TERRA DAILY SPACE WAR MARS DAILY SPACE MART SINO DAILY SPACE TRAVEL
FEBRUARY 24, 2006 24/7 News Coverage our time will build eternity
Space Capabilities Integral To Economy, Central To Defense Structure
by General Lance W. Lord
Colorado Springs CO (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
Contrary to what some would like us to believe, space acquisition is not derailed. It is true our failed acquisition strategy and manning policies of the 1990s did get us off track. The result: Our major programs developed in the 1990s had multiple congenital defects. We were wrong to think we could take short cuts to success and are now suffering the consequences. For good reason, the space program has come under careful scrutiny and sharp criticism.
Google Re Indexes SpaceWar.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Google Inc. has responded to requests
to re-index our associated Internet site - SpaceWar.com - a daily news wire covering military space issues.

Many thanks to all our readers who helped by sending emails and picking up the phone.

We look forward to a continuing and profitable partnership with Google to provide readers with highly contextual ads driven by our growing database of news and information.

Both are outstanding products and we readily recommend that companies buy keywords on our websites via the Google Ad Words system.

  
SubscribeUnsubscribe
Subscribe To Our Free Newsletter
Contact Us Los Angeles Sales Office: 310-373-3169
Email Us :: Advertising :: Editorial :: Publisher ::
XML News Feeds :: Space :: Earth :: War :: China
LAST 5 DAYS FEB 23 FEB 22 FEB 21 FEB 20 FEB 17
Arianespace Clears Ariane 5 For Launch
Kourou, French Guyana (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
Arianespace has authorized the launch of its heavy-lift Ariane 5 ECA rocket for Friday evening, Feb. 24. The rocket will carry a dual payload of SPAINSAT, a military telecom satellite for Spain's Ministry of Defense, and HOT BIRD 7A, a television broadcasting satellite. Mission controllers approved the launch following the replacement of a problem component.
ESO's VLT Launches Laser Guide Star
Cerro Paranal, Chile (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
Astronomers at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope array have created an artificial laser guide star that makes it possible to apply the instrument's adaptive-optics system that counteracts the blurring effect of the atmosphere. ESO ignited a laser beam of several watts on Jan. 28 at Yepun, the fourth 8.2-meter telescope in the array.
  • Building A Better Guide To The Galaxy

    First Long-Duration Mission For ESA Astronaut On The ISS
    Paris, France (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    ESA astronaut Thomas Reiter from Germany will soon become the first European to undertake a long-duration mission onboard the ISS following his dispatch on the next Shuttle mission (STS-121), currently scheduled for May. That mission will mark many important milestones for European astronauts, European science and European control centres.

  • Fresh Features On Enceladus
    Pasadena CA (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    This new image of Saturn's moon Enceladus in false color reveals subtle details not visible in natural color views. The now-familiar bluish appearance (in false color views) of the southern features called tiger stripes, and other relatively youthful fractures, almost certainly is attributable to larger grain sizes of relatively pure ice, compared to most surface materials.

    Goodrich Technology Enables ALOS Imaging
    Charlotte NC (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    Goodrich Corporation's imaging technology is enabling Japan's newly launched Advanced Land Observation Satellite to carry out its remote-sensing mission. Goodrich's Electro-Optical Systems team developed the advanced high precision optical systems in ALOS's three Panchromatic Remote-sensing Instrument of Stereo Mapping, or PRISM, telescopes.

    Land Launch Receives Contract Award From Israel Aircraft Industries
    Long Beach CA (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    Space International Services and Sea Launch Company are pleased to announce the award of a firm launch contract with Israel Aircraft Industries utilizing the Land Launch system. The delivery-in-orbit agreement requires a Zenit-3SLB vehicle to launch the AMOS-3 communications satellite to geostationary orbit from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, in the 4th Quarter of 2007.

    Martian Gardens
    Raleigh NC (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    Plants and animals are fragile life forms. Dry them out, freeze them, expose them to high doses of radiation - they don't do so well. But not all organisms are so picky. Many archaeans, for example, are distinguished by their ability to adapt to a variety of extreme environments. It's in their genes.

    NASA Under Pressure To Ensure Researcher Independence
    St Louis MO (AFP) Feb 22, 2006
    The US space agency NASA is under increasing pressure from Congress and the scientific community to make sure its researchers remain independent after the agency's top expert on climate publicly denounced attempts to censor his work. The charges, first reported by The NY Times in January, have since been confirmed by NASA public relations officials.

    Rhea's Wisps In Color
    Pasadena CA (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    Bright, wispy markings stretch across a region of darker terrain on Saturn's moon Rhea. In this extreme false-color view, the roughly north-south fractures occur within strips of material (which appear greenish here) that are a different color from the surrounding cratered landscape.

    Scientists Discover Mars' Atmosphere Altered By Solar Flares
    Boston MA (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    Astronomers said Thursday they have uncovered the first clear evidence that solar flares can affect the upper atmosphere of Mars. A team at Boston University said their studies of X-ray bursts from the Sun in April 2001 that reached Mars show the phenomena caused dramatic enhancements to the planet's ionosphere - the region where the Sun's ultraviolet and X-rays are absorbed by atoms and molecules in the atmosphere.

    Swift Might Have Detected A Supernova Just Beginning
    Greenbelt, Md. (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    NASA's Swift satellite has detected a strange cataclysmic event in another galaxy that scientists think could be a supernova just getting started.

    Venerable Ultraviolet Satellite Returns To Operations
    Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 23, 2006
    NASA's Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer astronomy satellite is back in full operation, its aging onboard software control system rejuvenated and its mission extended by enterprising scientists and engineers after a near-death experience in December 2004.

  • Martian Gardens
  • Scientists Discover Mars' Atmosphere Altered By Solar Flares
  • Phobos Shadows The Surface of Mars
  • Light And Shadow On The Surface Of Mars

  • Fresh Features On Enceladus
  • Rhea's Wisps In Color
  • Titan Smiles Back
  • See Saturn At Its Best This Friday

  • Goodrich Technology Enables ALOS Imaging
  • Venerable Ultraviolet Satellite Returns To Operations
  • LockMart: GOES-R Geostationary Lightning Mapper Formulation Phase
  • Magnet Provides Promise For Electronics Advances

  • EADS Astrium Built Arabsat 4A Satellite Ready For Launch
  • Worldspace Satellite Radio Goes Live In Kolkata
  • Civilian Sector Biggest Space Customer
  • Eads Astrium-ISRO Alliance Sealed

  • Trimble Offers New Modular GPS Solutions To Construction Industry
  • Tetra Wins FAA Satellite Navigation Assistance Contract
  • Lockheed Martin GPS Updates Enhance System Accuracy Up To 15 Percent
  • EADS Space To Play Central Role In Galileo Sat Nav Test

  • Radiation 'Safe Zone' Migrates With Solar Cycle
  • NASA Honors A Legendary Astronaut
  • Proton Dangers To Astronauts Underestimated
  • Space Adventures To Build Spaceport In Singapore

  • New Horizons Set For A Comfortable Cruise Out To Jupiter And Pluto Transfer
  • Questioning Pluto
  • Subaru Collaborates With Pluto Kuiper Belt Mission
  • New Outer Planet Is Larger Than Pluto

  • Mozambique Quake Leaves Two Dead, Rattles Zimbabwe, SAfrica
  • New Instrumentation May Help Scientists Understand Earthquake Mechanics
  • The Math Of Deadly Waves
  • Forest Destruction Leaves Indonesia Facing Landslide Risk

  • LAST 5 DAYS FEB 23 FEB 22 FEB 21 FEB 20 FEB 17
    The contents herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2005 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy statement