Monthly Archives: October 2014

Dragon Departs From ISS – If You New – Chris Lake Feat. Nastala #MysteryHunter – Video

Posted: October 28, 2014 at 11:55 am


Dragon Departs From ISS - If You New - Chris Lake Feat. Nastala #MysteryHunter
Dragon Returns After Supplying Space Station. SpaceX #39;s Dragon cargo craft splashed down in the Pacific Ocean at 3:39 p.m. EDT a few hundred miles west of Baja California, Mexico, marking...

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Orbital and NASA hold a status briefing about next mission to resupply International Space Station – Video

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Orbital and NASA hold a status briefing about next mission to resupply International Space Station
Orbital Sciences Corp. and NASA held a pre launch status briefing to discuss the next mission to resupply the International Space Station on Monday, Oct. 27. Orbital #39;s Cygnus cargo spacecraft...

By: NASA

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Orbital and NASA hold science briefing update for next resupply mission to ISS – Video

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Orbital and NASA hold science briefing update for next resupply mission to ISS
Orbital Sciences Corp. and NASA held a pre launch science update to discuss the mission #39;s science cargo aboard the SS Deke Slayton spacecraft soon to depart for the International Space Station...

By: NASA

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Orbital and NASA hold science briefing update for next resupply mission to ISS - Video

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Antares ORB 3 Processing Highlights (NASA video) – Video

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Antares ORB 3 Processing Highlights (NASA video)
Orbital #39;s Antares rocket will launch the company #39;s Cygnus cargo spacecraft loaded with supplies for the International Space Station for NASA. The launch will occur at the Mid-Atlantic Regional...

By: OrbitalSci

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Antares ORB 3 Processing Highlights (NASA video) - Video

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Destination Station From NASA’s Marshal Space Flight Center Discusses Technology Aboard The ISS – Video

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Destination Station From NASA #39;s Marshal Space Flight Center Discusses Technology Aboard The ISS
Recorded during a live event, Destination Station forum is the second in a series of interactive panel discussions about the International Space Station and how technologies are tested aboard...

By: NASA

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Destination Station From NASA's Marshal Space Flight Center Discusses Technology Aboard The ISS - Video

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Professor Stephen Hawking on Space Exploration – Video

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Professor Stephen Hawking on Space Exploration
Every 90 minutes, the ISS circles planet Earth as humanity #39;s first permanent home away from home in space. The space station is developing the technologies and techniques necessary to allow...

By: NASA

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#askAstro: Can You See Disneyworld from Space? – Video

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#askAstro: Can You See Disneyworld from Space?
Aboard the International Space Station, Expedition 41 Flight Engineer Reid Wiseman of NASA discussed life in space during an in-flight question and answer session Oct. 10. Wiseman answered...

By: ReelNASA

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#askAstro: Can You See Disneyworld from Space? - Video

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Space station cargo ship grounded by wayward sailboat

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An Orbital Sciences Antares rocket carrying a commercial Cygnus cargo ship loaded with supplies bound for the International Space Station stands poised on the launch pad at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport at Wallops Island, Va. Orbital Sciences

Last Updated Oct 27, 2014 9:30 PM EDT

Launch of an Orbital Sciences Antares rocket carrying a commercial cargo ship bound for the International Space Station was scrubbed Monday evening after a sailboat strayed into the off shore danger zone southeast of the Virginia launch site.

Liftoff from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport at NASA's Wallops Island, Va., flight facility was targeted for 6:45 p.m. EDT (GMT-4), roughly the moment Earth's rotation carried pad 0A into the plane of the space station's orbit.

But as the countdown ticked into its final minutes, range safety officers noticed a boat in the zone where rocket debris could fall in the event of a launch failure. The countdown was held up at the T-minus 12-minute mark and then restarted in hopes the ship would clear the area by the end of the rocket's 10-minute launch window.

But it was not to be, and mission managers reluctantly called off the countdown for the day as the window expired. Engineers were told to recycle the rocket for a second launch attempt at 6:22 p.m. Tuesday. Forecasters predicted good weather.

If all goes well, the Orbital Sciences Cygnus cargo ship perched atop the Antares will catch up with the space station Nov. 2, pulling up to within about 30 feet of the lab complex. At that point, astronaut Reid Wiseman, operating the lab's robot arm, will lock onto a grapple fixture so the capsule can be pulled in for berthing at the Earth-facing port of the forward Harmony module.

"This mission is going to carry over 5,000 pounds of cargo to the crew, a wide variety of items, everything from science to clothes to food, tools, replacement parts, etc.," said Orbital Executive Vice President Frank Culbertson, a former shuttle commander and space station crew member.

The mission is Orbital's third operational space station resupply flight -- the fourth including a demonstration mission -- under a $1.9 billion contract with NASA that calls for delivery of some 44,000 pounds of hardware and equipment to the space station.

SpaceX holds a similar $1.6 billion contract to covering 12 resupply missions.

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To Infinity! NASA Kicks Up Space Station Tech

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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. NASA has pioneered new technologies on the International Space Station for years, but the space agency's latest technological twists are venturing into science-fiction territory.

For example, the next generation of camera-equipped, free-flying robots could usher in an age when remote-controlled gizmos check out the space station's far corners, unassisted by humans on board. But couldn't that open the way for a robot to go rogue, as HAL did in "2001: A Space Odyssey"?

"It's our job to make sure that doesn't happen," Jose Benavides, chief engineer for the SPHERES robotic flier program at NASA's Ames Research Center, told NBC News.

Benavides and other researchers provided an update on space station innovations on Monday during a televised forum at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville. SPHERES which is short for for "Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, Reorient Experimental Satellites" ranks as one of the station's longest-running tech experiments.

Astronauts have been testing the gas-propelled, beachball-sized satellites since 2006, but just recently the SPHERES devices have been rigged up with Android smartphones to enhance their vison and intelligence. The station's three spaceballs can now use a Kinect-style 3-D scanning system to map their environment.

Sometime next month, the flying robots are due to venture out of their home base in the Japanese Experiment Module for the first time, Benavides said. Eventually, they'll be given the run of the entire space station.

Suppose Mission Control wants to check out an anomalous reading on one of the space station's displays. "Without having to bother an astronaut, the ground operator can navigate the SPHERES over to take a look," Benavides said.

The robot can also be sent to look for, say, a missing wrench while the astronaut who lost it is otherwise engaged. "A lot of the astronauts' time has been spent looking for things," Benavides explained.

This SPHERES robot has been equipped with a smartphone to enhance its navigational capability. This free-flying robot is propelled in zero-G with compressed carbon dioxide gas, but future free-fliers are more likely to use ducted fans or compressed air.

Meanwhile, Benavides and his teammates spend a lot of their time working through even the most unlikely scenarios for example, a stray gamma-ray blast that somehow scrambles the SPHERES software to make sure a flying robot won't turn into a mini-HAL. "Even if all the wrong things happen, it can't hurt anybody or do any damage," he said.

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To Infinity! NASA Kicks Up Space Station Tech

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Space station resupply launch delayed by drifting boat

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WALLOPS ISLAND, Va., Oct. 28 (UPI) -- Private space company Orbital Sciences Corp. was set to a rocket a Cygnus cargo ship into space on Monday this week, the latest of NASA's regular International Space Station resupply missions, but the blastoff was postponed until Tuesday after a stray boat drifted into the launch zone.

The company's Anteres rocket ship was scheduled to take off from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island in Virginia on Monday evening. When a boat appeared downrange of the takeoff site, officials were forced to call off the launch plans.

"This was strictly a range issue this evening that terminated the count just 10 minutes before the scheduled liftoff time at the end of a 10-minute window," NASA TV commentator Rob Navias said during a webcast yesterday.

Engineers will reattempt the launch of the cargo ship on Tuesday night at approximately 6:22 p.m. NASA officials say the launch could be visible, weather permitting, up and down the Eastern Seaboard, from as far south as South Carolina and as far north as Massachusetts. The launch will be broadcast live on NASA TV.

Frank Culbertson, former NASA astronaut and now executive vice president of Orbital Sciences, brushed off any concerns about the pending launch. He congratulated launch team members for their work leading up to the planned liftoff and shrugged off the boat-caused delay.

"That's just spaceflight," Culbertson told Space.com.

Tuesday's launch will be the second of eight launches the company is contracted to carry out for NASA -- an arrangement worth $1.9 billion. Earlier this year, NASA awarded a $1.6 billion contract to SpaceX to launch 12 unmanned resupply missions.

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