Private Manned Moon Program Announced:http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2012/12/golden-spike-phase-a-commercial-lunar-landing-missions/people involved in this company:Concept art:
12/6/2012 2:19:49 PM
12/6/2012 2:20:42 PM
What's going on here?
12/6/2012 3:54:59 PM
Just got back onto TWW after being out of country for a while and glad to see all this news about space flight!
12/6/2012 4:49:08 PM
I am sure 2020 won't happen although I hope it does. Virgin Galactic was supposed to be up and running by now I believe.
12/6/2012 6:06:49 PM
ha... another person involved as an advisor to the board...
12/6/2012 10:51:04 PM
After reading about this "Golden Spike" company and it's plans, I'm less optimistic than I was when I had previously heard about them before this announcement. It was hinted that there were already billions backing this program, but it turns out there are "potential" billions in "projected" fees paid by "future" customers, none of which have committed 100%.
12/7/2012 10:48:33 AM
^^Hiring a guy that's widely known for building fake spaceships isn't exactly good PR for a spaceflight startup seeking investors.
12/10/2012 5:00:27 PM
Moving again.
12/12/2012 9:06:29 AM
http://lightyears.blogs.cnn.com/2012/12/13/moon-probes-to-be-blown-apart-in-monday-mountain-crash/
12/13/2012 6:20:16 PM
I'm assuming that it mostly has to do with cost but I have to wonder why they didnt try to find some other use for those probes after they were done with their primary mission. Just simply crashing them into the moon seems silly. Even just sending them off into space towards something else to take some pictures or something. Just seems like a waste to simply crash em into the moon.
12/14/2012 11:09:49 AM
I doubt that they could leave orbit.
12/14/2012 11:10:54 AM
Yeah I mean obviously they werent designed to hence why I assume it was just they were trying to get one thing done cheaply. I dont know the in's and out's of costs on these sorta things but even if it was simply to add solar panels to keep the thing with power for much longer just orbiting the moon and snapping some nice pictures or anything really. I'm just assuming in the end it came down to this is what we want to do what is the absolutely cheapest way we can get it done and this was the result.[Edited on December 14, 2012 at 11:17 AM. Reason : o]
12/14/2012 11:15:15 AM
I would assume at least part of the reason is that they want to be able to de-orbit the probes before they lose the ability to maneuver and they are stuck in orbit, junking up cis-lunar space.
12/14/2012 12:25:10 PM
12/19/2012 3:00:41 PM
http://www.howmanypeopleareinspacerightnow.com/new crew heading to the ISS.
12/20/2012 10:42:02 AM
12/20/2012 10:59:46 AM
To infinity and beyond!
12/21/2012 11:11:17 AM
Health and safety...you don't want our astronauts to get hit in traffic do you?
12/21/2012 12:39:01 PM
looks like most of the holidays was spent taking panoramas. Mostly repetitive to look at in the raw image site. I wonder why they took them like that... maybe for time lapse of the horizon?taken on 28th
1/2/2013 3:52:28 PM
http://www.geekologie.com/2013/01/youre-nuts-plan-to-kidnap-a-moon-for-our.php
1/3/2013 8:39:58 PM
Aliens.
1/7/2013 2:54:14 PM
Alien larva:
1/7/2013 2:57:59 PM
Those are some interesting pictures
1/7/2013 3:04:24 PM
They released a color version of their latest panorama.It's hard to appreciate without a giant printout canvasing an entire wall, so I spliced it out.First, the entire thing, hard to see detailNow, here are small portions of that picture[Edited on January 7, 2013 at 3:13 PM. Reason : ]
1/7/2013 3:11:08 PM
I think it's supposed to drill soon. Look forward to that.
1/14/2013 10:30:52 AM
http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2013/jan/HQ_M13-011_NASA-Bigelow_Event.html
1/14/2013 4:56:56 PM
i read that it should happen in 2 years... the deal has been signed.here's a pretty good write-up about it:http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2013/01/expanding-on-bigelows-inflatable-module-iss/BEAM me up?
1/14/2013 6:16:42 PM
^ If it's going to happen, then why isn't it on the Wikipedia ISS page In other news, the drill targets for Curiosity were selectedthese are them:It has not used the drill yet. It has cooked stuff, laser beamed stuff, and other things. But "the drill" might be the only instrument they have not broken out yet.And they found evidence of water in the past. Apparently they didn't expect to make that discovery so early in the mission. But it seems like everything NASA announces is "evidence for water".
1/16/2013 10:40:36 AM
I mean just simply looking at some of those pictures its really hard to imagine there not having been water or at least liquid something there at one time.
1/16/2013 1:27:31 PM
1/16/2013 2:27:20 PM
this is my own speculation, but I think this is a part of the pics they're taking for the case they're trying to build of water erosion I mentioned
1/17/2013 2:00:53 AM
the ESA is officially taking over the service module of the Orion capsule, and are basing it on their ATV craft that has resupplied the space station a few times. The new notional art makes it look very X-wingish. Good in a way because it promotes international cooperation, responsible budgeting, etc, but it could reduce the number of American jobs associated with it (no, nasa isn't a jobs program)http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2013/01/orions-atv-deal-esa-astro-em-2-mission/This has been talked about for a few months (or longer), but it is pretty certain now.
1/17/2013 1:11:06 PM
I think that White House Death Star proposal just got new life...Also, today's Mars porn, a broken rock. NASA says they broke it by driving over it with a 1 ton rover. I prefer to think they used the force.
1/18/2013 8:21:10 AM
1/18/2013 8:55:33 AM
Mars looks eerily similar to some deserts on Earth. Crazy to think that it's a separate planet millions of miles away and the entire planet looks like that. Are there any plans to send a rover to the ice caps on Mars?
1/18/2013 9:33:07 AM
If my understanding is correct, Mars only temporarily has ice caps.
1/18/2013 11:02:44 AM
i'm pretty sure they expand and contract seasonally, but they are always there. The dry ice varies a lot more than the water ice.
1/18/2013 11:12:34 AM
They're going to recycle the MSL infrastructure for another rover, so you could put in your 2 cents to lobby for the ice caps, I don't see it happening though.I have no idea where they'll go next. The Gale Crater was pretty much the best site on the planet by a long shot, and Curiosity's range was perfectly suited for it. I thinks it would be more exciting if they could increase the speed of the next rover. If they could get it to travel 1 km in a day instead of a month that would open up a new kind of mission.
1/18/2013 11:35:09 AM
a new space mining venture...http://www.space.com/19368-asteroid-mining-deep-space-industries.html
1/22/2013 1:42:23 PM
^I'll believe it when I see it.
1/23/2013 9:31:20 AM
ditto.
1/23/2013 2:15:41 PM
Opportunity rover took that picture for it's 9th anniversary. I guess we can't call it a birthday since it was functional before we ever launched it.Just think about it, for the majority of those nine years, it was the only moving thing on the planet.Also, the orbiter took a picture that is supposed to show evidence of waterhttp://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/?ImageID=5043You know NASA, I think we all get it by now. We believe you that Mars once had water. After so many times we see "evidence" for it, it's not really evidence anymore. Is evidence for something you already knew really evidence?^^ No matter, you can't take away the awesomeness of that picture no matter what you do.
1/23/2013 2:35:05 PM
Google Mars with the path of the rover. I've wanted to see something like this. This one delivers.http://curiosityrover.com/tracking/drivetrack.php?drivenum=41
1/23/2013 2:52:47 PM
1/23/2013 3:42:33 PM
Here are some more images from this space mining deal... (from space.com)This illustration depicts Deep Space Industries' small Firefly class Archimedes spacecraft for asteroid exploration. The small, nimble probes are designed for one-way trips to investigate asteroid targetshttp://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/335/original/deep-space-industries-archimedes-concept.jpg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~An artist's concept of Deep Space Idustries' Dragonfly picker to capture asteroids for mining operationshttp://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/334/original/deep-space-industries-dragonfly-picker.jpg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~An artist's concept of Deep Space Idustries' Dragonfly spacecraft to capture and return asteroid samples for return to Earth orbit for mining operations.http://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/333/original/deep-space-industries-dragonfly-concept.jpg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~This illustration depicts Deep Space Industries' Fuel Processor class spacecraft for asteroid mining.http://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/336/original/deep-space-industries-fuel-harvester-concept.jpg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~This illustration depicts Deep Space Industries' Harvestor class spacecraft for asteroid mining.http://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/338/original/deep-space-industries-archimedes-concept-3.jpg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~This illustration depicts Deep Space Industries' Harvestor class spacecraft for asteroid mininghttp://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/337/original/deep-space-industries-archimedes-concept-2.jpg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~An artist's concept of a Deep Space Industries foundry for extracting minerals and resources from an asteroid under microgravity conditions.http://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/340/original/deep-space-industries-microgravity-foundry.jpg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~An artist's concept of a wheel habitat under construction at an asteroid, a vision of space settlement by the asteroid-mining company Deep Space Industrieshttp://i.space.com/images/i/000/025/341/original/deep-space-industries-wheel-construction.jpg
1/23/2013 3:57:13 PM
1/23/2013 4:36:16 PM
I was thinking to myself:Won't we someday put big data centers into low Earth orbit? The materials part is difficult for several reasons, but the major important components could be high-value and low weight.The main motivation would be the temperature. If you rigged up a good enough radiation management system, you could approach the temperature of space and allow for superconducting computers with only passive cooling, which could never be done on Earth.Seems more economic than mining asteroids for rare metals.
1/23/2013 5:55:26 PM
land a supercomputer on Titan. pretty cold there
1/23/2013 5:57:35 PM
Finally some more development in nuclear propulsion!http://news.yahoo.com/nasa-begins-development-nuclear-thermal-rocket-deep-space-173600485.html
1/23/2013 6:08:37 PM