How the Canadarm changed spaceflight – The Globe and Mail

This story is part of a series about people, products and discoveries that changed the world.

During a recent meeting at Canadian Space Agency headquarters in Longueuil, Que., Ken Podwalski put up a picture that he wanted his entire team to take a moment to absorb.

It was Dextre, the built-in-Canada space robot that perches on the end of Canadarm2 and is featured on the back of the Canadian five-dollar bill. The snapshot Mr. Podwalski was so taken with captured Dextre last December, in the midst of upgrading the power system on the International Space Station. With a battery in each hand and one on the side, Dextre could hardly have looked more busy or more capable a space-age equivalent of Rosie the Riveter.

Look at what we do now, Mr. Podwalski said, who is the Canadian program manager for the space station. This is all-out robotics.

Great Canadian Innovations: How Canadians at Whistler invented the future of skiing

Great Canadian Innovations: How a Canadian engineer fuelled the battery industry

Great Canadian Innovations: How the discovery of stem cells revolutionized medicine

Mr. Podwalski joined the agency more than 20 years ago, when engineers were dreaming up how a robotic system to service the space station would work. Back then, no one yet foresaw just how much work there would be for it to do. As with the first generation of Canadarms that flew on the space shuttle, the key to the systems success would prove to be its ability to take on new roles as the needs and priorities of the space program changed.

Canadarm began when Spar Aerospace, a Toronto company spun off from de Havilland Aircraft, was looking for new business just as NASA was looking to involve Canada in its fledgling shuttle program. NASA was already interested in DSMA Atcon, another Toronto firm, which built robots for loading fuel into CANDU nuclear reactors. Spar had got its start building extendable antennas for satellites. Soon, the two companies were teaming up on a proposal to build the space shuttles remote manipulator system an astronaut-operated device that would be used to deploy satellites from the shuttles cargo bay.

With encouragement from the National Research Council, the federal government got on board with the plan. U.S. aerospace companies were less enthusiastic, hoping instead for a made-in-the-United-States arm. But in July, 1975, the deal was struck. Canada would provide an arm for the shuttle with Spar as prime contractor. For Spar, the project was a reach in more ways than one: A failure on such a high-profile venture might take down the company.

Their specialty was electromechanical systems that work in a very hostile environment, Mr. Podwalski said. But from that starting point, Spar engineers had a long way to go to develop an arm that would do what NASA needed.

Among the most inspired innovations they came up in the early days was the end effector, essentially the hand that allows the arm to capture objects in space. Foregoing more complex and finicky options such as a claw or mechanical gripper, engineer Frank Mee devised a system of three cables that narrowed like the iris of a camera to snare its target. When the idea first came to him, he built a model at home using cardboard and string to persuade his colleagues at Spar that it would work.

Other key developments included the arms gearbox, which provided fluid movement while minimizing backlash an engineering term for sloppiness or play between motors and joints.

Bob Ferguson, an engineer who once worked on Formula One race cars, developed the gearbox.

In February, 1981, the first arm was officially accepted by NASA at a ceremony at Spar. It was then that NRC president Larkin Kerwin dubbed it the Canadarm. But the real branding coup would come with the arms maiden flight that November. As the shuttle orbited with its cargo-bay doors open, its camera showed the arm, elbow bent, against the swirling white-and-blue backdrop of planet Earth, with the Canada logo a late-stage addition proudly emblazoned on the arms white thermal blanket.

What mattered most was that the arm worked beautifully, and not just for satellites, but as a camera on a stick that could be pointed at anything the shuttle mission controllers wanted to see. On one occasion in 1984, it proved to be just the thing to knock a worrisome chunk of ice off the side of the space shuttle Discovery. The successes led NASA to order a Canadarm for every shuttle in its fleet.

Mike Hiltz, an engineer who began working at Spar as a co-op student in the 1980s, still recalls the thrill of working with the system and adapting it to meet new challenges, such as when it served as a platform for astronauts repairing the Hubble Space Telescope in 1993, or when it mated the first two elements of the International Space Station, a Russian module with a U.S. node, in 1998.

We never stopped improving and evolving, Mr. Hiltz said, now manager of systems engineering at MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates Ltd., which acquired the space division of Spar in 2001.

In his view, the most impressive task the arm was asked to perform was one that never played out in real life: serving as a bridge between two space shuttles in the event that NASA had to mount a rescue mission in orbit.

We did all the simulations to prove you could do this, he said. Imagine a flexible, 1,000-pound arm holding two 250,000-pound vehicles with astronauts scrambling up and down it.

Building Canadarm 2 and Dextre for the space station required several more technical leaps, including a vision system, a way to sense how much force can be safely applied during delicate work, and an arm that can detach at either end and walk around the outside of the station to get to wherever it is needed. The arm also blurs the boundary between Earth and space in a way the public rarely perceives. While the media focus is generally on the astronauts who live and work on the station, as often as not the arm today is handled by one of nine Canadian operators who sit in Houston or in CSAs control centre in Longueuil.

Meanwhile, control systems and technologies developed for Canadarm have since found their way into numerous other applications, including robotic-assisted brain surgeries.

But as the United States and other countries begin to think about what comes after the space station, whether its the moons surface, the nearby asteroids or a mission to Mars, its hard to imagine that there wont be a need for a system like Canadarm should Canada choose to fill it.

For now, theres no firm plan for the future of Canadas biggest claim to fame in space. But Mr. Podwalski allows that this hasnt stopped engineers from thinking about the possibilities.

Weve begun to dream again, he said.

Follow Ivan Semeniuk on Twitter: @ivansemeniuk

Excerpt from:

How the Canadarm changed spaceflight - The Globe and Mail

Scientists Say Spaceflight Alters Your Microbiome – Inverse

An announcement this week from scientists at Northwestern University says that living in space slightly changes the composition of a persons gut bacteria, also known as the microbiome. This research, while still in its early stages, has strong implications for the future of long-term space flight. Since it looks more and more probable that humans will travel to Mars within our lifetime, it only seems right that we should figure out how long-term space travel can affect our bodies. Plus, with recent popular depictions of long-term human spaceflight, as in the film Passengers, the public could use some well-grounded research on the topic.

The research subject, NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, returned from his record year in space 11 months ago. Upon returning to Earth, he began his career as a guinea pig. Scott has an identical twin brother, Mark, who is also an astronaut but who remained on Earth while Scott lived in space. These identical twins near-identical career paths provide scientists with the unique opportunity to study how long-term space travel affects a human body, with Scott as the test subject and Mark as the control group. Scientists at ten different research institutions have been studying different aspects of the Kellys physiology, and theyve recently begun to announce some of the results of these studies.

A new batch of test results came out this week, showing that the composition of microscopic organisms in Scotts digestive system had been altered during his time in space. We are seeing changes associated with spaceflight, and they go away upon return to Earth, said Fred W. Turek, one of the lead authors on the study, in this weeks announcement. These changes include shifts in the balance of types of bacteria, fluctuations in the number of certain types of bacteria during Scotts time in space, differences in microbe populations between the two brothers (though this is always to be expected when comparing two people), and, surprisingly, a lack of overall changes in microbial diversity. In other words, Scotts microbiome shifted a bit, but all the same species he blasted off with came back to Earth with him. Any abnormalities settled out upon his return.

The researchers still have lots of work to do, and theyre not exactly sure what these findings mean yet, but it seems like good news that a person lived in space for a year and his microbiome wasnt altered in any bizarre ways. In conjunction with other studies, researchers should be able to use the Kellys to give us a clearer idea of what to expect from long-term space travel.

Photos via Getty Images / Brian Ach

See the rest here:

Scientists Say Spaceflight Alters Your Microbiome - Inverse

SpaceX rocket tagged for reuse test-fired in Texas – Spaceflight Now

The test-firing of a previously-flown Falcon 9 first stage booster in late January paves the way for its second launch scheduled for no earlier than March. Credit: SpaceX

The Falcon 9 first stage booster assigned to launch as soon as March on SpaceXs first mission with a previously-flown rocket has been test-fired at the companys development facility in Central Texas.

The 15-story rocket stage completed the test-firing of its nine Merlin 1D engines in late January, according to SpaceX.

The company conducts acceptance testing of all Falcon 9 boosters its test site in McGregor, Texas, before shipping rockets to launch bases in Florida or California. The recent test-firing was to be followed by the first stages transport to Cape Canaveral for preparations ahead of its launch with the SES 10 communications satellite, a mission tentatively set for March.

The rocket first flew in April 2016 on a resupply launch to the International Space Station. After boosting the Falcon 9s second stage and Dragon cargo craft into the upper atmosphere, the first stage returned to a vertical landing on a platform in the Atlantic Ocean while the upper part of the launcher continued into orbit.

The landing last April marked the first time SpaceX succeeded in recovering a rocket at sea, and the second time successful Falcon 9 rocket landing overall. The first rocket stage recovered intact is on public display outside SpaceXs headquarters in Hawthorne, California.

The SES 10 launch is currently third in line on SpaceXs manifest, with Falcon 9 flights scheduled for no earlier than Feb. 14 and Feb. 28 with a Dragon supply ship for the space station and the EchoStar 23 communications craft to provide broadcast services over Brazil.

SES 10 was shipped to Cape Canaveral from its Airbus Defense and Space factory in France last month. The satellite, owned by SES of Luxembourg, will broadcast television over Latin America.

The above video shows a test-firing last year of a Falcon 9 booster recovered after a launch in May. It will not be reused.

SpaceX is eager to demonstrate that the Falcon 9 rockets first stage structure and Merlin engines can be reused. The company says the capability will reduce launch prices, and SES received a discount of approximately 10 percent in exchange for agreeing to put its payload on the first flight of a previously-flown Falcon 9.

The Falcon 9s nose cone, a clamshell-like fairing that shields satellites during the first few minutes of flight, might be the next component SpaceX tries to reuse. The second stage cannot currently be recovered.

SpaceX is only putting the rocket booster assigned to fly with SES 10 through standard preflight testing.

But engineers have conducted extensive stress testing on other recovered Falcon 9 rockets that will not fly again, including a series of at least seven test-firings of a first stage that landed last May after the launch of a Japanese telecom satellite.

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

Read more:

SpaceX rocket tagged for reuse test-fired in Texas - Spaceflight Now

ULA’s navy delivers rocket that will launch supplies to the space … – Spaceflight Now

A recent Mariner arrival at Port Canaveral for Atlas 5. Credit: Justin Ray/Spaceflight Now

PORT CANAVERAL The ocean-sailing ship that transports rocket stages from United Launch Alliances factory to U.S. launch sites completed its latest voyage overnight, pulling into port to deliver the Atlas 5 that will send a cargo freighter to the International Space Station in March.

The Mariner, owned and operated by the Foss Maritime company, made a week-long voyage from the ULA production facility in Decatur, Alabama to Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Originally built to carry Delta 4 rockets for Boeing to the Cape and Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, the Mariner now also delivers Atlas 5 stages for ULA whenever circumstances permit.

The Atlas 5s original mode of transportation the massive Antonov aircraft continues to be used sparingly.

The custom-made, purpose-built cargo ship entered service in 2000. The 312-foot-long roll-on/roll-off vessel has a crew of 16, carries over 100,000 gallons of fuel and is powered by engines derived from a locomotive.

It features full living quarters, a kitchen and dining area, a fabrication shop below deck and even a helipad.

Construction of the Atlas was performed inside the sprawling Decatur factory, followed by full testing and being readied for transport to Florida.

The Mariner traversed 270 miles up the Tennessee River, 60 miles on the Ohio River and 646 miles down the Mississippi River. The trek then covered 815 miles through the Gulf of Mexico and around to Floridas east-central coast to Port Canaveral.

A trips round-the-clock average speed is about 12 mph.

Now at the harbor in Port Canaveral, a semi-trucks will drive the 106.6-foot-long, 12.5-foot-diameter bronze-colored booster stage and 41.5-foot-long, 10-foot-diameter Centaur upper stage off the Mariner and up through Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Monday.

The first stage goes to the Atlas Spaceflight Operations Center high bay for receiving checks and the Centaur will be processed at the Delta Operations Center and integrated with the interstage and boattail.

Later, the stages will be taken further up the road to the Vertical Integration Facility at Complex 41 for stacking aboard the mobile launch platform.

Once the first stage is erected, the interstage and Centaur will be hoisted and attached to complete the basic build up of the Atlas 5 rocket, designated AV-070.

Installation of the encapsulated payload will occur about one week before launch to top off the 194-foot-tall rocket.

The mission, slated for March 19 at 10:56 p.m. EDT (0256 GMT), will launch the Orbital ATK OA-7 Cygnus spacecraft filled with 7,700 pounds of provisions and experiments for the International Space Station.

The Atlas 5 rockets yaw-steering ability will enable a 30-minute launch window extending 15 minutes before and after the instant when the stations orbital plane passes over the pad.

It will be Orbital ATKs seventh resupply mission to the station under NASAs commercial cargo-delivery program.

The pressurized cargo module for Cygnus arrived at Kennedy Space Centers Space Station Processing Facility on Jan. 9. The crafts propulsion section arrived Feb. 1.

The two pieces will be mated together and initial cargo loading performed at the SSPF before the Cygnus is moved to the nearby Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility for propellant loading and the stowage of late-load cargo items.

Encapsulation of the ship in the Atlas 5 rockets 14-foot-wide, 45-foot-long extra extended payload fairing (XEPF) will occur at the SSPF, too.

Previous Cygnus spacecraft have been given a ceremonial name for a former astronaut who has since passed away. The name for OA-7 has not yet been revealed.

NASA requested that this Cygnus be launched aboard the Atlas 5 instead of Orbital ATKs revamped Antares rocket. The switch allows the craft to carry a greater amount of supplies and gives the space agency better schedule assurance.

The Atlas 5 successfully launched two Cygnus missions in December 2015 and March 2016 while the Antares fleet was grounded to upgrade its engines from stockpiled Soviet-era powerplants to modern-day Russian ones.

** CYGNUS FLIGHT HISTORY **

Demo Antares 1,299 pounds Launched Sept. 18, 2013 Orb 1 Antares 2,780 pounds Launched Jan. 9, 2014 Orb 2 Antares 3,293 pounds Launched July 13, 2014 Orb 3 Antares 4,883 pounds Launched Oct. 28, 2014 *Failure OA-4 Atlas 5 7,746 pounds Launched Dec. 6, 2015 OA-6 Atlas 5 7,758 pounds Launched March 22, 2016 OA-5 Antares 5,163 pounds Launched Oct. 17, 2016

Among the science projects being launched in this upcoming OA-7 Cygnus include an Advanced Plant Habitat as a stepping-stone to food production systems on long-duration exploration missions, new tests on cell cultures in space for biological research, a technology experiment into coatings applied to container walls that could benefit fuel storage tanks, a host of cubesats that will be launched from the station, the third spacecraft fire test to study flames in microgravity and another try at collecting data during atmospheric reentry at the missions conclusion.

See earlier OA-7 Cygnus coverage.

Our Atlas archive.

Continue reading here:

ULA's navy delivers rocket that will launch supplies to the space ... - Spaceflight Now

Leaving Orbit: A Tribute to American Spaceflight – The Avion


The Avion
Leaving Orbit: A Tribute to American Spaceflight
The Avion
Moderator Marc Bernier sat down with Professor Dean to discuss her book Leaving Orbit: Notes From the Last Days of American Spaceflight. The book tells a creative nonfiction story about the final days of the successful Space Shuttle program: America's ...

Go here to see the original:

Leaving Orbit: A Tribute to American Spaceflight - The Avion

How Astronauts’ Brains Are Changed By Spaceflight – Gizmodo – Gizmodo

Spaceflight is not for the faint of heartliterally. The first results of NASAs twin study, released just this week, revealed that space physically impacts astronauts on multiple levels, right down to shifts in gene expression. Now, a group of scientists at the University of Michigan have released research that suggests spaceflight alters astronauts brains.

The team studied 26 astronauts who spent various amounts of time in space, between 2008 to 2012. Twelve of the astronauts spent two weeks as shuttle crew members, while the other 14 spent six months aboard the International Space Station (ISS). After examining structural MRIs from all the astronauts taken before and after spaceflight, the researchers found that all subjects experienced both increases and decreases in the volume of gray matter in different regions of the brain. Gray matter is responsible for many key functions, including muscle control, emotions, memory and sensory perception.

Naturally, those who spent more time in space were impacted more dramatically. The teams findings were published on December 19, 2016 in Nature Microgravity.

Some of the areas show decreases in gray matter volume, and I dont want anyone to think that means you go to space and lose brain cells, University of Michigan professor Rachel Seidler, a co-author on the study, told Gizmodo. The losses are coming from shifts in fluid in the brain that happen with flight.

Specifically, the shifts in gray matter volume appear due microgravity, which describes the very slight presence of gravity aboard the ISS.

Imagine gravity pulling all the fluids toward your feet, and in space you dont have that happening. Seidler said. Theres more fluid toward the headyou may have seen photos of astronauts where they have puffy faces in spacebut theres a shift in fluid in the brain as well.

The group found that during spaceflight, gray matter volume increased in small regions of the brain that control leg movement, which could reflect how the brain retrains the body to move in microgravity. In other areas of the brain, gray matter volume decreased, possibly due to a redistribution of the cerebrospinal fluid that coats the central nervous system.

Astonishingly enough, we know almost nothing about how space impacts the brain. This study is the first to ever analyze how brain structure could change due to microgravity. While its still unclear howor ifgray matter volume returned to pre-flight levels in the astronauts studied, Steidler is conducting a separate ongoing study that analyzes astronauts brains in the six months after their returns from space.

Because of the amount of exercise theyre doing now, astronauts are coming back with their [muscles and bones] pretty well protected, Steidler said. But the brain is really still an open question...we dont yet have available follow-up data to see how long it takes the brain to recover.

With certain Earthlings grand ambitions to go to Mars, its important to understand how long stints in space can affect the human body. But this research could also be key to understanding health conditions here on Earth. Steidler said studies like this could help medical professionals better understand brain disorders like normal pressure hydrocephalus, which is caused by a build up of fluid in the brain.

Its very interesting to use this as a model to study the maximum capacity for neuroplasticity in the healthy brain, she explained. Its an important model for understanding how much the brain can change when faced with an environment youve never been in before.

[University of Michigan]

Visit link:

How Astronauts' Brains Are Changed By Spaceflight - Gizmodo - Gizmodo

NASA –"Space Flight Changes Structure of the Human Brain" (VIDEO) – The Daily Galaxy (blog)

For decades, scientists working with astronauts have known that spaceflight has an effect on neurological systems, said Mill Reschke, chief scientist for NASA Neuroscience. Scientists also have believed the changes we observe in spatial orientation, balance and disturbances in the control of eye movements needed to maintain clear vision when the head is moved must be the result of structural changes in the brain."

Dr. Seidler is making a major step forward with her investigation of changes in the brain acquired during flight, and relating these changes to functional performance following flight," saidReschke.

Seidler and other researchers studied the structural MRIs of 12 astronauts who spent two weeks as shuttle crew members. They also studied the MRIs of 14 astronauts who spent six months on the International Space Station (ISS). Every one of the astronauts experienced increases and decreases in gray matter in the different areas of their brains. The changes were clearer and more pronounced in the astronauts who stayed in space for a longer period of time.

Seidler and colleagues examined structural MRIs in 12 astronauts who spent two weeks as shuttle crew members, and 14 who spent six months on the International Space Station. All experienced increases and decreases in gray matter in different parts of the brain, with more pronounced changes the longer the astronauts spent in space.

"We found large regions of gray matter volume decreases, which could be related to redistribution of cerebrospinal fluid in space," Seidler said. "Gravity is not available to pull fluids down in the body, resulting in so-called puffy face in space. This may result in a shift of brain position or compression."

"It's interesting because even if you love something you won't practice more than an hour a day," Seidler said. But the brain changes researchers observed were equivalent to someone practicing a new skill round-the-clock.

This figure shows dose response effects blue areas are where there are more gray matter decreases in international space station astronauts than in those that just spent a few weeks on the space shuttle.The researchers also found increases in gray matter volume in regions that control leg movement and process sensory information from legs, which may reflect changes related to the brain learning how to move in microgravity. These changes were greater in space station astronauts because their brains were learning and adapting 24/7.

The top row shows brain changes with long duration bed rest; the bottom row shows brain changes with spaceflight. Orange shows regions of increase; blue = decrease. There is some overlap but also notable differences with spaceflight showing more changes in the cerebellum, a structure that is involved in motor learning."In space, it's an extreme example of neuroplasticity in the brain because you're in a microgravity environment 24 hours a day," Seidler said.

Though they haven't pinpointed the exact nature of the changes yet, the findings may lead to new ways of thinking about certain health conditionsfor example, people on long-duration bed rest or people who have normal pressure hydrocephalus, a condition in which cerebrospinal spinal fluid accumulates in ventricles in the brain and causes pressure.

Seidler said the brain changes could reflect new connections between neurons, and she's leading another long-term study that will help determine the repercussions on cognition and physical performance, as well as how long the brain changes last. For example, even after balance returns, the brain might still recruit different pathways to compensate for the structural brain changes caused by spaceflight.

"The behavior may return to normal, but the way the brain controls the behavior may change," she said.

Scott Kelly etched his spot in the record books this fall. In October, he recorded his 382nd day in spacethe most among any American astronaut. But his latest stint in a weightless environment will end in March when Kelly wraps up his mission aboard the International Space Station. Then comes the transition period when Kelly has to re-adapt to Earths gravity. Its during this transition period when many astronauts struggle with depth perception, memory and motor control.

There is no up or down in space, said Seidler. So when astronauts return to Earth, it takes some time for them to adapt because the way their brain interpreted the signals in space is no longer relevant for our gravitational environment. They need time to re-adapt before they can drive a car or maintain their balance well. They need, in some cases, a couple of weeks or a month to recover.

"The brain itself is very fascinating. Its one of our last great scientific frontiers," concludes Seidler.

Dr. Seidler provides new insights about the adaptability of the healthy brain, especially as it involves the complex interplay among perception, cognition, and motor function, said U-M School of Kinesiology Dean Ron Zernicke. Microgravity is a unique means to discover new knowledge about brain function.

Seidler will continuously monitor the brain structure and function of astronauts aboard the International Space Station, with a goal to wrap up her data collection by 2018.

This is a study that takes a lot of patience because there arent a lot of astronauts aboard the International Space Station that we can recruit from, she said. But regardless of the timeline, this type of research has major implications on the health and wellbeing of our astronauts. The brain itself is very fascinating. Its one of our last great scientific frontiers.

The Daily Galaxy via University of Michigan and NASA

Image credit: Top of page With Thanks to neuroscapelab.com,gazzaleylab.ucsf.edu | sccn.ucsd.edu

Follow this link:

NASA --"Space Flight Changes Structure of the Human Brain" (VIDEO) - The Daily Galaxy (blog)

Could Floating Cities Help Us Adapt to Climate Change? – Triple Pundit (registration) (blog)

The future, as defined by the Seasteading Institute.

Will the smart cities of the future float?

With data suggesting sea levels could rise by as much as six feet before the end of this century, the possibility of building floating communities has captured plenty of imaginations. One Silicon Valley startup suggested and even patented self floating environments that would create communities immune to rising seas. Several years ago, a Paris architecture firm drew up renderings for biomimicry-inspired floating cities that could house climate refugees.

Now, a South Pacific government has entered into an agreement with a California NGO that will supposedly make such communities the reality.

Earlier this month, French Polynesia (which includes Tahiti, its largest island) signed a memorandum of understanding with theSeasteading Institute to embark ona development called theFloating Island Project.

Upon completion, the island or islands will have their own special governing framework and will comprise an innovative special economic zone. The territorys housing minister, Jean-Christophe Bouissou, touted the agreement as one allowing French Polynesia to find solutions to the problems facing Island communities by building ocean platforms.

Founded in 2008 by Patri Friedman and initially funded by Paypal co-founder Peter Thiel, the Seasteading Institute at first had a lofty and libertarian goal to build in international waters in order to establish new nations and spur competitive governance from the outside. But the expense of building in remote oceanic areas, along with the access to land these proposed cities would need, convinced the organization to build its first prototypes adjacent to a nation or territory.

And these floating cities, in the shape of a small square or pentagon at least 50 meters (180 feet) on each side, promise a bevy of sustainable benefits.

They would be powered by solar, allowing them to function completely off the grid. Their design also suggests that they could host small-scale aquaculture and desalination projects.

But at first, they will not come cheap: Joe Quirk, an author and spokesman for the Seasteading Institute, said that the cost to build floating communities and house residents in three-story homes would cost just over $500 a square foot a price equivalent to real estate prices in London or Manhattan.

And therein lie some head-scratching questions. Randolph Hencken, executive director of the Seasteading Institute, told the New York Timesthe cost of building these cities could become cheaper and more scalable as more of them are constructed.

That would allow these communities to house citizens in low-lying island nations that are most vulnerable to sea-level rise. But as outlined in the Guardian, plenty of Tahitians and other French Polynesians see such a development as a ruse to allow wealthy foreigners to move to the South Pacific in order to avoid paying taxes in their home countries.

Furthermore, challenges such as waste management and procuring resources such as food are overlooked and left unanswered.

Then there are the logistics that could become involved if a community no longer wants to be subjected to a particular government: Where would residents move its platform?

Even Thiel, who has not been involved with the Seasteading Institute for several years, told Maureen Dowd of the New York Times earlier this month that such a utopia will not be the reality until far into the future. Theyre not quite feasible from an engineering perspective, he said.

Unless the Seasteading Institute and its allies can prove these floating platforms are more of a tangible climate change solution than a futuristic vacation or duty-free getaway, critics will insist that such money could be better spent on climate mitigation, healthcare or education.

Image credit: Gabriel Sheare, Luke & Lourdes Crowley, and Patrick White (Roark 3D)

Go here to see the original:

Could Floating Cities Help Us Adapt to Climate Change? - Triple Pundit (registration) (blog)

The world’s first magazine devoted to redheads exists and it’s incredibly beautiful – Metro

(Picture: MC1R/Jens Kaesemann)

If you have a thing for beautiful redheads then prepare to have your fill, because theres now a magazine entirely devoted to them.

MC1R claims to be the only magazine for ginger people and is a journal entirely centred around the culture of red hair.

The magazines curious name stands for Melanocortin 1 Receptor one of the key proteins involved in regulating pigment production in human hair and skin. Its also the crucial component involved in the production of ginger hair, which is why its often called the red hair gene.

MC1R was founded by Tristan Rodgers a 31-year-old redheaded student from Hamburg.

He says that it all started as a photography project with a few friends who also all had red hair.

After a few weeks, I interviewed and photographed a few more people and got a number of interesting points of view on the topic (of ginger hair), he says.

I then looked into how much it would cost to print a few private copies of this collected work as a small magazine for the people whove been part of this project.

Tristan then started a crowdfunding campaign to see whether anyone else would be interested in buying a copy and managed to receive enough pre-orders to get the ball rolling.

That was two years ago and the magazine is now on its fifth issue.

So, why do ginger people need their own specific magazine?

Redheads are one of the smallest minorities all over the world and they have this special look which almost everyone reacts to, says Tristan.

He says its natural to stand out or to attract some negativity when you look different from the majority. Because plenty has been made of discrimination in the past, he says that he doesnt want to focus on it in this project.

Often redheads have this special kind of connection to (having ginger hair), so there is this special vibe I try to catch and reflect with this project.

Since beginning MC1R, Tristan says that hes discovered that theres a massive network of redheads out there.

Hes going to the Irish Redhead Convention later this year, and hes found plenty of other redhead festivals and ginger-focused art scenes everywhere from Israel to South Africa and Australia.

Theres a big positive hype right now so prepare to see more of us in the media and elsewhere, he warns.

There are still a few redheads who dont like the attention but its still a really good thing. If you can create something positive, its always good; if someone in some place is having problems with the way they look, this might give them help or strength.

If people are able to identify with the way our artists or models look, they can choose how to control their identity and that creates this good feeling for everyone whos part of the culture.

Need some 'me time'? Try these 12 pampering beauty products

There's a fancy new perfume range that makes you smell like weed

This woman got stuck in her bathtub for 30 minutes after bathing in coconut oil

But Tristan is keen to point out that although the magazine doesnt focus on it, ginger people do still face negativity.

Every minority has to handle discrimination. The problem is that theres no sensitivity for redheads who have problems with looking different.

With that in mind, MC1R is keen to continue the sort of collaborative, open-community feel that it started with. They regularly have open calls for submissions and are currently asking for people to get in touch for their next issue. So, if youre a redheaded photographer, writer or avid selfie-taker, get in touch.

Theyre even doing an Instagram Reader of the Week feature:all you have to do is send them a sample selfie and your IG account name in a DM to get tagged.

Each copy is16 (13.60) with free worldwide shipping.

So muchauburn allure.

MORE: A redhead emoji might finally be on the cards thanks to ginger equality campaigners

MORE: Kiss A Ginger Day why do people say gingers have no souls?

Link:

The world's first magazine devoted to redheads exists and it's incredibly beautiful - Metro

Discover World’s First Magazine Created By Redheads, For Redheads, About Redheads – Konbini US

MC1R Magazine is making history as the worlds first publication geared specifically towards the redheaded community. Fittingly named after the protein involved in causing the red hair gene, themagazine is a new extension in culture for the vibrantly tressled influencers of today.

Established in 2013 by 31-year-old German student Tristan Rodgers, the print-onlymagazine was created as a platform to connectrelevant art, events, fashion, photography and stories revolving theastoundingly small and widely uncharted demographic.

(via MC1R Magazine)

(via MC1R Magazine)

A mere 1-2% of the world carries the red hair trait, making it one of the most obscure characteristicson the planet. Rodgers, a redhead himself, began the project as a small-scale photography series that steadily grew as more red-haired collaboratorsjoined in.

Each issue of MC1R features 100+ pages of photo editorials, art spreads, illustrations, introspective stories, interviews, quips and more from redheaded contributors from around the world. If yourea part of the 1% of redheads on the planet, or have material regarding redheadedness, you cancontribute too!

Currently, the magazine is gearing up to produce its sixth issue and per protocol, will only be available in print.Keep up withMC1R and its upcoming issue on their website and check out some fuego editorial shots from the history-making publication below.

(via MC1R Magazine)

(via MC1R Magazine)

(via MC1R Magazine)

(via MC1R Magazine)

(via MC1R Magazine)

(via MC1R Magazine)

Read More ->Beyonc Announces Pregnancy, And Were Twice (!) As Happy

Multimedia journalist concerned with the intersections of art, photography, music, fashion, culture and society.

Continued here:

Discover World's First Magazine Created By Redheads, For Redheads, About Redheads - Konbini US

NASA gives its nod to NanoRacks for space station’s first commercial portal – GeekWire

In this artists conception, NanoRacks airlock module is the knobby-looking hardware attached to a port on the International Space Stations Tranquility module. (NanoRacks Illustration)

NASA has accepted a plan froma private venture called NanoRacks to provide the International Space Station with an air lock that would serve as its first commercial portal.

The plan could serve as the model for the eventual development of entire space stations backed by the private sector.

The NanoRacks Airlock Module is to be developed in cooperation with Boeing and could be fitted to the stations Tranquility module by as early as 2019, NASA and Houston-based NanoRacks said today in a pair of announcements.

For years, NanoRacks has been working on logistics with NASA and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, or CASIS, which manages non-NASA payloads for the space station. Scores of miniaturized satellites have been deployed into orbit through an air lock onthe stations Japanese-built Kibomodule with the aid of NanoRacksdeployer.

The new air lock would let NanoRacks and its partners expand its commercial satellite deployment operation, and provide new opportunities for NASA as well as commercial ventures.

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, Sam Scimemi, director of the ISS Division at NASA Headquarters, said in todays announcement. We hope this new airlock will allow a diverse community to experiment and develop opportunities in space for the commercial sector.

Once NanoRacks has complied with the steps outlined in a Space Act Agreement reached with NASA last year, the space agency will give the official go-ahead for installation. Today, NanoRacks announced a side agreementthat gives Boeing the task of fabricating and installing a criticalcomponent of the air lock, the Passive Common Berthing Mechanism. The PCBM hardware is the standard interface for connecting space station modules.

We are very pleased to have Boeing joining with us to develop the Airlock Module, NanoRacks CEO Jeffrey Manber said. 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.

NanoRacks said San Diego-based ATA Engineering will be in charge of structural and thermal analysis, testing services and support of the air lock.

The Airlock Module is designedto bedetached at a future time if desired. During last summers New Space conference in Seattle, Manber said it could serve as one of the initial building blocks for a commercial space station.

That air lock can leave the station at the proper time four, five, six years from now and attach to a commercial piece of real estate, Manber said at the Seattle meeting.

Other space ventures are pursuing a similar model, starting with commercial components for the space station that could be repurposed or refined for different orbital platforms.

For example, Bigelow Aerospace provided an inflatable module for testing on the space station last year under the terms of a $17.8 million contract with NASA. A larger modulecould serve as thefirst piece of a commercial space station testbed that Bigelow is developing in cooperation with United Launch Alliance.

Yet another private venture, Axiom Space, is working on a commercial orbital module that could be temporarily attached to the space station, and then detached to become the foundation for a private-sector outpost in orbit.

NanoRacks Manber is no stranger to space commercialization: In the late 1990s, he was the CEO of MirCorp, a company that struck a deal with the Russians for commercial orbital activities during the final days of the Mir space station.

For a time, MirCorp worked with NBC and Survivor producer Mark Burnett on a reality-TV space show tentatively titled Destination Mir, but when Mir flamed out in 2001, so did the TV project.

View post:

NASA gives its nod to NanoRacks for space station's first commercial portal - GeekWire

Uber hires NASA veteran to help it figure out flying cars – The Verge

Mark Moore, a 30-year veteran of NASA, has left the aeronautics agency for a seemingly more terrestrial business: ride-hailing giant Uber. But Moore wont be working on anything as boring as expanding Ubers ground operation. According to Bloomberg, he will be working on the companys nascent on-demand aviation service, also known as Ubers flying car project.

To be sure, Moore wont be building a flying car for Uber at least not yet. Last October, the company released a white paper that envisioned a flying taxi service as a network of lightweight, electric aircraft that take off and land vertically from preexisting urban heliports and skyscraper rooftops. These VTOL (vertical takeoff and landing, pronounced vee-tol) aircraft would operate using fixed wings with tilt prop-rotors.

Newsflash: flying cars dont exist yet

Most notably, Uber said it wasnt going to build its own flying car, but stood ready to contribute to the nascent but growing VTOL ecosystem and to start to play whatever role is most helpful to accelerate this industrys development. That probably translates into, Come to us with a decent prototype and well buy it.

But as you can tell by looking out any window right now, flying cars dont exist yet. We havent really even seen a halfway decent prototype. Numerous challenges lay ahead, such as noise level, battery life, and air-traffic restrictions, before we can reasonably expect to see any flying cars, let alone flying Ubers, soaring through the skies.

Thats where Moore steps in. He wont be running Uber Elevate, the name the company gave to its flying car project, but he will be helping smooth out many of its hurdles. Before joining Uber, his title was chief technologist for on-demand mobility at NASAs Langley Research Center. In 2010, he produced a research paper outlining the feasibility of short-range, electric-powered VTOL aircraft called the Puffin Electric Tailsitter.

It was a somewhat goofy, but totally sci-fi prototype that went on to inspire Google founder Larry Page to launch his own flying car startups, Zee Aero and Kitty Hawk, late last year. Uber launched Elevate soon after, and suddenly this niche, totally unrealistic idea for personalized, autonomous aircraft had serious money behind it.

Moore certainly is a true believer. According to Bloomberg, he left NASA one year before he was eligible for retirement, giving up a significant portion of his pension and free health care for life. Thats a lot to leave on the table. Lets hope Uber CEO Travis Kalanick, who is personally overseeing the flying car project, made it worth his while.

Update February 6th, 11:01am ET: Uber continues to see its role as an catalyst to the growing developing VTOL ecosystem, said Nikhil Goel, Head of Product for Advanced Programs, in a statement. We're excited to have Mark join us to work with companies and stakeholders as we continue to explore the use case described in our white paper.

Excerpt from:

Uber hires NASA veteran to help it figure out flying cars - The Verge

NASA ‘Space Bowl’ Video Takes Super Bowl 2017 Out of this World – Space.com

NASA is truly ready for some football!

In a new video, NASA employees and affiliates virtually toss a football from space to various centers across the United States to celebrate the Super Bowl, as well as NASA's journey to Mars.

The Super Bowl will play Sunday (Feb. 5) at NRG Stadium in Houston, also home to NASA's Johnson Space Center, where astronauts train for space.[NASA Goes to Super Bowl 2017 (Photos)]

A NASA astronaut poses with Pat Patriot, mascot of the New England Patriots, during a visit to Mission Control in Houston at Johnson Space Center ahead of Super Bowl LI. The Patriots will face off against the Atlanta Falcons during the big game.

The video begins with Shane Kimbrough, Expedition 50 commander, holding a football. "To all of you back on Earth in the Super Bowl city of Houston, welcome," he says. "We hope you enjoy our great city and have a fabulous Super Bowl week."

Kimbrough then tosses the football off camera, and the next scene shows a football landing in the hands of NASA astronaut Victor Glover, on a treadmill in NASA's countermeasure training laboratory in Houston. From there, the football passes to people all over the United States.

Some of the places the football lands includes:

Viewers are also treated to football facts, such as:

So if you watch the big game today, take a moment to think about what a future Super Bowl might be like in space.

Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebookand Google+.Original article on Space.com.

See more here:

NASA 'Space Bowl' Video Takes Super Bowl 2017 Out of this World - Space.com

Business as usual at NASA two weeks into new administration – SpaceNews

NASA Acting Administrator Robert Lightfoot told agency employees in a Feb. 3 memo that there had yet to be any major changes to NASA programs under the new administration. Credit: NASA

WASHINGTON Two weeks into the administration of President Donald Trump, NASAs acting administrator said there have yet to be any major changes to the agencys activities or any indication of when such changes might come.

In a Feb. 3 memo to NASA employees, Acting Administrator Robert Lightfoot said that the agency was continuing to carry out its various programs as supported by a continuing resolution, a spending bill that funds NASA and other federal offices at 2016 levels through April.

At this point, there has been no new guidance on any of our current work, despite what you might have heard being speculated, Lightfoot wrote in the memo. We are executing the missions as defined under the current Continuing Resolution.

One policy change that has affected NASA and other agencies is a hiring freeze. President Trump issued that freeze Jan. 23, which prevents agencies from filling open civilian positions without an exemption from the Office of Personnel Management. The hiring freeze is intended as a short-term measure until the administration develops a long-term plan for reducing the size of the federal workforce.

How that hiring freeze will affect NASA activities remains unclear. Lightfoot, in his memo, said that NASAs office of human capital management was working with NASAs field centers on specific guidance, but offered no additional details.

Lightfoot emphasized that the transition to the Trump administration was going well, as the landing team of transition personnel is replaced by an initial beachhead team of presidential appointees, some of whom also served on the landing team.

We are working with the presidential appointees to integrate the new folks into our team. They are extremely engaged and to a person excited to be part of this great Agency, Lightfoot wrote. This team is genuinely interested in maintaining a smooth transition and are working with us to ensure as such.

Lightfoot, who as associate administrator was the top civil servant at NASA, became acting administrator Jan. 20 when former administrator Charles Bolden and deputy administrator Dava Newman departed the agency at the end of the Obama administration. The Trump administration has yet to nominate a new administrator, despite months of speculation about who might be considered for the job.

Also, since I have been asked a lot, there is no news on the next Administrator. I know the new administration is working it along with the many other positions, Lightfoot wrote.

Original post:

Business as usual at NASA two weeks into new administration - SpaceNews

Trump’s NASA Is Probably Aiming For The Moon Or Mars – Daily Caller

5464661

Congress is considering funding a giant rocket capable of sending U.S. astronauts to the moon or even Mars, which could furtherPresident Donald Trumps agenda.

Congress could re-authorize funding for the Space Launch System (SLS) a 212-foot heavy-lift rocket, and possibly the most powerful rocket booster ever built. NASAs proposed missions to return a human to the moon or send astronauts to Mars are almost entirely reliant on the SLS and its Orion capsule.

The draft NASA Transition Authorization Act of 2017 maintains continuity of purpose across a broad array of NASA programs and initiatives, Texas Republican Rep. Brian Babin, chairman of the House Subcommittee on Space, told The Daily Caller News Foundation. It continues support for a robust and well-planned human exploration program that includes not only the Space Launch System and Orion programs but also commercial crew and cargo programs, among others.

New legislation supports a balanced portfolio in space science, planetary science, astrophysics, astronomy, and astrobiology, including the James Webb Space Telescope, the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope, the Mars 2020 rover, and a potential mission to Jupiters moon Europa, Babin said.

Trump has expressed interest in space missions that would require the SLS and Orion. The president vowed to unlock the mysteries of space in his inaugural address, lending credence to reports he discussed sending humans to Mars in a private meeting with billionaire Elon Musk.

Trump could slash the more than $2 billion NASA spends on its Earth Science Mission Directorate, which covers global warming science, and divert that money towards space exploration.

Former President Barack Obama tried for years to eliminate the SLS and Orion programs, but Congress rescued the rocket. Obama took money from space exploration programs to fund Earth science programs.

The first manned SLS/Orion mission isnt scheduled until 2021. Congress could potentially speed up this timeline to orbit the moon by 2020. The rocket is currently scheduled to send U.S. astronauts to Mars in the 2030s.

Experts have long suspected Trumps space agenda will fund exploration with robotic probes and, later, sending humans to Mars with money diverted from NASAs global warming science programs. Another billionaire space entrepreneur, Robert Bigelow, thinks Trump could double NASAs budget.

The U.S. is better prepared to visit Mars than it was to visit the moon in the 1960s, according to a study by NASAs Johnson Space Center. The total cost of current plans to send Americans to Mars comes out to roughly $35 billion spent by 2025 to arrive in 2030.

Additional money for Mars exploration could be diverted from NASAs troubled Asteroid Redirect Mission, whichwas heavily supported by Obama.

A number of prominent Republicans on Capitol Hill think that NASA should not be involved to the degree that it is in Earth science, Jeff Foust, a senior writer at the trade publication SpaceNews, told Space.com. I would certainly expect to see some sort of development in terms of potential reduction to NASAs Earth science program.

Obama repeatedly tried to slash space exploration funding and redirect it to Earth science programs, which include climate modeling initiatives designed to measure global warming. Obama increased NASAs budget for environmental programs by 63 percent at the expense of its exploration budget.

Budget cuts have been blamed for China taking the lead in planning missions to Mars. China is rapidly catching up to the space programs of NASA and the U.S. military Republicans and Democrats blame Obama for this.

Follow Andrew on Twitter

Send tips to andrew@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

The rest is here:

Trump's NASA Is Probably Aiming For The Moon Or Mars - Daily Caller

NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Carlos over La Reunion and Mauritius – Phys.Org

February 6, 2017 On Feb. 6 at 09:45 UTC: (4:45 a.m. EST) NASA's Aqua satellite captured this visible image of Tropical Cyclone Carlos (04S) over La Reunion and Mauritius. Credit: NASA Goddard MODIS Rapid Response Team

NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Cyclone Carlos when it was affecting La Reunion and Mauritius islands in the Southern Indian Ocean. The satellite imagery provided a clear picture of how wind shear was affecting the storm. Earlier the GPM core satellite found heavy rain and towering storms within Tropical Cyclone Carlos.

Tropical Cyclone 04S formed north of La Reunion Island on February 4 and continued to track slowly toward the island. This ended an unusual drought of tropical cyclone formation in that part of the Indian Ocean that began in July 2016. When NASA's Terra passed over the newly-formed tropical cyclone imagery showed a concentration of strong thunderstorms around the center of the compact storm. The storm was later renamed Tropical Cyclone Carlos.

NASA's Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM core observatory satellite flew above tropical storm Carlos on February 5, 2017 at 1056 UTC (5:56 a.m. EST) when Carlos had maximum sustained winds of about 45 knots (51.8 mph). GPM collected data that showed the intensity and structure of precipitation within Carlos. GPM's Dual-Frequency Precipitation Radar (DPR) measured rain falling at a rate of over 100 mm (3.9 inches) per hour in intense feeder bands converging into Carlos' northeastern side.

The 3-D vertical structure of tropical storm Carlos was examined by GPM's radar (DPR Ku Band). This inspection showed that some of the powerful storms around the tropical cyclone had storm tops reaching heights greater than 14 km (8.8 miles). Heavy showers in a few of these storms were bouncing radar reflectivity values of almost 49 dBZ values back to the GPM satellite. GPM is a joint mission between NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

On Feb. 6 at 09:45 UTC: (4:45 a.m. EST) the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible image of Tropical Cyclone Carlos' clouds and storms over La Reunion and Mauritius. The image clearly showed the center of circulation was north of the clouds and thunderstorms which covered the two islands. Strong vertical wind shear up to 25 knots 28.7 mph/46.3 kph) from the northwest pushed the clouds and showers south-southeast of the center and over the islands. A thin ring of clouds appeared around the center of circulation.

At 1500 UTC (10 am EST) Tropical Cyclone Carlos had maximum sustained winds near 55 knots (64 mph / 102 kph). Warm sea surface temperatures are expected to allow the system to continue to strengthen. It was centered near 18.3 degrees south latitude and 57.0 degrees east longitude, approximately 120 nautical miles north of Port Louis, Mauritius, has tracked south-southwestward at 4 knots (4.6 mph/7.4 kph).

Meteo France is issuing advisories on Carlos. For forecast updates on La Reunion island, visit: http://www.meteofrance.re/.

The Joint Typhoon Warning Center said that Tropical Cyclone Carlos will peak at 80 knots (92 mph/148 kph) in on Feb. 9 as it begins curving to the southeast away from southeastern Madagascar in over the open ocean.

For updated forecasts in English from the Meteo France La Reunion website, visit: http://www.meteo.fr/temps/domtom/La_Reunion/webcmrs9.0/anglais/.

Explore further: NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Haliba affecting La Reunion and Mauritius islands

The Amazonian rainforest was transformed over two thousand years ago by ancient people who built hundreds of large, mysterious earthworks.

A University of Wyoming researcher contributed to a paper that determined a "Snowball Earth" event actually took place 100 million years earlier than previously projected, and a rise in the planet's oxidation resulted from ...

For marine protected areas established to help coral reefs recover from overfishing, size really does seem to make a difference.

The annual summer monsoon that drops rain onto East Asia, an area with about a billion people, has shifted dramatically in the distant past, at times moving northward by as much as 400 kilometers and doubling rainfall in ...

The Earth's mantlethe layer between the crust and the outer coreis home to a primordial soup even older than the moon. Among the main ingredients is helium-3 (He-3), a vestige of the Big Bang and nuclear fusion reactions ...

Increasingly dangerous fire weather is forecast as the global footprint of extreme fires expands, according to the latest research.

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

Originally posted here:

NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Carlos over La Reunion and Mauritius - Phys.Org

How NASA Plays The Odds With Asteroids That Could Kill Us – Vocativ

More than 100 years ago, on June 30, 1908, a mid-air explosion rocked the Siberian wilderness near the Stony Tunguska River, leveling about 800 square miles of forest the size of New York City and Los Angeles combined in an instant. The remote location meant there were no known human casualties. But what if the asteroid or cometthat caused the Tunguska event was just seven or eight hours late in its journey toward Earth? That could have put it in the path of several majorcities including Saint Petersburg, Helsinki, and Oslo or left it to explode harmlessly above the icy ocean, potentially with nobody even noticing at all.

The Tunguska object, which exploded with a force roughly 1,000-times greater than the Hiroshima atomic bomb, captures the essential paradox in thinking about devastating asteroid impactsfrom outer space. The problem is asteroid impacts big enough to cause damage on that sort of scale are astonishingly rare, on the order of one every several hundred or even several thousand years. Indeed, there are no confirmed asteroid-related deaths in recorded human history, though there might have been one dog in Egypt. So are asteroids really a threat, or are they not worthworrying about?

Scientists have decided its worth worrying, but just a little.Asteroid impacts are very unlikely events, especially the large ones, but they are preventable if we find these objects with sufficient warning, Paul Chodas, manager of the Near-Earth Object office at NASAsJet Propulsion Laboratory, told Vocativ. Compared with, say, earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, its that predictability that makes asteroid impacts unique. We can do something about this hazard. Many other hazards are more random and you cant.

NASAs Kelly Fast, a scientistat the recently formed Planetary Defense Coordination Office, approaches it witha similarattitude: You dont know if you dont look. Thats why NASAs primary focus is on finding as many potentially hazardous near-earth objects as possible. The Planetary Defense team is on the lookout for any possibly dangerous objects more than about 50 meters wide (the Tunguska object was probably about 40 to 50 meters wide). NASAsNear-Earth Object office takes a still broader view, as a 2005 law calls for them to locate and catalog potentially devastating asteroids more than 140 meters across.

The problem, to some extent,it that were running up against the limits of our current telescopes in searching for such faint objects. Of 140-meter asteroids,there are probably roughly 25,000 in Earths general vicinity, but weve only located about 25 to 30 percent of them, far short of the 90 percent goal Congress had set. In theory, the agency is meant to hit that markby 2020, but theres next to no chance of that happening, in part because of technological limits. The next generation of ground- and space-based telescopes, such as theNEOCam,have the potential to reveal many more of those 140-meter objects, but these are still years away from coming online.

But asteroids smaller than 140 meters, smaller even than the 40-meter Tunguska object, can still make a splash:Just ask the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, above which a meteor exploded on February 15, 2013. This object was considerably smaller than Tunguska, measuring about 20 meters wide. The explosion created an air blast thatreleased about 33 times the energy of the Hiroshima bomb, though the effect on the ground wasnt as severe as that might suggest. About 1,500 people suffered injuries, mostly from windows shattered by the blast wave.

In our engineered world, it doesnt take a very large object to cause some damage, Victoria Friedensen of NASAs Planetary Defense told Vocativ. Indeed, this was a frighteningexperience for the residents of Chelyabinsk, made worse because it came with no advance warning. The meteor approached from a sunward direction, making it invisible to ground-based telescopes before it entered the atmosphere.

Surprises like that arent uncommon for such relatively small objects, but they are considerably less likely for asteroids that could cause devastation on a much larger scale. Before NASAs current task of finding all the 140-meter asteroids, the Spaceguard Project in the 1990s called for the agency to find 90 percent of the one-kilometer near-Earth objects a goal taken far more seriously after the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacted Jupiter in 1994, releasing energy equivalent to 600 times the worlds nuclear arsenal. NASA has completed this task, finding about 950 kilometer-long objects.Though there are still some unaccounted for, theres no real risk an object that big could sneak up on Earth unannounced like Chelyabinsk did we would likely have decades worth of warningbefore collision. That means there would be time to do something about it.

The more lead time you have, if you had years to plan, you would only have to deflect an object by a small amount for it to miss Earth years down the road, said Friedensen. One possibility would be to hit the asteroid with a fast-moving object, deflecting it off course like a game of cosmic billiards. Another technique is the gravity tractor technique, where you would put a mass close to an asteroid and hover there, and it would tug it.

Both those options would require a lot of warning, likely at least more than 10 years. And while thats not impossible NASA is tracking asteroids that have less than a one percent chance of hitting Earth in the late 22nd century a more immediate threat might require a solution that sounds like something out of Armageddon. Or at least a more scientifically accurate version of it.

Nuclear is on the table, said Chodas. We could potentially explode a nuclear missile near the surface of the asteroid, which would vaporize part of the asteroid, and the material that comes off the asteroid actually pushes it and changes its trajectory ever so slightly.

But what if an impact did prove unavoidable? As unlikely as that is and Chodas pointed out the chances of an asteroid hitting a populated area is still more improbable there would probably be time to evacuate a city or small region before the impact, though the infrastructure and economic damage could be enormous. And keep in mind that, while we use the term impact, that doesnt necessarily mean the asteroid would reach the ground intact. Neither the Tunguska nor Chelyabinsk objects were big enough to hit the ground, and Chodas said its an open question whether a 140-meter object could make it through the atmosphere without burning up. In those cases, the devastation comes not from the collision with the ground but from the blast created by the mid-air explosion.

Its only the much, much bigger asteroids where the real danger of global catastrophe begins. Most famously, the object that wiped out the dinosaurs was likely about 10 kilometers across. There are at most a handful of these objects, all of which we know about, and the fact that the last one hit Earth 66 million years ago gives asense of their rarity. Asteroids at least a kilometer wide are more common, and while they might not wipe out humanity, theycould kick up enough ash and debris to change the planets climate for months.

But the odds of any of that happening in our lifetimes are, if not nil, then the nearest thing to it. Asteroids remain more a topic for scientific investigation than active threat preparation, though many of NASAs research efforts feature a little of both.

The nice thing about the nearest objects and potentially hazardous objects is they come to us, said Fast. We dont have to go them.The agency is developing missions that will test both the kinetic impactor and gravity tractor techniques, while the recently launched Osiris-Rex mission will rendezvous with the asteroid Bennu in 2023, which among other things will allow scientists to better calculate its orbit and determine the true (and likely non-existent) odds of it hitting Earth in the late2100s.

Thinking about asteroid impacts is an exercise in thinking about a series of smaller and smaller probabilities. The odds of a large asteroid heading our way, the odds of all deflection efforts failing, the odds of its path taking it directly over a major inhabited area, the odds of any of this happening while any of use is alive but theres a difference between a zero percent chance and a next to zero percent chance. And its because of that difference that NASA continues its work.

Yes, the Earth is a very small target on the scale of the solar system, said Chodas. But its a very important to us, so thats why we need to keep calculating the orbits to the greatest precision possible.

Whats the worst that can happen? This week, Vocativ explores the power of negative thinking with our look at worst case scenarios in politics, privacy, reproductive rights, antibiotics, climate change, hacking, and more. Read more here.

See the article here:

How NASA Plays The Odds With Asteroids That Could Kill Us - Vocativ

Advocates of Big NASA Rocket Seek to Fend Off Foes During Transition – Wall Street Journal


Wall Street Journal
Advocates of Big NASA Rocket Seek to Fend Off Foes During Transition
Wall Street Journal
Facing unpredictable White House decision-making and delays in appointing a new NASA leadership team, Boeing Co., Lockheed Martin Corp. and their supporters are taking extra precautions to safeguard deep-space exploration programs. The Boeing-led ...

View original post here:

Advocates of Big NASA Rocket Seek to Fend Off Foes During Transition - Wall Street Journal

NASA revamps site for EPIC photos of Earth from space – ExtremeTech

There are a myriad of satellites in orbit of Earth with cameras that can send back amazing photos, but they cant snap a photo of the entire planet at once. NASAs Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) camera can, though. It sends back thousands of amazing photos every year, and now you can peruse them more easily with the new website. It is, dare I say, epic.

EPIC is a 4MP CCD camera with a telescope mounted on the NOAA DSCOVR satellite (Deep Space Climate Observatory, informally known as GoreSat). It was launched in 2015 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, but it wasnt just headed to low-Earth orbit like so many other payloads.

The DSCOVR satellite made its way out to the L1 Lagrangian point. Lagrangian points are locations of gravitational equilibrium between two bodies. In this case, L1 allows the satellite to remain in between Earth and the sun. It always has a view of the daylight side of Earth, which is ideal for taking images. The instrument is 1 million miles away from Earth and 92 million miles away from the sun.

The DSCOVR satellite has several other instruments, but what were interested in here is NASAs EPIC camera. Its designed to take 10 narrow-band spectral images of Earth from 317 to 780 nanometers. It combines those into an image that looks much like what the human eye would see. You can see above an example image with natural color on the left and enhanced color on the right.

EPIC captures an image every hour from mid-April to mid-October, and one every two hours for the rest of the year. That adds up to a huge number of images, all available for public consumption. The new EPIC site makes that a more pleasant experience. Theres not a floating magnifier feature that lets you see up close whats in each image. Over on the left is the image info box that tells you when the image was acquired. Thats important because the axial tilt will determine which hemisphere is most visible at different times of the year. If you want to see a different view, theres a filmstrip at the bottom to page through images and a calendar on the left to jump farther.

Theres a gallery on the site that shows off some of the more notable images like moon transits and eclipses (which are amazing). And of course, you can download any image you want from the site.

View post:

NASA revamps site for EPIC photos of Earth from space - ExtremeTech

Atomically thin material optimises data communication – Eetasia.com

With the importance of short distance optical interconnects for improving data centres performance, a team of researchers have discovered the first step towards building electrically pumped nanolasers (or light-based sources). These lasers are critical in the development of integrated photonic based short-distance optical interconnects and sensors.

The team including Arka Majumdar, University of Washington assistant professor of Electrical Engineering and Physics and Xiaodong Xu, assistant professor of Materials Science and Engineering and Physics, demonstrated this first step through cavity-enhanced electroluminescence from atomically thin monolayer materials. The thinness of this material yields efficient coordination between the two key components of the laser. Both the cavity-enhanced electroluminescence and material will allow energy-efficient data centres and support high performance parallel computing.

Figure 1: Assistant professors Arka Majumdar (left) and Xiaodong Xu (right) have discovered how to improve data centres performance through light-based sources.

The recently discovered atomically thin semiconductors have generated significant interest due to showing light emission in the 2D limit. However, due to the extreme thinness of this material, its emission intensity is usually not strong enough, and it is important to integrate them with photonic devices (nanolasers, in this case) to get more light out.

Researchers have demonstrated electroluminescence in this material [atomically thin monolayer], Majumdar said. Last year, we also reported the operation of an ultra-low threshold optically pumped laser, using this material integrated with nano-cavity. But for practical applications, electrically driven devices are required. Using this, one can power the devices using electrical current. For example, you power your laser pointer using an electrical battery.

Figure 2: Heterostructure of 2D material.

Majumdar and Xu recently reported cavity-enhanced electroluminescence in atomically thin material. A heterostructure of different monolayer materials are used to enhance the emission. Without the cavity, the emission is broadband (unidirectional) and weak. A nano-cavity enhances the emission and also enables single-mode (directed) operation. This allows direct modulation of the emission, a crucial requirement for the data communication.

These structures are of current scientific interest and are considered the new gold rush of condensed matter physics and materials science. Their current result and the previous demonstration of optically pumped lasers show the promise of electrically pumped nanolasers that constitutes the next milestone for this research. This next achievement will improve data centres efficiency for optimal performance.

Our team is currently exploring integration of the monolayer materials with a silicon nitride platform, Majumdar said. Through this work, we hope to achieve the coveted CMOS [complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor] compatibility that is the same process by which the computer processors are fabricated today.

Excerpt from:

Atomically thin material optimises data communication - Eetasia.com