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SPACEDAILY EXPRESS July 1, 2002
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July 1, 2002
Northrop Grumman To Takeover TRW For $60 Per Share
 After months of attrition TRW has fallen to Northrop Grumman. Pictured here is a laser-based missile defense system TRW is helping to develop. |
Los Angeles - July 1, 2002
Northrop Grumman Corporation and TRW Inc. jointly announced early Monday that they have entered into a definitive merger agreement. The combination will position Northrop Grumman as the nation's second largest defense contractor with projected annual revenues of more than $26 billion and approximately 123,000 employees.
As Summer Starts, Next El Nino Is Slow To Grow
Pasadena - June 27, 2002
The Pacific Ocean doesn't show signs of anything that looks like the whopper El Ni�o of 1997-1998, according to the latest information from the
Ariane 5 Set To Loft GEO Pair July 5
Kourou - Jun 27, 2002
The launch of Arianespace's eighth mission of the year is on schedule for July 5, when a heavy-lift Ariane 5 is to loft a dual telecommunications satellite payload.
Twenty Years On And Still Getting Away
Greenbelt - Jul 01, 2002
On June 27, 1982, Get Away Special No. 1 rocketed into space aboard Space Shuttle "Columbia" on STS-4. Since its first flight in June of 1982, NASA has successfully flown 167 GAS payloads on the Space Shuttle. Experiments have been flown for schools, the US government, foreign governments and private companies.
Neither Rome Nor Universe Built In A Day As Scientists Study New Data
Boston - June 27, 2002
The early evolution of the universe has confounded astronomers for years. Observations seem to show that giant black holes containing as much mass as three billion suns formed less than a billion years after the Big Bang. Collecting so much material so quickly was as unlikely as building a 20-room mansion in a day's time.
Tiny Device Can Detect Hidden Nuclear Weapons, Materials
Argonne - Jun 28, 2002
A small, portable detector for finding concealed nuclear weapons and materials has been developed by the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory.
NASA Selects Team To Build 21st Century Ion Engine For Deep Space Missions
Washington - June 27, 2002
NASA's Office of Space Science in Washington today announced the selection of a team for the development of an advanced ion propulsion system - an alternative to conventional chemical propulsion that could revolutionize the way we send science missions into the solar system. A second team was selected to develop advanced ion optics, which are critical components of ion engines.
We were wrong! Our earlier article on the Asia Pacific Space Center's Christmas Island launch center has been withdrawn. SpaceDaily wishes to apologize unconditionally to Asia Pacific Space Center, and that the story that we previously published contains false allegations about the current and future contractual operations of APSC and its Christmas Island launch proposal. We regret the error. |
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Dirty Solar Arrays Delay Comet Mission Launch Cape Canaveral - Jun 28, 2002
The launch of NASA's Comet Nucleus Tour (CONTOUR) spacecraft aboard a Boeing Delta II rocket has been postponed to no earlier than Wednesday, July 3 following the discovery of a possible "dusty" solar array.
The Art Of Life Is Universal Zurich - Jun 27, 2002
One might say his studio is the universe, because the art work of Arthur Woods focuses on space. The Swiss-American artist who lives near Zurich conceived and built the first sculpture designed for a zero-gravity habitat and actually managed to exhibit it on the Mir space station.
Shenzhou-4 May Rocket Into Space In September Beijing - Jul 01, 2002
The next test flight of China's Shenzhou manned spacecraft may occur as soon as this September, according to various pieces of information that the Chinese media has reported since April.
Harry Potter and the Magical Satellite Los Angeles - Jul 01, 2002
"Wow! Shades of Harry Potter and Stephen King. It makes one believe in ghosts." Thus wrote AMSAT's Bill Tynan in a recent bulletin describing the astounding return to life of a tiny spacecraft.
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