Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 961
Mar 28, 2016
Quarks To Quasars Photo 3
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: particle physics, space
Mar 28, 2016
CO2 Recovery System Saves Brewers Money, Puts Bubbles into Beer
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: economics, energy, space
NASA Technology
Building on work he and his companies did with Johnson Space Center’s In Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU) team, Robert Zubrin has developed and commercialized technologies that could prove revolutionary in their Earth applications, such as a system that could extract millions of barrels of oil from defunct oil wells around the world and another that can harness all the natural gas currently burned off as waste at many oil drilling rigs (Spinoff 2015).
But when he’s not working to change this world or colonize others, the president of Pioneer Astronautics, Pioneer Energy, and the Mars Society enjoys a good microbrew. Now, he’s applied some of that same technology to cut costs for craft breweries that produce anywhere between 3,000 and 300,000 barrels per year.
Mar 26, 2016
Toward a realistic cosmic evolution
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: evolution, space, supercomputing
Using the Piz Daint supercomputer, cosmologists at the University of Geneva are the first to simulate the structure of the universe in a way that consistently accounts for the general theory of relativity.
Mar 25, 2016
Lockheed Martin joins race to build hypersonic jetliners, weapons
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: space
Mar 24, 2016
First Retailer in Orbit: Lowe’s and Made In Space Send 3D Printer to Station
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, education, habitats, space
Outer space is about to get its first pop-up retail shop.
Lowe’s, the home-improvement store, has teamed up with Made In Space, the company behind the world’s first zero-G 3D printer, to launch the first commercial manufacturing facility on the International Space Station.
The Additive Manufacturing Facility (AMF), as it is called, is an advanced, permanent 3D printer that will be available for use not only by NASA and its station partners, but also by researchers, educational organizations and commercial customers.
Continue reading “First Retailer in Orbit: Lowe’s and Made In Space Send 3D Printer to Station” »
Mar 22, 2016
Shockwave of an exploding star seen for the first time
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: space
It lasted only 20 minutes and took place 1.2 billion light years away, but NASA managed to catch it on camera: a star exploding.
The brilliant flash of an exploding star’s shockwave — or “shock breakout” — has been captured for the first time in visible light by the Kepler space telescope.
Mar 22, 2016
Scientists have seen the shockwave from a star’s collapsing core for the first time
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: military, space
Astronomers have for the first time seen a shockwave generated by a star’s collapsing core and captured the earliest minutes of two exploding stars.
An international team of scientists found a shockwave only in the smaller supernova, a finding that will help them understand these complex explosions which create many of the elements that make up humans, the Earth and the Solar System.
“It’s like the shockwave from a nuclear bomb, only much bigger, and no one gets hurt,” says Brad Tucker from the Australian National University (ANU).
Mar 21, 2016
Robot-Built Landing Pad Could Pave the Way for Construction on Mars
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: materials, robotics/AI, space
A robot has built a prototype launch-and-landing pad in Hawaii, potentially helping pave the way for automated construction projects on the moon and Mars.
The robotic rover, named Helelani, assembled the pad on Hawaii’s Big Island late last year, putting together 100 pavers made of locally available material in an effort to prove out technology that could do similar work in space.
“The construction project is really unique. Instead of concrete for the landing pad, we’re using lunar and Mars material, which is exactly like the material we have here on the Big Island — basalt,” Rob Kelso, executive director of the Pacific International Space Center for Exploration (PISCES) in Hawaii, told Hawaiian news outlet Big Island Now. PISCES partnered with NASA on the project, which is part of a larger program called Additive Construction with Mobile Emplacement, or ACME for short. [The Boldest Mars Missions in History].
Mar 21, 2016
See ‘twin’ comets buzz Earth hotter and brighter than expected
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: space
Two comets, perhaps fragments of the same larger space rock, will make two of the closest passes in modern history, one right after the other.