Monthly Archives: November 2012

All Wish you ‘Happy Diwali’ Sunita Williams – Video

Posted: November 14, 2012 at 10:44 pm


All Wish you #39;Happy Diwali #39; Sunita Williams
Indian American astronaut Sunita Williams has greeted Indians around the world from space on the occasion of Diwali. "I wish everybody in India and people of Indian origin around the world, Happy Diwali. It is a wonderful day and a wonderful festival and I am happy we are part of it up here at the International Space Station (ISS)," Williams said.From:P7News24x7Views:0 0ratingsTime:00:36More inNews Politics

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Anomalous Incident – Video

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Anomalous Incident
Something mysterious is happening at the space station in this sci fi themed animation. Rendered with POV-Ray, set to original music.From:MovieguyTedViews:0 0ratingsTime:01:33More inFilm Animation

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Aki Answers from ISS – Video

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Aki Answers from ISS
Aboard the International Space Station, Expedition 33 Flight Engineer Aki Hoshide of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency took questions from Japanese university students and summarized the major accomplishments of his four-month mission on the orbital laboratory during an in-flight educational event on Nov. 14. Hoshide, Expedition 33 Commander Suni Williams of NASA and Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko will return to Earth Nov. 19 in their Soyuz TMA-05M spacecraft for a parachute-assisted landing before sunrise on the steppe of Kazakhstan.From:NASAtelevisionViews:166 19ratingsTime:17:47More inScience Technology

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ISS Update – Nov. 14, 2012 – Video

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ISS Update - Nov. 14, 2012
The International Space Station video update for Nov. 14, 2012.From:ReelNASAViews:25 5ratingsTime:03:08More inScience Technology

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Red Faction OST – BrakeUp – Video

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Red Faction OST - BrakeUp
Track from the Red Faction soundtrack, composed by Dan Wentz. This part of the soundtrack is heard when the Space Station is falling apart from the reactor overload: more specifically when you are heading down towards the station #39;s lower levels. It can also be heard in the squeal, Red Faction II, during the level called #39;On The Docks #39; .From:jesusisherelookbusyViews:0 0ratingsTime:03:13More inGaming

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Jupiter – ISS passing – Video

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Jupiter - ISS passing
International Space Station passing near Jupiter. 1080p, Full HD available.From:Jerry BoydViews:16 0ratingsTime:00:09More inScience Technology

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Sarah Brightman Press Highlight Reel – Video

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Sarah Brightman Press Highlight Reel
sarahbrightman.com | Highlights from the press coverage of Sarah Brightman #39;s announcement from Moscow that she will be traveling to the International Space Station.From:ChannelMusicalViews:10 1ratingsTime:02:42More inMusic

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Russia loses space station contact

Posted: at 10:44 pm

Russia has reportedly lost the ability to send commands to most of its satellites and its segment of the International Space Station (ISS) following a power cable failure near Moscow.

State news agency RIA Novosti said on Wednesday the power cut may also delay the planned November 19 return to earth of three ISS members who are completing their six-month mission on board the floating international space lab.

'We have not had a connection with the ground telemetry stationed in Russia for the past two hours,' RIA Novosti quoted an unidentified source in the Russian space industry as saying.

'Our specialists lack the ability to control the civilian satellites or send commands to the Russian segment of the ISS,' said the source.

'They can see the crew and can talk to them, but they cannot send any commands to the Russian segments.'

The director of a Moscow region institute in charge of satellite and ISS communication told the Interfax news agency that the power cut appeared to have been caused by basic road repair work.

The unnamed industry source added that military satellites were not affected by the power cut and that the line would take at least 48 hours to fix.

'What happened is in no way related to the work being done by our specialists with the air and space defence forces,' the source told RIA Novosti.

'Communications with the military satellites continue as always,' the source said.

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Russia loses contact with satellites, space station

Posted: at 10:44 pm

by agence france-presse Posted on 11/14/2012 11:38 PM |Updated 11/14/2012 11:39 PM

MOSCOW, Russia - Russia on Wednesday, November 14 lost the ability to send commands to most of its satellites and its segment of the International Space Station following a power cable failure near Moscow.

The Roscosmos space agency attributed the embarrassing malfunction to basic road repair work near the the sprawling Korolyov mission control centre outside Moscow.

Officials said the problem may take 48 hours to fix and could theoretically delay the November 19 return to Earth of three ISS members who are completing their four-month mission on board the floating international space lab.

"We have not had a connection with the ground telemetry stationed in Russia for the past two hours," RIA Novosti quoted an unidentified source in the Russian space industry as saying.

"Our specialists lack the ability to control the civilian satellites or send commands to the Russian segment of the ISS," said the source, while adding the problem could take two days to fix.

"They can see the crew and can talk to them, but they cannot send any commands to the Russian segments."

Russia has suffered a string of failed satellite launches and rocket losses in the past two years that prompted reshuffles at the very top of the country's once-proud space industry.

But the agency has struggled to reform due to chronic underfunding and alleged corruption as well as a long-term inability to replace retiring Soviet-era specialists with fresh talent.

The main subsidiary of Roscosmos is currently the subject of a 6.5 billion ruble ($200 million) embezzlement probe that has fanned speculation over possible new sackings at the very top of Russian space command.

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Europe Proposes Cheap Quantum Optics Link to the Space Station

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The ability to send entangled photons to the ISS would be a stepping stone to a global quantum internet and could test the link between quantum mechanics and relativity

One of the great mysteries of modern physics is the link between quantum mechanics and general relativity or gravity. But quantum phenomena generally occur on the very smallest scales while gravity generally crops on the largest scales. Never the twain shall meet.

At least, not without some clever thinking. One idea is to entangle a pair of photons, hang on to one and send the other across a distance so vast that gravity is significant, in other words, far enough for the gravitational curvature of space to come into play.

The issue in question is whether the entanglement--a purely quantum phenomenon--'feels' this curvature in the same way as purely classical things, like humans.

Therequired distance isn't that far--a few hundred kilometres should do the trick.

But there's a problem. The furthest scientists have sent entangled photons is just 144kilometres.and because of atmospheric losses and the curvature of the Earth's surface, the only way to go further is to fire photons straight upwards, into space.

Today,Thomas Scheidl at theAustrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna and a couple of pals suggests a simple and relatively cheap way of doing these kinds of experiments for the first time using the International Space Station (ISS), which orbits at an altitude of about 400 kilometres.

Their plan is to create entangled photons on the ground and beam them up to the ISS. That gets around one important problem with this kind of work, which is that much of the hardware needed for creating entangled photons--the lasers, nonlinear materials etc--are not yet qualified for use in space and getting such a qualification is an expensive business.

So leaving all this stuff on the ground is a sensible idea. All you need in space is a sensor capable of detecting photons and their polarisation. In other words, a camera.

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Europe Proposes Cheap Quantum Optics Link to the Space Station

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