Space News from SpaceDaily.com
June 01, 2020
ROCKET SCIENCE
US astronauts enter space station in milestone mission



Washington (AFP) May 31, 2020
NASA astronauts entered the International Space Station on Sunday after a landmark 19-hour journey on the first crewed US spacecraft in nearly a decade, a triumph for SpaceX and private enterprise. The arrival completed the first leg of the trip, designed to test the capabilities of the Crew Dragon capsule. But the mission will only be declared a success when the astronauts return safely to Earth in a few months' time. The spaceship's hatch opened at 1:02 pm Eastern Time (1702 GMT) as Bob Behnke ... read more

ROCKET SCIENCE
Moscow bemused at US space 'hysteria' as Musk taunts Russia
Moscow (AFP) May 31, 2020
Moscow space officials on Sunday said they were puzzled by "hysteria" around the successful SpaceX flight as Elon Musk taunted Russia and US President Donald Trump vowed to beat it to Mars. ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
For Russia, SpaceX success is 'wakeup call'
Moscow (AFP) May 31, 2020
Russia has lost its long-held monopoly as the only country able to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station following the flawless manned launch by US company SpaceX. ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
Russia plans rocket tests, lunar programme resumption
Moscow (AFP) May 31, 2020
Russia on Sunday put a brave face on the loss of its space travel monopoly, saying it planned to test two new rockets this year and resume its lunar programme in 2021. ... more
SPACEWAR
US Space Force debuts new recruiting ad entitled 'Make History'
Arlington VA (AFNS) May 29, 2020
The U.S. Space Force is releasing a new recruiting ad May 28 designed to encourage people to join the newly-formed military service while also framing the service's ... more
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TECH SPACE
Designing a flexible material to protect buildings, military personnel
Columbia MO (SPX) May 27, 2020
Shake, rattle and roll... Even though they are miles from the epicenter of an earthquake, buildings can collapse due to how an earthquake energy makes the ground shake and rattle. Now, a team ... more
ENERGY TECH
Next-gen laser facilities look to usher in new era of relativistic plasmas research
Washington DC (SPX) May 27, 2020
The subject of the 2018 Nobel Prize in physics, chirped pulse amplification is a technique that increases the strength of laser pulses in many of today's highest-powered research lasers. As next-gen ... more
ENERGY TECH
Surprise link found to edge turbulence in fusion plasma
Plainsboro NJ (SPX) May 27, 2020
Blobs can wreak havoc in plasma required for fusion reactions. This bubble-like turbulence swells up at the edge of fusion plasmas and drains heat from the edge, limiting the efficiency of fusion re ... more
MISSILE DEFENSE
Advanced Air and Missile Defense, in the hands of soldiers
Falls Church VA (SPX) May 28, 2020
It's a cold December morning at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, and two surrogate cruise missile targets have just been launched, one after the other. They are flying separate courses among ... more
UAV NEWS
Citadel Defense launches Deepfake AI to prevent drone attacks on military and government assets
San Diego CA (SPX) May 27, 2020
Citadel Defense, a proven innovator in full spectrum counter drone solutions, has released new software incorporating deepfake neural networks to protect against adversarial spoofing tactics. This c ... more
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CHIP TECH
DARPA Selects Teams to Increase Security of Semiconductor Supply Chain
Washington DC (SPX) May 29, 2020
As Internet of Things (IoT) devices rapidly increase in popularity and deployment, economic attackers and nation-states alike are shifting their attention to the vulnerabilities of digital integrate ... more
SPACE MEDICINE
Surrey reveals its implantable biosensor that operates without batteries
Surrey UK (SPX) May 22, 2020
Researchers from the University of Surrey have revealed their new biodegradable motion sensor - paving the way for implanted nanotechnology that could help future sports professionals better monitor ... more
TECH SPACE
Kyoto scientists announce a 'nuclear' periodic table
Kyoto, Japan (SPX) May 28, 2020
A staple in every science classroom is the periodic table of elements, and for many it is their first introduction to the vast mysteries of the natural world. Now physicists from Kyoto Univers ... more
ROBO SPACE
The concept of creating brain-on-chip revealed
Nizhny Novgorod, Russia (SPX) May 29, 2020
Lobachevsky University scientists in collaboration with their colleagues from Russia, Italy, China and the United States have proposed the concept of a memristive neurohybrid chip to be used in comp ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
SpaceX rocket lifts off on historic private crewed flight
Kennedy Space Center, United States (AFP) May 30, 2020
A SpaceX rocket carrying two veteran NASA astronauts was headed for the International Space Station on Saturday on the first ever crewed flight by a private company, ushering in a new era in space travel. ... more


Elon and Gwynne, the pair who made SpaceX

MICROSAT BLITZ
Nanosatellite with global mission tested for space
Paris (ESA) May 29, 2020
ESA's largest antenna test facility remains operational despite the COVID-19 pandemic, performing pre-flight testing for the latest satellite in a constellation to serve the internet of things. ... more
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MOON DAILY
Will US Attempt to Introduce New Moon Mining Rules Trigger New Space Race?
New Delhi (Sputnik) May 29, 2020
The US announced the Artemis Accord on 15 May and asked countries to join the treaty to explore the Moon with a new framework, while opposing the 1979 Moon Agreement. The US claimed that the new agr ... more
EXO WORLDS
In Planet Formation, It's Location, Location, Location
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 29, 2020
Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope are finding that planets have a tough time forming in the rough-and-tumble central region of the massive, crowded star cluster Westerlund 2. Located 2 ... more
EXO WORLDS
ESPRESSO confirms the presence of an Earth around the nearest star
Geneva, Switzerland (SPX) May 29, 2020
The existence of a planet the size of Earth around the closest star in the solar system, Proxima Centauri, has been confirmed by an international team of scientists including researchers from the Un ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
SpaceX astronaut launch: here's the rocket science it must get right
Birmingham UK (The Conversation) May 28, 2020
Two NASA astronauts, Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley, will make history by travelling to the International Space Station in a privately funded spacecraft, SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
Doug Liman to direct Tom Cruise film shot in space
Washington DC (UPI) May 29, 2020
Doug Liman will direct Tom Cruise in the first narrative feature film to be shot in space. The Hollywood Reporter confirmed Tuesday that Liman, 54, will direct Cruise, 57, in the new movie fil ... more
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No SpaceX T-shirts for tourists at Cape Canaveral
Merritt Island, United States (AFP) May 27, 2020
NASA begged tourists to watch the SpaceX launch online, but space fans are still showing up in Florida. It would have been pretty good news for Brenda Mulberry - if she'd had some SpaceX T-shirts to sell them. "We can't sell SpaceX because they're a private company," said Mulberry, the owner of Space Shirts. Her store is located on the main road in Merritt Island, the Florida peninsula ... more
+ Airbus wins ESA contract to construct third European Service Module for NASA's Orion spacecraft
+ Doug Liman to direct Tom Cruise film shot in space
+ Barrett, Raymond speak with U.S. astronaut ahead of historic launch
+ US Space Council meets ahead of private, US crewed launch
+ Robert Polsgrove: Commercial Crew to Human Landers
+ NASA seeking US Citizens for social isolation study for Moon and Mars missions
+ Ultra-thin sail could speed journey to other star systems
SpaceX astronaut launch: here's the rocket science it must get right
Birmingham UK (The Conversation) May 28, 2020
Two NASA astronauts, Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley, will make history by travelling to the International Space Station in a privately funded spacecraft, SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon capsule. But the launch, which was due to take place on May 27, has been aborted due to bad weather, and will instead take place on May 30 at 3:22 pm EDT. The astronauts will take off lying on t ... more
+ First test of Virgin Orbit rocket fails to accomplish goal
+ AFRL marks 10 years of ramjet development since X-51A test mission
+ US astronauts enter space station in milestone mission
+ Elon and Gwynne, the pair who made SpaceX
+ SpaceX rocket lifts off on historic private crewed flight
+ Russia plans rocket tests, lunar programme resumption
+ Moscow bemused at US space 'hysteria' as Musk taunts Russia


MAVEN maps electric currents around Mars that are fundamental to atmospheric loss
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 27, 2020
Five years after NASA's MAVEN spacecraft entered into orbit around Mars, data from the mission has led to the creation of a map of electric current systems in the Martian atmosphere. "These currents play a fundamental role in the atmospheric loss that transformed Mars from a world that could have supported life into an inhospitable desert," said experimental physicist Robin Ramstad of the ... more
+ The detective aboard NASA's Perseverance Rover
+ Air deliveries bring NASA's Perseverance Mars rover closer to launch
+ NASA's Curiosity Rover Finds Clues to Chilly Ancient Mars Buried in Rocks
+ The little tires that could go to Mars
+ NASA's Perseverance Rover goes through trials by fire, ice, light and sound
+ Mystery of lava-like flows on Mars solved by scientists
+ ExoMars rover upgrades and parachute tests
China space program targets July launch for Mars mission
Beijing (AFP) May 25, 2020
China is targeting a July launch for its ambitious plans for a Mars mission which will include landing a remote-controlled robot on the surface of the red planet, the company in charge of the project has said. Beijing has invested billions of dollars in its space programme in an effort to catch up with its rival the United States and affirm its status as a major world power. The Mars mis ... more
+ More details of China's space station unveiled
+ China's tracking ship Yuanwang-5 back from rocket monitoring mission
+ China's Kuaizhou rocket industrial park partially operational
+ China's experimental new-generation manned spaceship works normally in orbit
+ Long March-5B rocket enables China to construct space station
+ China's new spacecraft returns to Earth: official
+ China's space test hits snag with capsule 'anomaly'
New UK-based space team launches to boost sector and economy
London, UK (SPX) May 26, 2020
Four UK-based companies have announced a plan to their complementary skills and expertise to enhance further the country's space industry capabilities to deliver prosperity and security. Athena is the UK's new national team in space, formed by Serco, Inmarsat, CGI UK and Lockheed Martin UK. The four companies are world leaders in providing technology and services across defence, space, com ... more
+ Harwell Space Cluster launches 10-year strategy to become UK Gateway to Space
+ Study explores space's impact on our daily lives
+ Strings of pearls in the night sky - the Starlink satellite project
+ India allows private firms, start-ups a sneak peek into ISRO data
+ Indian space sector reforms: Will it be a big bang approach?
+ RUAG Space offers new electronics for constellations
+ Intelsat files for bankruptcy, seeks to restructure
Kyoto scientists announce a 'nuclear' periodic table
Kyoto, Japan (SPX) May 28, 2020
A staple in every science classroom is the periodic table of elements, and for many it is their first introduction to the vast mysteries of the natural world. Now physicists from Kyoto University have unveiled a new table that provides a different perspective on the building blocks of the universe. While the traditional table is based on the behavior of electrons in an atom, this new table ... more
+ SpaceChain invests in Core Semiconductor to drive open Direct Satellite-to-Devices Communication
+ UK commits new funding to combat space debris
+ Designing a flexible material to protect buildings, military personnel
+ Solving the space junk problem
+ New Observatory Will Track Near-Earth Satellites and Space Debris
+ CSIRO uncovers innovative approach to gold exploration
+ Amazon puts heat on eSports giants with 'Crucible'


Distance from Brightest Stars Is Key to Preserving Primordial Discs
Garching, Germany (SPX) May 29, 2020
The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope was used to conduct a three-year study of the crowded, massive and young star cluster Westerlund 2. The research found that the material encircling stars near the cluster's centre is mysteriously devoid of the large, dense clouds of dust that would be expected to become planets in a few million years. Their absence is caused by the cluster's most massive ... more
+ Astronomers create cloud atlas for hot, Jupiter-like exoplanets
+ Galactic crash may have triggered Solar System formation
+ ESPRESSO confirms the presence of an Earth around the nearest star
+ In Planet Formation, It's Location, Location, Location
+ Terrestrial bacteria can grow on nutrients from space
+ ESO telescope sees signs of planet birth
+ The bold plan to see continents and oceans on another earth
SOFIA finds clues hidden in Pluto's haze
Moffett Field CA (SPX) May 14, 2020
When the New Horizons spacecraft passed by Pluto in 2015, one of the many fascinating features its images revealed was that this small, frigid world in the distant solar system has a hazy atmosphere. Now, new data helps explain how Pluto's haze is formed from the faint light of the Sun 3.7 billion miles away as it moves through an unusual orbit. Remote observations of Pluto by NASA's teles ... more
+ New evidence of watery plumes on Jupiter's moon Europa
+ Telescopes and spacecraft join forces to probe deep into Jupiter's atmosphere
+ Newly reprocessed images of Europa show 'chaos terrain' in crisp detail
+ Mysteries of Uranus' oddities explained by Japanese astronomers
+ Jupiter probe JUICE: Final integration in full swing
+ The birth of a "Snowman" at the edge of the Solar System
+ New Horizons pushing the frontier ever deeper into the Kuiper Belt


Hydropower plants to support solar and wind energy in West Africa
Leuven, Belgium (SPX) May 29, 2020
Hydropower plants can support solar and wind power, rather unpredictable by nature, in a climate-friendly manner. A new study in the scientific journal Nature Sustainability has now mapped the potential for such "solar-wind-water" strategies for West Africa: an important region where the power sector is still under development, and where generation capacity and power grids will be greatly expand ... more
+ 'Water is life': COVID-19 exposes chronic crisis in Navajo Nation
+ Search-and-rescue algorithm identifies hidden'traps' in ocean waters
+ There is no escaping from climate change, even in the deep sea
+ The deep ocean is warming slowly - but dramatic changes are ahead
+ Israel picks local firm over Chinese for desalination plant
+ Mississippi Delta marshes in a state of irreversible collapse
+ Towable sensor free-falls to measure vertical slices of ocean conditions
Harnessing space to save lives at sea
Prague, Czech Republic (SPX) May 25, 2020
The migration crisis in recent years has thrown into focus the fact that current technological solutions are simply not capable of saving the lives of all those who get lost at sea. A number of search and rescue services and other state authorities are increasingly using drones to make surveillance operations more efficient. However, drones usually have very limited flight time which is not suff ... more
+ Out-of-the-box spoofing mitigation with Galileo's OS-NMA service
+ Galileo in high latitudes and harsh environments
+ New BeiDou satellite starts operation in network
+ Velodyne Lidar announces multi-year sales agreement with GeoSLAM
+ Galileo positioning aiding Covid-19 reaction
+ GPS celebrates 25th year of operation
+ Galileo Green Lane, easing pressure at the EU's internal borders


NASA awards $3M to develop Lunar LASVEGAS
San Antonio TX (SPX) May 28, 2020
NASA has awarded Southwest Research Institute $3 million to develop a lunar version of its Laser Absorption Spectrometer for Volatiles and Evolved Gas (LASVEGAS) instrument. This spectrometer can precisely measure the volatile compounds present in planetary atmospheres and surfaces - critical information for space science and exploration. "LASVEGAS is about half the size of a paper towel r ... more
+ Will US Attempt to Introduce New Moon Mining Rules Trigger New Space Race?
+ Made in India moon analog soil gets patent for ISRO
+ US seeks to change the rules for mining the Moon
+ Russia says ready to discuss Moon exploration with NASA
+ US hopes Russia will support Artemis Space Development Accords
+ Lunar Surface Trash or Treasure
+ Innovators around the world help NASA improve a moon digging robot
The asteroids Ryugu and Bennu were formed by the destruction of a large asteroid
Paruis, France (SPX) May 28, 2020
What is the origin of the asteroids Bennu and Ryugu, and of their spinning-top shape? An international research team led by Patrick Michel, a CNRS researcher at the Laboratoire Lagrange and Ronald-Louis Ballouz from the University of Arizona, proposes an answer to this question in an article published in Nature Communications on May 27, 2020. Numerical simulations of large asteroid disrupt ... more
+ Dinosaur-dooming asteroid struck earth at 'deadliest possible' angle
+ OSIRIS-REx Asteroid Sample Collection Set for October 20th
+ UH ATLAS telescope discovers first-of-its-kind asteroid
+ Aerojet Rocketdyne delivers DART spacecraft propulsion systems ahead of 2021 asteroid impact mission
+ OSIRIS-REx ready for touchdown on Asteroid Bennu for sample collection
+ Why ESA and NASA's SOHO Spacecraft Spots So Many Comets
+ The discovery of Comet SWAN by solar-watcher SOHO


Calling for ideas for next Earth Explorer
Paris (ESA) May 26, 2020
As part of ESA's continuing commitment to realise cutting-edge satellite missions to advance the scientific understanding of our planet and to show how new technologies can be used in space, a new Call for Earth Explorer mission ideas has been released. The Call invites scientists working in Earth observation to submit ideas for ESA's 11th Earth Explorer mission. Our planet works as ... more
+ NASA's AIM Spots First Arctic Noctilucent Clouds of the Season
+ Volcanic eruptions reduce global rainfall
+ ESA's oldest Earth-observer images Delhi airport
+ Common CFC replacements break down into persistent pollutants
+ Tiny NASA satellite captures first image of clouds and aerosols
+ New, rapid mechanism for atmospheric particle formation
+ Space video streaming company Sen awards Momentus orbital deployment contract
Sun is less active than similar stars
Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany (SPX) May 01, 2020
The extent to which solar activity (and thus the number of sunspots and the solar brightness) varies can be reconstructed using various methods - at least for a certain period of time. Since 1610, for example, there have been reliable records of sunspots covering the Sun; the distribution of radioactive varieties of carbon and beryllium in tree rings and ice cores allows us to draw conclus ... more
+ Switchbacks and spikes: Parker Solar Probe data consistent with 20-year-old theory
+ New research helps explain why the solar wind is hotter than expected
+ SwRI to build Space Weather Follow-On L1 for NOAA
+ SwRI-led PUNCH mission achieves milestone
+ High-Res Images Reveal Fine Plasma Threads in Sun's Atmosphere
+ A journey into the northern lights
+ NASA Selects Mission to Study Causes of Giant Solar Particle Storms


Astronomers see 'cosmic ring of fire,' 11 billion years ago
Canberra, Australia (SPX) May 26, 2020
Astronomers have captured an image of a super-rare type of galaxy - described as a "cosmic ring of fire" - as it existed 11 billion years ago. The galaxy, which has roughly the mass of the Milky Way, is circular with a hole in the middle, rather like a titanic doughnut. Its discovery, announced in the journal Nature Astronomy, is set to shake up theories about the earliest formation of galactic ... more
+ Cosmic bursts unveil Universe's missing matter
+ Astrophysicists capture new class of transient objects
+ Two More Rare, Explosive Events Captured as 'Cow' mystery strikes back
+ Mergers between galaxies trigger activity in their core
+ New infrared telescope to help find Universe's "hidden treasures" in real time
+ Fresh Antimatter Study Will Help Search for Dark Matter
+ Beyond the Brim, Sombrero galaxy's halo suggests turbulent past
Half the matter in the universe was missing - we found it hiding in the cosmos
Santa Cruz CA (The Conversation) May 28, 2020
In the late 1990s, cosmologists made a prediction about how much ordinary matter there should be in the universe. About 5%, they estimated, should be regular stuff with the rest a mixture of dark matter and dark energy. But when cosmologists counted up everything they could see or measure at the time, they came up short. By a lot. The sum of all the ordinary matter that cosmologists measur ... more
+ Under pressure, black holes feast
+ Media incorrectly connects UH research to parallel universe theory
+ Physicist creates fifth state of matter from their living room
+ Photon discovery is a major step toward at-scale quantum technologies
+ NIST team builds hybrid quantum system by entangling molecule with atom
+ Scientists use light to accelerate supercurrents, access forbidden light, quantum world
+ UCLA physicists develop world's best quantum bits
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