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Feb 22, 2018
Stealth space catapult startup SpinLaunch is raising $30M
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: drones, satellites, sustainability
What if instead of blasting cargo into space on a rocket, we could fling it into space using a catapult? That’s the big, possibly crazy, possibly genius idea behind SpinLaunch. It was secretly founded in 2014 by Jonathan Yaney, who built solar-powered drone startup Titan Aerospace and sold it to Google. Now TechCrunch has learned from three sources that SpinLaunch is raising a massive $30 million Series A to develop its catapult technology. And we’ve scored an interview with the founder after four years in stealth.
Sources who’ve spoken to the SpinLaunch team tell me the idea is to create a much cheaper and sustainable way to get things like satellites from earth into space without chemical propellant. Using a catapult would sidestep the heavy fuel and expensive booster rockets used by companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin.
SpinLaunch plans to use a centrifuge spinning at an incredible rate inside a vacuum that reduces friction. All that momentum is then harnessed to catapult a payload into space at speeds one source said could be around 3,000 miles per hour. With enough momentum, objects could be flung into space on their own. Alternatively, the catapult could provide some of the power needed with cargo being equipped with supplemental rockets necessary to leave earth’s atmosphere.
Feb 22, 2018
Wilbur Ross: Moon Should Be a ‘Gas Station for Outer Space’
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space travel
Feb 22, 2018
Proposed Exomoon Defies Formation Theories
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
The mysterious object could be the first moon found beyond our solar system—or something else entirely.
- By Nola Taylor Redd, SPACE.com on February 21, 2018
Feb 22, 2018
Programming a DNA Clock
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, computing
Engineers have created a DNA-based chemical oscillator, opening the door to molecular computing.
- By Rachel Nuwer on February 21, 2018
Feb 22, 2018
Bigelow Aerospace’s new company will find customers for its space habitats
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: business, habitats, space
Bigelow Aerospace — the Las Vegas-based company manufacturing space habitats — is starting a spinoff venture aimed at managing any modules that the company deploys into space. Called Bigelow Space Operations (BSO), the new company will be responsible for selling Bigelow’s habitats to customers, such as NASA, foreign countries, and other private companies. But first, BSO will try to figure out what kind of business exists exactly in lower Earth orbit, the area of space where the ISS currently resides.
Bigelow makes habitats designed to expand. The densely packed modules launch on a rocket and then inflate once in space, providing more overall volume for astronauts to roam around. The company already has one of its prototype habitats in orbit right now: the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, which has been attached to the International Space Station since 2016. The BEAM has proven that Bigelow’s expandable habitat technology not only works, but also holds up well against the space environment.
Feb 22, 2018
How to build a human brain
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Organoids, made from human stem cells, are growing into brains and other miniorgans to help researchers study development.
Feb 22, 2018
DAYS Exchange is to find elixir of life extension
Posted by Edward Futurem in category: life extension
Feb 22, 2018
Bioquark Inc. — Faces of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Podcast — Ira Pastor
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: aging, biotech/medical, DNA, genetics, health, life extension, military, neuroscience, science, transhumanism
Feb 22, 2018
3D bioprinting center of excellence launched by AMBER and Johnson & Johnson
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, biotech/medical
Trinity College Dublin (TCD), in Ireland, is to be the recipient of a new specialist 3D bioprinting facility supported by a collaboration between multinational medical device and pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson, and the AMBER research center.
With preparations beginning in the first quarter of this year, the new 3D bioprinting laboratory is due to be opened by the close of 2018.
Professor Michael Morris, AMBER director, comments.
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