May 31, 2014 |
NASA faces identity crisis, funding battle Washington (UPI) May 30, 2013 - As NASA funding continue to dissipate, space agency officials are left trying - frustratingly - to figure out what's worth paying for. And the Spitzer Space Telescope is just the latest in a growing list of defunded and soon-to-be-extinct projects. Since the Apollo missions to the moon ended in 1973, NASA's budget has steadily declined - from 1.35 percent of the federal government's ... more | |
SpaceX unveils capsule to ferry astronauts to space Los Angeles (AFP) May 30, 2014 - A sleek, white gumdrop-shaped space capsule that aims to carry up to seven astronauts to the International Space Station and return to land anywhere on Earth was unveiled Thursday by SpaceX. The Dragon V2, short for version two, is the first attempt by a private company to restore Americans' ability to send people to the orbiting space station in the wake of the space shuttle program's retir ... more | |
Earth's gravitational pull stretches moon surface Greenbelt, Md. (UPI) May 30, 2013 - Anyone who's been to the beach - and seen the ocean's tides - knows the moon's gravitational effects on Earth are rather obvious. The effects of Earth's gravitational pull on the moon are less apparent. But a new study by scientists at NASA - published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters - shows even the shape of the moon's all-solid surface changes in response to the positi ... more | |
Apollo 13 astronaut's toothbrush sells for $11,794 Los Angeles (AFP) May 30, 2014 - A toothbrush used by one of the American astronauts who flew to the Moon was sold at auction for nearly $12,000, or triple the starting bid, the auction house said Friday. The clear Oral B-40 toothbrush was used by command module pilot Jack Swigert during the 1970 Apollo 13 mission and sold for $11,974, said the Nate D. Sanders auction house, which did not reveal the buyer. Swigert was p ... more | |
National Security Space: Then.Now.Tomorrow Colorado Springs CO (SPX) May 20, 2014 - Well that was far too generous of an introduction. I didn't even recognize any of that myself. It is great to be back at the symposium this year and thank you all for attending this morning. It's an honor to stand before this particular audience and it's a remarkable collection of space experts, including many friends, and by the way at this point in my life I refuse to call you old friends. ... more | |
Engineers reconnect with ISEE-3, retired NASA probe Los Gatos, Calif. (UPI) May 30, 2013 - Engineers with Skycorp, Inc. - the Los Gatos, California-based group attempting to reconnect with a retired NASA probe first launched in the 1970s - announced Thursday they had successfully established contact with International Sun-Earth Explorer-3, or ISEE-3. Last month, the citizen scientists signed an agreement with NASA which granted them permission to take over control of the sp ... more | |
A first for NASA's IRIS: a gigantic eruption of solar material Palo Alto, Calif. (UPI) May 30, 2013 - Earlier this month, a coronal mass ejection (CME) - which sounds both gross and dangerous, until you learn it's just a really big solar flare - leaped from the side of the sun. Luckily, IRIS, NASA's newest solar observatory, was in prime position to capture a detailed profile view of extraordinary ejection. Capturing the impressive CME was a first for Interface Region Imaging Spectrog ... more | |
Earthly Conflicts Threaten US-Russia Space Cooperation Washington DC (SPX) May 29, 2014 - Angered over U.S. sanctions against Russian officials involved in the annexation of Crimea, and unrest in Eastern Ukraine, Russian deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said Moscow may retaliate by re-assessing the space cooperation between the two countries. If his threat becomes reality, it could affect future space explorations aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Russia h ... more | |
US seeks greater missile defense cooperation by Japan, South Korea Washington (AFP) May 28, 2014 - A top US military official on Wednesday called for better missile defense cooperation between Japan and South Korea, in the face of strained ties between America's two closest Asia allies and a belligerent North Korea. "We're encouraging our allies and partners to acquire their own missile defenses and to strengthen regional missile defense cooperation that will result in better performance ... more | |
Microsystems Technologies Office: Creating A New Electronics Revolution For National Defense Washington DC (SPX) May 29, 2014 - Since its inception in 1992, DARPA'S Microsystems Technology Office (MTO) has helped create and prevent strategic surprise through its investments in compact microelectronic components such as microprocessors, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), and photonic devices. MTO's revolutionary work applying these advanced capabilities in areas such as wide-band gap materials, phased array rada ... more | |
China's decision to replace IBM servers with domestic equivalents may boost national security Moscow (Voice of Russia) May 29, 2014 - The use of home-made servers in Beijing's national banks may prevent inclusion of hidden backdoors that facilitate intelligence gathering by the US National Security Agency, according to expert in the US-China relations, RIA Novosti reports. Chinese government institutions, including the People's Bank of China and the Ministry of Finance, are reviewing domestic commercial banks' reliance o ... more | |
Supersonic spray delivers high quality graphene layer Chicago IL (SPX) May 30, 2014 - A simple, inexpensive spray method that deposits a graphene film can heal manufacturing defects and produce a high quality graphene layer on a range of substrates, report researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Korea University. Their study is available online in the journal Advanced Functional Materials. Graphene, a two-dimensional wonder-material composed of a sing ... more | |
Zeroing in on the proton's magnetic moment Saitama, Japan (SPX) May 30, 2014 - As part of a series of experiments designed to resolve one of the deepest mysteries of physics today, researchers from RIKEN, in collaboration with the University of Mainz, GSI Darmstadt and the Max Planck Institute for Physics at Heidelberg, have made the most precise ever direct measurement of the magnetic moment of a proton. The work, published in Nature, seeks to answer the fundamental ... more | |
DNA nanotechnology places enzyme catalysis within an arm's length Tucson AZ (SPX) May 29, 2014 - Using molecules of DNA like an architectural scaffold, Arizona State University scientists, in collaboration with colleagues at the University of Michigan, have developed a 3-D artificial enzyme cascade that mimics an important biochemical pathway that could prove important for future biomedical and energy applications. The findings were published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology. Led ... more | |
Scientists develop new hybrid energy transfer system Southampton, UK (SPX) May 28, 2014 - Scientists from the University of Southampton, in collaboration with the Universities of Sheffield and Crete, have developed a new hybrid energy transfer system, which mimics the processes responsible for photosynthesis. From photosynthesis to respiration, the processes of light absorption and its transfer into energy represent elementary and essential reactions that occur in any biological livi ... more | |
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Leaving the islands Munich, Germany (SPX) May 29, 2014 - In a recent study involving LMU researchers, the desorption of oxygen molecules from a silver surface was successfully visualized for the first time. The effects account for the shortcomings of conventional models of desorption. In heterogeneous catalytic reactions, which take place at the boundary layer between a solid and the gas phase, the products finally have to desorb from the surfac ... more | |
A Path Toward More Powerful Tabletop Accelerators Berkeley CA (SPX) May 29, 2014 - Making a tabletop particle accelerator just got easier. A new study shows that certain requirements for the lasers used in an emerging type of small-area particle accelerator can be significantly relaxed. Researchers hope the finding could bring about a new era of accelerators that would need just a few meters to bring particles to great speeds, rather than the many kilometers required of ... more | |
Sending entangled beams through fast-light materials College Park MD (SPX) May 27, 2014 - Michael Lewis's bestselling book "Flash Boys" describes how some brokers, engaging in high frequency trading, exploit fast telecommunications to gain fraction-of-a-second advantage in the buying and selling of stocks. But you don't need to have billions of dollars riding on this-second securities transactions to appreciate the importance of fast signal processing. From internet to video streamin ... more | |
Velociraptor robot almost as fast as robotic rival Cheetah Daejeon, South Korea (UPI) May 30, 2013 - Luckily for Usain Bolt, robots aren't allowed to compete for gold medals. If they were, the new Velociraptor robot designed by researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, might force Bolt to settle for silver - or bronze if Raptor's robotic rival Cheetah raced, too. The new sprinting robot, Raptor, currently tops out at 28.5 mph. Bolt's highest clocked speed ... more | |
Virgin space flights cleared for US take-off Los Angeles (AFP) May 29, 2014 - Richard Branson's dream of commercial space flights took a step nearer reality after Virgin Galactic signed a deal with US aviation authorities to let it blast paying customers into space, the company said Thursday. The agreement with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) sets out how routine space missions from the Spaceport America base in the US state of New Mexico will be coordinated ... more | |
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