index space travel

[Link] China and the US Are Racing to Go Nuclear in Space

Read: 23/11/2022 www.vice.com

The outpost is developed in conjunction with Russia and is expected to be built by 2028 on the lunar south pole, which has patches of sunny spots as well as permanently shadowed craters. The U.S.

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[Link] An “incident” with the James Webb Space Telescope has occurred

Read: 25/11/2021 arstechnica.com

A short update on the projected launch date of the $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope came out of NASA on Monday, and it wasn't exactly a heart-warming missive.

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[Link] NASA Plans to Put a Nuclear Reactor on the Moon Within a Decade

Read: 22/11/2021 www.vice.com

The agency put out a request for proposals for a lunar nuclear power plant that can power surface exploration. If you’ve been sitting on a creative idea for how to build a nuclear power plant on the Moon, NASA and the Department of Energy want you.

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[Link] Russian Anti-Satellite Weapon Test Draws Widespread Condemnation

Read: 17/11/2021 hackaday.com

On the morning of November 15, a Russian missile destroyed a satellite in orbit above Earth.

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[Link] NASA unveils asteroid-fighting spacecraft as it prepares for Armageddon-style mission test

Read: 7/11/2021 www.abc.net.au

The spacecraft will be launched later this month as part of the space agency's first planetary defence test mission called the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART). It will direct itself at an asteroid while traveling at a speed of about 24,000 kilometres per hour.

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[Link] Hey, Jeff Bezos: Send Hideo Kojima to Space Already

Read: 4/11/2021 www.vice.com

Kojima's fascination with space is no big secret. The branding for his studio Kojima Productions features a mysterious space explorer planting a flag on an alien world, and his 1994 game Policenauts takes place in space.

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[Link] Jeff Bezos Reveals Plans to Build a Space Station Called 'Orbital Reef'

Read: 25/10/2021 www.vice.com

Jeff Bezos has turned his wealth from Amazon into a play for space. He's already gone to the edge of space in one of his own Blue Origin rockets and broken the record for sending the oldest person ever into space, twice.

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[Link] Thousands of kilometres from anywhere lies Point Nemo, a watery grave where space stations go to die

Read: 6/9/2021 www.theguardian.com

At the furthest point from any landmass on earth, and 4km under the sea, lies the space cemetery. When their outer space journeys come to an end, old satellites, rocket parts and space stations are sent to this desolate spot in the Pacific Ocean to rest on the dark seabed forever.

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[Link] China Is Aiming to Develop Miles-Wide, 'Ultra-Large' Spacecraft

Read: 30/8/2021 www.vice.com

A new five-year plan highlights an 'urgent need' to develop megaprojects in space, such as human habitats and space-based solar power plants. ABSTRACT breaks down mind-bending scientific research, future tech, new discoveries, and major breakthroughs.

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[Link] Retrotechtacular: Amiga Pips The PC For Mission-Critical Computing At NASA

Read: 17/8/2021 hackaday.com

In 1986, a group of NASA engineers faced a difficult choice in solving their data processing woes: continue tolerating the poor performance of PC architecture, or pony up the cash for exotic workstations.

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[Link] How 'Space Environmentalism' Could Prevent a Disaster In Orbit

Read: 7/8/2021 www.vice.com

It’s been more than 60 years since humans launched the world’s first satellite, Sputnik, into outer space.

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[Link] Sperm-on-a-Postcard Breakthrough Opens Door to Massive 'Sperm Books'

Read: 5/8/2021 www.vice.com

It’s always a delight to receive a thoughtful letter in the mail, but scientists in Japan have added a whole new layer to the experience by sending each other postcards containing freeze-dried mouse sperm.

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[Link] International Space Station stabilizes after just-docked Russian module suddenly fires thrusters

Read: 30/7/2021 www.theregister.com

The International Space Station tilted 45 degrees today after Nauka, a just-docked Russian module, suddenly and unexpectedly fired its thrusters. The launch of Nauka, also known as the Multipurpose Laboratory Module, did not go smoothly.

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