Space News from SpaceDaily.com
July 10, 2018
MOON DAILY
Israel plans its first moon launch in December



Yehud, Israel (AFP) July 10, 2018
An Israeli organisation announced plans Tuesday to launch the country's first spacecraft to the moon in December, with hopes of burnishing Israel's reputation as a small nation with otherworldly high-tech ambitions. The unmanned spacecraft, shaped like a pod and weighing some 585 kilogrammes (1,300 pounds) at launch, will land on the moon on February 13, 2019 if all goes according to plan, organisers SpaceIL told a news conference in Yehud, central Israel. The vessel will be launched via a rock ... read more

SPACE TRAVEL
Russian cargo ship docks at ISS in record time
Moscow (AFP) July 10, 2018
A Russian cargo vessel took just three hours and 40 minutes to reach the International Space Station on Tuesday, Roscosmos space agency said, smashing the record flight time by two hours. ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
Testing Refines Requirements for Deep Space Habitat Design
Houston TX (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
NASA performed tests the week of June 25 at the agency's Johnson Space Center in Houston to help engineers refine NASA's requirements for the design of a deep space habitat, one of several elements ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
Orion Jettison Motor Ready for Crew Escape System Test
Sacramento CA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
Aerojet Rocketdyne recently passed a key milestone in preparation for the Ascent Abort Test (AA-2) next year with the successful casting of the Jettison Motor for the Lockheed Martin-built Orion spa ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
Largest-ever solid rocket motor poised for first hot firing
Paris (ESA) Jul 10, 2018
This week, the largest solid rocket motor ever built in one piece will be test fired at Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana for the first time. This important milestone validates the booster f ... more
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ROCKET SCIENCE
Chinese Space Company Planning Launch of Largest Privately Owned Liquid Rocket
Beijing (Sputnik) Jul 10, 2018
Beijing-based space launch company LandSpace recently revealed that its Suzaku No. 2, the largest privately-owned rocket developed in the country so far, will be launched in 2020. The company, ... more
IRON AND ICE
Tiny fine particles of global impact reveals the origin of black carbon
Helsinki, Finland (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
A technical breakthrough was achieved in the source determination of very small carbon samples at the Accelerator Laboratory and the Laboratory of Chronology of the University of Helsinki. The devel ... more
EARTH OBSERVATION
China launches two satellites for Pakistan
Jiuquan, China (XNA) Jul 10, 2018
China launched two satellites for Pakistan on a Long March-2C rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China at 11:56 a.m. Monday. The PRSS-1 is China's first optical remot ... more
EARTH OBSERVATION
ICESat-2 Lasers Pass Final Ground Test
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
The next time lasers fire from NASA's Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite-2, or ICESat-2, the spacecraft will be orbiting hundreds of miles above Earth and beginning its mission to monitor chan ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Plasma-spewing quasar shines light on universe's youth, early galaxy formation
Pasadena CA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
Carnegie's Eduardo Banados led a team that found a quasar with the brightest radio emission ever observed in the early universe, due to it spewing out a jet of extremely fast-moving material. ... more
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EXO WORLDS
NASA's Kepler Spacecraft Pauses Science Observations to Download Science Data
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
Earlier this week, NASA's Kepler team received an indication that the spacecraft fuel tank is running very low. NASA has placed the spacecraft in a hibernation-like state in preparation to download ... more
SATURN DAILY
Listen: Sound of Electromagnetic Energy Moving Between Saturn, Enceladus
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 10, 2018
New research from NASA's Cassini spacecraft's up-close Grand Finale orbits shows a surprisingly powerful and dynamic interaction of plasma waves moving from Saturn to its rings and its moon Enceladu ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Distant quasar providing clues to early-universe conditions
Charlottesville VA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
Astronomers using the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) have made an image revealing tantalizing details of a quasar nearly 13 billion light-years from Earth - an object ... more
RAY GUNS
Raytheon contracted to develop laser for U.S. Army
Washington (UPI) Jul 6, 2018
Raytheon has a received a $10 million contract to develop the US Army's High Energy Laser Tactical Vehicle Demonstration program. ... more
SPACEMART
Laser-Based System is Set to Expand Space-to-Ground Communication
Atlanta GA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
A new collaborative research project has been announced between the Georgia Institute of Technology and satellite communications provider Xenesis to offer new age solutions to open the bottleneck th ... more


Report accuses China firms over ozone-depleting gas

CHIP TECH
Closing the gap: On the road to terahertz electronics
Munich, Germany (SPX) Jul 06, 2018
A team headed by the TUM physicists Alexander Holleitner and Reinhard Kienberger has succeeded for the first time in generating ultrashort electric pulses on a chip using metal antennas only a few n ... more
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DRAGON SPACE
China readying for space station era: Yang Liwei
Beijing (XNA) Jul 10, 2018
China is accelerating its timetable for a space station, with the core capsule expected to be launched in 2020, says Yang Liwei, director of the China Manned Space Engineering Office and the country ... more
CARBON WORLDS
Electrogeochemistry captures carbon, produces fuel, offsets ocean acidification
Santa Cruz CA (SPX) Jul 06, 2018
Limiting global warming to 2 degrees Celsius will require not only reducing emissions of carbon dioxide, but also active removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. This conclusion from the Inter ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Magnetic skyrmions: Not the only ones of their class
Julich, Germany (SPX) Jul 06, 2018
These objects, which are referred to as "chiral magnetic bobbers", are three-dimensional magnetic structures that appear near the surfaces of certain alloys. "For a long time, the unique objec ... more
CARBON WORLDS
Graphene assembled film shows higher thermal conductivity than graphite film
Gothenburg, Sweden (SPX) Jul 06, 2018
Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have developed a graphene assembled film that has over 60 percent higher thermal conductivity than graphite film - despite the fact that gra ... more
MARSDAILY
NASA listens out for Opportunity everyday
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 09, 2018
The dust storm on Mars is continuing as a Planet-encircling Dust Event (PEDE) with no indication of receding at this time. Again, since the last contact with the rover on Sol 5111 (June 10, 20 ... more
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Russian cargo ship docks at ISS in record time
Moscow (AFP) July 10, 2018
A Russian cargo vessel took just three hours and 40 minutes to reach the International Space Station on Tuesday, Roscosmos space agency said, smashing the record flight time by two hours. The "Progress" launched at 2151 GMT on Monday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and arrived at the space station in the early hours of Tuesday, the agency said. "The length of the flight, be ... more
+ Orion Jettison Motor Ready for Crew Escape System Test
+ Testing Refines Requirements for Deep Space Habitat Design
+ Successful Flight Testing Of Crew Escape System - Technology Demonstrator
+ NASA seeks new ways to handle trash for deep space missions
+ '2001: A Space Odyssey,' 50 Years Later
+ India's Manned Spaceflight Plan Gets Boost With Astronaut Escape Feature Trial
+ Airbus and United Nations team up for universal access to space
Largest-ever solid rocket motor poised for first hot firing
Paris (ESA) Jul 10, 2018
This week, the largest solid rocket motor ever built in one piece will be test fired at Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana for the first time. This important milestone validates the booster for use on Vega-C next year and on Ariane 6 from 2020. Fully loaded with solid fuel, the P120C rocket motor common to Europe's future launchers Vega-C and Ariane 6, will be held vertically in the ... more
+ Dragon Now Installed To Station For Month-Long Stay
+ Chinese Space Company Planning Launch of Largest Privately Owned Liquid Rocket
+ Aurora Launch Services established in Alaska To provide responsive launch services
+ China to develop new series of carrier rockets: expert
+ Dragon delivers some ICE
+ 'Flying brain' blasts off on cargo ship toward space station
+ Dawn's Engines Complete Firing, Science Continues


Mars to Pamper Gazers With Stunning Sight Amid NASA's Dust Storm Concerns
Washington DC (Sputnik) Jul 06, 2018
On July 27 and several days afterwards, the Red Planet will become especially visible due to a so-called "opposition," with Earth coming equally close both to Mars and the sun, international media reported. Although it generally occurs nearly every two years, this year is unique, as in light of a Martian year being almost twice as long and both planets orbiting more elliptically than circu ... more
+ UK space sector set to benefit from new European Space Agency contract
+ Airbus wins two ESA studies for Mars Sample Return mission
+ NASA listens out for Opportunity everyday
+ Top 10 Teams Selected in Virtual Model Stage of NASA's 3D-Printed Habitat Challenge
+ Mars valleys traced back to precipitation
+ The meteorite 'Black Beauty' expands the window for when life might have existed on Mars
+ Precipitation explains Mars' fluvial patterns, astronomers claim
China launches new space science program
Beijing (XNA) Jul 06, 2018
China Wednesday launched a new space science program focusing on the origin and evolution of the universe, black holes, gravitational waves and relationship between the solar system and human. The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) announced to develop a group of four satellites in the program. The program includes a satellite named "Einstein-Probe (EP)", which is tasked with discover ... more
+ China readying for space station era: Yang Liwei
+ China Rising as Major Space Power
+ China launches new-tech experiment twin satellites
+ China confirms reception of data from Gaofen-6 satellite
+ Experts Explain How China Is Opening International Space Cooperation
+ Beijing welcomes use of Chinese space station by all UN Nations
+ China upgrades spacecraft reentry and descent technology
China Mulls Creation of Joint Global Satellite System with Russia
Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 09, 2018
A Chinese delegation has proposed to Russia's Roscosmos state space corporation to discuss a possibility of the creation of a joint global satellite communications system, which could become an analogue of UK's OneWeb satellite constellation or Starlink, a source from Russian space industry told Sputnik. "During the bilateral meeting on July 4, the Chinese delegation, which arrived in Mosc ... more
+ Laser-Based System is Set to Expand Space-to-Ground Communication
+ Yes we've got a space agency - but our industry needs 'Space Prize Australia'
+ GomSpace and Aerial Maritime Ltd enter MOU for delivery and operation of a global constellation
+ SSL ships first of 3 ComSats slated for launch this summer
+ Forget Galileo - UK space sector should look to young stars instead
+ A milestone in securing ESA's future role in the global exploration of space
+ US FCC expands market access for SES O3b MEO constellation
Astronomer Reveals When Soviet-Era Interplanetary Station Will Crash to Earth
Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 09, 2018
A station was unsuccessfully launched as a part of the USSR's space exploration program and has been orbiting the Earth ever since, but the station's deterioration is bringing its "homecoming" closer with each passing year. The Kosmos 482 interplanetary station, which was unsuccessfully sent towards Venus in 1972 by the USSR, may crash land on Earth between 2023 and 2025, astronomer and co ... more
+ Spectral cloaking could make objects invisible under realistic conditions
+ Plastic is light, versatile and here to stay -- for now
+ Sandia light mixer generates 11 colors simultaneously
+ New insights bolster Einstein's idea about how heat moves through solids
+ Scientists calculate impact of China's ban on plastic waste imports
+ Probing nobelium with laser light
+ Hope for new catalysts with high activity


NASA's Kepler Spacecraft Pauses Science Observations to Download Science Data
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
Earlier this week, NASA's Kepler team received an indication that the spacecraft fuel tank is running very low. NASA has placed the spacecraft in a hibernation-like state in preparation to download the science data collected in its latest observation campaign. Once the data has been downloaded, the expectation is to start observations for the next campaign with any remaining fuel. Since Ma ... more
+ Researchers see beam of light from first confirmed neutron star merger emerge from behind sun
+ Detecting the Boiling Atmosphere of the Hottest Known Exoplanet
+ More clues that Earth-like exoplanets are indeed Earth-like
+ First confirmed image of newborn planet caught with ESO's VLT
+ Airbus completes the integration of CHEOPS satellite
+ New Infrared Instrument Searches for Habitable Planets
+ NASA should update policies that protect planets and other solar system bodies
Europa's Ocean Ascending
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 06, 2018
This animation demonstrates how deformation in the icy surface of Europa could transport subsurface ocean water to the moon's surface. This is just one of several simulated behaviors reported in a new study performed by scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The study focused on linear features called "bands" and "groove lanes" found on Jupiter's moons Europa and Ganymede. Scienti ... more
+ Jupiter's moons create uniquely patterned aurora on the gas giant planet
+ 'Cataclysmic' collision shaped Uranus' evolution
+ Webb Telescope to target Jupiter's Great Red Spot
+ Charon at 40: four decades of discovery on Pluto's largest moon
+ A dark and stormy Jupiter
+ NASA shares more Pluto images from New Horizons
+ Juno Solves 39-Year Old Mystery of Jupiter Lightning


China eyes Pacific summit as N.Z. warns of power vacuum
Wellington (AFP) July 10, 2018
China is planning a summit of Pacific island leaders in November, Papua New Guinea has revealed, as New Zealand warned Tuesday Beijing was attempting to fill a "vacuum" in the long-neglected region. President Xi Jinping wants to hold the meeting ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in Port Moresby from November 12-18. "(I) invite you to attend a Pacific Island lead ... more
+ New Zealand to buy new Boeing maritime patrol planes
+ Study finds link between river outflow and coastal sea level
+ Baltic Sea oxygen loss is unprecedented, study shows
+ Global surface area of rivers and streams is 45 percent higher than previously thought
+ Water compresses under a high gradient electric field
+ The tow-an-iceberg plan being floated to ease Cape Town drought
+ Gulf Stream eddies as a source of iron
Next four Galileo satellites fuelled for launch
Kourou, French Guiana (ESA) Jul 04, 2018
Europe's next four Galileo satellites have been fuelled for launch at Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, in preparation for their launch on 25 July. The four satellites were placed into their protective containers to be transported from the S1A processing building to the S3B payload preparation building, where they were filled with the hydrazine fuel that will keep the satellites ... more
+ NASA Tests Solar Sail for CubeSat that Will Study Near-Earth Asteroids
+ India's Domestic SatNav System Hits Major Roadblock Ahead of Commercial Release
+ Russia launches Soyuz-21b with Glonass-M navigation satellite
+ China's Beidou system helps livestock water supply in remote pastoral areas
+ UK says shut out of EU's Galileo sat-nav contracts
+ Woman drowns in Prague drains playing GPS treasure hunt
+ What exclusion from Galileo could mean for UK


Israel plans its first moon launch in December
Yehud, Israel (AFP) July 10, 2018
An Israeli organisation announced plans Tuesday to launch the country's first spacecraft to the moon in December, with hopes of burnishing Israel's reputation as a small nation with otherworldly high-tech ambitions. The unmanned spacecraft, shaped like a pod and weighing some 585 kilogrammes (1,300 pounds) at launch, will land on the moon on February 13, 2019 if all goes according to plan, o ... more
+ The toxic side of the Moon
+ Waystation to the Solar System
+ Queqiao satellite the bridge to China's lunar exploration
+ NASA will seek partnership with US Industry to develop lunar gateway
+ Chinese satellite could link world to Moon's far side: space expert
+ Micro satellite developed by Chinese university starts to work around Moon
+ Long suspected theory about the moon holds water
Fragment of Impacting Asteroid Recovered in Botswana
Mountain View, CA (SPX) Jul 09, 2018
A meteorite was found in Botswana's Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR) that is a fragment of asteroid 2018 LA. This small asteroid was discovered in space by the University of Arizona's Catalina Sky Survey on June 2, 2018, eight hours before hitting Earth. The asteroid burst through the upper atmosphere and resulted in a meteor fireball. The asteroid detonated a few seconds after entry and the ... more
+ Tiny fine particles of global impact reveals the origin of black carbon
+ Molecular oxygen in comet's atmosphere not created on its surface
+ Successful second deep space maneuver for OSIRIS-REx confirmed
+ Dawn's latest orbit reveals dramatic new views of Occator crater
+ Study reveals secret origins of asteroids and meteorites
+ New Mystery Discovered Regarding Active Asteroid Phaethon
+ Meteor explodes unexpectedly over Russia


ICESat-2 Lasers Pass Final Ground Test
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
The next time lasers fire from NASA's Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite-2, or ICESat-2, the spacecraft will be orbiting hundreds of miles above Earth and beginning its mission to monitor changes in ice sheets, glaciers and sea ice. On June 23, ICESat-2 engineers at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California successfully finished the final ground-based test of the lasers, which are part ... more
+ China launches two satellites for Pakistan
+ Report accuses China firms over ozone-depleting gas
+ Full steam ahead for Aeolus launch
+ Tiny cameras snap pictures of Great Lake
+ First laser light for GRACE Follow-On
+ Airbus and Planet join forces to bring new geospatial products to market
+ Climate change is making night-shining clouds more visible
This Summer's Solar Eclipses from the Ends of the Earth
Williamstown MA (SPX) Jul 09, 2018
Solar eclipses will occur at opposite ends of the Earth this summer, 2018. Both will be merely partial solar eclipses as seen from the Earth's surface, not as dramatic as last summer's total solar eclipse whose path of totality crossed the United States, with partial eclipses being seen from as far north as Canada and as far south as northern South America. Prof. Jay Pasachoff, Chair of th ... more
+ Cutting-Edge Heat Shield Installed on NASA's Parker Solar Probe
+ Big Bear Solar Observatory' Expands View of the Sun
+ Sounding rocket takes a second look at the sun
+ Revised launch date targeted for Parker Solar Probe
+ The true power of the solar wind
+ How solar prominences vibrate
+ Expedition Measures Solar Motions Seen During Last Summer's Total Eclipse


Distant quasar providing clues to early-universe conditions
Charlottesville VA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
Astronomers using the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) have made an image revealing tantalizing details of a quasar nearly 13 billion light-years from Earth - an object that may provide important clues about the physical processes at work in the Universe's first galaxies. The scientists studied a quasar called PSO J352.4034-15.3373 (P352-15), an unusually brigh ... more
+ Groundbreaking Study Sheds New Light on Galaxy Evolution
+ Major Collision Changed the Milky Way Galaxy
+ Even dense neutron stars fall like feathers
+ Kirigami-inspired technique manipulates light at the nanoscale
+ The fingerprints of molecules in space
+ NASA's NuSTAR mission proves superstar Eta Carinae shoots cosmic rays
+ Magnetic Field of SN 1987A's Remains Observed
Plasma-spewing quasar shines light on universe's youth, early galaxy formation
Pasadena CA (SPX) Jul 10, 2018
Carnegie's Eduardo Banados led a team that found a quasar with the brightest radio emission ever observed in the early universe, due to it spewing out a jet of extremely fast-moving material. Banados' discovery was followed up by Emmanuel Momjian of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, which allowed the team to see with unprecedented detail the jet shooting out of a quasar that formed ... more
+ Magnetic skyrmions: Not the only ones of their class
+ Theory of general relativity proven yet again in new research
+ Study provides insight into the physics of the Higgs particle
+ A refined magnetic sense
+ Guiding sound waves through a maze
+ Study develops a model enhancing particle beam efficiency
+ Einstein proved right in another galaxy
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