Space News from SpaceDaily.com
August 01, 2018
SPACEMART
Thales and SSL form consortium to further design and develop Telesat's LEO constellation



Westminster CO (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
Thales Alenia Space, a Joint Venture between Thales (67 %) and Leonardo (33 %), and SSL, a Maxar Technologies company (NYSE: MAXR; TSX: MAXR), have signed a consortium agreement to pursue the development and manufacture of Telesat's highly advanced global LEO satellite constellation and end-to-end system. In addition the consortium, led by Thales Alenia Space, announced reports that they have been awarded a contract by Telesat for a System Design and Risk Management Project for the Telesat LEO constella ... read more

EARTH OBSERVATION
China launches high-resolution Earth observation satellite
Taiyuan, China (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
China on Tuesday launched Gaofen-11, an optical remote sensing satellite, as part of the country's high-resolution Earth observation project. The Gaofen-11 satellite was launched on a Long Mar ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
NASA, Commercial Partners Progress to Human Spaceflight Home Stretch
Kennedy Space Center FL (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
NASA and commercial industry partners Boeing and SpaceX are making significant advances in preparing to launch astronauts from U.S. soil for the first time since the space shuttle's retirement in 20 ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
Cygnus concludes 9th Cargo Supply Mission to Space Station
Dulles VA (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) announced that its "S.S. J.R. Thompson" Cygnus spacecraft successfully completed its ninth cargo supply mission to the International Space Station under NASA ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
First SLS Core Stage flight hardware complete, ready for joining
Huntsville AL (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
The first major piece of core stage hardware for NASA's Space Launch System rocket has been assembled and is ready to be joined with other hardware for Exploration Mission-1, the first integrated fl ... more
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TIME AND SPACE
Black holes are fuzzy balls of string with an endless appetite for matter
Washington (UPI) Jul 31, 2018
A trio of physicists at Ohio State University believe black holes are like "fuzzballs" with an insatiable appetite for matter. And according to their latest research, these fuzzballs are not surrounded by a "firewall." ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
NASA Selects US Firms to Provide Commercial Suborbital Flight Services
Edwards AFB CA (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
NASA's Flight Opportunities Program has selected four companies to integrate and fly technology payloads on commercial suborbital reusable platforms that carry payloads near the boundary of space. ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
The cosmic ray gun duel of Eta Carinae
Hiroshima, Japan (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
An international collaboration operating NASA's NuSTAR satellite has revealed that two of the biggest stars in the galaxy are capable of creating cosmic rays. Their results were published in Nature ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
Solar flares disrupted radio communications during September 2017 Atlantic hurricanes
Washington DC (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
An unlucky coincidence of space and Earth weather in early September 2017 caused radio blackouts for hours during critical hurricane emergency response efforts, according to a new study in Space Wea ... more
MISSILE DEFENSE
Japan to spend $4.2 bn over 30 years on missile defence system radar
Tokyo (AFP) July 30, 2018
Japan said Monday it would spend some $4.2 billion over the next 30 years on installing and operating US radar systems to protect itself against North Korean missile threats. ... more
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SPACEWAR
Russian defense industry reveals time frame for delivery of new strategic arms
Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 31, 2018
Earlier this year, the Russian president announced that Russia was well underway in upgrading its strategic defenses amid NATO's increasing deployments by Russia's borders, US efforts to build a mis ... more
MISSILE DEFENSE
US Congress pushes Ballistic Missile Defense Program based on laser-armed drones
Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 31, 2018
Despite receiving a record-high $11.5 billion budget in 2018, the US Missile Defense Agency is poised to receive an extra $50 million in 2019 for a missile defense program that it did not ask Congre ... more
NUKEWARS
Trump says willing to meet with Iran leaders 'any time'
Washington (AFP) July 30, 2018
Donald Trump seemed to jettison threats of impending war with Iran on Monday, saying he was willing to meet the country's leaders without precondition, a dramatic about-face by the enigmatic US president. ... more
MARSDAILY
Mars makes closest approach to Earth in 15 years
Los Angeles (AFP) July 31, 2018
Earth's neighboring planet, Mars, is closer than it has been in the past 15 years, offering unusually bright views of the Red Planet's auburn hues. ... more
TECTONICS
Plate tectonics not needed to sustain life
University Park PA (SPX) Jul 31, 2018
There may be more habitable planets in the universe than we previously thought, according to Penn State geoscientists, who suggest that plate tectonics - long assumed to be a requirement for suitabl ... more


Deglacial changes in western Atlantic Ocean circulation

FLORA AND FAUNA
Bacteria extinctions are quite common, study shows
Washington (UPI) Jul 30, 2018
Until now, many scientists thought microbes rarely go extinct. But new research suggests bacteria species disappear at surprisingly high rates. ... more
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CHIP TECH
Reversing cause and effect is no trouble for quantum computers
Singapore (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
Watch a movie backwards and you'll likely get confused - but a quantum computer wouldn't. That's the conclusion of researcher Mile Gu at the Centre for Quantum Technologies (CQT) at the National Uni ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Demon in the details of quantum thermodynamics
St. Louis MO (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
Thermodynamics is one of the most human of scientific enterprises, according to Kater Murch, associate professor of physics in Arts and Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. "It has ... more
TECH SPACE
US judge blocks release of 3D gun blueprints amid uproar
Chicago (AFP) Aug 1, 2018
A US judge on Tuesday temporarily blocked the online publication of blueprints for 3D-printed firearms, in a last-ditch effort to stop a settlement President Donald Trump's administration had reached with the company releasing the digital documents. ... more
MARSDAILY
Mars terraforming not possible using present-day technology
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 31, 2018
Science fiction writers have long featured terraforming, the process of creating an Earth-like or habitable environment on another planet, in their stories. Scientists themselves have proposed terra ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
NASA's Parker Solar Probe and the curious case of the hot corona
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
Something mysterious is going on at the Sun. In defiance of all logic, its atmosphere gets much, much hotter the farther it stretches from the Sun's blazing surface. Temperatures in the corona ... more
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NASA, Commercial Partners Progress to Human Spaceflight Home Stretch
Kennedy Space Center FL (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
NASA and commercial industry partners Boeing and SpaceX are making significant advances in preparing to launch astronauts from U.S. soil for the first time since the space shuttle's retirement in 2011. As part of the Commercial Crew Program's public-private partnership, both companies are fine-tuning their designs, integrating hardware, and testing their crew spacecraft and rockets to prepare fo ... more
+ Space Station experiment reaches ultracold milestone
+ Cygnus concludes 9th Cargo Supply Mission to Space Station
+ Space tourism economics - financing and regulating trips to the final frontier
+ NASA to Name Astronauts Assigned to First Boeing, SpaceX Flights
+ Crewed Missions Beyond LEO
+ Sky's no limit: Japan firm to fly wedding plaques into space
+ NASA Marshall Awards 43 New Small Innovation and Technology Research Proposals
NASA Selects US Firms to Provide Commercial Suborbital Flight Services
Edwards AFB CA (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
NASA's Flight Opportunities Program has selected four companies to integrate and fly technology payloads on commercial suborbital reusable platforms that carry payloads near the boundary of space. The selection is part of NASA's continuing effort to foster a viable market for American commercial reusable suborbital platforms that allow testing of new space technologies within Earth's atmos ... more
+ First SLS Core Stage flight hardware complete, ready for joining
+ NASA certifies Russia's RD-180 rocket engines for manned flights
+ SpaceX launches, lands rocket in challenging conditions
+ Latest Blue Origin Launch Tests Technologies of Interest to Space Exploration
+ Russia's Khrunichev Center Develops Concept of Reusable Rocket
+ Roscosmos' Research Center's Staff Suspected of Leaking Data Abroad
+ Sustained hypersonic flight-enabling technology patent granted to Advanced Rockets Corporation


Scientists looking for ways to grow crops on Red Planet
Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 31, 2018
While humans prepare to land on Mars and eventually colonize it, the question about what people will eat on the Red Planet looms large. Indeed, generating a stable supply of food poses a major challenge given the exorbitant cost of sending resources from Earth, the scientific journal Universe wrote. This means that colonizers will need a high level of self-sufficiency and sustainable ... more
+ Mars makes closest approach to Earth in 15 years
+ Mars terraforming not possible using present-day technology
+ Evidence of subsurface Martian liquid water bolstered
+ Life on Mars: Japan astronaut dreams after lake discovery
+ Is Mars' Soil Too Dry to Sustain Life?
+ Mars Express Detects Liquid Water Hidden Under Planet's South Pole
+ 'Storm Chasers' on Mars Searching for Dusty Secrets
Growing US unease with China's new deep space facility in Argentina
Moscow (Sputnik) Aug 01, 2018
China is expanding its presence in Latin America filling the gap left by the US, Argentinian foreign studies analyst Gustavo Cardozo told Sputnik. Besides solidifying its positions on the continent, China is seeking to become a major space power, according to the analyst. China's space base in Argentina's Patagonia is making Washington feel unease amid Beijing's consistent expansion in Lat ... more
+ China developing in-orbit satellite transport vehicle
+ PRSS-1 Satellite in Good Condition
+ China readying for space station era: Yang Liwei
+ China launches new space science program
+ China Rising as Major Space Power
+ China launches new-tech experiment twin satellites
+ China confirms reception of data from Gaofen-6 satellite
Thales and SSL form consortium to further design and develop Telesat's LEO constellation
Westminster CO (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
Thales Alenia Space, a Joint Venture between Thales (67 %) and Leonardo (33 %), and SSL, a Maxar Technologies company (NYSE: MAXR; TSX: MAXR), have signed a consortium agreement to pursue the development and manufacture of Telesat's highly advanced global LEO satellite constellation and end-to-end system. In addition the consortium, led by Thales Alenia Space, announced reports that they have be ... more
+ We'll soon have ten times more satellites in orbit - here's what that means
+ Aerospace Workforce Training A National Mandate for 2018
+ Rockwell Collins and Iridium Partner to Deliver Next-Generation Aviation Services
+ 27 Satellites in 3 Years: Indian Private Sector Shifts Focus to Space Projects
+ Head of Roscosmos Research Center Paison Hands in Application for Dismissal
+ Space, not Brexit, is final frontier for Scottish outpost
+ Billion Pound export campaign to fuel UK space industry
US judge blocks release of 3D gun blueprints amid uproar
Chicago (AFP) Aug 1, 2018
A US judge on Tuesday temporarily blocked the online publication of blueprints for 3D-printed firearms, in a last-ditch effort to stop a settlement President Donald Trump's administration had reached with the company releasing the digital documents. Eight states and the District of Columbia, which houses the capital Washington, had filed a lawsuit against the federal government, calling its ... more
+ Tech titans jostle as Pentagon calls for cloud contract bids
+ Lawmakers protest US deal allowing free plans for 3D guns
+ NASA Interns Develop and Release Navigation Software Simulating Star Tracker Navigation
+ Millennium Space Systems ALTAIR Pathfinder Satellite Surpasses 10,000 Hours in Orbit
+ Smart machine components alert users to damage and wear
+ Intense conditions turn nitrogen metallic
+ Made-to-measure silicon building blocks


NASA's TESS spacecraft starts science operations
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite has started its search for planets around nearby stars, officially beginning science operations on July 25, 2018. TESS is expected to transmit its first series of science data back to Earth in August, and thereafter periodically every 13.5 days, once per orbit, as the spacecraft makes it closest approach to Earth. The TESS Science Team will begi ... more
+ How Can You Tell If That ET Story Is Real
+ WSU researcher sees possibility of moon life
+ X-ray Data May Be First Evidence of a Star Devouring a Planet
+ Glowing bacteria on deep-sea fish shed light on evolution, 'third type' of symbiosis
+ Origami-inspired device helps marine biologists study aliens
+ Finding a Planet with a 10-Year Orbit in a Few Months
+ TESS Spacecraft Continues Testing Prior to First Observations
High-Altitude Jovian Clouds
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
his image captures a high-altitude cloud formation surrounded by swirling patterns in the atmosphere of Jupiter's North North Temperate Belt region. The North North Temperate Belt is one of Jupiter's many colorful, swirling cloud bands. Scientists have wondered for decades how deep these bands extend. Gravity measurements collected by Juno during its close flybys of the planet have now pro ... more
+ 'Ribbon' wraps up mystery of Jupiter's magnetic equator
+ The True Colors of Pluto and Charon
+ Radiation Maps of Jupiter's Moon Europa: Key to Future Missions
+ Dozen new Jupiter moons declared
+ NASA Juno data indicate another possible volcano on Jupiter moon Io
+ First Global Maps of Pluto and Charon from New Horizons Published
+ Europa's Ocean Ascending


Can seagrass help fight ocean acidification?
Washington DC (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
Seagrass meadows could play a limited, localized role in alleviating ocean acidification in coastal ecosystems, according to new work led by Carnegie's David Koweek and including Carnegie's Ken Caldeira and published in Ecological Applications. When coal, oil, or gas is burned, the resulting carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere where it is the driving force behind global climate ... more
+ Chile to restrict tourists and non-locals on Easter Island
+ First mapping of global marine wilderness shows just how little remains
+ Lebanon sinks old tanks to create underwater dive 'park'
+ Thick mud hampers Laos dam rescue with hundreds still unaccounted for
+ Ocean acidification is disrupting marine ecosystems, study shows
+ The last wild ocean
+ The blueprint for El Nino diversity
China launches new twin BeiDou-3 navigation satellites
Xichang, China (XNA) Jul 31, 2018
China on Sunday sent twin satellites into space via a single carrier rocket, entering a period with unprecedentedly intensive launches of BeiDou satellites. The Long March-3B carrier rocket lifted off from Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province at 9:48 a.m., the 281st mission of the Long March rocket series. The twin satellites are the 33rd and 34th of ... more
+ Arianespace orbits four more Galileo satellites, as Ariane 5 logs its 99th mission
+ GMV and Tecnobit partners with Skydel
+ Europe's next Galileo satellites in place atop Ariane 5
+ CTSi flight tests prototype navigation system to replace GPS in highly contested environments for US Navy
+ Love navigated by Beidou
+ Next four Galileo satellites fuelled for launch
+ NASA Tests Solar Sail for CubeSat that Will Study Near-Earth Asteroids


MIDAS cameras spot pair of lunar flashes caused by meteoroid impacts
Washington (UPI) Jul 30, 2018
New images from the European Space Agency showcased a pair of recent lunar flashes. Photographs of the flashes were captured using CCD cameras at a trio of observatories in Spain, which make up the MIDAS project. CCD stands for "charge coupled device." Lunar flashes occur when space rocks collide with parts of the moon facing away from the sun. Because these parts of the moon are ... more
+ At 60, NASA shoots for revival of moon glory days
+ Russia may use ISS Modules in Lunar Gateway Project
+ Israel plans its first moon launch in December
+ 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
What Looks Like Ceres on Earth
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 30, 2018
With its dark, heavily cratered surface interrupted by tantalizing bright spots, Ceres may not remind you of our home planet Earth at first glance. The dwarf planet, which orbits the Sun in the vast asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, is also far smaller than Earth (in both mass and diameter). With its frigid temperature and lack of atmosphere, we're pretty sure Ceres can't support life as w ... more
+ China Focus: Capture an asteroid, bring it back to Earth?
+ Twenty Years of Planetary Defense
+ NASA's Dawn spacecraft focused on Ceres as it nears end of mission
+ Observatories Team Up to Reveal Rare Double Asteroid
+ ATLAS Telescope Pinpoints Meteorite Impact Prediction
+ Dusk for Dawn: Mission of many firsts to gather more data in home stretch
+ Fragment of Impacting Asteroid Recovered in Botswana


China launches high-resolution Earth observation satellite
Taiyuan, China (SPX) Aug 01, 2018
China on Tuesday launched Gaofen-11, an optical remote sensing satellite, as part of the country's high-resolution Earth observation project. The Gaofen-11 satellite was launched on a Long March 4B rocket at 11 am Beijing Time from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in northern Shanxi Province. It was the 282nd flight mission by a Long March carrier rocket. The satellite can be used ... more
+ What is causing more extreme precipitation in the northeast?
+ Urban geophone array offers new look at northern Los Angeles basin
+ Satellite tracking reveals Philippine waters are important for endangered whale sharks
+ Satellite maps reveal spread of mountaintop coal mining in Appalachia
+ Preparing to fly the wind mission Aeolus
+ Red Sea flushes faster from far flung volcanoes
+ NASA Debuts Online Toolkit to Promote Commercial Use of Satellite Data
NASA's Parker Solar Probe and the curious case of the hot corona
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
Something mysterious is going on at the Sun. In defiance of all logic, its atmosphere gets much, much hotter the farther it stretches from the Sun's blazing surface. Temperatures in the corona - the tenuous, outermost layer of the solar atmosphere - spike upwards of 2 million degrees Fahrenheit, while just 1,000 miles below, the underlying surface simmers at a balmy 10,000 F. How the Sun m ... more
+ Solar flares disrupted radio communications during September 2017 Atlantic hurricanes
+ Parker Solar Probe and the birth of the solar wind
+ 'Blood moon' dazzles skygazers in century's longest eclipse
+ Red planet and 'blood moon' pair up to dazzle skygazers
+ Rare Red Moon and Mars in Evening Sky on 27 July
+ NASA prepares to launch Parker Solar Probe, a mission to touch the Sun
+ How does the sun's rotational cycle influence lightning activity on earth?


Colliding stars spill radioactive molecules into space
Charlottesville VA (SPX) Jul 31, 2018
When two Sun-like stars collide, the result can be a spectacular explosion and the formation of an entirely new star. One such event was seen from Earth in 1670. It appeared to observers as a bright, red "new star." Though initially visible with the naked eye, this burst of cosmic light quickly faded and now requires powerful telescopes to see the remains of this merger: a dim central star ... more
+ Stellar corpse reveals origin of radioactive molecules
+ The cosmic ray gun duel of Eta Carinae
+ Blue crystals in meteorites show that our sun went through the 'terrible twos'
+ French Consortium Joins Square Kilometre Array Radio Telescope Project
+ Trapping light that doesn't bounce off track for faster electronics
+ Researchers discover thin gap on stellar family portrait
+ New family photos of Mars and Saturn from Hubble
X-ray technology reveals never-before-seen matter around black hole
Hiroshima, Japan (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
In an international collaboration between Japan and Sweden, scientists clarified how gravity affects the shape of matter near the black hole in binary system Cygnus X-1. Their findings, which were published in Nature Astronomy this month, may help scientists further understand the physics of strong gravity and the evolution of black holes and galaxies. Near the center of the constellation ... more
+ Black holes are fuzzy balls of string with an endless appetite for matter
+ First Successful Test of General Relativity Near Supermassive Black Hole
+ A Simpler Approach to Black Hole Description Developed
+ Galaxy outskirts likely hunting grounds for dying massive stars and black holes
+ Black holes really just ever-growing balls of string, researchers say
+ Demon in the details of quantum thermodynamics
+ New algorithm could help find new physics
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