Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Virgin Galactic Shows Off Space Ships


Well if you're rich and have always wanted to scratch that itch of wanting to be an astronaut, Virgin Galactic is here to help you out. The ommercial space flights launch in 2009, and will allow anyone who can afford the $200,000 price tag to expirience 5 minutes of weightlessness. The plan is to have one airplane called the White Knight take the 8 passengers up high enough to launch SpaceShipTwo, which will take them into a sub-orbit.

Testing will begin later this year, while Virgin Galactic builds a Spaceport in the New Mexico desert. Yes, $200,000 is a lot of money! But you know it you had it to burn, you would be all over this.









[Virgin Galactic via Gizmodo]

Monday, December 10, 2007

Voyager 2 May Be First Probe To Escape Our Solar System


How cool is this!

The Voyager 2 probe might be the first man-made object to leave our solar system. The probe is about 3 times as far away from the Sun as Pluto. This will give us our first look at what's outside our solar system, and possibly make contact with a species that will come and assimilate our culture and technology into their own. The probe is expected to take a few years to accomplish this, and I'm sure will be huge for geeks around the world.

I wonder if the housing market will be better out there?

[NewScientist via Gizmodo]

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

A Cousin to Our Solar System


Year after year Astronomers are finding more and more extra-solar planets. This time, Space.com reports they have found a system that has 4 rocky planets and a fifth much larger gaseous planet circling around a star about the same size as our Sun. The fifth gaseous planet is far removed from the inner rocky four. What is cool about it is they believe the area between the four inner planets and fifth outer planet to be a likely habitable region where they expect to find rocky planets that may very well be home to large watery oceans.
The universe is getting more exciting every day! I actually am starting to believe we may learn about sentient life outside Earth in my lifetime. Check out this interesting article here.

Monday, August 6, 2007

Let's hope al Qaeda isn't ordering a bunch of PS3's


Ok, On the headline I'm kidding; but back one game generation; governments were trying to make sure none of the world's countries that likely harbor terrorists ever got their hands on PS2's. Why? Because if they could reverse engineer it or use it to move ahead in the technology dept, they would have processors that could simulate 3D environments easily, or any other task they wished. And that I'm not kidding about. The chips now made by IBM for different gaming systems (specifically IBM’s Power Architecture, similar to the one used in Sony’s PlayStation 3) would really give them incredible technology that would make terrorist's plan's or equipment, much easier to acquire.

But enough of that. Let's see what else it can be used for! Lookie!! There's a new Mars Lander (named Phoenix Lander)from our folks at NASA! Literally, gaming technology is leading us to accomplish our technological dreams; like traveling to and researching other planets and probably other places too! The processing power in the PS3, X-Box360, or even the Wii is light years ahead of the technology we had back in the Voyager phase. (Though I lean towards VGER being a wee bit more powerful as exemplified in Star Trek - The Motion Picture)
If you think this information is exciting, click here!!! And for even more info, click HERE!!!!

Life; it's not just a cereal anymore.


It's nice to see that more and more planets are being found. They are up to 200! What does that mean? Their may be extraterrestrials!!!

Check it out!

Sorry Victoria Beckham... We don't know for sure what a real alien looks like; and you were the most lifelike image I could find.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

NASA pisses me off again!


Once again, NASA has found another GLARING problem for the upcoming launch of Endeavor. Apparently their was a cabin leak that could depressurize the craft and kill everyone; again.
Am I glad the found it before launch on August 7th? Yes; but this is like the fourth or fifth MAJOR discovery of errors that would have killed everyone. There is no way (if I were an Astronaut) that I'd EVER fly in that thing! Read more and lose confidence in NASA.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Who would make a better U.S. President, Kirk or Picard

Wil Wheaton and George Takei discuss the pro's and con's of each leader if they were U.S. Presidents. This is a fun, interesting, and surprising interview!

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Project Orion


Tonight, and repeating often on other nights; The Science Channel presents the first logical point to discuss about Project Orion, or the mission back to the Moon, Mars, and beyond. (click here for show times)
The show introduces several aspects of engineering, testing and getting Astronauts opinions on what life is going to be like in & out the newly created capsule. That's right; capsule not shuttle. Even though the capsule looks very familier on the outside to the old Apollo capsules, inside it's all new and improved. Millions of processors in computers at NASA (many running Linux) are speeding up times to engineer and test thermal tolorances, new touch panel computer screens, and returning to the Earth and landing on LAND, not water. I don't wan't to spoil it for you; but what I'll do is direct you here to get more information; and just push you to watch the documenteries on Project Orion. You'll be amazed at how many old things are new again!

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Space Shuttle Discovery Isn't Fairing Too Well.


I was pretty amazed when I saw this pic; this is how it looked at the end of it's last mission of landing minutes after touch down.

Seeing this makes me feel many emotions; most of all being, NASA/U.S. leaders PLEASE don't put anyone in anything that is so battered, duct taped, whatever. Put this era out of commission. It's shocking how evident the danger from just from viewing it. Click here for the pic that will make you think a bit.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Take a Trip into Space: at $266,000


Looks like Lance Bass got boned (no pun intended) by spending 20 million for a space ride.

European space agency EADS is offering people- and rich ones at that - the chance of a quick one-and-a-half hour blast into space. The trips, starting in 2012, will cost around 200,000 euros ($266,000).

Space goers will get the thrill of experiencing three to five minutes of weightlessness at the height of their journey.

Any takers?

Saturday, June 9, 2007

What Comes after the Space Shuttle?



Seeing I just mentioned (a couple articles ago) that the current line of Space Shuttles will soon be out of commission permanently; I found this next article VERY interesting. There isn't much in the way of pictures; but you will understand what NASA plans to send up instead of the Space Shuttle during this strange period of Space exploration. (By that I mean, the American Space Program is in flux; and their new goal is returning to the moon. So whatever they use sans the shuttle, might likely be a stop gap)

For more info about what they are doing now, jump here.

For more info about the future craft (including artist renditions) jump here.

Friday, June 8, 2007

Space Shuttle Atlantis Launches Tonight at 7:38pm EDT



I know we've all grown accustomed to Shuttle Launches; but the truth is, soon this tech will be retired. Still, this technology is a mindblowing thing. You can watch the launch this evening at 7:38pm EDT. I hear it's AMAZING in HD!!!

For more info jump here; or here.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

In a Galaxy not so far Away

When I was a young boy growing up in Pittsburgh, PA; nothing brought more happiness then when he'd take me to the Planetarium, or even better the Observatory. It was my first love; captivating the wonder of what's out there. It simply dominated my imagination.
So this next bit of facinating evolutionary technology is something I must post.

This article is from Edna DeVore, Education and Public Outreach for SPACE.com
Really Old Stars Perhaps Ideal for Advanced Civilizations
Planets abound in the galaxy. Over the past decade, scientists have discovered giant planets mostly by radial velocity techniques that detect the spectral shift in a star's light caused by the to and fro tug of an unseen planetary companion.
This method has detected more than 200 planets, dominantly large close-in planets called 'hot Jupiters' that are inhospitable to life as we know it.
In the near future, with the launch of NASA's Kepler Mission in 2008, we'll have the tools to seek evidence of Earth-size planets in the habitable zone of distant stars.
The search for life beyond Earth is the search for a good place to live, a habitable planet, in orbit about a long-lived star where life may arise and evolve. The first place we looked was at stars like our own Sun, a middle-sized, middle-aged star. G-Stars like the Sun are stable for about 10 billion years, which is a good long time for planets to form, and life to evolve. We also expected to find solar systems like our own with small terrestrial planets near the star, and larger gaseous planets farther out. This particular pre-conception was discarded with the discovery of hot Jupiters on 4-day orbits about their stars.
The idea that other, less-massive, dimmer stars than the Sun could also host habitable worlds has long been debated. A particular class, M-Stars, are of interest simply because there are so many of them-they are the most common star in the galaxy. They're the cool stars that inhabit our neighborhood.
There's considerable interest in the question of whether M-Stars could host habitable planets. Would the planets be tidally locked with one face always directed toward the M-Star? Would flares wipe out life on the local planet? If M-Stars could host habitable planets, life may be much more widespread that we've previously thought. Thus, M-Stars are of interest to astrobiologists including SETI scientists who are searching for life beyond Earth.
In July 2005, a team of SETI institute scientists, as part of our
NASA Astrobiology Institute research program, brought together a diverse group of scientists to consider-frankly reconsider-the possibility of life on planets orbiting M-Stars. The results of this workshop are now published as the current issue of 'Astrobiology': Search for Habitable Planets Outside Earth's Solar System. According to the publisher, 'These reports present the preliminary results and conclusions from recent studies on the habitability of M Star Planets, which are planets about the size and mass of Earth that contain sufficient amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) in their atmosphere to support a stable source of water on the planet's surface. The habitability of terrestrial planets depends in large part on the distance of their orbit from the nearest star. Most of the stars closest to the Earth's Sun are characterized as M Stars, and planets orbiting M Stars are of particular importance in the ongoing Darwin/Terrestrial Planet Finder missions being developed jointly by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the European Space Agency (ESA).'
The collected papers present the current understanding of M-stars, explore various aspects of M Stars (including dwarf M Stars and low mass M Stars), describe efforts to simulate Earth-like planets, consider the possible greenhouse effects in the atmosphere of Earth-like planets, and review the spectral signatures of photosynthesis.
'M stars are the most accessible, yet challenging, targets for habitable zone terrestrial planet searches,' says journal Editor-in-Chief, Sherry L. Cady, Ph.D., Associate Professor in the Department of Geology at Portland State University. 'The potential for M Star habitable zone planets to evolve biospheres and retain them are but two of the many reasons to include M stars in the search for evidence of life beyond the confines of Earth.'
Why are SETI scientists interested in M-Stars? As Dr. Peter Backus, Observing Programs Manager for SETI, concluded in a preliminary report on the M-Stars workshop, 'One...aspect of M dwarfs makes them intriguing for SETI: they may be ideal hosts for advanced technological civilizations because they live an extraordinarily long time. Stars like the Sun live (i.e., they fuse hydrogen into helium) for only about 10 billion years. No M dwarf that ever formed has yet to die; no M dwarf will die for more than another 100 billion years. With such long lifetimes, there are big possibilities for these small stars.'
For those of you who wish to delve deeper into this truly cool subject, the results of the first workshop are available to download, free-of-charge, at the Astrobiology magazine.
Water Found in Extrasolar Planet's Atmosphere
Early Earth Was Purple, Study Suggests