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Monthly Archives: September 2021
Kentucky to receive $300 Million from online gambling lawsuit – WOWK 13 News
Posted: September 27, 2021 at 5:52 pm
FRANKFORT, KY (WOWK) Flutter Entertainment, the Parent company of PokerStars, has agreed to pay Kentucky $300 million to settle a lawsuit brought against the internet gambling site in 2011.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear says J. Michael Brown, the Secretary of the Justice and Public Safety Cabinet in 2008, brought actions on behalf of Kentucky in Franklin Circuit Court to stop the unregulated, untaxed and illegal offshore gambling operations running in Kentucky.
PokerStars collected almost $300 million in actual cash losses from thousands of Kentuckians who played on PokerStars websites from 2007 to 2011.
Under Kentucky law, the state brought an action against PokerStars seeking recovery of the nearly $300 million lost by its citizens and trebled as required by Kentucky law damages.
Last year, the Supreme Court of Kentucky affirmed that judgment, which was rendered in December 2015.
Flutter Entertainment and its subsidiary, PokerStars, are located in the Isle of Man, United Kingdom. PokerStars claimed that the English Protection of Trading Interests Act of 1980 could have prevented the commonwealth from collecting the damages upheld by the Supreme Court of Kentucky.
The $300 million settlement amount is nearly $10 million above the actual damages awarded by the courts, which was $290,230,077.94.
In April 2021, the Franklin Circuit Court ordered a bond of $100 million to be paid. The bond payment was received in May, and an additional $200 million was added to it.
Kentucky law says the proceeds from the settlement will go to the General Fund.
After 10 long years, the commonwealth has not only prevailed, but collected dollars that the General Assembly will be able to direct to critical areas, like education, health care and economic development.
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Michigan Online Gambling Numbers Rise: Does The State Have A Problem? – Play Michigan
Posted: at 5:52 pm
(Editors note: You can reach the Michigan Problem Gambling Hotline at 1-800-270-7117.)
After a record August for Michigan online casino revenue and the return of football this month, who knows what kinds of numbers were in for this September?
Nine figures of internet gaming revenue? A record $400 million of football bets online in a single month? How about $500 million?
Thats all on the table here in Michigan, as we write this, in late September.
Those are good numbers for the balance sheets of casino companies and the tax coffers for state, local and tribal governments.
But as weve covered here at PlayMichigan, there is an obvious downside with more access to gambling. That means lots of Michiganders losing millions of expendable money, and others who may be crossing a line into problem gambling territory.
Heres a snapshot of where were at, as Responsible Gaming Education Week wraps.
Along with the launch of online gambling in January, the Michigan Gaming Control Board developed the Responsible Gambling Database, as dictated by the new laws.
A spokesperson for the MGCB said the agency has received 47 applications for the Responsible Gambling Database. (Note: Applications are available here.)
In addition, individual operators have self-exclusion programs on top of the states effort, though the MGCB did not have data on those.
The new database is in addition to the Disassociated Persons List for exclusion from the Detroit casinos, which had existed since 2001.
Through Sept. 1, 4,913 applications for the DPL have been processed in more than 20 years. In 2020, 67 applications were processed in a year the Detroit casinos were mostly closed. So far in 2021, 83 applications had been processed.
In addition, legislators added a new law in October of last year allowing residents on the DPL to apply to come off the list after five years.
Since that time, 661 residents have been taken off the DPL, including 546 this year.
Responsible gambling advocates endorse the law. They say that the removal process makes going on the list less of a deterrent at the outset than a lifetime ban.
Awareness is one of the key issues with problem gambling.
Michiganders can recognize problematic signs with their own habits or, perhaps even more importantly, find signs of destructive behavior in others.
To that end, new MGCB executive director Henry Williams told PlayMichigan over the summer that the agency will develop informational literature that will be distributed to Michiganders about responsible gambling signs and resources.
The MGCB spokesperson said Friday that the literature is going through final review before publication.
An uncharted frontier in the marketing of sports betting in Michigan is through college athletics programs.
A school such as Michigan or Michigan State could add an athletics revenue stream by partnering with a sports gambling company, such as how Colorado first did with PointsBetlast year.
However, even more exposure for gambling companies and the negative connotation could be a bridge too far for some universities to swallow.
Last week, Louisiana State University teamed up with Caesars for sponsorships, naming rights and other branding placements.
A money grab like that would be disappointing for some, and perhaps a step in the wrong direction.
But with more universities inevitably partnering with more gambling companies, perhaps a Michigan school could build in a research and assistance component to the sector, funded by the company, to help the fight against the industrys pitfalls.
Louisiana is also the site for a lauded program Michigan could copy to fight problem gambling.
Michael Burke, executive director of the Michigan Association on Problem Gambling, has advocated for an inpatient gambling disorder treatment facility. Burke points to the Center of Recovery (CORE) in Shreveport, Louisiana, for what could be a model for other states to follow.
Of course, funding is the issue there. Burke has said he used to advocate for public funding through the tax revenue gained, but has since shifted his focus on hopes for an operator to fund such a program as part of a PR move.
Then again, admitting there is a problem is a form of self-sabotage for a company, too. It would be quite a step, and a commendable one at that, for a company to take.
The Michigan gambling market has brought a lot of new money into the industry, and companies are certainly living up to their end of the bargain by paying their tax obligations.
But other than tax money and a new form of entertainment for residents, what has the industry delivered on a local level?
Other states are getting more: PointsBet created jobs by setting up US headquarters in Colorado. and FanDuel is bringing a technology hub (and 900 jobs) to Georgia, for instance. None of the companies has sought Michigan as a hub for, anything, really. Casinos had added sportsbook writers to physical locations, and the Evolution live dealer studios added jobs to Southfield. But nothing has arrived on a large scale.
Perhaps responsible gambling could be an avenue to deliver something big here, whether a research-based search for solutions or an inpatient treatment clinic for rehabilitation.
Michigan also has a big governors race coming in 2022, and well see if candidates bring the online gambling boom either its benefits and pitfalls to the forefront of the campaign.
Heck, maybe a PlayMichigan reader has a good idea for things that could come here to bring positive ends for Michiganders. Contact us if you have any ideas.
Because, along with some unquestionable good, we also know a lot of bad has come with the territory.
(You can reach the Michigan Problem Gambling Hotline at 1-800-270-7117.)
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Michigan Online Gambling Numbers Rise: Does The State Have A Problem? - Play Michigan
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Why is online gambling growing in popularity? – Floridanewstimes.com
Posted: at 5:52 pm
Why is gambling so popular nowadays? Why do new casinos not on gamstop 2021 receive more and more people, but their popularity does not cease to grow exponentially? This question is often raised by relatives and friends of gamers because they do not understand why gamblers choose to spend their leisure time with spectacular slots, a family vacation, or other entertainment. The same gamblers themselves usually can not even explain why they continue to play, in spite of the misunderstandings or troubles in life. Such entertainment serves as a way of escaping from real life and self-effacement from stressful situations or problematic issues.
The name of the dice game in Arabic Zar gave the name to all art games. Dice is one of the oldest games in the world and was entertained by our ancestors in ancient times. Dice with dots were found during the excavations of the Egyptian pyramids, referring to the year 2000 BC. A similar version of the game was also known in the era of the Roman rulers. Many people spent their leisure time playing dice with their servants. Contemporaries noted no small pathological addiction to gambling in the emperor Caligula.
In the Middle Ages, many people willingly played thimbles, which were imported from India. Although this type of game was popular even during the dominance of ancient Greece. Playing cards came to Europe from the east of Asia. The Japanese and Chinese used bamboo and wooden boards with different images to play cards.
After a while, gradually began to appear all kinds of versions of card games, which entertained the frequenters of brothels and gambling establishments, as well as the nobility and the nobles at receptions or receptions in the palaces. During the reign of the tsarist dynasties of Russia in demand remained: point, ninth shaft, Napoleon, Boer, and other versions of card games. Since the middle of the 19th century in great demand in the casinos have become various types of roulette, she dubbed the king of casino games.
Ancient poker is more than five hundred years old. Its new rules were finally formed in the early 19th century. Such a card game successfully differs from the others, in her victory is significantly dependent on the knowledge of the player, rather than on Fortune.
Fans of gambling entertainment fell in love with poker for:
Gamers choose wg casino UK and gambling in particular because they are able to carry out their personal fantasy, solve difficulties and meet their wishes. They are attracted to:
Citizens earn and lose huge capital every day, investing them in all kinds of projects and businesses. Gambling entertainment is just one of the spheres of life associated with risk, where there is an opportunity to win and lose money.
Many people also choose this type of entertainment because they get a significant boost of happiness hormones mixed with adrenaline, and this, in turn, perfectly relaxes and relieves the psyche, refreshes, and improves the mood. That is, it turns out that the player has a rest, playing these games, and also gets an opportunity to supplement their own budget. What could be better?
The world of gambling is a vast line of possibilities and a lot of fun, and its not surprising why these kinds of entertainment are so popular today. Such a niche allows a person to rest, relax and truly feel the taste of life, it is a great opportunity to make new acquaintances and even finds a confident and stable future.
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SpaceX’s Starlink broadband satellites could be used for GPS navigation – Space.com
Posted: at 5:49 pm
SpaceX's Starlink satellites may be used for navigation and global positioning in addition to their core function of broadband Internet, a new research study suggests.
Engineering researchers external to SpaceX found a way to use the Starlink constellation signals for navigation similar to the capabilities provided by global positioning satellites (GPS), which are used in the United States and several other countries. The study represents the first time Starlink was used for navigation by researchers outside of SpaceX, the team members stated.
Researchers triangulated the signals from six Starlink satellites to fix upon a location on Earth with less than 27 feet (eight meters) of accuracy, the team reported in a statement. That's pretty comparable to the typical GPS capabilities of a smartphone, which typically pinpoints your spot on Earth to within 16 feet (4.9 m), depending on the conditions.
Related: Russian startup tests tech that filters SpaceX Starlink passes from astronomical observations
"We eavesdropped on the signal, and then we designed sophisticated algorithms to pinpoint our location, and we showed that it works with great accuracy," study author Zak Kassas, director of the Center for Automated Vehicles Research with Multimodal Assured Navigation (CARMEN) at Ohio State University, said in the statement.
"Even though Starlink wasn't designed for navigation purposes, we showed that it was possible to learn parts of the system well enough to use it for navigation," Kassas said.
The researchers developed their navigation system with no help from SpaceX, nor any access to data being shared over the broadband connection. Rather, they used the signals from several satellites and developed an algorithm to locate a position on Earth.
Next, they placed an antenna on the University of California, Irvine campus in an attempt to find its location using Starlink. Their experiment placed the estimated position of the antenna, using Starlink signals, within 25 feet (7.7 m) of its actual position.
The algorithm and Starlink working together are comparably accurate compared to past projects the team has worked on, Kassas said. Other low Earth orbit satellite constellations zeroed in on locations to within about 75 feet (23 meters). An unrelated project with the U.S. Air Force, to pinpoint locations of high-altitude aircraft, produced an accuracy of 16.5 feet (5 meters).
Kassas noted that Starlink's accuracy, using this methodology, will increase as more satellites in the fleet fly to orbit. SpaceX has about 1,700 working satellites today, the team stated, but the company hopes to launch more than 40,000 into orbit. (Recent launches have been delayed due to a liquid oxygen shortage induced by higher medical needs during the COVID-19 pandemic.)
The researchers suggested this method of using Starlink navigation could supplement traditional GPS navigation, the latter of which has vulnerabilities. Since GPS has been around for a generation (more than 30 years) and has a well-known signal, it is easy to use on smartphones or vehicles but also more "vulnerable to attacks", the team stated.
Starlink also has an advantage with its altitude, orbiting at roughly 750 miles (1,200 km), much closer to Earth than GPS in medium-Earth orbit. Starlink satellites are also launched more frequently once every few weeks, typically than GPS (once every few months or years), allowing Starlink to have more frequent hardware upgrades.
Coincidentally, in recent years SpaceX has launched several GPS satellites for the U.S. Space Force. Founder Elon Musk has so far offered no comment about the new study on Twitter in recent days.
Editor's note: This article has been updated to fix an error in GPS satellite orbit altitudes.
Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.
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SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket will launch internet satellite to serve Alaska in 2022 – Space.com
Posted: at 5:49 pm
SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket just got another passenger.
The powerful Falcon Heavy is now scheduled to loft Astranis' first commercial communications satellite to orbit next spring, Astranis representatives announced Thursday (Sept. 23).
The satellite which will beam internet service down to Alaskans from geostationary orbit, about 22,200 miles (35,730 kilometers) up had previously been slated to ride atop a SpaceX Falcon 9.
Related: The evolution of SpaceX's rockets in pictures
"Launching on Falcon Heavy will get us on orbit months faster, allowing us to serve customers in Alaska that much sooner," Astranis CEO John Gedmark said in a statement. "This is a huge win for our customers in Alaska."
The Alaska-serving satellite will be just the beginning for Astranis, if all goes according to plan.
"By owning and operating its satellites and offering them to customers as a turnkey solution, Astranis is able to provide bandwidth-as-a-service and unlock previously unreachable markets," representatives of the San Francisco-based company wrote in the same statement. "This allows Astranis to launch small, dedicated satellites for small and medium-sized countries, Fortune 500 companies, existing satellite operators and other customers."
The 880-pound (400 kilograms) Astranis satellite will share space on the Falcon Heavy with another communications craft Viasat-3, which will be operated by fellow California company Viasat.
Falcon Heavy has just three launches under its belt to date, but it's poised to get quite a workout over the coming months. The rocket is scheduled to launch two classified missions for the U.S. Space Force by early 2022, the first of which will lift off next month. The Viasat-3/Astranis flight will follow shortly thereafter. And Falcon Heavy's manifest also includes NASA's Psyche asteroid mission, which is slated to launch next August.
The rocket will also fly some other high-profile missions in the near future, including NASA's ice-hunting VIPER moon rover in 2023 and Europa Clipper probe in 2024.
The Falcon Heavy consists of three modified, strapped-together Falcon 9 first stages. The central core is topped by a second stage, which carries the payload. Like the workhorse Falcon 9, the Falcon Heavy is partially reusable; all three first stages are designed to return to Earth, make vertical, powered landings, and fly again.
Mike Wall is the author of "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.
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NASA, Blue Origin and SpaceX can’t agree on lunar flight reviews – Quartz
Posted: at 5:49 pm
Whats holding up US plans to go back to the moon? An argument over pre-flight meetings.
NASA administrator Bill Nelson says he cant firm up plans to return Americans to the moon by 2024 until a lawsuit against the space agency, brought by Jeff Bezos space company Blue Origin, is resolved. The suit contends that NASA should not have chosen Elon Musks SpaceX to build a lander that will carry astronauts to the lunar surface.
Specifically, the suit hinges on flight readiness reviews, or FRRs, which are comprehensive briefings about every aspect of a space mission. They take place soon before a launch and represent the final approval to go ahead with a mission.
These meetings are important because of the relationship between NASA and its contractors. The agency is using the public-private partnership model that entails giving contractors limited guidance and paying them a fixed price. Since the agency is not doing as much of the nitty-gritty design work, FRRs offer a key opportunity for oversight.
Bezos and company say that SpaceX is risking the safety of astronauts because it will not do enough of these reviews. Musk says that we always do flight readiness reviews.
Whos correct?
NASAs plan to get to the moon involves launching astronauts in a spacecraft called Orion. Unlike the Apollo missions, when the astronauts brought a lander along with them, the next generation of moon explorers will meet a separate lander vehicle orbit above the moon, which will shuttle them back and forth to the surface below. NASA asked private companies to build it.
SpaceX proposed its newest vehicle, a large spacecraft called Starship. To do so, SpaceX will need to refuel the Starship in orbit before it goes to the moon and back; that will require the launch of fourteen tanker Starships, and another spacecraft whose description is redacted in public documents, but is widely believed to be some kind of propellant depot. (All those launches are required because of how much propellant large spacecraft require to break free of Earths gravity.)
The plan is to have Starship fly to orbit, fuel up, and then meet the astronauts in lunar orbit. And, according to the Government Accountability Organization, SpaceX proposed to NASA that there would be one flight readiness review before the launch of the Starship being used to transport astronauts; the rest of the fueling infrastructure would already be on orbit, and no astronauts would be onboard Starship until it actually met them in deep space.
Two competing bids, one from a consortium led by Blue Origin and another from an Alabama company called Dynetics, proposed smaller, more traditional lunar landers. Blue Origin has not settled if its lander will launch on one huge rocket or on three medium-sized vehicles. Dynetics lander will get to the moon with one launch but needs to be refueled in orbit by four tanker spacecraft.
NASA hoped to choose two contractors to build moon landers, but had only received funding from Congress to pick one. The space agency ultimately selected SpaceXs proposal, saying it was the cheapest and the most technically sound. But, again according to the GAO, NASA officials asked SpaceX to add two more FRRs to its plan, so that each vehicle type would be scrutinized before it launchedone review for the tankers, one for the potential depot, and one for the Starship that will carry the astronauts.
The other two contractors challenged the decision before the GAO. The protestors argued that because NASA did not require an FRR before every SpaceX launch, the company received an unfair advantage. The GAO agreed that NASA didnt stick to the original wording of its proposal when it allowed SpaceX to have three reviews, but said that didnt change the course of the contract and rejected the challenge. Blue Origin has now escalated the dispute to federal court.
Heres where the mystery comes in: SpaceX distributed a briefing document to lawmakers, whose decisions about NASA funding will influence the agencys choices, stating that SpaceX willand has always been planning toconduct an FRR with full NASA insight and participation prior to every Starship HLS launch. Elon Musk also tweeted that we always do flight readiness reviews! This argument makes no sense.
If thats the case, perhaps the lawyers SpaceX hired to make its case to the GAO should be concerned that they were unable to convey this. SpaceX did not answer questions attempting to tease out the distinction between Musks argument and the GAOs assessment of the contract.
To interpret the difference between GAOs three FRRs and SpaceXs claim that the company always does flight readiness reviews, you have to parse the semantics: When the briefing document says Starship HLS launch, it appears to refer to the human lander spacecraft, and not the other launches. SpaceX has always intended to have an FRR for that specific vehicle.
SpaceX seems to be arguing that the tanker spacecraft and potential fuel depot are infrastructure that NASA doesnt need to worry as much about, while the vehicle that will actually carry astronauts deserves fuller scrutiny. In a court filing unsealed today, the companys attorneys made the case that supporting spacecraft did not fall under the FRR requirements outlined in NASAs request for bids.
The argument over the FRRs mostly reflects the ambition of SpaceXs plans compared to its rivals. Blue Origin and Dynetics proposed fewer launches to get their smaller lander vehicles to the moon.
That is, in part, why the GAO rejected their challenge: It wasnt clear why SpaceX received an advantage when NASA allowed it to have three FRRs. Blue Origin would only be launching its lander vehicle, in either one or three pieces, and no fueling infrastructure. Dynetics proposal, meanwhile, had other weaknesses that outweighed its concerns about FRRs.
SpaceXs latest filing says that NASA expressly gave bidders the liberty to propose a different architecture, and the company did so. All the meeting madness holding up NASAs plans doesnt seem to rise to the level of disregard for safety, as Blue Origin alleges, but we wont know for sure until the lawsuit is over and all the facts come out.
While much of the court docket is sealed, the parties are currently debating what kind of records the judge will review, with Blue Origin seeking to obtain NASA emails, and other documents and SpaceX saying those additional records are unnecessary. One the administrative record is settled, a judge will determine if Blues challenge has merit.
This story has been corrected to clarify the moon landing plans developed by Blue Origin and Dynetics.
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Valley college professor calls trip to space on SpaceX capsule out of this world – KTAR.com
Posted: at 5:49 pm
PHOENIX A capsule parachuting into the Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast on Sept. 18 after a trip to space concluded what was a dream come true for a Valley college professor.
Sian Proctor, a professor at South Mountain Community College, was among the four-person crew of the SpaceX Dragon capsule.
It was an amazing experience, Proctor told KTAR News 92.3 FMs Arizonas Morning News on Thursday. It was out of this world.
Im kind of still in shock that weve gone up and come back down.
The capsule launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Sept. 15, with Proctor piloting the fully automated capsule.
Everything went so smoothly from liftoff to being on orbit to de-orbiting, Proctor said, adding de-orbiting is a time where things could potentially go wrong.
Proctor, a one-time NASA astronaut finalist, along with trip sponsor Jared Isaacman and two others spent three days in space, being presented with views of a lifetime.
She didnt realize that because of their altitude and the design of the cupola a bubble-shaped window at the top of the capsule that they would be able to see the entire sphere of the Earth.
When you get up there and see that, you are just in awe and amazed, Proctor said, adding going into it as a poet and an artist added another layer to the experience.
Just absolutely stunningly beautiful.
The crew wasnt just up there to sight-see as Proctor said there were many tasks to complete during the three-day trip.
Went by way too fast and we had too much to do, Proctor said, adding there was no sense of boredom.
We had all these medical research experiments we were doing, I wanted to paint so I did one drawing and one full painting.
Proctor isnt sure what she will do next for the Maricopa County Community College District, serving as the districts astronaut resident, but is excited to bring the experience to the classroom.
Geology tends to attract a lot of non-science majors, and Im always excited to take those students and get them really fired up about science and our planet and the possibilities, Proctor said.
Now being able to add this orbital perspective to our planet really adds something.
After winning her ticket by beating a field of 200 applicants, Proctor said she would be open to going on another trip to space with the company.
Flying with SpaceX was a fantastic experience, they are the most amazing company, Proctor said.
Im not going to turn them down if they come knocking.
The capsule reached a high altitude of 363 miles, surpassing the International Space Station by 100 miles.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Have a story idea or tip? Pass it along to the KTAR News team here.
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SpaceXs Starlink satellites could be a stronger, more secure alternative to GPS, new research suggests – The Independent
Posted: at 5:49 pm
SpaceXs Starlink satellites may be used for navigation and GPS in the future, a new study suggests.
Engineers from Ohio State University have developed a means to use signals broadcast by Starlink to locate a position on Earth.
It is the first time the system has been used by scientists outside of SpaceX, and the researchers say they only used data related to the satellites movement and location not the actual data being sent through the satellites.
We eavesdropped on the signal, and then we designed sophisticated algorithms to pinpoint our location, and we showed that it works with great accuracy, said Zak Kassas, director of the Center for Automated Vehicles Research with Multimodal Assured Navigation (CARMEN) at Ohio State.
Even though Starlink wasnt designed for navigation purposes, we showed that it was possible to learn parts of the system well enough to use it for navigation.
The important catch here is that we are not listening in on what is being sent over these satellites. We learned the signals just well enough to harness them for navigation purposes.
Using their algorithm, they were able to identify an antenna at the campus of University of California, Irvine, within approximately 7.7 metres although this is still significantly less accurate than GPS, which identifies areas with an accuracy of between 0.3 and five metres. Using other low Earth orbit (LEO) systems, the researchers could pinpoint an area with an accuracy of 23 metres.
SpaceX currently has under 2,000 satellites in orbit but intends to launch over 40,000 more. The researchers say that as the constellation grows the accuracy of the system will increase.
Eventually, it is believed this research could be used as an alternative and more secure version of GPS, since global positioning systems are weaker than the signals given off by LEO constellations, due to their distance.
In addition, GPS uses well-known signals, and while this is a benefit to companies making equipment that use those signals, it makes it vulnerable to spoofing or jamming attacks which, in some situations, can even put malicious individuals in control of military drones or maritime vessels.
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An alarm went off during SpaceX’s all-tourist space flight. The problem was the toilet – WCVB Boston
Posted: at 5:49 pm
As Jared Isaacman and his three fellow crewmates were free-flying through Earth's orbit, shielded from the unforgiving vacuum of space by nothing but a 13-foot-wide carbon-fiber capsule, an alarm started blaring.The SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft's systems were warning the crew of a "significant" issue, Isaacman said. They'd spent months poring over SpaceX manuals and training to respond to in-space emergencies, so they leaped into action, working with SpaceX ground controllers to pinpoint the cause of the error.As it turned out, the Crew Dragon wasn't in jeopardy. But the on-board toilet was.Nothing in space is easy, including going to the bathroom. In a healthy human on Earth, making sure everything ends up in the toilet is usually a matter of simple aim. But in space, there is no feeling of gravity. There's no guarantee that what comes out will go where it's supposed to. Waste can and does go in every possible direction.To solve that problem, space toilets have fans inside them, which are used to create suction. Essentially they pull waste out of the human body and keep it stored away.And the Crew Dragon's "waste management system" fans were experiencing mechanical problems. That is what tripped the alarm the crew heard.Scott "Kidd" Poteet, an Inspiration4 mission director who helped oversee the mission from the ground, tipped reporters off about the issue in an interview with CBS. Poteet and SpaceX's director of crew mission management later confirmed there were "issues" with the waste management system at a press conference but didn't go into detail, setting off an immediate wave of speculation that the error could've created a disastrous mess.When asked directly about that on Thursday, however, Isaacman said "I want to be 100% clear: There were no issues in the cabin at all as it relates to that."But Isaacman and his fellow travelers on the Inspiration4 mission did have to work with SpaceX to respond to the problem during their three-day stay in orbit, during which they experienced numerous communications blackouts, highlighting the importance of the crew's thorough training regimen."I would say probably somewhere around 10% of our time on orbit we had no , and we were a very calm, cool crew during that," he said, adding that "mental toughness and a good frame of mind and a good attitude" were crucial to the mission."The psychological aspect is one area where you can't compromise because...there were obviously circumstances that happened up there where if you had somebody that didn't have that mental toughness and started to react poorly, that really could've brought down the whole mission," Isaacman said.SpaceX did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.The toilet anecdote also highlights a fundamental truth about humanity and its extraterrestrial ambitions no matter how polished and glitzy we may imagine our space-faring future, biological realities remain.Excreta in space, a historyIsaacman was as numerous astronauts before him bashful when it came to discussing the "toilet situation.""Nobody really wants to get into the gory details," Isaacman said. But when the Inspiration4 crew talked to some NASA astronauts, they said "using the bathroom in space is hard, and you've got to be very what was the word? very kind to one another."He added that, despite the on-board toilet issues, nobody suffered any accidents or indignities."I don't know who was training them, but we were able to work through it and get going even with what was initially challenging circumstances, so there was nothing ever like, you know, in the cabin or anything like that," he said.Figuring out how to safely relieve oneself in space was, however, was a fundamental question posed at the dawn of human spaceflight half a century ago, and the path to answers was not error-free.During the 1969 Apollo 10 mission the one that saw Thomas Stafford, John Young and Eugene Cernan circumnavigate the moon Stafford reported back to mission control on Day Six of the mission that a piece of waste was floating through the cabin, according to once-confidential government documents."Give me a napkin, quick," Stafford is recorded as saying a few minutes before Cernan spots another one: "Here's another goddamn turd."The feces collection process at the time, a NASA report later revealed, was an "extremely basic" plastic bag that was "taped to the buttocks.""The fecal bag system was marginally functional and was described as very 'distasteful' by the crew," an official NASA report from 2007 later revealed. "The bags provided no odor control in the small capsule and the odor was prominent."In-space toilets have evolved since then, thanks to strenuous efforts from NASA scientists, as journalist Mary Roach, author of "Packing for Mars," told NPR in 2010."The problem here is you've got this very elaborate space toilet, and you need to test it. Well, you've got to, you know, haul it over to Ellington Field, board it onto a zero-gravity simulator a plane that does these elaborate up-and-down arcs and then you've got to find some poor volunteer from the Waste System Management Office to test it. And I don't know about you, but, I mean, to do it on demand in 20 seconds, now that is asking a lot of your colon. So it's very elaborate and tricky."And, Roach writes in "Packing for Mars," astronaut potty training is no laughing matter."The simple act of urination can, without gravity, become a medical emergency requiring catheterization and embarrassing radio consults with flight surgeons," she wrote. And because urine behaves differently inside the bladder in space, it can be very difficult to tell when one needs to go.
As Jared Isaacman and his three fellow crewmates were free-flying through Earth's orbit, shielded from the unforgiving vacuum of space by nothing but a 13-foot-wide carbon-fiber capsule, an alarm started blaring.
The SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft's systems were warning the crew of a "significant" issue, Isaacman said. They'd spent months poring over SpaceX manuals and training to respond to in-space emergencies, so they leaped into action, working with SpaceX ground controllers to pinpoint the cause of the error.
As it turned out, the Crew Dragon wasn't in jeopardy. But the on-board toilet was.
Nothing in space is easy, including going to the bathroom. In a healthy human on Earth, making sure everything ends up in the toilet is usually a matter of simple aim. But in space, there is no feeling of gravity. There's no guarantee that what comes out will go where it's supposed to. Waste can and does go in every possible direction.
To solve that problem, space toilets have fans inside them, which are used to create suction. Essentially they pull waste out of the human body and keep it stored away.
And the Crew Dragon's "waste management system" fans were experiencing mechanical problems. That is what tripped the alarm the crew heard.
Scott "Kidd" Poteet, an Inspiration4 mission director who helped oversee the mission from the ground, tipped reporters off about the issue in an interview with CBS. Poteet and SpaceX's director of crew mission management later confirmed there were "issues" with the waste management system at a press conference but didn't go into detail, setting off an immediate wave of speculation that the error could've created a disastrous mess.
When asked directly about that on Thursday, however, Isaacman said "I want to be 100% clear: There were no issues in the cabin at all as it relates to that."
But Isaacman and his fellow travelers on the Inspiration4 mission did have to work with SpaceX to respond to the problem during their three-day stay in orbit, during which they experienced numerous communications blackouts, highlighting the importance of the crew's thorough training regimen.
"I would say probably somewhere around 10% of our time on orbit we had no [communication with the ground], and we were a very calm, cool crew during that," he said, adding that "mental toughness and a good frame of mind and a good attitude" were crucial to the mission.
"The psychological aspect is one area where you can't compromise because...there were obviously circumstances that happened up there where if you had somebody that didn't have that mental toughness and started to react poorly, that really could've brought down the whole mission," Isaacman said.
SpaceX did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.
The toilet anecdote also highlights a fundamental truth about humanity and its extraterrestrial ambitions no matter how polished and glitzy we may imagine our space-faring future, biological realities remain.
Isaacman was as numerous astronauts before him bashful when it came to discussing the "toilet situation."
"Nobody really wants to get into the gory details," Isaacman said. But when the Inspiration4 crew talked to some NASA astronauts, they said "using the bathroom in space is hard, and you've got to be very what was the word? very kind to one another."
He added that, despite the on-board toilet issues, nobody suffered any accidents or indignities.
"I don't know who was training them, but we were able to work through it and get [the toilet] going even with what was initially challenging circumstances, so there was nothing ever like, you know, in the cabin or anything like that," he said.
Figuring out how to safely relieve oneself in space was, however, was a fundamental question posed at the dawn of human spaceflight half a century ago, and the path to answers was not error-free.
During the 1969 Apollo 10 mission the one that saw Thomas Stafford, John Young and Eugene Cernan circumnavigate the moon Stafford reported back to mission control on Day Six of the mission that a piece of waste was floating through the cabin, according to once-confidential government documents.
"Give me a napkin, quick," Stafford is recorded as saying a few minutes before Cernan spots another one: "Here's another goddamn turd."
The feces collection process at the time, a NASA report later revealed, was an "extremely basic" plastic bag that was "taped to the buttocks."
"The fecal bag system was marginally functional and was described as very 'distasteful' by the crew," an official NASA report from 2007 later revealed. "The bags provided no odor control in the small capsule and the odor was prominent."
In-space toilets have evolved since then, thanks to strenuous efforts from NASA scientists, as journalist Mary Roach, author of "Packing for Mars," told NPR in 2010.
"The problem here is you've got this very elaborate space toilet, and you need to test it. Well, you've got to, you know, haul it over to Ellington Field, board it onto a zero-gravity simulator a plane that does these elaborate up-and-down arcs and then you've got to find some poor volunteer from the Waste System Management Office to test it. And I don't know about you, but, I mean, to do it on demand in 20 seconds, now that is asking a lot of your colon. So it's very elaborate and tricky."
And, Roach writes in "Packing for Mars," astronaut potty training is no laughing matter.
"The simple act of urination can, without gravity, become a medical emergency requiring catheterization and embarrassing radio consults with flight surgeons," she wrote. And because urine behaves differently inside the bladder in space, it can be very difficult to tell when one needs to go.
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An alarm went off during SpaceX's all-tourist space flight. The problem was the toilet - WCVB Boston
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Elon Musk says Tesla, SpaceX commitments in Texas a reason for split with Grimes – austin360
Posted: at 5:49 pm
Elon Musk, Grimes' baby name 'X A-12' broken down
Entrepreneur Elon Musk and musical artist Grimes welcomed a baby boy, "X A-12," to the world. Here's a possible explanation of the name.
USA TODAY
EntrepreneurElon Musk and musician Grimes, otherwise known as Claire Boucher, are "semi-separated."In a exclusive interview with Page Six, Musk said the two remain on good terms.
Musk said a reason for the breakup was due to his work with SpaceX and Tesla requiring him to be in Texas whereas Grimes work as a recording artists is mostlyin Los Angeles.
It's electric: With Tesla leading the way, Austin revs up as a key electric vehicle hub
Musk made the move to Texas last year, reportedly buying a multi-million dollar home in Austin and a tiny home in Boca Chica near SpaceX's operational center, too.
We are semi-separated but still love each other, see each other frequently and are on great terms, Musk told Page Six.
The two began dating in 2018. Grimes gave birth to the couple's son in 2020. A boy, the two named him "X A-Xii." Musk told Page Six the two will continue to co-parent their son.
Elon Musk has five other children with his ex-wifeJustine Musk.
In a 2010interview with Marie Claire just two years after their divorce, Justine said she was estranged from her ex-husband. She said they shared custody of the children but deals with his assistant on those matters.
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Elon Musk says Tesla, SpaceX commitments in Texas a reason for split with Grimes - austin360
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