Space News from SpaceDaily.com
August 20, 2009
Tight budget quashes US space ambitions: panel
Washington (AFP) Aug 19, 2009
US ambitions for manned space exploration have hit a major hurdle in the wake of severe budget constraints, according to preliminary findings of a panel appointed by President Barack Obama. Reaching Mars was deemed too risky while returning to the Moon by 2020 was ruled out barring an additional three billion dollars per year to replace the retiring space shuttle fleet and build bigger rocke ... read more

Storm Brews Over Titan's Tropical Desert
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Aug 20, 2009
While far from a tropical rain forest, the equatorial region of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, has recently displayed tantalizing evidence that the parched, dry desert can support large-scale storms. The research, published in the journal Nature, announces the discovery of significant cloud formation (about three million square kilometers) within the moon's tropical zone near its equator. ... more

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The Ultimate Long Distance Communication
White Sands NM (SPX) Aug 20, 2009
Anyone who's vacationed in the mountains or lived on a farm knows that it's hard to get good internet access or a strong cell phone signal in a remote area. Communicating across great distances has always been a challenge. So when NASA engineers designed the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), they knew it would need an extraordinary communications system. Over the next year, the LRO, NASA ... more

Spirit Hits 2000 Sols On Mars Duty
Pasadena CA (JPL) Aug 20, 2009
Today marks the 2,000th Martian day, or sol, of what was initially planned as a 90-sol mission on Mars for NASA's Spirit rover. Spirit's twin, Opportunity, will reach the 2,000-sol milestone on Sept. 8. Both rovers have found rocks altered by past action of water on Mars. Both show some signs of aging but remain capable of further scientific investigations. Since their landing halfwa ... more

Space shuttle Discovery cleared for lift-off
Washington (AFP) Aug 19, 2009
The space shuttle Discovery will blast off next Tuesday on a mission to the International Space Station, NASA said, clearing the launch after days of debate over safety issues. Lift-off was set for 0536 GMT from the Kennedy Space Center near Cape Canaveral in Florida, NASA said, after two days of meetings between mission officials. "It was a very effective review. I think we're ready to ... more

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  • SmartZip pinpoints hot homes in US foreclosure market

  • SKorea delays rocket launch minutes before blast-off

  • Microsats For The Moon

  • Jumping Asteroids

  • Jack Swigert Aerospace Academy Opens

  • Galaxies Demand A Stellar Recount
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    Food Vital During Long Space Flights
    Chicago IL (SPX) Aug 20, 2009
    A new study in the Journal of Food Science explores the impact of space flight on the nutritional value of foods. Maintaining the health of the crew aboard a spacecraft is a critical issue especially during extended trips. Because foods may lose their nutrients during extended space missions, food scientists are analyzing ways to increase shelf life of nutrients in the food. Researchers at ... more

    Discovery Set For August 25 Launch
    Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Aug 20, 2009
    The Flight Readiness Review for space shuttle Discovery's STS-128 mission has concluded, setting the launch date for Tuesday, Aug. 25 at 1:36 a.m. EDT. "I can't say enough about the quality of the review we had over the past day and a half," said Bill Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for Space Operations, during a post-FRR news conference Wednesday morning. "It was a very effect ... more

    Cassini Marks 10 Years Off Earth
    Pasadena CA (JPL) Aug 20, 2009
    A decade ago, NASA's Cassini spacecraft flew past Earth at a distance of 1,171 kilometers (727 miles) on its way to an appointment with the solar system's second largest occupant - Saturn. Launched in October of 1997, Cassini required a grand total of four planetary flybys to provide the gravity boost it needed to get to the ringed world. A gravity boost uses a planet's mass and orbi ... more

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  • Ariane To Launch JCSAT-12 And Optus D3 Friday

  • A Look Into The Hellish Cradles Of Suns And Solar Systems

  • UK Technology To Boost Search For Gravitational Waves

  • Glycine In The Grid

  • Iran pushing for ban on strikes on nuclear facilities

  • Seoul cautious over North Korean deal

  • Iran ready for unconditional nuclear talks
  • For sale in Germany: Soviet nuclear warhead bunkers
  • SKorea weighs NKorea tour offer for possible sanctions breach
  • Pakistan floods kill 27, affect 70,000: UN, officials
  • Missing Link To Cloud Formation Found
  • Over 8,000 boats stranded on China river: state media
  • Five users sue Facebook for being too social a network
  • China could see emissions peak in 2030: govt panel

  • Category 2 Hurricane Bill strengthens slightly
  • Canada flies NATO flag in arctic showdown
  • IBM sees future of microchips in DNA
  • EU invests millions in "ultra high-speed" mobile internet
  • Clunkers Program Is Expensive Way To Cut Carbon Emissions
  • Russia's Rosatom buys German nuclear unit: company
  • SKorea postpones rocket launch minutes before blast-off
  • Putin Pledges Major State Investment In Russian Aerospace Sector

  • Pakistan To Launch First Satellite In 2011
  • Far Out: A Space-Time Chronicle
  • DLR And Roskosmos Sign Agreement On eROSITA X-ray Telescope
  • Spirit Hits 2000
  • Space Systems/Loral Delivers Telesat's Nimiq 5 Satellite To Launch Base
  • NASA To Use Lackland As Stopover
  • GOES-O Releases First Solar Image
  • ESA's Swedish Astronaut To Return To The ISS



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