ReportWire

Tag: Outer Space

  • Duke grad is a candidate to become NASA astronaut

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    A Duke University graduate is an astronaut candidate with
    NASA.

    Anna Menon has previously been on a mission with Space X,
    and now she’s in the middle of a two-year training program to prepare her for
    NASA’s mission to the moon
    .

    “I am just thrilled to be here as a part of NASA’s
    [astronaut candidate] class,” Menon said. “Really, what these first couple years
    entail is all the foundational training.

    “And, after that, they will start assigning us to specific missions.”

    Menon said she is learning about space walking, how to fly
    jets and the International Space Station [ISS].

    WRAL News asked Menon how she trains to walk in space.

    “There are a lot of great tools that NASA has developed over
    the years to train for  space walks,”
    Menon said. “One of them involves a giant pool here at Johnson Space Center [in
    Houston] called the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory.”

    Menon said she can practice the steps of an entire space
    walking operation, which can take up to six hours. She has been to outer space
    before as part of SpaceX’s Polaris Dawn, which was a five-day private mission
    that launched on Sept. 10, 2024. Menon was one of four crew members.

    WRAL News asked Menon if her children want to follow in her
    footsteps.

    “We’re really excited to support them and what they’re
    curious about,” Menon said. “My son currently wants to be a paleontologist and my
    daughter currently wants to have five different jobs at the same time.”

    Other NC astronauts

    Zena Cardman is a graduate of the University of North
    Carolina at Chapel Hill. He just got back from a mission to the ISS.

    Christina Koch is an NC State graduate who is scheduled to
    travel in March to the moon.

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  • Parenting 101: Outschool’s free mission to Mars

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    Outschool has announced a one-of-a-kind virtual event that will allow learners around the world to communicate live with a simulated Mars mission, complete with a real Earth-to-Mars communication delay. Taking place on February 4th, the 80-minute live event will allow learning to tune in, ask questions, collaborate during the wait, and receive responses from the Mars analog crew, turning delay into discovery.

    The event is free, designed for kids ages 5-18 and will take place at 12 p.m.

    In partnership with veteran Outschool educator Tom Bickmore, who will serve as Crew Journalist during an upcoming mission at the Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS) in Utah, the event invites kids to experience what it’s truly like to talk to people on another planet.

    “When humans go to Mars, communication won’t be instant, but it can still feel human,” Bickmore said in a media release. “Kids are incredibly candid about their experiences, which makes them perfect participants in this kind of research.”

    On a real Mars mission, messages take approximately 10 minutes to transmit between planets due to their distance. In this event, kids will experience this same delay each way — turning this wait into a fun challenge where participants can ask questions, work together while waiting, and feel what it’s really like to chat with someone on another planet.

     – JC

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  • We Can’t Get Enough of Magdalena Bay, Here’s Why.

    We Can’t Get Enough of Magdalena Bay, Here’s Why.

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    Electronic pop just got a whole lot more interesting. A new duo has emerged on the scene, slowly but surely taking over our playlists. Magdalena Bay is the love child of Mica Tenenbaum and Matthew Lewin who create music for those of us wanting to escape reality. If you’re a fan of Blu DeTiger (which we definitely are), then you probably already know Magdalena Bay’s sound as they are featured on Blu’s hit track, ‘Disappearing.’ Picture what music would sound like on Mars or Jupiter, produced by bug-eyed aliens floating on zero gravity. That’s exactly what this duo is giving you. 👽

    Image Source: Lissyelle Laricchia

    So now that we’ve introduced them, we have to rant about their new song, ‘Death & Romance.’ The title of the song immediately caught our eye, so we had to hit play. Right off the bat, we’re transported to another dimension. It’s giving funk-wave-pop dance music, and we are here for every moment!

    “Imagine rain pouring, streetlights glowing,” the band says. “You sit at home and wait for your alien boyfriend to pick you up in his UFO…but this time, he’s not coming.”

    Magdalena Bay stated in a press release

    Check out the visualizer and hear the song for yourself below 👇

    Did you enjoy ‘Death & Romance?’ What was your favorite lyric? Let us know in the comments or by hitting us up on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram 🐝

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT MAGDALENA BAY:
    TIKTOK | INSTAGRAM | YOUTUBE | TWITTER | SPOTIFY | APPLE MUSIC

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    ableimann

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  • SpaceX Starship Blows Up Minutes After Launch

    SpaceX Starship Blows Up Minutes After Launch

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    SpaceX’s Starship rocket, the most powerful ever built, blasted off on an unpiloted maiden flight Thursday, flying for more than two minutes before exploding. What do you think?

    “Everything explodes eventually.”

    Kat Alvarez, Apartment Stager

    “We’re on the doorstep of a bold new era of space disasters.”

    Andy Hood, Jar Sealer

    “I’d like to see China blow up a rocket in less than two minutes.”

    Oscar Huerta, PR Educator

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  • NASA Robot Sends One Of The Saddest Tweets I Have Ever Seen

    NASA Robot Sends One Of The Saddest Tweets I Have Ever Seen

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    Image for article titled NASA Robot Sends One Of The Saddest Tweets I Have Ever Seen

    Image: NASA

    InSight—or, less elegantly, the Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport mission—is a robot that NASA’s JPL (with help from the European Space Agency) sent to Mars back in 2018.

    It’s job was fairly simple. Or as simple as “a highly complex robot built on Earth then fired from a rocket into deep space then landed on another planet” can be, anyway. InSight put a seismometer on Mars and has sat around for the last four years reading and interpreting the data received from it, killing its time providing “accurate 3D models of the planet’s interior” and measuring “internal heat transfer using a heat probe called HP3 to study Mars’ early geological evolution”.

    A selfie taken by InSight back in 2018

    A selfie taken by InSight back in 2018
    Photo: NASA

    Aside from its main role, InSight has also been useful because it has a camera attached, allowing it to take some very nice photos of the surface of Mars. Its coolest achievement, however, at least for anyone not in the field of hardcore space science, is the fact that the robot was able—via vibrations detected on its solar panels—to record the sound of wind on Mars, which is the first time anyone had ever heard wind from another planet.

    Sounds of Mars: NASA’s InSight Senses Martian Wind

    So yeah, nice robot! But like any robot sent into space, InSight is running on a battery, and while solar panels and judicious use of its systems have helped prologue its life, the time is fast approaching where it runs out of juice for good and is forced to power down.

    This should be a routine matter. This is a machine, it’s going to stop working, we will all get on with our lives. But somebody at NASA had the bright/terrible idea to anthropomorphize InSight’s final days, and so instead of a press report saying “machine stopped working, it did neat stuff”, we have to read this:

    Excuse me. I just have some…Martian dust in my eye.

    I hope, one day soon, we ourselves are able to travel to Mars. And when we get there, I hope one of the first things we do is find InSight, and give it a hug.

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    Luke Plunkett

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  • NASA’s Orion makes splashdown after a $4 billion trip to the moon that points to an eventual lunar base

    NASA’s Orion makes splashdown after a $4 billion trip to the moon that points to an eventual lunar base

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    NASA’s Orion capsule made a blisteringly fast return from the moon Sunday, parachuting into the Pacific off Mexico to conclude a test flight that should clear the way for astronauts on the next lunar flyby.

    The incoming capsule hit the atmosphere at Mach 32, or 32 times the speed of sound, and endured reentry temperatures of 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit (2,760 degrees Celsius) before splashing down west of Baja California near Guadalupe Island. A Navy ship quickly moved in to recover the spacecraft and its silent occupants — three test dummies rigged with vibration sensors and radiation monitors.

    NASA hailed the descent and splashdown as close to perfect, as congratulations poured in from Washington..

    “I’m overwhelmed,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said from Mission Control in Houston. “This is an extraordinary day … It’s historic because we are now going back into space — deep space — with a new generation.”

    The space agency needed a successful splashdown to stay on track for the next Orion flight around the moon, targeted for 2024 with four astronauts who will be revealed early next year. That would be followed by a two-person lunar landing as early as 2025 and, ultimately, a sustainable moon base. The long-term plan would be to launch a Mars expedition by the late 2030s.

    Astronauts last landed on the moon 50 years ago. After touching down on Dec. 11, 1972, Apollo 17′s Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt spent three days exploring the valley of Taurus-Littrow, the longest stay of the Apollo era. They were the last of the 12 moonwalkers.

    Orion was the first capsule to visit the moon since then, launching on NASA’s new mega moon rocket from Kennedy Space Center on Nov. 16. It was the first flight of NASA’s new Artemis moon program, named after Apollo’s mythological twin sister.

    “From Tranquility Base to Taurus-Littrow to the tranquil waters of the Pacific, the latest chapter of NASA’s journey to the moon comes to a close. Orion back on Earth,” announced Mission Control commentator Rob Navias.

    While no one was on the $4 billion test flight, NASA managers were thrilled to pull off the dress rehearsal, especially after so many years of flight delays and busted budgets. Fuel leaks and hurricanes conspired for additional postponements in late summer and fall.

    In an Apollo throwback, NASA held a splashdown party at Houston’s Johnson Space Center on Sunday, with employees and their families gathering to watch the broadcast of Orion’s homecoming. Next door, the visitor center threw a bash for the public.

    Getting Orion back intact after the 25-day flight was NASA’s top objective. With a return speed of 25,000 mph (40,000 kph) — considerably faster than coming in from low-Earth orbit — the capsule used a new, advanced heat shield never tested before in spaceflight. To reduce the gravity or G loads, it dipped into the atmosphere and briefly skipped out, also helping to pinpoint the splashdown area.

    All that unfolded in spectacular fashion, officials noted, allowing for Orion’s safe return.

    “I don’t think any one of us could have imagined a mission this successful,” said mission manager Mike Sarafin.

    Further inspections will be conducted once Orion is back at Kennedy by month’s end. If the capsule checks find nothing amiss, NASA will announce the first lunar crew amid considerable hoopla in early 2023, picking from among the 42 active U.S. astronauts stationed at Houston’s Johnson Space Center.

    “People are anxious, we know that,” Vanessa Wyche, Johnson’s director, told reporters. Added Nelson: “The American people, just like (with) the original seven astronauts in the Mercury days, are going to want to know about these astronauts.”

    The capsule splashed down more than 300 miles (482 kilometers) south of the original target zone. Forecasts calling for choppy seas and high wind off the Southern California coast prompted NASA to switch the location.

    Orion logged 1.4 million miles (2.25 million kilometers) as it zoomed to the moon and then entered a wide, swooping orbit for nearly a week before heading home.

    It came within 80 miles (130 kilometers) of the moon twice. At its farthest, the capsule was more than 268,000 miles (430,000 kilometers) from Earth.

    Orion beamed back stunning photos of not only the gray, pitted moon, but also the home planet. As a parting shot, the capsule revealed a crescent Earth — Earthrise — that left the mission team speechless.

    Nottingham Trent University astronomer Daniel Brown said the flight’s many accomplishments illustrate NASA’s capability to put astronauts on the next Artemis moonshot.

    “This was the nail-biting end of an amazing and important journey for NASA’s Orion spacecraft,” Brown said in a statement from England.

    The moon has never been hotter. Just hours earlier Sunday, a spacecraft rocketed toward the moon from Cape Canaveral. The lunar lander belongs to ispace, a Tokyo company intent on developing an economy up there. Two U.S. companies, meanwhile, have lunar landers launching early next year.

    Our new weekly Impact Report newsletter examines how ESG news and trends are shaping the roles and responsibilities of today’s executives. Subscribe here.

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    Marcia Dunn, The Associated Press

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  • Steve Aoki Is Flying Around the Moon On SpaceX’s First Civilian Lunar Mission – EDM.com

    Steve Aoki Is Flying Around the Moon On SpaceX’s First Civilian Lunar Mission – EDM.com

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    Steve Aoki wants to crater to every whim.

    The DJ has been revealed as one of eight people selected by Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa to join him on a commercial space flight around the moon. The trip, organized by Elon Musk’s SpaceX and dubbed “Dear Moon,” is planned for 2023.

    “Life is crazy,” Aoki said in a clip recorded to capture his reaction to the news. “I’m going to go to the… moon!”

    According to Maezawa, a “space enthusiast” and online fashion retail mogul, the project marks the world’s first-ever civilian lunar orbital mission. He’ll be footing the bill for the 10 people he picked—including two backup crew members—who were reportedly selected from a pool of 1 million applicants. At the time of writing, Maezawa has a net worth of $1.7 billion, per Forbes.

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    Jason Heffler

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