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Category Archives: Space Station

Space Station 13 Ep15: Speedy Goonzales – Video

Posted: January 20, 2013 at 5:46 am


Space Station 13 Ep15: Speedy Goonzales
8 minute syndicate round.

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Space Station 13 Ep15: Speedy Goonzales - Video

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BYOND: Space Station 13 – Co-Op Adventures – Part One – Baby Steps [HD] – Video

Posted: at 5:46 am


BYOND: Space Station 13 - Co-Op Adventures - Part One - Baby Steps [HD]
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BYOND: Space Station 13 - Co-Op Adventures - Part One - Baby Steps [HD] - Video

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Installing the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module on the Space Station | NASA ISS Science Video – Video

Posted: January 18, 2013 at 10:46 pm


Installing the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module on the Space Station | NASA ISS Science Video
Visit my website at http://www.junglejoel.com - here #39;s an animation of the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module being extracted and attached to the International Space Station. Once attached, the module is then inflated. Please rate and comment, thanks! Video Credits NASA

By: CoconutScienceLab

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Installing the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module on the Space Station | NASA ISS Science Video - Video

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-Teaser- Space Station Clean-Up Crew (Killing Floor) – Video

Posted: at 10:46 pm


-Teaser- Space Station Clean-Up Crew (Killing Floor)
Teaser video for a Machinima video my friends and I are working on. Featuring Killing floor game play with a SS13 plot, coming sometime in a week or so. Like if you enjoyed the video, it helps spread the channel! Sub for more and to stay tuned! Follow me on: twitter.com Ask me Questions: http://www.formspring.me Channels that you should check out! http://www.youtube.com http://www.youtube.com

By: SeanTheSheepVideos

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-Teaser- Space Station Clean-Up Crew (Killing Floor) - Video

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Space Station and Full Moon Glow in Yosemite Night Sky (Photo)

Posted: at 10:46 pm

The International Space Station shoots across the sky as the full moon shines over Half Dome at Yosemite National Park in this beautiful image.

Scott McGuire took this photo on Oct. 28, 2012 from Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park, Calif. He used a Pentax K-5 camera and a Pentax 15mm Limited lens to capture the photo.

"I was at Glacier Point to photograph the sunset and full moon, theInternational Space Station was an unexpected bonus," McGuire wrote SPACE.com in an email.

Half Dome is a large peak rising 5,000 miles above Yosemite Valley. The steep, granite mountain is one of the most popular hikes in Yosemite National Park.

With a wingspan as long as a football field, the International Space Station is the largest human-made structure in space. The spacecraft is home to six astronauts representing the United States, Russia and Canada, and has the same living space as a five-bedroom home.

The space station can be easily seen from Earth by the unaided eye, if you know where and when to look. At times, it can even rival Venus, the brightest planet in the night sky, with its intensity. NASA recently launched a newSpot the Station website that allows stargazers to sign up for text messages to learn when the orbiting laboratory will be flying over their location.

Editor's note:If you snap an amazing photo of Venus and the moon, or any other night sky object, thatyou'd like to share for a possible story or image gallery, send photos, comments and your name and location to managing editor Tariq Malik atspacephotos@space.com.

Follow Space.com on Twitter @SPACEdotcom. We're also onFacebook&Google+.

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Space Station and Full Moon Glow in Yosemite Night Sky (Photo)

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VVVVVV (3): Space Station Two – Video

Posted: at 10:46 pm


VVVVVV (3): Space Station Two
Don #39;t tell me what trinkets I can and can #39;t collect, chump. SA thread: forums.somethingawful.com Game info here: thelettervsixtim.es Soundtrack here: http://www.souleye.se Preview tracks heard in the video here: souleyedigitalmusic.bandcamp.com souleyedigitalmusic.bandcamp.com

By: SAPhiggle

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VVVVVV (3): Space Station Two - Video

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The Space Station Balloons — Literally

Posted: at 10:46 pm

NASA, building the International Space Station over the last two decades, ran into ballooning costs. One solution it's now embraced is ballooning -- literally -- in orbit.

NASA has signed a $17.8 million contract with Bigelow Aerospace, a firm based near Las Vegas, to build an inflatable habitat that could be added to the space station by 2015. The new compartment is called BEAM, short for Bigelow Expandable Activity Module.

In announcing the deal, NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver said a lightweight, inflatable compartment could be dramatically cheaper than the metal cylinders that make up most of the space station's living area.

"Let's face it; the most expensive aspect of taking things in space is the launch," she said. "So the magnitude of importance of this for NASA really can't be overstated."

Bigelow's mastermind is Robert Bigelow, an entrepreneur who made his fortune in construction and hotels -- the Budget Suites chain of extended-stay hotels is his. Now he's taken extended stays to higher levels; since 2006 Bigelow has successfully launched two inflatable prototype spacecraft into orbit.

BEAM would be folded up in the nose of a rocket -- perhaps one supplied by Elon Musk's SpaceX company -- and inflated after it is attached to a port on the space station. The prototype would be 13 feet across, but later versions could be three times as roomy as the cylindrical chambers that now make up the station -- at less cost.

When Bigelow says "inflatable," don't think of something like a balloon. The outer skin has multiple layers, some of them made of bulletproof Vectran fibers. It might have a little give, but it would be as tough as snow tires. Bigelow has suggested that micrometeoroids might actually bounce off instead of puncturing a ship's metal walls.

The technology, actually, was originally NASA's. It made plans for inflatable living quarters for the space station, but canceled them in the face of budget cuts, and licensed its patent to Bigelow.

Robert Bigelow has a colorful reputation, but when ABC News spoke with him a few years ago, he spoke about space exploration as dispassionately as one might about, say, extended-stay hotels. His company has plans for affordable habitats in the cosmos, perhaps to be rented out to countries or companies that cannot afford their own space programs.

"Think of us as if we were building an office building in space," he said. "Other countries or corporations would be our tenants."

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The Space Station Balloons -- Literally

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A bounce-house addition to the International Space Station?

Posted: at 10:46 pm

NASA and Bigelow Aerospace plan to add a $17.8 million inflatable room to the International Space Station. The Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, will house astronauts, and is built to withstand heat, radiation, debris and other assaults.

NASA is partnering with a commercial space company in a bid to replace the cumbersome "metal cans" that now serve as astronauts' homes in space with inflatable bounce-house-like habitats that can be deployed on the cheap.

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A $17.8 million test project will send to the International Space Station an inflatable room that can be compressed into a 7-foot tube for delivery, officials said Wednesday in a news conference at North Las Vegas-based Bigelow Aerospace.

If the module proves durable during two years at the space station, it could open the door to habitats on the moon and missions to Mars, NASA engineer Glen Miller said.

The agency chose Bigelow for the contract because it was the only company working on inflatable technology, said NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver.

Founder and President Robert Bigelow, who made his fortune in the hotel industry before getting into the space business in 1999, framed the gambit as an out-of-this-world real estate venture. He hopes to sell his spare tire habitats to scientific companies and wealthy adventurers looking for space hotels.

NASA is expected to install the 13-foot, blimp-like module in a space station port by 2015. Bigelow plans to begin selling stand-alone space homes the next year.

The new technology provides three times as much room as the existing aluminum models, and is also easier and less costly to build, Miller said.

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A bounce-house addition to the International Space Station?

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Next Space Station Crew Faces Out-of-This-World Final Exams

Posted: at 10:46 pm

An American astronaut and two Russian cosmonauts are preparing to join the crew of the International Space Station in March, but before they blast off, they'll have to face the thing all students dread: final exams.

NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, along with Alexander Misurkin and Pavel Vinogradov of Russia, are due to launch toward the space station aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft on March 28. They will lift off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and join the station's Expedition 35 crew a few days later. The spaceflyers plan to spend about six months in space performing experiments and keeping the $100 billion space laboratory in tip-top shape.

But for now, the crew is spending its final weeks before launch cramming for a critical two-day exam that will take place in the Russian town of Star City. The test is one all space station crews must pass before they are cleared to launch.

"We're honing in on the end of a two-and-a-half-year process, which is culminating with some intense training here in Houston," Cassidy said in a NASA briefing today (Jan. 17). "We'll soon be in Star City where we'll have our final exams."

The three men will spend their first exam day inside a life-size simulator of the Russian segment of the space station, carrying out typical tasks and responding to simulated malfunctions that test their abilities to cope in a crisis. [Space Jet Lag: How Astronauts Cope (Video)]

On the second day, they'll tackle the same challenges inside a Soyuz simulator, carrying out mock launch, rendezvous and undocking sequences while clad in their Russian Sokol spacesuits. All this will be observed by a Russian state commission that includes veteran cosmonauts and officials.

"It sounds scary and it is intimidating the first time you do it," Cassidy told SPACE.com. "When you're sitting in a big gigantic room with a lot of experienced Soyuz commanders, and they're asking questions about why you put your hand in a certain place, it can be intimidating. But in my opinion it is a good process. It can really make you step up your game."

Crews must pass the exams before they are allowed to launch to space, but if at first they don't succeed, they do get a second chance to try again.

"Recently there have been some crews that have made a critical mistake," Cassidy said. "And what theyll do is make you redo that section and just fine-tune it."

Cassidy, Vinogradov and Misurkin will be taking their test March 6 and 7. The first two spaceflyers have some experience under their belt, as both have flown to space before: Cassidy flew on NASA'sSTS-127 mission of the space shuttle Endeavour in 2009, while Vinogradov is a veteran of two previous spaceflights, including a trip to Russia's space station Mir in 1997 and the International Space Station's Expedition 13 mission in 2004.

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Next Space Station Crew Faces Out-of-This-World Final Exams

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Space station to get $18 million inflatable room

Posted: January 17, 2013 at 4:48 pm

Posted: 6:19 AM Updated: 6:19 AM

Hannah Dreier / The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS NASA is partnering with a commercial space company in a bid to replace the cumbersome "metal cans" that now serve as astronauts' homes in space with inflatable bounce-house-like habitats that can be deployed on the cheap.

click image to enlarge

This artist's rendering provided by Bigelow Aerospace shows an inflatable space station. NASA is partnering with this commercial space company to test an inflatable room that can be compressed into a 7-foot tube for delivery to the International Space Station. NASA is expected to install the module by 2015.

AP

A $17.8 million test project will send to the International Space Station an inflatable room that can be compressed into a 7-foot tube for delivery, officials said Wednesday in a news conference at North Las Vegas-based Bigelow Aerospace.

If the module proves durable during two years at the space station, it could open the door to habitats on the moon and missions to Mars, NASA engineer Glen Miller said.

The agency chose Bigelow for the contract because it was the only company working on inflatable technology, said NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver.

Founder and President Robert Bigelow, who made his fortune in the hotel industry before getting into the space business in 1999, framed the gambit as an out-of-this-world real estate venture. He hopes to sell his spare tire habitats to scientific companies and wealthy adventurers looking for space hotels.

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Space station to get $18 million inflatable room

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