Monthly Archives: November 2012

The Soleanna Experience – Video

Posted: November 16, 2012 at 9:44 pm


The Soleanna Experience
WHY IS MY PRECIOUS ROCKET SHIP DRIFTING OFF INTO DEEP SPACE? WHY AM I REACHING YOU AT THE COORDINATES OF THE ABANDONED SPACE STATION? WHY? WHY? WHYYYYY?From:hippymonkmonViews:30 0ratingsTime:00:15More inGaming

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The Soleanna Experience - Video

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ISS – International Space Station, pass on Nov 16, 2012 – Video

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ISS - International Space Station, pass on Nov 16, 2012
Toronto / Mississauga - ISS pass on Nov 16, 2012, around 6:40 AM (IPhone recording)From:TheMiniSuperCubViews:1 0ratingsTime:00:59More inScience Technology

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ISS - International Space Station, pass on Nov 16, 2012 - Video

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Let’s Play Pokemon Emerald Part 45: Gym Leaders Tate and Liza – Video

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Let #39;s Play Pokemon Emerald Part 45: Gym Leaders Tate and Liza
Wow! Great battle! We also head inside the Space Station to see what Team Magma are up to.. The game tricked me!! :(From:King MiltankViews:3 0ratingsTime:16:44More inGaming

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Let's Play Pokemon Emerald Part 45: Gym Leaders Tate and Liza - Video

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Jacqueline Truong of SMHS speaks to the ISS – Video

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Jacqueline Truong of SMHS speaks to the ISS
We were chosen to ask a question to the International Space Station!From:SanMarinoHSMediaViews:11 0ratingsTime:01:14More inEducation

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Jacqueline Truong of SMHS speaks to the ISS - Video

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ISS Video Update: November 15, 2012 – Video

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ISS Video Update: November 15, 2012
ISS Update - Nov. 15, 2012 -- The International Space Station video update for Nov. 15, 2012.From:okrajoeViews:1 0ratingsTime:03:00More inScience Technology

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Space Station cam, copper UFO – Video

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Space Station cam, copper UFO
From:Jasper SerenViews:1 0ratingsTime:01:33More inEducation

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Space Suit Design 1987 NASA Zero Prebreathe

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Space Suit Design 1987 NASA Zero Prebreathe Hard Space Suits at JSC ARC
more at scitech.quickfound.net "This video shows how space suits evolved to those being designed for the Space Station Freedom." Public domain film from NASA, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied. The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization. en.wikipedia.org A space suit is a garment worn to keep a human alive in the harsh environment of outer space, vacuum and temperature extremes... Some of these requirements also apply to pressure suits worn for other specialized tasks, such as high-altitude reconnaissance flight. Above Armstrong #39;s Line (around 19000 m/62000 ft), the atmosphere is so thin that pressurized suits are needed. The first full pressure-suits for use at extreme altitudes were designed by individual inventors as early as the 1930s. The first space suit worn by a human in space was the Soviet SK-1 suit worn by Yuri Gagarin in 1961... Hard-shell suits Hard-shell suits are usually made of metal or composite materials and do not use fabric for joints. Hard suits joints use ball bearings and wedge-ring segments similar to an adjustable elbow of a stove pipe to allow a wide range of movement with the arms and legs. The joints maintain a constant volume of air internally and do not have any counter force. Therefore, the astronaut does not need to exert to hold the suit in any position. Hard suits can also operate at ...From:webdev17Views:6 2ratingsTime:03:53More inScience Technology

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Intergalactic Heat by Jessica E. Subject – Video

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Intergalactic Heat by Jessica E. Subject
A date on a space station? Alien lovers? Madame Evangeline, owner of the exclusive 1Night Stand dating service is known to be magical in fulfilling the ideal dates of her clients, but she #39;s outdone herself this time, bring together beings from Earth and beyond. As long as applicants are willing to let go of their pasts and open their hearts and minds, she will find their perfect match, whether they be a former sci-fi television star, a nurse, an employee of the Space Service, a former Marine, or even an extraterrestrial. Because everyone in the universe deserves a happily ever after...From:Jessica E. SubjectViews:2 0ratingsTime:01:41More inEntertainment

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Russia restores space contact after cable rupture

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Russia on Thursday restored its communications with the International Space Station and satellites after repairing a cable in Moscow that had been damaged during road works.

"The line of communication has been restored. The system of command is working normally," the spokesman for the Russian space agency Roscosmos Alexei Kuznetsov told state media.

Officials had said the road works on the Shchyolkovsky Highway outside Moscow close to a Roscosmos communications station had ruptured a key cable, forcing Russia to lose contact with most of its satellites and a segment of the ISS.

While Roscomos and NASA insisted that the problem had no impact on the space station, the mishap was a major embarrassment for Russia which has in recent months battled a series of failures in its space programme.

Kuznetsov said that the three outgoing astronauts on the ISS -- Russia's Yury Malenchenko, Sunita Williams of the US and Akihiko Hoshide of Japan -- will be able to return to Earth on schedule on November 19.

They will leave behind on board the crew of Russia's Oleg Novitsky and Yevgeny Tarelkin and Kevin Ford of the United States, who will be joined by a new crew on December 19.

Roscosmos sought to play down the loss of communication, a scenario for which the agency's head of human space flight Sergei Krikalyev said the crew was properly prepared.

"The crew trains for this and it's a normal routine to work without communication," he was quoted as saying by the ITAR-TASS news agency.

Kuznetsov said that the cable rupture had had no effect on Russia's management of the ISS and satellites.

NASA said that the communications cut was not a unique occurrence and noted that Russia had the ability to communicate with its segment of the ISS through its US partners.

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Gadgets in Space : What It Takes to Get an iPad Into Orbit

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The shuttle program may have ended in July, but NASA still maintains a crew of astronauts aboard the International Space Station, where they work on cutting-edge technologies like humanoid robots and how spacecrafts can perform autonomous refueling.

But they also spend a lot of time on decidedly consumer-edge tech.For crew staying on the ISS for six months at a time, gadgets like tablets and smartphones can make this remote outpost feel more homey and comfortable. Everyone wants the next newest camera to be brought up, self-funded space tourist Richard Garriott told Wired. He said the everyone on the ISS wanted to play with the Nikon D3X he took there in October of 2008.

Back in June, NASA sent a pair of iPhone 4s up into orbit on the shuttles last trip to the ISS to conduct experiments with some purpose-built apps. Notebook computers and even iPods have made the leap into orbit. And tablets should also be heading up in the near future. This is all about a lot more than simply playing Angry Birds Space in space.

Were attempting to show how a commercial product that millions of people use can function as spaceflight hardware, Brian Rishikof, CEO of Odyssey Space Research, said in June 2011. His company designed a piece of iPhone software called SpaceLab that was used on the iPhones sent up into orbit on the space shuttles final mission last summer. The goal was to see if these $500 devices could replace machines that cost 10 or 100 times as much.

When we approached NASA with the idea, it was novel. They werent sure, Rishikof told Wired. Eventually we got them to cooperate very well, but it took awhile to convince people that these devices had capabilities worth considering.One of the important metrics of flying in space is the mass, and these things are so light and so powerful. Computationally, its probably one of the best performance-based computers out there.

Because of the low mass, if iPhones and iPads were substituted for larger, NASA-designed computer systems, NASA could save on development time and money (rocket fuel aint cheap, you know). Astronauts also get the benefits of an intuitive, well-designed user interface and more modern technology, versus the computers the astronauts now use, which are generally five to 10 years behind the latest consumer tech.

For a computer designed specifically for use on board the space station, odds are very good its not going to be as robust, user friendly, powerful, or convenient as an off-the-shelf piece of technology, Garriott said.

But before they can be approved for space travel,gadgets have to go through a rigorous, generally two-year-long certification process to make sure theyre appropriate for use on board the ISS.When Garriott was preparing for his trip, he wanted to bring his iPod aboard. In order to get it approved, he would have had remove the internal battery, leave it on earth, wire the device to an external battery pack, and wire that back into the iPod to power it. He left the iPod at home.

The biggest thing [with getting consumer tech certified for flight] is safety issues, said Bruce Yost,NASA Small Spacecraft Technology Program manager.For instance the batteries have to be of a certain type so they dont explode or leak. Another issue is determining if a product emits any noxious gases. In the home or office, a plastic product treated with a solvent may give off some fumes that get diluted in the air to safe levels. The reason why there is a sign-off process is that once youre in orbit, youre in an extremely closed ecosystem, Garriott said. The livable area of the space station is about the size of a five-bedroom house, and air gets recycled. The space stations systems may not be able to successfully cleanse certain chemicals out of the air supply.

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Gadgets in Space : What It Takes to Get an iPad Into Orbit

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