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Category Archives: Transhuman News

The Spatials – iOS / Android – HD Gameplay Trailer – Video

Posted: May 7, 2014 at 11:46 pm


The Spatials - iOS / Android - HD Gameplay Trailer
The Spatials by Weird and Wry / Carlos Carrasco (iOS / Android) It #39;s the year 5781 and you have been chosen to build and lead a space station in a wild corner of the galaxy! Design its rooms...

By: TouchGameplay

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US Space Taxi: Vehicles to ferry astronauts to and from the ISS – Video

Posted: at 11:46 pm


US Space Taxi: Vehicles to ferry astronauts to and from the ISS
The US space agency retired its space shuttle fleet in 2011. Since then, the only way American astronauts can get to the International Space Station is through its old rival, Russia. But the...

By: CCTV

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KSP Rescaled, Part 20: Station Destruction – Video

Posted: at 11:46 pm


KSP Rescaled, Part 20: Station Destruction
Space Station Adventure has some fatal construction errors, and it has to go. Should be a really cool reentry! Get the game here: https://kerbalspaceprogram.com For a mod list and other informati...

By: TheWinterOwl

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KSP Rescaled, Part 20: Station Destruction - Video

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Boeing’s Big Bet on the Future of Space Travel – Video

Posted: at 11:46 pm


Boeing #39;s Big Bet on the Future of Space Travel
May 7 (Bloomberg) --- Boeing is known for making airplanes, but they actually have a long history in space. They #39;ve been a contractor for NASA on every manned space mission ever flown. A new...

By: Bloomberg News

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Dangling Dextre Digs out Docked Dragon Depot prior to Station Departure

Posted: at 11:46 pm

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Backdropped against a cloudy portion of Earth, Canadas Dextre robotic handyman and Canadarm2 dig out the trunk of SpaceXs Dragon cargo vessel docked to the ISS after completing a task 225 miles above the home planet. Credit: NASA

To close out their final week aboard the International Space Station, three of the six Expedition 39 crew members are completing their unloading tasks inside the docked commercial SpaceX Dragon cargo freighter and other duties while teams at Mission Control in Houston conduct delicate robotics work outside with dazzling maneuvers of the Dextre robot to remove the last external experiment from the vessels storage truck.

See a dazzling gallery of photos of Dextre dangling outside the docked Dragon depot above and below.

On Monday, May 5, the robotics team at NASA Mission Control Center at the Johnson Space Center in Houston carefully guided Canadas Dextre robotic handyman attached to the end of the 57-foot long Canadarm2 to basically dig out the final payload item housed in the unpressurized trunk section at the rear of the SpaceX Dragon cargo vessel docked to the ISS.

Dextre stands for Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator and was contributed to the station by the Canadian Space Agency. It measures 12 feet tall and is outfitted with a pair of arms and an array of finely detailed tools to carry out intricate and complex tasks that would otherwise require spacewalking astronauts.

The Canadarm2 with Dextre in its grasp conducts external cargo transfers from the SpaceX Dragon resupply ship. Credit: NASA TV

The massive orbiting outpost was soaring some 225 miles above the home planet as Dextres work was in progress to remove the Optical PAyload for Lasercomm Science, or OPALS, from the Dragons truck.

The next step is to install OPALS on the Express Logistics Carrier-1 (ELC-1) depot at the end of the stations port truss on Wednesday.

Mondays attempt was the second try at grappling OPALS. The initial attempt last Thursday was unsuccessful due to a problem gripping the payloads grapple fixture with the Special Purpose Dextrous Manipulator, or Dextre, NASA reported.

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Dangling Dextre Digs out Docked Dragon Depot prior to Station Departure

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First-Ever HD Live Stream From Space Is Your New Favorite Time Suck

Posted: at 11:46 pm

By Chris Taylor2014-05-07 23:52:39 UTC

As astronauts who've spent time aboard the International Space Station have noted, there is nothing more beautiful than watching 16 sunrises a day.

Now you can see them all from your desk, thanks to four HD cameras NASA has installed aboard the ISS and Ustream, which is transmitting the results live, and for free, to the whole Internet.

The view is such stunning high quality, it's hard to believe this is just an experiment. The cameras are being exposed to the harsh radiation of space so that engineers can figure out how to build better, more radiation-resistant cameras in the future, according to the space agency. Another hard-to-believe fact: These cameras were constructed and are maintained with the help of high school kids across the U.S.

The best part? This NASA note on the feed: "There is no audio on purpose. Add your own soundtrack."

The experimental feed was meant to launch a couple of days ago, but last-minute glitches held it back. It seems to have been worth the wait, however. Just under 7 million viewers have been watching the feed at any one time, a large enough number that we're wondering what kind of impact this glorious view is having on the economy.

The link to the feed has been tweeted more than 11,000 times Wednesday, with some well-known names expressing their delight alongside regular, earthbound Joes:

Image: NASA

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New Craft Will Be America's First Space Lifeboat in 40 Years

Posted: at 11:46 pm

The next generation of American spacecraft designed to carry people into low-Earth orbit will be required to function as a lifeboat for the International Space Station for up to seven months. This service has not been provided by an American spacecraft since an Apollo command module remained docked to Skylab for about three months from 1973 to '74.

Like a lifeboat on a cruise ship, the spacecraft is not expected to be called into service to quickly evacuate people but it has to be ready for that job just in case.

Right now, the lifeboat function on the space station is served by requiring a pair of Russian Soyuz spacecraft to be docked at all times. Each Soyuz holds three people. So with two docked, there can be six people working on the station at any one time. The crew drops to three when one Soyuz leaves and before another arrives during a procedure called an indirect handover.

There are fundamentally two capabilities a spacecraft must perform to be called a lifeboat, said NASA engineers who are working with companies developing spacecraft in the agency's Commercial Crew Program (CCP).

First, the spacecraft needs to provide a shelter for astronauts in case of a problem on the station. Second, the ship has to be able to quickly get all its systems operating and detach from the station for a potential return to Earth.

"You've got to make sure it provides the same capability on day 210 as it does on day 1," said Justin Kerr, manager of CCP's Spacecraft Office.

Two things make it tough for spacecraft designers when it comes to the lifeboat feature: power and protection from things outside the spacecraft like micrometeoroids. The vast amount of electricity generated by the space station's acre of solar arrays is reserved for the station's systems and science experiments.

The amount of power dedicated for a docked crew spacecraft is similar to the amount of electricity a refrigerator uses.

"There's very little power available for these spacecraft so what we're really driving the partners to do is develop this quiescent mode that draws very little power," Kerr said.

Ideally, designers want to have the spacecraft powered off when it is attached to the station. That might not be possible, though, because air doesn't automatically circulate in microgravity the way it does on Earth. So a spacecraft, even with its hatch open inside of the station, can develop dead spots, or sections of the cabin without air for breathing, unless there is something to move the air around.

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NASA Television to Air Expedition 39 Crew's Return from Space Station

Posted: at 11:46 pm

Three crew members currently aboard the International Space Station are scheduled to end more than six months on the orbiting laboratory Tuesday, May 13 (U.S. time), and NASA Television will provide complete coverage of their return to Earth, from farewells to landing.

Expedition 39 Commander Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Flight Engineer Rick Mastracchio of NASA and Soyuz commander Mikhail Tyurin of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) will undock their Soyuz TMA-11M spacecraft from the station at 6:33 p.m. EDT. The spacecraft will land southeast of the remote town of Dzhezkazgan in Kazakhstan at 9:57 p.m. (7:57 a.m. May 14 local time in Dzhezkazgan). Their return will wrap up 188 days in space since launching from Kazakhstan Nov. 7.

Under the command of NASA astronaut Steve Swanson, Expedition 40 formally will begin aboard the station when Expedition 39 undocks. Swanson and his crewmates, Alexander Skvortsov and Oleg Artemyev of Roscosmos, will operate the station as a three-person crew for two weeks until the arrival of three new crew members. Reid Wiseman of NASA, Max Suraev of Roscosmos and Alexander Gerst of the European Space Agency are scheduled to launch from Baikonur, Kazakhstan on May 28 (U.S. time).

NASA TV coverage of Expedition 39's return to Earth will begin Monday, May 12, with the change of command ceremony in which Wakata will turn over command of station operations to Swanson. Coverage will continue Tuesday and Wednesday with Expedition 39 landing and post-landing activities.

All times Eastern:

Monday, May 12: 3 p.m. -- Expedition 39/40 Change of Command Ceremony

Tuesday, May 13: 3 p.m. -- Farewells and hatch closure (hatch closure scheduled at 3:15 p.m.) 6:15 p.m. -- Undocking (undocking scheduled at 6:33 p.m.) 8:45 p.m. -- Deorbit burn and landing (deorbit burn scheduled at 9:03 p.m. landing scheduled at 9:57 p.m.)

Wednesday, May 14: 12 a.m. -- Video File of hatch closure, undocking and landing activities 12 p.m. -- Video File of post-landing activities and interviews with Mastracchio and Wakata in Kazakhstan (pending availability)

For more information on the International Space Station, visit:

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Plant Life on Mars? NASA May Send Up Greenhouse in 2021

Posted: at 11:45 pm

Plant life may touch down on Mars in 2021.

Researchers have proposed putting a plant-growth experiment on NASA's next Mars rover, which is scheduled to launch in mid-2020 and land on the Red Planet in early 2021. The investigation, known as the Mars Plant Experiment (MPX), could help lay the foundation for the colonization of Mars, its designers say.

A rendition of the proposed location of the Mars Plant Experiment (MPX) on top of a Curiosity rover image. MPX would be affixed to NASA's next Mars rover, which is due to launch in 2020.

"In order to do a long-term, sustainable base on Mars, you would want to be able to establish that plants can at least grow on Mars," MPX deputy principal investigator Heather Smith, of NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California, said April 24 at the Humans 2 Mars conference in Washington, D.C. "This would be the first step in that we just send the seeds there and watch them grow." [The Boldest Mars Missions in History]

The MPX team led by fellow Ames scientist Chris McKay isn't suggesting that the 2020 Mars rover should play gardener, digging a hole with its robotic arm and planting seeds in the Red Planet's dirt. Rather, the experiment would be entirely self-contained, eliminating the chance that Earth life could escape and perhaps get a foothold on Mars.

MPX would employ a clear "CubeSat" box the case for a cheap and tiny satellite which would be affixed to the exterior of the 2020 rover. This box would hold Earth air and about 200 seeds of Arabidopsis, a small flowering plant that's commonly used in scientific research.

The seeds would receive water when the rover touched down on Mars, and would then be allowed to grow for two weeks or so.

"In 15 days, we'll have a little greenhouse on Mars," Smith said.

MPX would provide an organism-level test of the Mars environment, showing how Earth life deals with the Red Planet's relatively high radiation levels and low gravity, which is about 40 percent as strong as that of Earth, she added.

"We would go from this simple experiment to the greenhouses on Mars for a sustainable base," Smith said. "That would be the goal."

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54 Canadians still in the running for one-way trip to Mars

Posted: at 11:45 pm

Scott Sutherland Digital Meteorologist, theweathernetwork.com

Tuesday, May 6, 2014, 2:09 PM - Mars One announced its latest round of cuts Monday, and the number of Canadians still in the running dipping to just 54, from the nearly 2,000 that originally signed up. So, what's next for these potential Mars colonists?

A total of 21 Canadians were cut from the list of candidates as of Monday, due to a mixture of personal or medical reasons. According to Mars One, most of those cut for personal reasons were between the ages of 40-50, while those cut for medical reasons were in the 20-30 age group. For some of those who didn't pass the medical examination, there was very likely a sense of disappointment, but their participation up to this point may have saved their lives.

What really left an impression with us is the fact that the medical tests turned out to have a major impact on the candidates' lives," said Mars One Chief Medical Officer Norbert Kraft, MD, in a statement, "as some of them found out that they needed to undergo an operation, where sick and needed medical attention, or even had a malignant form of cancer that otherwise would not have been detected in such an early stage."

Now, the 54 Canadians who made the cut, along with 651 others from nations around the world, will advance to the interviews round of the selection process, which will apparently be televised for the world to see. Although it has solely been up to the Mars One selection committee to choose candidates so far, it may very well be up to us, the public, to decide who advances to the final stage. According to the Mars One website, the audience will choose one winner from each region of the world, and the selection committee will choose additional candidates.

After the interview stage ends and the candidates moving forward have been selected, they will be split into international teams, and will start on the first short-term training program for the mission. Their goal: prove to the world that they have the 'right stuff' to be the very first human colonists on Mars.

Six teams of four members each are expected to advance from there to the Mars One astronaut corps, to begin their final training. The first team of four is expected to lift off sometime in 2024, for a landing on Mars in 2025, and new teams will arrive every two years afterwards.

Can it be done?

Mars One has an ambitious plan, for sure, but doesn't necessarily reach beyond our capabilities. We don't have what it takes right at this moment, of course, but there's roughly 10 years before the first crew launches. With their dedicated approach to the mission, they could be the ones developing the technologies and techniques that we use for planetary colonization for years to come.

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