• Space Station Crew to Return to Earth Sunday

    Updated: 2012-06-30 15:34:00
    Three astronauts living on the International Space Station will return home to Earth Sunday after spending more than six months in orbit.

  • This Week at NASA Recap for Friday, June 29, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-30 14:12:50
    In This Week at NASA Senator Barbara Mikulski, chairwoman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies, was joined by officials from NASA, Orbital Sciences Corporation and others at the Wallops Flight Facility for an update of Orbital's Antares rocket and the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport's new pad, from which the vehicle will launch and more.

  • Catching up with the space station crew before they fly home

    Updated: 2012-06-30 14:00:36
    After six months in space astronauts Oleg Kononenko, Don Pettit and André Kuipers, whose tour of duty began two days before Christmas, will leave the space station Saturday evening to return home. Before their departure I had a chance to speak on Thursday morning with Pettit, Kuipers and Joe Acaba, who arrived on the station [...]

  • What’s Your Favorite Planet?

    Updated: 2012-06-30 00:44:49
    Mars? Jupiter? Pluto (regardless of its label?) Watch this video, assembled by 18-year-old Tomislav Safundžic from Croatia, and you just might be reminded that it’s Earth. All original images courtesy of the Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, NASA Johnson Space Center, via The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth. Music by The XX. © Jason [...]

  • Smoking Wildfires Seen From Space

    Updated: 2012-06-30 00:17:03
    Wildfires continue to rage across the western United States, burning forests and property alike, and even the most remote have sent up enormous plumes of smoke that are plainly visible to astronauts aboard the Space Station. The photo above was taken by an Expedition 31 crew member on June 27, showing thick smoke drifting northeast [...]

  • Ridiculously awesome photo and time lapse of a stormcloud at twilight

    Updated: 2012-06-29 22:17:20
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Boulder wildfire Wait just a second No really , wait JUST A SECOND Ridiculously awesome photo and time lapse of a stormcloud at twilight I’ve been following photographer Jeffrey Sullivan on Google+ for a while now it’s a great place to see the work of talented people , and that’s where I found his lunar eclipse sequence I posted here last year . Jeff is really good , and gets amazing shots of the sky . But today he posted the best shot I’ve seen from him : this jaw-dropping composite photo of a cumulonimbus cloud spawning lightning below and with star trails : above Holy . .

  • Titan Likely Harbors a Layer of Liquid Water Under Its Ice Shell

    Updated: 2012-06-29 22:15:54
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  • Famous meteorites yield mineral that’s brand new to science but old to solar system

    Updated: 2012-06-29 20:21:06
    Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment Lots of Ink : Asteroid foundation named after a fable seeks big-money telescope to find real ones Famous meteorites yield mineral that’s brand new to science but old to solar system Here is some essentially arcane , minor news that nonetheless received considerable attention from reporters . The news is that analysis of fragments of the Allende Meteor , whose pieces scattered across Mexico in 1969, revealed a mineral not in the catalogs . One reason is catches the eye is its common name , Panguite , and the press release from Caltech explaining that it derives from Pan Gu , a Chinese mythological giant who , the tale goes , swung an ax and smote yin from yang to make sky . Ancient mythologies doesn’t matter whether

  • An Astronomical Tour in the Realm of Galaxies

    Updated: 2012-06-29 19:15:00
    Astronomer Mark Thompson guides us through the summer skies, pointing out some galactic treasures.

  • Lots of Ink: Asteroid foundation named after a fable seeks big-money telescope to find real ones

    Updated: 2012-06-29 19:02:16
    : Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment Lots of Ink for freaky big Colorado Wildfires . Is freaky the new normal Famous meteorites yield mineral that’s brand new to science but old to solar system Lots of Ink : Asteroid foundation named after a fable seeks big-money telescope to find real ones Venture capital space missions are in the news a lot lately so why not this latest news from the B612 Foundation Yesterday , as promised , it officially declared a goal to raise a few hundred million dollars for a space telescope . From solar orbit it would search for smallish asteroids , tens to a few hundred meters wide , with orbits that make it a bad bet to assume they won’t hit Earth in the near or nearly near future . Such things could take out cities , lay

  • Video: Kennedy Space Center 50th Anniversary

    Updated: 2012-06-29 18:27:12
    On July 1, 1962, the Launch Operations Center in Florida officially became operational. The name was later changed to John F. Kennedy Space Center in honor of the president and his vision of Americans visiting the Moon. This video looks back at the many launches and space exploration highlights that occurred at KSC, so enjoy [...]

  • Lots of Ink for freaky big Colorado Wildfires. Is freaky the new normal?

    Updated: 2012-06-29 18:15:47
    . Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment SINC : La Nasa tergiversa la información para hacer creer que descubrió hielo en el cráter Shackleton en el polo sur de la Luna Lots of Ink : Asteroid foundation named after a fable seeks big-money telescope to find real ones Lots of Ink for freaky big Colorado Wildfires . Is freaky the new normal What with space photographs by astronauts , the always-present questions about the role of climate change , ongoing convulsion and revision in America’s western landscape , plus wildlife ecology aspects , the colossal wildfires in Colorado can easily be fitted in to the science beat . But what prompts a post is this photo from Reuters’s wire with credit to the US Air Force’s p.r . people at its academy . Is that real It

  • First Light Image for NuSTAR

    Updated: 2012-06-29 17:02:24
    Here is the first image taken by the newest space mission, NuSTAR, or the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, the first space telescope with the ability to see the highest energy X-rays in our universe and produce crisp images of them. “Today, we obtained the first-ever focused images of the high-energy X-ray universe,” said Fiona Harrison, [...]

  • Shenzhou-9 Lands Safely

    Updated: 2012-06-29 16:06:28
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Shenzhou-9 Lands Safely By Keith Cowing Posted June 29, 2012 12:06 PM View Comments XINHUA Shenzhou-9 Crew At Thee Landing Site China is celebrating the safe return of three astronauts , who successfully completed a mission that included the country's first manual docking in space and the first Chinese woman astronaut . Live television images of the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft's return were broadcast around China . Friday After re-entering earth's atmosphere , a red and white striped parachute slowed the capsule so

  • Protecting Astronauts from Solar Storms

    Updated: 2012-06-29 15:52:15
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Protecting Astronauts from Solar Storms By Keith Cowing Posted June 29, 2012 11:52 AM View Comments With the impending solar maximum expected to bring heightened rates of flares and coronal mass ejections CMEs putting at risk an ever-increasing human presence in space , Oh et al . designed and assessed a prediction system to keep astronauts safe from these solar . storms During a solar flare or CME , particles from the Sun can be accelerated to very high energies-in some cases travelling near the speed of light .

  • Kennedy Space Center 50th Anniversary Video

    Updated: 2012-06-29 15:46:47
    To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) NASA has released this video montage of highlights. From Kennedy's speech, Glen's Friendship 7 flight, the Apollo years, unmaned launches, the Shuttle era and through to the transformation of KSC for the next era of U.S. human spaceflight, watch it all.

  • Robots Tested in Sample Return Challenge

    Updated: 2012-06-29 14:54:49
    Caption: Participants in NASA’s Sample Return Robot Challenge. Credit: NASA Editor’s note: This guest post was written by Andy Tomaswick, an electrical engineer who follows space science and technology. Picking up rocks can be harder than you’d think. That is one of the lessons to take away from the recently completed Sample Return Robot Challenge [...]

  • Private Telescope to Hunt for Killer Asteroids

    Updated: 2012-06-29 08:23:14
    Two former NASA astronauts have given themselves a new mission: To seek out potentially dangerous asteroids so humanity can have enough time to do something about it.

  • Success! China's Astronaut Trio Return to Earth

    Updated: 2012-06-29 05:22:00
    The Shenzhou-9 spacecraft touched down safely after a successful 13-day mission to test orbital docking technologies.

  • Huge lenticular cloud near Mt. Fuji

    Updated: 2012-06-29 01:44:15
    . Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Privately and publicly looking for Earth-threatening asteroids Cannonball star blasts away from the scene of the crime Huge lenticular cloud near Mt . Fuji Astronomers love clouds . Well , actually a lot of us hate clouds , but a lot of us are fascinated by meteorology , and clouds in particular . I love em all , from cumulonimbus to mammatus . But there’s something about the bizarre lenticular clouds lens-shaped beasties that form downwind from mountains . So how could I not love this video of a gigantic lenticular that formed near Mt . Fuji in Japan Yegads . I have a decent

  • Western wildfires seen from space

    Updated: 2012-06-29 01:42:04
    A four-minute video from the International Space Station, released today by NASA, captures a beautiful and horrible sight: Ribbons of smoke drifting across Colorado and other Western states, due to a rash of wildfires. You can also see sunlight glinting off lakes, as well as the  hellip;

  • CSExtra – Friday, June 29, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-29 01:23:16
    To subscribe to CSExtra via RSS feed click here. If you would prefer to receive CSExtra in e-mail format, e-mail us at Info@spacecoalition.com with the word SUBSCRIBE in the subject line. Friday’s CSExtra offers the latest reporting and commentary on space related activities under way around the world. China’s three member Shenzhou 9 crew descends safely to [...]

  • First-Ever Changes in an Exoplanet Atmosphere Detected by Hubble and Swift Telescopes

    Updated: 2012-06-29 00:10:59
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  • Moon of Mars – Rife with Life?

    Updated: 2012-06-28 23:39:00
    Phobos – one of two moons of Mars – could well be the site for life detection beyond Earth. That’s the belief of Purdue University researchers, arguing that Phobos may be an extraterrestrial repository for microbes blasted off of Mars by being on the receiving end of asteroid hits. “A sample from the moon Phobos, [...]

  • Voyager 1: The Little Spacecraft That Could

    Updated: 2012-06-28 22:08:26
    Voyager 1, the spacecraft that launched on a tour of the solar in 1977, is getting ready to enter interplanetary space -- what a journey it's had!

  • LA Times, Chr. Science Monitor, etc: A record! 7.2 trillion degrees F (4 trillion C, or K take your pick)

    Updated: 2012-06-28 20:18:20
    , . , : , Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment Nature News , etc : An undergrad hears news of a puzzle , tracks down an odd red crucifix over ancient Britain SINC : La Nasa tergiversa la información para hacer creer que descubrió hielo en el cráter Shackleton en el polo sur de la Luna LA Times , Chr . Science Monitor , etc : A record 7.2 trillion degrees F 4 trillion C , or K take your pick The highest temperature anywhere on Earth ever , anywhere in today’s universe for all I know , has been briefly inferred in the teeny fireballs of colliding particles at the US’s Brookhaven National Laboratory . The Guinness World Record people are in agreement . To set the mark , the physicists banged gold nuclei into each another at near-light speed . They have a

  • On a cooler day, some isolated storms pop up

    Updated: 2012-06-28 20:09:06
    The sea breeze has produced some pop-up thunderstorms across the area this afternoon, including pea-sized hail and lots of lightning to the north and northwest of downtown. The storm is essentially moving northwest between Highway 290 and the Tomball Parkway. These storms, and any others that form this afternoon, are being driven by warm afternoon [...]

  • Privately and publicly looking for Earth-threatening asteroids

    Updated: 2012-06-28 19:53:24
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Stellar tantrum blasts away part of its planet’s atmosphere Huge lenticular cloud near Mt . Fuji Privately and publicly looking for Earth-threatening asteroids Note : In the interest of full disclosure , I am friends with many of the folks on both teams described below . I have tried to be scrupulously fair to both missions , and to be honest as I say below the best thing to happen would be for both missions to be locked , loaded , and looking for potentially hazardous rocks . The B612 Foundation is a group of scientists , astronauts , astronomers , and engineers who have come

  • Nature News, etc: An undergrad hears news of a puzzle, tracks down an odd red crucifix over ancient Britain…

    Updated: 2012-06-28 19:30:12
    , : , Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment AP : An enterprising wide look at what apes think about themselves LA Times , Chr . Science Monitor , etc : A record 7.2 trillion degrees F 4 trillion C , or K take your pick Nature News , etc : An undergrad hears news of a puzzle , tracks down an odd red crucifix over ancient Britain Did a scribe in Britain during the Dark Ages record a supernova Maybe . At Nature News Richard A . Rick Lovett reports this week the story of a Nature podcast over a puzzling spike in carbon-14 in the eighth century . It is recorded in tree rings and suggests that a wave of high energy radiation hit the upper atmosphere back then . Listening was an undergrad in biochemistry at UC Santa Cruz . He used his familiarity with ancient

  • Subsurface Ocean on Titan

    Updated: 2012-06-28 18:56:25
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Subsurface Ocean on Titan By Keith Cowing Posted June 28, 2012 2:56 PM View Comments Data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft have revealed Saturn's moon Titan likely harbors a layer of liquid water under its ice . shell Researchers saw a large amount of squeezing and stretching as the moon orbited Saturn . They deduced that if Titan were composed entirely of stiff rock , the gravitational attraction of Saturn would cause bulges , or solid tides , on the moon only 3 feet 1 meter in height . Spacecraft data show Saturn

  • AP: An enterprising wide look at what apes think about themselves

    Updated: 2012-06-28 18:39:24
    : Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment The Loom : Hot new Newsroom show tries science journalism as theme . Uh it’s not really LIKE that is it Nature News , etc : An undergrad hears news of a puzzle , tracks down an odd red crucifix over ancient Britain AP : An enterprising wide look at what apes think about themselves This is sort of creepy , evoking slightly images from that recent movie I didn’t see but I saw the trailers : Rise of the Planet of the Apes You know , virus-vectored , genetically altered chimps and gorillas planning a takeover . Its imagery of primate skullduggery came to mind while reading on the AP Seth Borenstein s review of recent research on the differences and similarities between how people and apes think It covers such

  • Stellar tantrum blasts away part of its planet’s atmosphere!

    Updated: 2012-06-28 16:45:07
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Singing the praises of Carl Sagan Privately and publicly looking for Earth-threatening asteroids Stellar tantrum blasts away part of its planet’s atmosphere Life must suck for HD . 189733b It’s a planet orbiting the star HD 189733, about 63 light years from Earth . It’s similar to Jupiter , being slightly more massive and slightly bigger . Unlike our own big brother , though , HD 189733b is far closer to its parent star , orbiting just about 4 million kilometers about 2.5 million miles above its surface That means the cloudtops of the planet are at a scorching 840°C 1500°F so

  • Asteroid activists launch fund-raising campaign for space telescope

    Updated: 2012-06-28 14:32:52
    Leaders of the nonprofit B612 Foundation today took the wraps off a campaign to fund and launch a space telescope to hunt for potential killer asteroids mdash; a campaign they portrayed as a cosmic civic improvement project. Former NASA astronaut Ed Lu, the foundation's cha hellip;

  • B612 Foundation Announces First Privately Funded Deep Space Mission

    Updated: 2012-06-28 14:13:58
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets B612 Foundation Announces First Privately Funded Deep Space Mission By Keith Cowing Posted June 28, 2012 10:13 AM View Comments B612 Foundation B612 Foundation Sentinel Spacecraft In a press conference at the California Academy of Sciences Thursday morning , the B612 Foundation unveiled its plans to build , launch , and operate the first privately funded deep space mission SENTINEL a space telescope to be placed in orbit around the Sun , ranging up to 170 million miles from Earth , for a mission of discovery and

  • You thought spray-on tans were revolutionary? Try a spray-on battery.

    Updated: 2012-06-28 14:04:59
    As Apple and other tech designers seek sleeker and ever-more powerful batteries to power laptops and devices, they’re pushing engineers to create unconventional, more space-efficient batteries. Some students at Rice University, in Pulickel Ajayan’s lab, have done just that. And then some. They actually created a “battery” that can be sprayed on virtually any surface [...]

  • Singing the praises of Carl Sagan

    Updated: 2012-06-28 14:00:55
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Virtual Star Party featured at big Google+ meeting Stellar tantrum blasts away part of its planet’s atmosphere Singing the praises of Carl Sagan One of my favorite quotations of all time is by Carl Sagan : If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch , you must first invent the Universe . quot The poetry and lyrical nature of that line are wonderful , and the sentiment well . He was exactly right . Sagan was one of many people who influenced me , and of course so many of us who promote astronomy to the public owe our careers to . him That’s why I was so pleased when I found

  • Hubble Captures Dramatic Changes on a Faraway Planet

    Updated: 2012-06-28 13:45:00
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Hubble Captures Dramatic Changes on a Faraway Planet By Marc Boucher Posted June 28, 2012 9:45 AM View Comments NASA Artist . illustration An international team of astronomers using data from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has detected significant changes in the atmosphere of a planet located beyond our solar system . The scientists conclude the atmospheric variations occurred in response to a powerful eruption on the planet's host star , an event observed by NASA's Swift . satellite The exoplanet is HD 189733b ,

  • Linkpost | 6.28.12

    Updated: 2012-06-28 12:30:03
    Subway work unearths ancient road in Greece: Several of the large marble paving stones were etched with children’s board games, while others were marked by horse-drawn cart wheels. This is cool! (chron.com) 80 million Americans are certain UFOs exist: It’s possible, sure. But to be certain of something for which there is no concrete evidence? Hmm… [...]

  • CSExtra – Thursday, June 28, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-28 01:19:14
    To subscribe to CSExtra via RSS feed click here. If you would prefer to receive CSExtra in e-mail format, e-mail us at Info@spacecoalition.com with the word SUBSCRIBE in the subject line. Thursday’s CSExtra offers the latest reporting and commentary on space related activities from around the world. China prepares to end its fourth manned space mission. Astronomers [...]

  • Virtual Star Party featured at big Google+ meeting

    Updated: 2012-06-27 21:41:19
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Teachers : help your kids detect cosmic rays Singing the praises of Carl Sagan Virtual Star Party featured at big Google+ meeting This morning was the Google I O 2012 meeting , celebrating the first anniversary of Google unveiling Google+ . At the meeting , keynote speaker Vic Gondotra talked about Google+ Hangouts live video chats that can have several people broadcasting , and an unlimited audience . And look what they featured for the talk : the Virtual Star Party held every week by my friend and Universe Today founder Fraser Cain Wow . You can see several regulars there too

  • (UPDATED*) California’s condors will need human tending until more hunters get the lead out

    Updated: 2012-06-27 20:21:56
    Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment Wires , etc : DC fed’l court says it’s still true . EPA can regulate CO2 as pollutant Muere el Solitario George en Galápagos . Gran reacción de la prensa . ecuatoriana UPDATED California’s condors will need human tending until more hunters get the lead out For three years now it has been illegal for hunters or anybody else shooting at wildlife within sanctuaries for California condors to use ammunition that contains lead . Steel , tungsten , copper , depleted uranium for all  I know , are ok But a new study in the Proceedings of the Nat’l Academy of Sciences finds that many of the carrion-eating birds are still carrying chronic , dangerous quantities in their blood streams . Maybe it’s old bullets still finding their

  • Little Telescope Discovers Pair of Odd Planets

    Updated: 2012-06-27 17:41:51
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Little Telescope Discovers Pair of Odd Planets By Keith Cowing Posted June 27, 2012 1:41 PM View Comments Vanderbilt University KELT-1b and KELT-2Ab Though the KELT North telescope in southern Arizona carries a lens no more powerful than a high-end digital camera , it's just revealed the existence of two very unusual faraway . planets One planet is a massive , puffed-up oddity that could change ideas of how solar systems evolve . The other orbits a very bright star , and will allow astronomers to make detailed

  • Teachers: help your kids detect cosmic rays

    Updated: 2012-06-27 17:30:59
    : Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS The galaxy that shouldn’t be there Virtual Star Party featured at big Google+ meeting Teachers : help your kids detect cosmic rays One thing I like to see is kids getting their hands on doing science . There’s something about being involved with something , actually doing it for yourself , that gives you a sense of ownership over the knowledge , makes you part of something . bigger Here’s another chance to do that for students across the world : the ERGO telescope project ERGO stands for Energetic Ray Global Observatory and the idea is to build simple cosmic-ray detectors

  • Impact Crater Studies Reveal Mars Water Ran Deep

    Updated: 2012-06-27 16:32:18
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  • Houston Workshop Marks Key Step in Forging a New Mars Strategy in the Coming Decades

    Updated: 2012-06-27 16:21:54
    Home Blog Advertise The Sky This Month The Moon This Month Astronomy News Astrobiology Magazine News Astronomy Picture of the Day BBC Science News CNN Space News Earth Observatory News Eurekalert Astronomy Space News European Southern Observatory News European Space Agency News Gemini Observatory News Hubble Space Telescope News JPL News Kepler Telescope News Lunar and Planetary Institute News MSNBC Space News NASA Breaking News NASA PlanetQuest News NASA TV National Geographic News PBS Nova News Science at NASA News Scientific American News Space Shuttle News Space Today News STEREO Solar Mission News The Astronomer’s Telegram News The Space Show Wired Science News Astronomy Podcasts 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast Astronomy Cast Podcast Astronomy Magazine Podcast Earth Sky Podcast

  • For Deepwater Horizon Victims

    Updated: 2012-06-27 16:17:36
    Via: bpclaims.usThe original post is located here: For Deepwater Horizon Victims

  • MESSENGER Completes Its 1,000th Orbit of Mercury

    Updated: 2012-06-27 16:12:57
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets MESSENGER Completes Its 1,000th Orbit of Mercury By Keith Cowing Posted June 27, 2012 12:12 PM View Comments MESSENGER completed its 1,000th orbit of the planet closest to the Sun at 11:22 p.m . EDT on 22 June 2012. Reaching this milestone is yet another testimony to the hard work and dedication of the full MESSENGER team that has designed , launched , and operated this highly successful spacecraft , says the mission trajectory lead Jim McAdams of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel

  • Curiosity On Track For Mars

    Updated: 2012-06-27 15:56:52
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Curiosity On Track For Mars By Keith Cowing Posted June 27, 2012 11:56 AM View Comments A maneuver on Tuesday adjusted the flight path of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft for delivering the rover Curiosity to a landing target beside a Martian . mountain The car-size , one-ton rover is bound for arrival the evening of Aug . 5, 2012, PDT early Aug . 6, EDT and Universal Time The landing will mark the beginning of a two-year prime mission to investigate whether one of the most intriguing places on Mars ever

  • CSExtra – Wednesday, June 27, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-27 12:19:47
    To subscribe to CSExtra via RSS feed click here. If you would prefer to receive CSExtra in e-mail format, e-mail us at Info@spacecoalition.com with the word SUBSCRIBE in the subject line. Wednesday’s CSExtra offers the latest reporting and commentary on space related activities from  around the world. China’s Shenzhou 9 crew receives praise from the country’s president. [...]

  • Linkpost | 6.27.12

    Updated: 2012-06-27 01:27:58
    The science of Bieber Fever: It’s all about dopamine. Music can activate the same pleasure circuits as chocolate and gambling. (Wall Street Journal) Say hello to panguite, the newly discovered mineral from the beginning of the solar system: Panguite’s primordial nature means that it was actually around before the Earth and other planets formed, meaning [...]

  • AAVSO Alert Notice 462: Monitoring of J1407 for Next Extrasolar Ring System Transit

    Updated: 2012-06-26 21:30:07
    : Home Blog Advertise The Sky This Month The Moon This Month Astronomy News Astrobiology Magazine News Astronomy Picture of the Day BBC Science News CNN Space News Earth Observatory News Eurekalert Astronomy Space News European Southern Observatory News European Space Agency News Gemini Observatory News Hubble Space Telescope News JPL News Kepler Telescope News Lunar and Planetary Institute News MSNBC Space News NASA Breaking News NASA PlanetQuest News NASA TV National Geographic News PBS Nova News Science at NASA News Scientific American News Space Shuttle News Space Today News STEREO Solar Mission News The Astronomer’s Telegram News The Space Show Wired Science News Astronomy Podcasts 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast Astronomy Cast Podcast Astronomy Magazine Podcast Earth Sky Podcast

  • Ancient Arc of Light Spotted by Hubble and Spitzer

    Updated: 2012-06-26 20:33:15
    Home Blog Advertise The Sky This Month The Moon This Month Astronomy News Astrobiology Magazine News Astronomy Picture of the Day BBC Science News CNN Space News Earth Observatory News Eurekalert Astronomy Space News European Southern Observatory News European Space Agency News Gemini Observatory News Hubble Space Telescope News JPL News Kepler Telescope News Lunar and Planetary Institute News MSNBC Space News NASA Breaking News NASA PlanetQuest News NASA TV National Geographic News PBS Nova News Science at NASA News Scientific American News Space Shuttle News Space Today News STEREO Solar Mission News The Astronomer’s Telegram News The Space Show Wired Science News Astronomy Podcasts 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast Astronomy Cast Podcast Astronomy Magazine Podcast Earth Sky Podcast

  • The GM Grass Scare That Wasn’t

    Updated: 2012-06-26 20:24:00
    Home Suggest Stories About Us Staff Contact Us Log In Register to Comment KSJ Tracker : Transitions , adjustments , and watch for more Wires , etc : DC fed’l court says it’s still true . EPA can regulate CO2 as pollutant The GM Grass Scare That Wasn’t Cows grazing in Tifton 85 grass Source : UGA On Saturday , a CBS news reporter , Alix Bryan posted a story out of Elgin , Texas about a herd of cattle poisoned by cyanide . The source of the poison , according to the story , was a genetically-modified” form of Bermuda grass that was apparently generating the . poison The problem was that the story was only partly right . The grass , called Tifton 85, was producing cyanide more about that later But it was not genetically-modified grass . Tifton 85 is a hybrid product according to researchers

  • NASA Mars Planning Report Is Online

    Updated: 2012-06-26 19:27:07
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets NASA Mars Planning Report Is Online By Keith Cowing Posted June 26, 2012 3:27 PM View Comments A recent workshop conducted for NASA by the Lunar and Planetary Institute LPI in Houston , marked a key step in the agency's effort to forge a new Mars strategy in the coming decades . A report that summarizes the wide range of cutting-edge science , technology and mission concepts discussed is available . online Held in Houston June 12-14 and attended by scientists and engineers worldwide , the meeting was held to seek

  • Asteroids Gaining New Focus

    Updated: 2012-06-26 16:25:27
      Asteroids are gaining big time on the respect scale. Two years ago, President Obama directed NASA to alter plans for a human lunar return and focus instead on mission that would land U.S. explorers one of the small rocky bodies by 2025. The mission would prepare explorers for the eventual exploration of Mars. In [...]

  • CSExtra – Tuesday, June 26, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-26 14:20:00
    To subscribe to CSExtra via RSS feed click here. If you would prefer to receive CSExtra in e-mail format, e-mail us at Info@spacecoalition.com with the word SUBSCRIBE in the subject line. Tuesday’s CSExtra offers the latest reporting and commentary on space related activities from across the globe. NASA nurtures biomedical research on the International Space Station. SpaceX [...]

  • Landing on Mars: Seven minutes of terror

    Updated: 2012-06-26 14:00:30
    : Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS SpaceX successfully tests new engine VIDEO A light bending exercise in space Landing on Mars : Seven minutes of terror This . Is . AWESOME How the bat-guano crazy engineers at NASA and JPL are going to land the Curiosity rover onto the surface of : Mars Holy crap . NASA , throw lots more money at the production company that made this video You want to excite the public They did it . right Now think about this : the rover weighs get this 890 kilograms nearly a ton . The Mars air is thick enough that engineers have to deal with it , but too thin to bring Curiosity all the way

  • NASA's SDO Show's Dancing Plasma on the Sun

    Updated: 2012-06-26 13:28:13
    NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) captured approximately 18 hours of video for this dancing plasma from June 24 through June 25. Suspended in twisted magnetic fields, the hot plasma structure is many times the size of planet Earth. Prominences are huge clouds of relatively cool dense plasma suspended in the Sun's hot, thin corona. At times, they can erupt, escaping the Sun's atmosphere. Emission in this spectral line shows the upper chromosphere at a temperature of about 50,000 degrees Kelvin (or 90,000 degrees Farenheit). Magnetic fields built up enormous forces that propelled particles out beyond the Sun's surface.

  • SpaceX's 3 minutes of heavenly hell

    Updated: 2012-06-26 03:48:23
    SpaceX is basking in the glow of last month's successful cargo mission to the International Space Station, but it's also celebrating the glow of its next-generation Merlin 1D rocket engine, which has now gone through a full mission duration firing of 185 seconds. The California-b hellip;

  • Turbulent Jet Streams Churn East and West Across Saturn

    Updated: 2012-06-25 21:51:00
    Home Blog Advertise The Sky This Month The Moon This Month Astronomy News Astrobiology Magazine News Astronomy Picture of the Day BBC Science News CNN Space News Earth Observatory News Eurekalert Astronomy Space News European Southern Observatory News European Space Agency News Gemini Observatory News Hubble Space Telescope News JPL News Kepler Telescope News Lunar and Planetary Institute News MSNBC Space News NASA Breaking News NASA PlanetQuest News NASA TV National Geographic News PBS Nova News Science at NASA News Scientific American News Space Shuttle News Space Today News STEREO Solar Mission News The Astronomer’s Telegram News The Space Show Wired Science News Astronomy Podcasts 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast Astronomy Cast Podcast Astronomy Magazine Podcast Earth Sky Podcast

  • SpaceX successfully tests new engine (VIDEO)

    Updated: 2012-06-25 21:20:05
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS In which I become SPACE JUDGE Landing on Mars : Seven minutes of terror SpaceX successfully tests new engine VIDEO SpaceX successfully launched the first privately owned rocket Falcon 9 and space capsule Dragon to the International Space Station in May . The engine that propelled them there is called the Merlin built by the company based on known technology and NASA heritage . Several generations of Merlin engines have been made , and the newest , the 1D , was recently test fired in May at the SpaceX facility in Texas . This video of it is pretty darn cool . Turn the volume up

  • In which I become… SPACE JUDGE

    Updated: 2012-06-25 19:24:54
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Bodies in space SpaceX successfully tests new engine VIDEO In which I become SPACE JUDGE Oh , I do love good news . A few days ago I wrote about a small group of aerospace experts who put up a Kickstarter project to launch a small satellite . The news It’s fully funded That means this satellite will get built and launched into space . Be aware that , as with most Kickstarter projects , reaching their goal doesn’t mean you can’t or shouldn’t pitch in . More money pledged even after the goal is achieved means more and cooler stuff the project people can do with it And in this

  • Jet Streams Cross-Cut Saturn

    Updated: 2012-06-25 18:08:40
    Home About SpaceRef NASA Watch OnOrbit Commercial Space Watch SpaceRef Canada SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia Astrobiology Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Jet Streams Cross-Cut Saturn By Keith Cowing Posted June 25, 2012 2:08 PM View Comments NASA JPL SSI Saturn Turbulent jet streams , regions where winds blow faster than in other places , churn east and west across Saturn . Scientists have been trying to understand for years the mechanism that drives these wavy structures in Saturn's atmosphere and the source from which the jets derive their . energy In a new study appearing in the June edition of the journal Icarus , scientists used images collected over several

  • Keeping an Eye on Hurricanes: A U. S. Summer Ritual

    Updated: 2012-06-25 17:47:38
    As surely as they bring high temperatures, summers in the United States bring Hurricane Season, a five-month stretch that raises the costly spectre of high winds, heavy rains and floods to the millions of people who live in the cities and communities that dot the East and Gulf Coasts. The devestation from these tropical storms [...]

  • The Challenge of Landing on Mars

    Updated: 2012-06-25 17:25:26
    Team members at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory share the challenges of the Curiosity Mars rover's final minutes to landing on the surface of Mars. The newest Mars rover is expected to touch down on Mars on Monday, August 6 at approximately 1:30 a.m. EDT for people on the east coast and 10:30 p.m. PDT on Sunday, August 5th on the west coast.

  • Surreal Arctic time lapse

    Updated: 2012-06-25 14:00:54
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Pyrocumulus cloud Bodies in space Surreal Arctic time lapse Oh , wow . We’re having a heat wave here in Boulder which isn’t helping the fire situation so I’m really glad I watched this time lapse video by Tor Even Mathisen . It is , quite literally , . cool He filmed this in Tromsø specifically Kvaløya and Tromsøya in northern Norway , which is apparently a mecca for aurorae see Related Posts below Mathisen is an editor and cameraman for Norwegian Broadcasting , and clearly has an excellent eye for the sky . He has another aurora video he shot in 2010 This is exactly what I

  • CSExtra – Monday, June 25, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-25 12:37:50
    To subscribe to CSExtra via RSS feed click here. If you would prefer to receive CSExtra in e-mail format, e-mail us at Info@spacecoalition.com with the word SUBSCRIBE in the subject line. Monday’s CSExtra offers the latest reporting and commentary on major space activities under way around the world, plus a roundup of weekend activities. Chinese astronauts achieve [...]

  • Voyager 1 May Be About to Enter Interstellar Space

    Updated: 2012-06-25 00:34:48
    Home Blog Advertise The Sky This Month The Moon This Month Astronomy News Astrobiology Magazine News Astronomy Picture of the Day BBC Science News CNN Space News Earth Observatory News Eurekalert Astronomy Space News European Southern Observatory News European Space Agency News Gemini Observatory News Hubble Space Telescope News JPL News Kepler Telescope News Lunar and Planetary Institute News MSNBC Space News NASA Breaking News NASA PlanetQuest News NASA TV National Geographic News PBS Nova News Science at NASA News Scientific American News Space Shuttle News Space Today News STEREO Solar Mission News The Astronomer’s Telegram News The Space Show Wired Science News Astronomy Podcasts 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast Astronomy Cast Podcast Astronomy Magazine Podcast Earth Sky Podcast

  • Planetary Resources Kickstarter – How You Can Get Involved

    Updated: 2012-06-24 16:01:50
    Home Blog Advertise The Sky This Month The Moon This Month Astronomy News Astrobiology Magazine News Astronomy Picture of the Day BBC Science News CNN Space News Earth Observatory News Eurekalert Astronomy Space News European Southern Observatory News European Space Agency News Gemini Observatory News Hubble Space Telescope News JPL News Kepler Telescope News Lunar and Planetary Institute News MSNBC Space News NASA Breaking News NASA PlanetQuest News NASA TV National Geographic News PBS Nova News Science at NASA News Scientific American News Space Shuttle News Space Today News STEREO Solar Mission News The Astronomer’s Telegram News The Space Show Wired Science News Astronomy Podcasts 365 Days of Astronomy Podcast Astronomy Cast Podcast Astronomy Magazine Podcast Earth Sky Podcast

  • More Videos from the International Space Development Conference

    Updated: 2012-06-23 16:58:33
    The following presentations from the 2012 NSS International Space Development Conference in Washington, DC, are now available on the NSS website. Michael Lopez-Alegria, President of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation and former NASA astronaut and International Space Station commander. Saturday Luncheon Keynote Address. 73 minute video. Doug McCuistion, Director of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program. 58 minute video. International Space [...]

  • The secret of nym

    Updated: 2012-06-23 14:00:13
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Near-Earth asteroid twice as big as previously thought Pyrocumulus cloud The secret of nym I’m a writer , and writers love . words We like playing with them . Writing them , rearranging then , substituting for them , playing around with rhyme and cadence and structure . It’s why I love doing crossword puzzles , and especially why I love puns layering double meanings into just a few words is an intellectual challenge as well as an exercise in humor . So I was thinking about words recently , looking for a synonym of a word , when I realized : something The antonym of synonym is

  • This Week at NASA Recap for Friday, June 22, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-23 13:14:22
    On This Week at NASA we have the following stories: The International Space Station and its benefit to science as the world's only laboratory in microgravity is highlighted on Capitol Hill. Also, NASA administrator Charles Bolden Finds NEEMO; JPL has its annual Open House; Cleveland HUBZone; African Cosmos; Aerospace Scholars; NASA Now Emmy; SOI; and more!

  • Movie trailer for a Mars thriller

    Updated: 2012-06-23 02:31:16
    "The Dark Knight Rises"? Bah! If you measure the heft of a movie trailer by dramatic impact, "Seven Minutes of Terror" is the one to watch. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory released the five-minute trailer today to tout the upcoming entry, descent and landing of its $2.5 billion  hellip;

  • Near-Earth asteroid twice as big as previously thought

    Updated: 2012-06-22 18:00:10
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS Natural born scientist The secret of nym Near-Earth asteroid twice as big as previously thought On June 14, 2012, the asteroid 2012 LZ1 passed the Earth . It missed us by a wide margin over 5 million kilometers 3 million miles so there was no danger of impact . While it does get near us every now and again , using current orbital measurements we know we’re safe from an impact by this particular rock for at least 750 years . . Phew Good thing , too . New observations using the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico indicate LZ1 is bigger than we first thought . Much bigger :

  • No words

    Updated: 2012-06-22 03:05:49
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS What to make of the Chinese space effort A mini star factory lost in the sky No words Astrophotographer Alan Friedman’s latest Just click it . Here’s an explanation of what you’re seeing Links to more of his soul-stirring photos are below . Image credit : Alan Friedman Related : Posts Towering transit of Venus Solar Cinco de Mayo The face of our star The boiling , erupting Sun Share June 21st , 2012 8:05 PM Tags : Alan Friedman Sun by Phil Plait in Astronomy Pretty pictures 14 comments RSS feed Trackback 14 Responses to No words” 1. quarksparrow Says : June 21st , 2012 at 8:27

  • A mini star factory lost in the sky

    Updated: 2012-06-22 01:30:14
    Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS No words Natural born scientist A mini star factory lost in the sky You’d think that with all our fancy equipment and technology , all the nearby galaxies in the Universe would’ve been spotted by now . But it turns out that’s not the case . Some galaxies are very faint small , with few stars making them tough to find even when relatively speaking they’re in our . neighborhood So say hello to our newly-discovered neighbor , UGC 4597 Click to galactinate . UGC 4597 is a dwarf galaxy . Galaxies like our Milky Way have billions or hundreds of billions of stars , but dwarf galaxies

  • CSExtra – Friday, June 22, 2012

    Updated: 2012-06-22 01:22:18
    To subscribe to CSExtra via RSS feed click here. If you would prefer to receive CSExtra in e-mail format, e-mail us at Info@spacecoalition.com with the word SUBSCRIBE in the subject line. Friday’s CSExtra offers the latest reporting and commentary on space related events from around the world. China’s Shenzhou 9 mission to the Tiangong-1 space lab represents [...]

  • That big asteroid was even bigger

    Updated: 2012-06-21 23:05:32
    The bad news about the asteroid 2012 LZ1, which zipped past Earth last week, is that it's actually twice as wide and a lot deadlier than we thought mdash; a kilometer (0.6 miles) wide in its largest dimension, rather than 500 meters. The good news is that we have at least  hellip;

  • Science Getaways: Dark skies

    Updated: 2012-06-21 17:38:19
    : Subscribe Today Renew Give a Gift Archives Customer Service Facebook Twitter Newsletter SEARCH Health Medicine Mind Brain Technology Space Human Origins Living World Environment Physics Math Video Photos Podcast RSS An unusual view of the Death Star moon What to make of the Chinese space effort Science Getaways : Dark skies I got an email recently from BABloggee Mark Sunderland , pointing out this photo to me . It shows the Toronto skyline with the Milky Way and thousands of stars blazing behind . it I had to chuckle : the picture is obviously fake and now the caption at Flickr says as much , though it didn’t when I first saw it There’s no way you could see the Milky Way from a city like Toronto . The city lights flood the air with illumination , lighting up the sky and drowning out

  • Ice at the Moon’s South Pole: Location for Future Moon Habitat?

    Updated: 2012-06-21 15:26:27
    The Moon is taking on an icy look thanks to NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft. Using a laser altimeter on the LRO, a research team essentially has illuminated the crater’s interior of Shackleton crater. Scientists from MIT, Brown University, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and other institutions have mapped Shackleton crater with unprecedented detail. [...]

  • No bot wins robot challenge

    Updated: 2012-06-21 02:52:47
    Not all missions are successful, and such was the case for last weekend's $1.5 million Sample Return Robot Challenge, backed by NASA and presented at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts. The robo-showdown was supposed to pit autonomous rovers against each other in a  hellip;

  • Asteroid experts plan privately funded Sentinel Space Telescope

    Updated: 2012-06-19 23:09:27
    The nonprofit B612 Foundation says it's planning the first privately funded deep-space mission, with the goal of launching an instrument known as the Sentinel Space Telescope to look for potentially hazardous asteroids from a vantage point inside Earth's orbit around the sun. The hellip;

  • Mars is calling: Be part of the conversation!

    Updated: 2012-06-18 23:06:06
    NASA is busy replanning the future Mars Exploration Program — and wants to hear from you! NASA has opened a forum for public input on its Mars Exploration Program, the purpose of which is to achieve high-priority science goals and address the challenges of sending humans to Mars, all within an environment of very constrained [...]

  • More Videos from the International Space Development Conference

    Updated: 2012-06-17 16:20:26
    The following presentations from the 2012 NSS International Space Development Conference in Washington, DC, are now available on the NSS website. Jeff Greason: The 20 Year Plan? Saturday Dinner Keynote Address. Greason is president of XCOR Aerospace and was a member of the President’s Human Space Flight Review Committee (Augustine Committee) in 2009. 54 minute [...]

  • VIDEO: Airborne Launch Sends X-Ray Observatory Into Earth Orbit

    Updated: 2012-06-13 22:02:00
    A 700-pound NASA science satellite roared into orbit Wednesday on a mission to map high-energy features across the universe, including black holes and supernovae. The NuSTAR mission will provide scientists with unprecedented resolution for viewing X-ray objects in space.

  • Videos from the International Space Development Conference Online

    Updated: 2012-06-10 04:11:15
    Videos of presentations from the 2012 NSS International Space Development Conference in Washington, DC, are now available on the NSS website. Charles F. Bolden, Administrator of NASA. Opening Keynote Address. Prior to becoming NASA Administrator, Bolden was a Shuttle astronaut who flew four missions, including the deployment of the Hubble Space Telescope. 60 minute video. SpaceX Update. [...]

  • NSS Mourns Passing of Ray Bradbury, Author and NSS Space Pioneer Award Recipient

    Updated: 2012-06-08 14:28:43
    The National Space Society mourns the loss of legendary author and visionary, Ray D. Bradbury, who passed away earlier this week at the age of 91. The author of more than 50 books, Bradbury’s works encompassed many genres, including science fiction, fantasy, and mystery. He is most widely known for his novels, The Martian Chronicles (1950), [...]

  • NASA Gains Breathing Room On Commercial Crew Program

    Updated: 2012-06-08 05:55:57
    NASA has negotiated a continuation of its successful Space Acts Agreements (SAA) procedures for contracting and funding of the next phase of its Commercial Crew Program (CCP). The SAA has also been the process for NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS), which saw the flight of the SpaceX Dragon to the International Space Station [...]

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