside Kibo for commercial customers, universities and NASA.

Houston-based NanoRacks also has an external platform outside Kibo, where scientists can test sensors, electronics and other equipment in the harsh environment of space.

The privately-funded commercial airlock will launch inside the unpressurized trunk of a SpaceX Dragon cargo craft, then attach to a port on the stations Tranquility module with the Canadian-built robotic arm.

Another commercial module is already to connected to Tranquility.

The Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, launched to the station in April 2016 under a NASA-funded contract. Developed and built by Bigelow Aerospace, the soft-sided module expanded to full size in late May after bolted on to the Tranquility module.

BEAM is on a two-year demonstration to test the performance of an expandable module in space, but Bigelow and NASA are in discussions to extend the modules presence on the station longer.

NASA and NanoRacks signed a Space Act Agreement for the airlock project last year. The space agency announced Monday that it has committed to install the airlock on the station once NanoRacks completes pre-agreed financial and technical milestones outlined in the agreement.

We want to utilize the space station to expose the commercial sector to new and novel uses of space, ultimately creating a new economy in low Earth orbit for scientific research, technology development and human and cargo transportation, said Sam Scimemi, director of the ISS division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. We hope this new airlock will allow a diverse community to experiment and develop opportunities in space for the commercial sector.

The new airlock will triple the number of small satellites that can be deployed in a single cycle, according to Boeing.

Astronauts inside the station will also be able to assemble payloads from components delivered to the complex in bags, then put them through the NanoRacks airlock, which can handle larger packages than the sizes supported by the current Kibo passageway.

Boeing is providing the passive common berthing mechanism, a connecting ring to install the new port on the Tranquility module, plus unspecified engineering services required for developing and manufacturing of the airlock, according to NanoRacks.

We are very pleased to have Boeing joining with us to develop the airlock module, said Jeffrey Manber, CEO of NanoRacks. This is a huge step for NASA and the U.S. space program, to leverage the commercial marketplace for low Earth orbit, on Space Station and beyond, and NanoRacks is proud to be taking the lead in this prestigious venture.

Boeing is also NASAs lead contractor for the entire space station, providing engineering support for all of the labs U.S. modules.

NanoRacks said the airlock could be detached from the ISS and placed on another platform in orbit.

The NanoRacks airlock module is the next logical step in the successful line of NanoRacks commercial payload facilities, said Brock Howe, head of the airlock project at NanoRacks. This airlock module will provide a broad range of capabilities to our payload customers and expand greatly on the commercial utilization of the station and I look forward to leading the team at NanoRacks on this next venture.

The airlock module will be assembled and tested by NanoRacks, which is also responsible for the design, safety, operations, quality assurance, mockups and crew training, the company said in a statement.

ATA Engineering of San Diego will lead structural and thermal analysis and testing services for the airlock project.

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Japanese cargo ship ends mission after space debris experiment flounders – Spaceflight Now

Artists concept of how the tether for Japans KITE experiment would have appeared when deployed from the HTV supply ship. Credit: JAXA

Japans HTV supply ship fell to Earth on Sunday more than a week after leaving the International Space Station, burning up in the atmosphere after officials gave up on an experiment looking into ways to remove space junk from orbit.

The barrel-shaped spacecraft, measuring 30 feet (9.2 meters) long and 14 feet (4.4 meters) wide, departed the space station Jan. 27 after deliveringmore than 9,000 pounds (about 4.1 metric tons) of supplies, experiments and six lithium-ion batteries to begin a refresh of the research labs electrical system.

The mission launched from Japan on Dec. 9 aboard an H-2B rocket.

Astronauts replaced the cargo with trash inside the HTVs pressurized cabin, and the stations robotics system placed nine no-longer-needed batteries into the logistics crafts external cargo bay before the departure.

The mission was Japans sixth HTV resupply mission nicknamed Kounotori 6, using the Japanese word for white stork.

Shortly after leaving the space station, the HTV was supposed to release an electrodynamic tether measuring nearly a half-mile (700 meters) long for a research experiment to gauge such a devices effectiveness at helping clear low Earth orbit of space junk.

But the experiment encountered problems, Japanese scientists said, and the tether was never unreeled.

One of four bolts holding the end mass a structure fixed to the end of the tether to the HTVs main body apparently did not release as planned Jan. 28, according to a statement by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

JAXA said telemetry data from the spacecraft indicated one of the bolts did not disengage after an initial release command, but data showed the bolt disconnected a few minutes later after further commands.

A couple of hours later, an attempt to extend the tether did not work. JAXA said ground controllers tried to unfurl it multiple times without success.

The Kounotori Integrated Tether Experiment, or KITE, was intended to study the behavior of a tether made of strands of aluminum and stainless steel wire, similar to devices that could remove space debris from orbit in the future.

Space debris experts say electrodynamic tethers like the one carried on Kounotori 6, which had a thin coating of lubricant to encourage electric conductivity, could offer a way to de-orbit derelict rocket stages and aging satellites without expending precious propellants.

The interaction between an electrodynamic tether and the Earths magnetic field should generate enough energy to change an objects orbit, eventually allowing it to burn up in the atmosphere.

Electrodynamic tethers have been tested in space before on two space shuttle missions in the 1990s. The tethers extended from the shuttles payload bay never reached their intended length one tether jammed and another broke but engineers gathered useful data to apply to future missions.

Once the tether aboard Kounotori 6 fully deployed, the rendezvous sensors and a camera on the HTV were designed to track the motion of the tether and its end mass. A field emission cathode was supposed to generate an electrical current to run through the tether to check its interaction with Earths magnetic field.

Despite the tether snag, JAXA said the cathode released electrons as designed, allowing experimenters to verify the performance of that piece of the tether demonstration.

Ground controllers only had about a week to conduct the tether experiment before the HTVs scheduled re-entry Sunday.

JAXA confirmed the spacecraft plunged back into the atmosphere and burned up over the ocean around 1506 GMT (10:06 a.m. EST) Sunday.

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Audit of NASA’s Mars 2020 rover mission warns of potential delays – SpaceFlight Insider

Jim Sharkey

February 7th, 2017

The selected payload for the Mars 2020 rover. Image Credit: NASA

In a report issued on Jan. 30, 2017, NASAs Office of Inspector General (OIG) voiced concerns about issues that could delay the planned July 2020 launch of the space agencys next Mars rover. An optimal 20-day window for a journey from Earth to Mars occurs once every 26 months. Missing the 2020 launch date would result in increased costs while waiting for the next launch opportunity.

A chart of NASA Tech Readiness Levels (TRL). Image Credit: NASA

The Mars 2020 rover is planned tocarry seven science instruments to further scientific knowledge about Mars. Specifically, the rover will search for signs of past life, cache rock samples for possible return to Earth by a future mission and demonstrate technologies that will support NASAs goal of sending humans to Mars in the 2030s.

The new rover will use a significant amount of heritage technology developed for NASAs Mars Science LaboratoryCuriosity rover in order to reduce mission costs and risks. Despite these cost and time-saving measures, an audit conducted by the OIG found several risks that could negatively impact the projects schedule.

The OIG audit found the greatest risk to the Mars 2020 missions schedule is the projects Sample and Caching Subsystem (Sampling System), which is being developed tocollect core samples of Martian rocks and regolith and place them on the Martian surface for retrieval by a future robotic or human mission.

During the missions preliminary design review, three of the Sampling Systems critical technologies were below technology readiness level (TRL) 6, which means the prototype had not yet demonstrated the capability to perform all required functions.

The OIG auditors were particularly concerned about the immaturity of these critical technologies because, according to Mars 2020 project managers, the Sampling System is the rovers most complex new component and delays could eat into the projects reserve schedule and, in the worst case scenario, cause the launch to be delayed. As of December 2016, the project was tracking the risk that the Sampling System might not be ready for testing and integration in May 2019.

The audit also found that the mission also appears to not be on track to have 90 percent of its engineering drawings completed by the February 2017 critical design review (CDR). The CDR is when a project demonstrates its design is mature enough to proceed with full-scale fabrication, assembly, integration, and testing.

The audit detailed a number of other challenges facing Mars 2020 project managers including late delivery of the actuators responsible for moving and controlling parts and instruments on the rover, eliminating as a cost-saving measure an engineering model of the Mars Resource Utilization Experiment (MOXIE), designed to test the feasibility of producing oxygen on Mars.

Additionally, managers need to ensure the rover doesnt exceed its designed mass limit of 2,315 pounds (1,050 kilograms) and address funding issues faced by foreign partners, which may affect their ability to deliver components on time.

The Mars 2020 rover is currently scheduled to launch in July 2020 atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V 541 booster from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Station in Florida.

Video courtesy of NASA OIG

Tagged: Lead Stories Mars Mars 2020 MOXIE NASA's Office of Inspector General Sampling System

Jim Sharkey is a lab assistant, writer and general science enthusiast who grew up in Enid, Oklahoma, the hometown of Skylab and Shuttle astronaut Owen K. Garriott. As a young Star Trek fan he participated in the letter-writing campaign which resulted in the space shuttle prototype being named Enterprise. While his academic studies have ranged from psychology and archaeology to biology, he has never lost his passion for space exploration. Jim began blogging about science, science fiction and futurism in 2004. Jim resides in the San Francisco Bay area and has attended NASA Socials for the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover landing and the NASA LADEE lunar orbiter launch.

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Audit of NASA's Mars 2020 rover mission warns of potential delays - SpaceFlight Insider

First SpaceX Falcon 9 scheduled to be re-flown tested at McGregor – SpaceFlight Insider

Derek Richardson

February 6th, 2017

The Falcon 9 first stage recovered during the April 2016 CRS-8 mission is being test fired at SpaceXs rocket development facility in McGregor, Texas. Photo Credit: SpaceX

SpaceX recently tested the previously-flown Falcon 9 first stage assigned to send the SES-10 communications satellite into space. That mission will mark the first time the company has re-flown one of its recovered boosters.

The stage was tested in late January 2017 at SpaceXs rocket development and test facility in McGregor, Texas, by completing a static test fire in which all nine Merlin 1D engines were fired at once for a few seconds. The company tests all its Falcon 9 boosters here before shipping each to their designated launch areas, currently either Florida or California.

SpaceX successfully lands a Falcon 9 first stage on a drone ship at sea for the first time. This booster propelled the CRS-8 mission toward space in April 2016. Photo Credit: SpaceX

The SES-10 mission is currently looking to launch no earlier than early March 2017, after the CRS-10 Dragon capsule and EchoStar 23 communications satellite are launched on Feb. 14 and Feb. 28, respectively.

This particular stage was recovered in April 2016 after lofting the CRS-8 mission to the International Space Station. After propelling the second stage and payload out of Earths atmosphere, the first stage made a propulsive landing on the deck of SpaceXs Of Course I Still Love You drone ship some 190 miles (300 kilometers) east of Cape Canaveral, Florida, in the Atlantic Ocean.

It was the first successful at-sea landing by a Falcon 9 booster and the second overall to be recovered.

Over the last few years, SpaceX has been actively working to propulsively land the first stage of its Falcon 9 rockets in order to inspect and eventually reuse them. The first successful landing occurred during the Orbcomm OG2 mission in December 2015. Since then, six more boosters were recovered both on land and at sea.

In May 2016, the company successfully landed a stage after a high-energy geostationary transfer orbit mission. SpaceX said that booster, which sent the JCSAT-14 communications satellite to space, went through the harshest conditions it expects a recovered stage to go through.

The California-based company decided to use the JCSAT-14 booster as itslife leader and has since put it through numerous inspections and stress tests. Additionally, the stage was put through least seven full-duration test firings at McGregor. One of those firings can be seen in the video below.

The JCSAT-14 booster will not fly again.

According to Spaceflight Now, the booster that will be used for SES-10 will only be put through the standard preflight testing. This means the next step will be for it to be shipped to Cape Canaveral and integrated for launch.

SpaceX is taking the information it is learning from recovered boosters and modifying the design of the Falcon 9 to make full and rapid reusability easier. This new Falcon 9 Block 5 is expected to fly no earlier than late 2017.

Video courtesy of SpaceX

Tagged: Cape Canaveral CRS-8 Falcon 9 Lead Stories McGregor SES-10 SpaceX

Derek Richardson is a student studying mass media with an emphasis in contemporary journalism at Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas. He is currently the managing editor of the student run newspaper, the Washburn Review. He also writes a blog, called Orbital Velocity, about the space station. His passion for space ignited when he watched space shuttle Discovery leap to space on Oct. 29, 1998. He saw his first in-person launch on July 8, 2011 when the space shuttle launched for the final time. Today, this fervor has accelerated toward orbit and shows no signs of slowing down. After dabbling in math and engineering courses in college, he soon realized that his true calling was communicating to others about space exploration and spreading that passion.

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First SpaceX Falcon 9 scheduled to be re-flown tested at McGregor - SpaceFlight Insider

Iridium to share Falcon 9 launch with NASA-German gravity satellites – Spaceflight Now

The first 10 Iridium Next satellites launched Jan. 14 on a Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. Credit: SpaceX

Iridium has secured a launch for five more of its next-generation communications craft in a rideshare arrangement with two U.S.-German research satellites aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket by early 2018.

The announcement Jan. 31 came two-and-a-half weeks after the first 10 Iridium Next satellites lifted off on a Falcon 9 booster from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Another 10 spacecraft are scheduled for launch on a Falcon 9 flight in April.

Iridium will share the Falcon 9s lift and volume capacities on the newly-announced mission also due to launch from Vandenberg with two gravity research probes jointly developed by NASA and the German Research Center for Geosciences, or GFZ, of Potsdam, Germany.

The twin research satellites will replace the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment GRACE spacecraft in orbit since March 2002. The GRACE-Follow On, or GRACE-FO, satellites are being built and tested in Germany by Airbus Defense and Space.

NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory is responsible for the overall mission valued at nearly $400 million and pays for the construction of the two GRACE-FO spacecraft and a microwave instrument, the centerpiece of the satellites science payload.

The German government and GFZ are in charge of part of the science payload and arranging launch services for the GRACE-FO mission, roughly one-quarter of the projects overall cost.

The identical GRACE-FO satellites will launch into a polar orbit around 300 miles (500 kilometers) above Earth, and fly around the planet in formation separated by 137 miles (220 kilometers). The microwave ranging instrument will track the distance between the two spacecraft with a precision of 0.002 millimeters, a fraction of the width of a human hair.

Changes in the range between the satellites will tell scientists about the strength and lumpiness of Earths gravity field, allowing the ground team to produce a global gravity map every 30 days through the missions expected five-year lifetime.

GRACEs data archive aids studies of earthquakes and other seismic activity, ocean currents and glaciers, and the structure of Earths interior.

GRACE-FO will continue GRACEs legacy of tracking changes in the distribution of Earths mass over time by creating monthly maps of Earths gravity field, said Frank Flechtner, project manager of the mission at GFZ. GRACE is improving our understanding and knowledge of a variety of important Earth system processes such as the terrestrial water cycle and changes in ice sheets, glaciers and sea level or surface and deep-ocean currents. These climate change related measurements provide a unique view of the Earth system and have far-reaching benefits to society.

The original GRACE satellites are low on fuel, and could run out of propellant as soon as this summer, around the time the follow-on craft were originally scheduled for liftoff, according to GFZ.

GFZ and NASA agreed in 2013 to launch the satellites on a Russian-Ukrainian Dnepr rocket provided by Kosmotras in August 2017, but that programs future is in doubt after relations between the two partner countries deteriorated following Russias annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Iridium also booked two satellites to launch on a separate Dnepr rocket, but the Virginia-based communications company is no longer counting on the converted Soviet-era missiles availability for the mission.

The indefinite grounding of Dnepr left Iridium and GFZ looking for an alternate ride.

Iridium said the rideshare launch with SpaceX offered a particularly compelling economical solution through cost-sharing with GFZ.

This is a very smart way to get additional Iridium Next satellites into orbit, said Matt Desch, CEO at Iridium. This launch provides added resiliency to our network for not much more than we had planned originally to launch 72 satellites, including two with Kosmotras.

We are pleased to be sharing a rocket with NASA and GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences for this additional SpaceX launch, and GFZ has been a great business partner throughout this process, Desch said in a statement.

Iridium said it will consider future launches with Kosmotrass Dnepr rocket once approvals are available.

Financial terms of the rideshare SpaceX launch contract were not disclosed.

GFZ said the agreement with SpaceX calls for a launch between December 2017 and February 2018.

Iridiums satellite contractors Thales Alenia Space and Orbital ATK are building 81 spacecraft for the new-generation fleet, which replaces the companys aging satellites in orbit since the late 1990s. Iridium booked seven Falcon 9 launches with SpaceX in 2010 enough to put 70 satellites into orbit and the latest contract adds five more to that number.

Launch arrangements for the remaining six satellites, considered ground spares, will be announced at a later date. Desch has said previously that Iridium intends to eventually launch all 81 of the satellites.

Iridiums network requires 66 satellites in space spread out in six orbital planes. The rest of the satellites launched will be stored in orbit.

Airbus Defense and Space is building a multi-satellite adapter to accommodate the dual-launch, according to GFZ. SpaceX builds the dispenser for the Iridium satellites.

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NASA Engineer Hired to Work on Uber’s Flying-Car Project – Space.com

Artist's illustration of the Puffin flying car, a concept vehicle developed by NASA aerospace engineer Mark Moore. Uber has hired Moore to work on the company's flying-car initiative, known as Uber Elevate.

Uber has hired longtime NASA engineer Mark Moore to work on the rideshare company's flying-car project, according to Bloomberg Technology.

Moore will become director of engineering for aviation and will help develop the Uber Elevate initiative, which envisions using "air taxis" to ferry people between "vertiports" located within 50 miles to 100 miles (80 to 100 kilometers) of each other, Bloomberg Technology reported Monday (Feb. 6).

Moore has spent the last 30 years at NASA. His research into vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) craft such as the electric Puffin concept vehicle helped inspire Google co-founder Larry Page to start two flying-car companies, Zee.aero and Kitty Hawk, Bloomberg Technology reported.

It won't be too long before we all move into the "Jetsons"-esque future such projects promise, according to Moore: He told Bloomberg Technology that he expects to see several different flying cars come online in the next one to three years. These vehicles will employ human pilots for the foreseeable future, Moore added.

Read the full article on Bloomberg Technology.

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Tornado damages NASA facility in New Orleans – The Verge

Today, severe thunderstorms and multiple tornadoes passed through New Orleans, Louisiana, causing significant damage to the area including communities that were hit by Hurricane Katrina more than a decade ago. The storms also smashed through NASAs Michoud Assembly Facility, one of the largest manufacturing plants in the world that the space agency uses to create parts for its rockets and spacecraft.

Only minor injuries have been reported and NASA employees and other tenants are being accounted for.

NASA says that a tornado hit the facility at 12:25PM ET and there have been no serious injuries. At this time, only minor injuries have been reported and NASA employees and other tenants are being accounted for, NASA officials said in a statement. There is still a threat of severe weather in the area and emergency officials are continuing to monitor the situation to ensure the safety of onsite personnel. The onsite Michoud emergency response team is also conducting damage assessments of buildings and facilities.

NASA may still be looking over the extent of the storms impact, but pictures of Michoud seem to show significant damage to the facilities buildings, as well as overturned cars in its parking lot.

Overseen by NASAs Marshall Space Flight Center, Michoud has been the birthplace of many key pieces of hardware the space agency has used to get people into space. The first stages of NASAs Saturn V rockets were built at Michoud, and the site was also used to stack portions of the Space Shuttles large, orange external fuel tank. Today, the major components of NASAs next big rocket, the Space Launch System, are being constructed at Michoud, to get the vehicle ready for its first flight scheduled for 2018. Its also where contractors are putting together the Orion crew capsule the vehicle that NASA wants to use to send people into deep space and onto Mars.

We will update this post as we find out more about the state of the facility.

For reference, here is a video of NASAs Michoud Assembly Facility prior to the storm:

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Tornado damages NASA facility in New Orleans - The Verge

NASA advances first-ever silicon-based X-ray optic – Phys.Org

February 7, 2017 by Lori Keesey Scientist Will Zhang has created a manufacturing facility to create a new-fangled X-ray optic made of silicon. This image shows the buffing machine to remove imperfections from the mirror's surface. Credit: NASA/W. Hrybyk

NASA scientist William Zhang has created and proven a technique for manufacturing lightweight, high-resolution X-ray mirrors using silicona material commonly associated with computer chips.

Zhang, an astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, has shown in repeated testing that single-crystal silicona hard, brittle non-metallic element used in the manufacturing of computer chipsworks exceptionally well as an X-ray optic.

Given the cost of building space observatorieswhich only increase in price as they get larger and heavierthe goal is to develop easily reproducible lightweight optics, without sacrificing quality. According to Zhang, use of silicon would give X-ray astrophysicists what they have long wanted: lightweight, super-thin mirrors that offer a significantly larger collection area and dramatically improved resolutionall at a reduced cost, Zhang said.

To date, no one has created an X-ray mirror that addresses all these performance goals. Furthermore, no one has polished and figured silicon for X-ray optics, which must be curved and nested inside a canister-like assembly to collect highly energetic X-ray photons. With this special configuration, X-rays graze the mirrors' surfaceslike how a thrown pebble skims across the surface of a pondrather than passing through them.

Silicon, which doesn't warp even when cut or exposed to fluctuating temperatures, offers a viable solution, Zhang said. "We have executed our mirror-making procedures many times," he added. "These represent the best lightweight X-ray mirrors ever. As a matter of fact, of all the astronomical X-ray mirrors that have been produced and flown, only Chandra's are better," he said, referring to one of NASA's Great Observatories, an X-ray mission that carries the highest-resolution X-ray mirrors ever launched. "But we aspire to match and then exceed Chandra's mirror quality before 2020."

Zhang intends to achieve that goal, in part, with NASA Strategic Astrophysics Technology funding. He and his team plan to further advance the non-conventional technology in preparation for a future X-ray mission.

Old Hand at Mirror Making

Zhang is not a newcomer to the mirror-making business.

Fifteen years ago, he set out to develop a less-expensive, more efficient technique for crafting lightweight X-ray mirrors. He succeeded. Four years ago, he delivered 9,000 super-thin, curved glass mirrors for NASA's Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, or NuSTAR, mission using a novel manufacturing technique in which he placed thin pieces of commercially available glass on a mandrel and heated the entire assembly inside an ovena process called slumping. As the glass heated, it softened and folded over the mandrel to produce a curved mirror that the Copenhagen-based Danish Technical University then coated with layers of silicon and tungsten to maximize its X-ray reflectance.

Taking it to the Limit

Though Zhang proved the technique and produced thousands of modest-resolution mirrors ideal for NuSTAR, Zhang realized that he had taken the approach to its limit. "I spent a couple years trying to make slumped glass better. I got all the mileage I could get."

He got rid of eight of his 10 ovens used in the slumping process and turned his attention, instead, to single-crystal silicon.

Unbeknownst to him, another Goddard technologist, Vince Bly, had already investigated the material's use, ultimately producing a thick, yet lightweight spare mirror for the Goddard-built Thermal Infrared Sensor, one of two instruments developed for NASA's Landsat Data Continuity Mission. Though the mission didn't use the mirror because the optic had never flown in space, Bly said testing indicated that it offered a viable option.

When Zhang heard about Bly's work, he and Bly started working together, benefiting from each other's experience. "He used what we had done to solve his own problem," Bly said.

No-Stress Silicon

The key, both said, lies with the material itself. Traditional materials for making mirrorsglass, ceramics, and metalssuffer from high internal stress, especially when cut or exposed to changing temperatures. These stresses become increasingly unpredictable as the mirror becomes thinner.

"Single crystal silicon is an excellent material for making spaceflight X-ray mirrors," Zhang said. "It is inexpensive and abundantly available because of the semiconductor industry. Furthermore, it is a perfect material. It is immune from the internal stresses that can change the shape of X-ray mirrors made of glass."

This is because every atom is arranged in a lattice configuration, which prevents the material from distorting even when cut or shaped. In other words, if a sheet of plywood were made of silicon, it would be perfectly flat and immune from warping, he said.

Learned from Slumping

Zhang's new process grows out of what he learned through glass slumping, he said. He takes a block of silicon and heats it to eliminate any stress that may have arisen from its handling. With a band saw, he creates the approximate shape and uses other machining tools and chemicals to further grind and refine the block's surface. Like slicing cheese, he then cuts a thin substrate measuring just a fraction of an inch in thickness from the block and polishes the surface. The last step is coating the individual segments with iridium to improve reflectance.

With his NASA funding, Zhang and his team are perfecting techniques for aligning and bonding 6,000 mirror segments to form meta-shells that would be integrated inside a mirror assembly projected to weigh about 200 pounds and stand just a 1.6-feet tall. Ultimately, he would like to create six meta-shells and automate the alignment process.

"Making lightweight, high-resolution, relatively inexpensive X-ray mirrors has become my life's work," Zhang said, referring to his quest to develop a lighter, more capable X-ray mirror. "When I started developing mirrors 15 years ago, I thought I'd get it done in a couple years. Fifteen years later, I'm still at it," Zhang said.

Explore further: NuSTAR's mirrors baked in Zhang's glass kitchen

(PhysOrg.com) -- It pays to persevere. No one knows this better than Will Zhang.

Inside a massive clean room at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland the James Webb Space Telescope team is steadily installing the largest space telescope mirror ever. Unlike other space telescope mirrors, ...

A lightweight telescope that a team of NASA scientists and engineers is developing specifically for CubeSat scientific investigations could become the first to carry a mirror made of carbon nanotubes in an epoxy resin.

The sole secondary mirror that will fly aboard NASA's James Webb Space Telescope was installed onto the telescope at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, on March 3, 2016.

Inside NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center's massive clean room in Greenbelt, Maryland, the ninth flight mirror was installed onto the telescope structure with a robotic arm. This marks the halfway completion point for the ...

(Phys.org)The sole secondary mirror and a third primary mirror segment that will fly aboard NASA's James Webb Space Telescope arrived at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., on Nov. 5, 2012. A video of ...

NASA scientist William Zhang has created and proven a technique for manufacturing lightweight, high-resolution X-ray mirrors using silicona material commonly associated with computer chips.

An exotic binary star system 380 light-years away has been identified as an elusive white dwarf pulsar the first of its kind ever to be discovered in the universe thanks to research by the University of Warwick.

A giant black hole ripped apart a nearby star and then continued to feed off its remains for close to a decade, according to research led by the University of New Hampshire. This black hole meal is more than 10 times longer ...

An experimental Japanese mission to clear 'space junk' or rubbish from the Earth's orbit has ended in failure, officials said Monday, in an embarassment for Tokyo.

Galaxies today fall roughly into two categories: elliptically-shaped collections of reddish, old stars that formed predominantly during a period early in the history of the universe, and spiral shaped objects dominated by ...

(Phys.org)A European team of astronomers led by Oscar Barragn of the University of Turin in Italy reports the discovery of a low-mass warm Jupiter extrasolar planet orbiting a nearby K-type main-sequence star. The newly ...

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NASA advances first-ever silicon-based X-ray optic - Phys.Org

Leading Commercial Space Group Embraces NASA’s Biggest Rocket – Wall Street Journal

Leading Commercial Space Group Embraces NASA's Biggest Rocket
Wall Street Journal
WASHINGTONCommercial space interests for the first time are publicly singing the praises of NASA's biggest, most expensive rocket program, seeking to get in sync with the Trump administration's evolving focus on public-private partnerships to further ...

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Leading Commercial Space Group Embraces NASA's Biggest Rocket - Wall Street Journal

NASA’s Rover Curiosity Reveals Something Weird About Mars’ Ancient Atmosphere – Seeker

Although Mars is now cold and dry, there are decades of evidence suggesting that the Red Planet's surface was once covered with rivers, streams, ponds, lakes and perhaps seas and oceans. Dark, narrow lines seen on Mars even hint that water could run down some of its slopes every spring. There is life virtually wherever there is water on Earth, so these findings raise the possibility that Mars was once a home to life, and might host it still.

"The watery environments that once occupied the floor of Gale Crater look like they were pretty hospitable to life not too hot, not too cold, not too acid, not too alkaline, and the water probably was not too salty," said study lead author Thomas Bristow, a planetary scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California. [ Photos: Ancient Mars Lake Could Have Supported Life]Ancient Mars must have been much warmer than the planet is today for such environments to persist, many scientists think. As such, prior work sought to look for signs that Mars once possessed ample amounts of greenhouses gases such as carbon dioxide in its atmosphere, which trap heat from the sun.

However, analyses of data taken from orbit above Mars suggested little in the way of the carbonate minerals on the Martian surface that one would expect to find if its atmosphere were once richer in carbon dioxide. To help solve this mystery, scientists examined data collected from the Red Planet's surface by NASA's Curiosity rover as it traversed the lower slopes of the mountain Aeolis Mons (known informally as Mount Sharp), which rises about 3.4 miles (5.5 kilometers) high from the center of Gale Crater.

RELATED: Here's What Mars' Amazing Polar Ice Cap Swirls Look Like From Above

The researchers analyzed Martian mudstones, siltstones, sandstones and other sedimentary rocks deposited by lakes and rivers on the floor of Gale Crater about 3.5 billion years ago. They did not detect carbonates, suggesting that atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide back then were tens to hundreds of times lower than those required by climate models to warm early Mars enough to keep liquid water on its surface.

These findings do not suggest that ancient Mars wasn't wet, study team members said. "The sedimentary evidence at Gale Crater is indisputable in showing the prolonged presence of liquid water on the surface of early Mars," Bristow told Space.com.

One possible explanation for this discovery is that Mars once did have carbonates on its surface that were later destroyed. However, "the nature of the minerals in the samples we focused on don't support that conclusion," Bristow said. "They don't show any sign of suffering an acidic attack that could have dissolved any carbonates there in the past."

Another possibility is that early Mars was warmed by other greenhouse gases, such as sulfur dioxide, methane or nitrous oxide.

"The downside of all these other greenhouse gases is that they tend to be quite reactive, so when you put them in the atmosphere, they don't hang out an especially long time," Bristow said. "So the warming periods driven by those kinds of greenhouse gases are relatively short-lived, which is not consistent with observations from Gale Crater where we have evidence for lakes and rivers that persisted for hundreds of thousands or even millions of years."

RELATED: Interstellar Clouds Eroded Martian Atmosphere

Other scenarios that might explain the water of early Mars include ice caps that could have kept liquid water insulated under them, or a change in the Martian orbit that made the Red Planet warmer. "Our findings mean that scientists have to think a bit more deeply about what kind of mechanisms could lead to stabilization of surface water," Bristow said.

Future research will analyze more data that Curiosity is collecting as it makes its way up Aeolis Mons.

"It looks like the rover should be sampling the rock record of ancient Mars during a climatic transition as it dried out and cooled down," Bristow said. "We are hoping to get more clues as to how the early Martian climate system operated."

The scientists detailed their findings online today (Feb. 6) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Original article on Space.com.

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NASA's Rover Curiosity Reveals Something Weird About Mars' Ancient Atmosphere - Seeker

Skidmore professor spends 27 days in ocean researching with NASA – NEWS10 ABC


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Skidmore professor spends 27 days in ocean researching with NASA
NEWS10 ABC
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (NEWS10) A local oceanographer is getting the chance of a lifetime, spending 27 days in the ocean with NASA. Skidmore's Meg Estapa is hoping to bring a little bit of the pacific ocean back to Saratoga with her. She took a break ...

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Skidmore professor spends 27 days in ocean researching with NASA - NEWS10 ABC

NASA’s Hubble Telescope Captures Rare Image of Dying ‘Rotten Egg’ Star – TIME

The Calabash Nebula, pictured here which has the technical name OH 231.8+04.2 is a spectacular example of the death of a low-mass star like the Sun. ESA/Hubble/NASA

NASA and the European Space Agency's (ESA) Hubble Space Telescope has captured a rare image that shows the spectacular death of a star.

The dying star can be seen transforming from a red giant to a planetary nebula called the Calabash Nebula, technically known as 231.8+04.2, according to the ESA. During this transformation, the dying star blows its outer layers of gas and dust out into the surrounding space at a speed close to 621,371 miles per hour.

The nebula is also known as the Rotten Egg Nebula, the ESA reports, because it contains a lot of sulphur, which smells like rotten egg when it combines with other elements. Luckily, as the nebula resides over 5,000 light-years away in the constellation of Puppis, humans don't need to worry about the stench.

The star's death occurs "within the blink of an eye in astronomical terms," according to the ESA, which explains why this kind of photo is hard to come by. Next, the star will evolve into a fully formed planetary nebula over the next thousand years.

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NASA's Hubble Telescope Captures Rare Image of Dying 'Rotten Egg' Star - TIME

What is nanotechnology (molecular manufacturing …

Nanotechnology, or, as it is sometimes called, molecular manufacturing , is a branch of engineering that deals with the design and manufacture of extremely small electronic circuits and mechanical devices built at the molecular level of matter. The Institute of Nanotechnology in the U.K. expresses it as "science and technology where dimensions and tolerances in the range of 0.1 nanometer (nm) to 100 nm play a critical role." Nanotechnology is often discussed together with micro-electromechanical systems ( MEMS ), a subject that usually includes nanotechnology but may also include technologies higher than the molecular level.

There is a limit to the number of components that can be fabricated onto a semiconductor wafer or "chip.". Traditionally, circuits have been etched onto chips by removing material in small regions. However, it is also possible in theory to build chips up, one atom at a time, to obtain devices much smaller than those that can be manufactured by etching. With this approach, there would be no superfluous atoms; every particle would have a purpose. Electrical conductors, called nanowire s, would be only one atom thick. A logic gate would require only a few atoms. A data bit could be represented by the presence or absence of a single electron .

Nanotechnology holds promise in the quest for ever-more-powerful computers and communications devices. But the most fascinating (and potentially dangerous) applications are in medical science. So-called nanorobot s might serve as programmable antibodies. As disease-causing bacteria and viruses mutate in their endless attempts to get around medical treatments, nanorobots could be reprogrammed to selectively seek out and destroy them. Other nanorobots might be programmed to single out and kill cancer cells.

Two concepts associated with nanotechnology are positional assembly and self-replication . Positional assembly deals with the mechanics of moving molecular pieces into their proper relational places and keeping them there. Molecular robots are devices that do the positional assembly. Self-replication deals with the problem of multiplying the positional arrangements in some automatic way, both in building the manufacturing device and in building the manufactured product.

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Experiencing Nanotechnology Using ‘Scanning Electron Microscope’ – Jamestown Post Journal

Students from Ellicottvilles CTE Center are learning to use a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Science teacher Cathleen Woods is shown with her students from the morning Medical Assisting class examining a hair with split ends from the Cosmetology class. Submitted photo

ELLICOTTVILLE Students at the Ellicottville Career and Technical Education Center have a leg up on most peers their age, because they are learning nanotechnology and are receiving hands-on experience in the operation of the JEOL6010LA Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM).

Through the use of a SEM, they are imaging, analyzing and manipulating materials at the nanoscale. They are being trained in material analysis and reporting methods while working with biologics, electronics and mechanical nano-materials.

Counselor Vince Oliverio said the SEM was funded with a Perkins Consortium grant, which is a Federally Funded Public School grant. CABOCES manages the grant for the districts it serves, thereby benefiting all of the districts.

According to science teacher Cathleen Woods, Oleans CTE Center also has one, but its a big, floor-model and not as user-friendly. She received some training on it at the end of the school-year last summer, prior to the arrival of the SEM at the Ellicottville location.

This one is much easier and Jim Schifley, CTE Administrator for Curriculum and Instruction, showed me how to use it in a day. Its very easy to operate, she said.

Woods looks at the science behind each CTE program as she integrates the nanotechnology class into every class at the center. She works as a support instructor, along with the other teachers, and develops lessons that enhance what is already being learned. She called it cooperative teaching and said they work together as a team.

One example was when I went into the Cosmetology class and did a lesson on how a perm works and the chemistry behind it, she said. We did a lotion lab to test different lotions to see which ones are the best, based on the percent of water thats retained.

Woods had students from the morning Medical Assisting class use the SEM to examine a strand of hair with split ends. The report for the hair shows the element number, element symbol, element name, weight and concentration, in addition to percentage of error. Elements in a strand of hair that has been color treated, for example, include oxygen, carbon, titanium, silicon, magnesium, sodium and iron.

One time, the Medical Assisting class came in and we did a lesson on how disease is spread, like hepatitis. They swabbed chemicals and then did a test for hepatitis. If someone tests positive, the solution gets very thick and white, she said.

The welding program is also using science and SEM. Woods and welding instructor Dave Poulin have a whole book of units theyve developed and, throughout the year, he will ask her to come to his class and do a lesson, such as a thermal energy lesson.

The project were working on now is in its initial stages, she said. There are electrodes with a coating on them that provide a protective shield for the weld, so contaminants dont get in. The flux also has elements that help with a slag deposition that has to be chiseled off, ending in the finished weld.

The class took images of these three items and analyzed the elements in each to make correlations between them.

Woods said its very formal with standards, assessments and a test. Through the use of the SEM, students can examine what is happening during the process of what they are doing. The microscope reports what elements are present during the procedure. Woods said the students have to know the fluxes and the elements, as well as the purpose of certain elements in the flux because its part of their certification test. SEM is another avenue they can use and it helps them learn.

Woods said her project, right now, is getting every CTE class to work with the scanning electron microscope and hopefully generate a poster of something they have imaged. She presents a class demo to show the kids the basics, then two students at a time come in to pick an item and image it. She said they can image something and use that experience in their resume; they can also take pictures and put them in their portfolio. The students identify the object, do research on it and then do a writeup to document that experience.

After graduation, the students may not walk into a job that has a SEM, but the fact that they have been exposed to it and have used it is a technical skill is an experience that even a Regents-bound student probably would not have, she said.

The program introduces students to the promise and potential of nanotechnology as it relates to Material Science Engineering. The rigorous course of study at the high school level includes opportunities for both in-class instruction as well as hands-on experimental challenges to prepare students for college and careers in science, technology and engineering.

A native of Portville, Woods currently resides in Springville. Shes been on staff at Ellicottvilles CTE Center since 2002. She said it was so different back then and having this technology makes it much more amazing.

Woods said the whole initiative with the nanotechnology comes from Tracie Preston, Assistant Superintendent for Career and Technical Education Programs. Woods said shes a big supporter of this technology and its also a vision of Principal Noel Sheehy.

To find out more about the career and technical education programs offered by the Ellicottville, Olean and Belmont centers, visit online at caboces.org.

RANDOLPH Randolph Area Community Development Corporation (RACDC) held its annual membership breakfast meeting ...

WESTFIELD The Westfield Town Board is moving ahead with a major water project. During the boards ...

Jamestown City Council has taken a baby step in moving forward with the proposed annexation of the Dow ...

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Experiencing Nanotechnology Using 'Scanning Electron Microscope' - Jamestown Post Journal

Japan Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017 – cHollywood News Portal (press release)

Ask a sample report, please email to:

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Report Summary

The Japan Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017 is a professional and in-depth study on the current state of the Nanomedicine industry.

The report provides a basic overview of the industry including definitions, classifications, applications and industry chain structure. The Nanomedicine market analysis is provided for the Japan markets including development trends, competitive landscape analysis, and key regions development status.

Development policies and plans are discussed as well as manufacturing processes and Bill of Materials cost structures are also analyzed. This report also states import/export consumption, supply and demand Figures, cost, price, revenue and gross margins.

The report focuses on Japan major leading industry players providing information such as company profiles, product picture and specification, capacity, production, price, cost, revenue and contact information. Upstream raw materials and equipment and downstream demand analysis is also carried out. The Nanomedicine industry development trends and marketing channels are analyzed. Finally the feasibility of new investment projects are assessed and overall research conclusions offered.

This report studies Nanomedicine focuses on top manufacturers in Japan market, with capacity, production, price, revenue and market share for each manufacturer, covering:

Affilogic

LTFN

Bergmannstrost

Grupo Praxis

Biotechrabbit

Bracco

Materials ResearchCentre

Carlina technologies

ChemConnection

CIC biomaGUNE

CIBER-BBN

Contipro

Cristal Therapeutics

DTI

Endomagnetics

Fraunhofer ICT-IMM

Ask a sample or any question, please email to:

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Key Topics Covered:

Chapter One Industry Overview

Chapter Two Manufacturing Cost Structure Analysis of Nanomedicine

Chapter Three Technical Data and Manufacturing Plants Analysis

Chapter Four Sales Analysis of Nanomedicine by Regions, Product Type, and Applications

Chapter Five Sales Revenue Analysis of Nanomedicine by Regions,Product Type, and Applications

Chapter Six Analysis of Nanomedicine Production, Supply, Sales and Demand Market Status 2010-2016

Chapter Seven Analysis of Nanomedicine Industry Key Manufacturers

Chapter Eight Price and Gross Margin Analysis

Chapter Nine Marketing Trader or Distributor Analysis of Nanomedicine

Chapter Ten Analysis of Nanomedicine Production, Supply, Sales and Demand Development Forecast 2017-2021

Chapter Eleven Industry Chain Suppliers of Nanomedicine with Contact Information

Chapter Twelve New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis of Nanomedicine

Chapter Thirteen Conclusion of the Japan Nanomedicine Industry Report 2017

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Global Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017

China Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017

Europe Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017

United States Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017

India Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017

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Germany/Korea/Australia/Brazil/Russia/India/Indonesia/ Malaysia/Saudi Arabia/Middle East/Europe/Asia/Asia-Pacific/Southeast Asia/North America/ Latin America/South America/AMER/EMEA/Africa etc Countries/Regions and Sales/Industry Versions Respectively

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Japan Nanomedicine Industry Market Research Report 2017 - cHollywood News Portal (press release)

New Nano MRI Lamp May Help Overcome Limitations in MRI Diagnosis – AZoNano

Written by AZoNanoFeb 7 2017

The Nano MRI Lamp consists of two magnetic materials: A quencher (magnetic nanoparticle) and an enhancer (MRI contrast agent). The MRI signal depends on the distance between the two materials. The enhancer produces a bright MRI signal only when it is at a critical distance of at least 7 nm away from the quencher. The signal is due to the rapid fluctuations of the electron spins of the enhancer. A fast flipping of the electron spins influences the water molecule, whose energy emission is detected as MRI signals. (CREDIT: IBS)

A new technology platform, the Nano MRI Lamp, is capable of tuning the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signals "ON" only in the vicinity of the targeted disease. This platform was developed by a research team led by Cheon Jinwoo at the Center for Nanomedicine, within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS).

This study can surpass the limitations of currently prevalent MRI contrast agents. The details of the research were published in Nature Materials.

MRI is a non-invasive method for diagnosis that is increasingly popular as it does not use destructive radiation. Certain tissues display a natural contrast on MRI, but for certain specific types of imaging, patients are given a MRI contrast agent to increase the difference between the target area and the rest of the body.

Typical MRI contrast agents, like gadolinium, are injected in an "ON" state and distributed across the whole biological system with relatively large background signal. We found a new principle to switch the MRI contrast agent "ON" only in the location of the target.

Cheon Jinwoo, IBS

IBS researchers discovered how to turn the signal ON/OFF using the Nano MRI Lamp.

The Nano MRI Lamp technology comprises of two magnetic materials: An enhancer (MRI contrast agent) and a quencher (magnetic nanoparticle). The switch is due to the distance between the two. When the two materials are positioned closer than 7 nm, the MRI signal is "OFF", whereas when they are at a critical distance, beyond 7 nm, the MRI signal is "ON".

The team christened this phenomenon Magnetic REsonance Tuning (MRET), which is similar to the powerful optical sensing method called Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET).

The Nano MRI Lamp was tested by the researchers to diagnose cancer. The presence of an enzyme that can stimulate tumor metastasis, MMP-2 (matrix metalloproteinase-2) in mice with cancer was detected. The researchers connected the two magnetic materials using a linker that is naturally cleaved by MMP-2.

As the linker maintains the two materials close together, the MRI signal was "OFF". However, when cancer was present, the linker is cleaved by MMP-2, which results in the two materials becoming separated and the MRI signal being switched "ON". Thus, the MRI signal revealed the location of MMP-2, and the tumor. The researchers also discovered that the MRI signals brightness matches with the concentration of MMP-2 in the tumor.

Most notably, the Nano MRI Lamp stays on OFF mode until it meets a biomarker linked with a specific disease, thus allowing better sensitivity.

The current contrast agent is like using a flashlight during a sunny day: Its effect is limited. Instead, this new technology is like using a flash light at night and therefore more useful.

Cheon Jinwoo, IBS

In addition to cancer diagnosis, in theory the Nano MRI Lamp can be used to analyze a number of biological events, such as pH variation, enzymolysis, and protein-protein interactions. IBS researchers suppose that it would be practical for both in vivo and in vitro diagnostics.

Although we still have a long way to go, we established the principle and believe that the MRET and Nano MRI Lamp can serve as a novel sensing principle to augment the exploration of a wide range of biological systems.

Cheon Jinwoo, IBS

The research team is currently involved in developing smarter and safer multitasking contrast agents, which can record and interpret numerous biological targets at the same time, and ultimately allow a better comprehension of biological processes and accurate diagnosis of diseases.

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New Nano MRI Lamp May Help Overcome Limitations in MRI Diagnosis - AZoNano

The Tata Nano might soon be killed and here’s why – Financial Express

As Tata Motors tries to gear up for the future with its new performance sub-brand TAMO, it seems the Nano may be running out of the road for survival. Going forward, Tata Motors aims to have just two platforms instead of the present six, allowing for a more streamlined operation. Unfortunately, none of these platforms presently underpin the Nano. One of these platforms is the Advanced Modular Platform (AMP), which will be capable of spawning vehicles ranging from hatchbacks to sports cars. The other platform is expected to be a derivative of a Land Rover platform, which will primarily take care of the SUV/ MUV products.

Since both platforms are modular, most critical parts will remain same for multiple vehicles, resulting in lesser cost and time for development. A lesser number of modular platforms is the way ahead for global vehicle makers but the Nano is based on a different platform, which isn't part of the two discussed platforms. Having a Nano in future would mean developing an all-new one based on the AMP, which doesn't make financial sense for the company. Hence, considering the low-sales of the Nano and the new strategy of Tata Motors, it seems the Nano, along with Ratan Tata's dream is nearing the end.

So, what went wrong for such a global star? Allow us to explain.

Launched in 2008, as the dream project of Ratan Tata, the Nano quickly went on to become a global attraction even before its launch. Despite being a well-engineered car and actually better than the earlier models of Tata Motors, the Nano failed to turn the face of mobility in India. The problem lay in the way it was marketed initially and the inability of the company to turn that around. Today, the Nano sells under 1,000 units on an average, which for a mass-market carmaker isn't a good number.

While popularity in India was due to the expected price of Rs 1 lakh, international companies were curious to know how did it become possible to make a proper car for such a small amount.

Unfortunately, while Tata Motors seemed happy to bask in the sunshine of Nanos increasing popularity, it didnt notice that simultaneously the Nano was also becoming a synonym for cheap. In a young and aspirational economy such as India, this wasnt the right recipe for success. Launched to the global audience, the Nano seemed to start off well but soon things started to go awry. While things had gone bad earlier with the plant in West Bengal earlier, this time the problem was the lack of consumer willingness to buy the Nano. Soon after its launch, some cases of the car catching fire only worsened things further. Soon, plagued by fire and quality issues and its perception of being the cheapest car around, very few people wanted to buy a Nano.

Now there wasn't actually any fundamental engineering or technical problem in the Nano and the car was actually more spacious than its immediate yet more expensive competitor, the Maruti Suzuki 800. The Nano was also safer than the competition but the company was unable to turn around the perception. Over the course of the next few years, Tata Motors rolled out multiple upgrades and new variants of the Nano with newer and better features and technologies. The marketing campaign too was aimed at the youth by pitching the Nano as a funky and convenient car. Later the company also added features such as power steering, Bluetooth audio and an Automated Manual Transmission (AMT) too, making it the most affordable automatic car in the country.

Also Read:From Nano to a sportscar, Tata Motors TaMo will have a huge perception gap to bridge

However, all these measures and a well-engineered product failed to capture the customers' imagination. While it was earlier thought that people from two-wheelers will upgrade to the Nano in favour of safety and convenience, the addition of features meant that most people couldn't think of such an upgrade. The targeted youth too didn't want to buy the car, probably because they didn't want to be seen driving around in the cheapest car. I personally know people who liked the Nano but went ahead and bought a used Maruti Suzuki Alto instead because for some being seen in the cheapest car was not a cool thing in the college.

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The Tata Nano might soon be killed and here's why - Financial Express