October 19, 2007 | SpaceDaily Advertising Kit |
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USC Concept Synthesis Studio Colonizes The Moon With Bugs Los Angeles CA (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 A lucky nine graduate students, ranging from industry participants to foreign nationals, spent the evening presenting their concepts and projects for some of the parts needed to land objects and colonize with man the moon above. I say lucky in that the audience contained some great space minds who were wry with commentary. The Space Concepts Studio: Space Exploration Architectures event was ti ... more Chinese Taikonauts May Build Communist Party Branch In Space Beijing, China (XNA) Oct 19, 2007 Chinese taikonauts (astronauts) may start a branch of the Communist Party of China (CPC) in space, said the country's first taikonaut Yang Liwei. China now has a 14-strong astronaut team. The team members, including Yang himself, are all CPC members. "If China has its own space station, the taikonauts on mission will carry out the regular activities of a CPC branch in space in the way we do on e ... more Radyne's AeroAstro To Upgrade Globalstar's Messaging Capacity Phoenix AZ (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 Radyne has announced its AeroAstro business unit will supply Globalstar with network upgrades as part of AeroAstro's SENS (Sensor Enabled Notification System) that will enhance both the receiver sensitivity and the overall customer messaging capacity of the entire AeroAstro-powered Globalstar Simplex data network. According to the recently signed agreement, AeroAstro will provide ground network ... more Critical Deep-Space Maneuver Targets MESSENGER For Its First Mercury Encounter Laurel MD (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 The MESSENGER spacecraft delivered a critical deep-space maneuver on Wednesday - 155 million miles (250 million kilometers) from Earth - successfully firing its large bi-propellant engine to change the probe's trajectory and target it for its first flyby of Mercury on January 14, 2008. "Completing this maneuver was a huge milestone for the mission," offered MESSENGER Principal Investigator Sean ... more First Stop Moon. Next Stop, Mars Vienna, Austria (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 The distant red planet Mars has captured the imagination of humankind for generations. It has inspired novelists to write stories about its exploration and motivated scientists to find ways to make space travel there a viable possibility. Now, for the first time in Europe, scholars such as historians, philosophers and sociologists are banding together with space scientists to share their thought ... more |
lunar:
telescopes: cassini: |
Washington (AFP) Oct 18, 2007 The United States and European Union should abandon their costly WTO feud over aircraft subsidies and negotiate a new trade pact, Airbus's US chief said Thursday. Allan McArtor, chairman of Airbus North America, also accused US rival Boeing of using "offensive and totally inappropriate" tactics in a bid to win a lucrative US Air Force tanker project. He said that then-Boeing boss Harry S ... more China reveals space plans Beijing (AFP) Oct 18, 2007 China on Thursday revealed its plans for space -- including space walking, spacecraft docking and the setting up of a space laboratory before 2010, state media reported. The government would also give priority to developing an earth observation system using satellites, aircraft and airships, Xinhua news agency reported, quoting a blueprint approved by the State Council, or the cabinet. ... more The Fantastic Skies Of Orphan Stars East Lansing MI (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 What a view! It's late summer, after dark, and you're flat on your back in a sleeping bag watching the camp fire's last embers drift up to the heavens. Overhead a magnificent band of stars divides the night-it's the Milky Way. Now, imagine that scene doubled in brightness and beauty. No, that's not quite right. Imagine an entire galaxy of stars spinning overhead. The galaxy's blue-white core of ... more Space Shuttle Crew Arrives Friday Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 As preparations for the launch of space shuttle Discovery on mission STS-120 enter the final days, the astronauts are due to arrive at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida midday on Friday. The countdown will begin at 2 p.m. EDT on Saturday, starting at the T-43 hour mark. This follows the detailed flight readiness review on Tuesday, after which NASA senior managers announced Oct. 23 as the of ... more Ball Aerospace Completes CDR For USAF STP-SIV Program Boulder CO (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 Ball Aerospace and Technologies has successfully completed the Space Test Program Standard Interface Vehicle (STP-SIV) Critical Design Review (CDR) for the United States Air Force. Ball Aerospace is developing the STP-SIV program for the Space and Missile's Command Space Development and Test Wing Space Development Group. The CDR demonstrated the design maturity of the spacecraft bus to perform o ... more |
spysat:
nuclear-doctrine: nuclear-doctrine: abm: |
Moscow (AFP) Oct 18, 2007 The United States is beginning to take into account Russian concerns over the deployment of a US missile defence system in Europe, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday. "Our latest contacts with our American colleagues show that... they are looking for solutions to the problem to remove our concerns," Putin said during a televised question-and-answer session in the Kremlin. ... more US says no missile defense review if Iran drops nuclear program Washington (AFP) Oct 18, 2007 The United States said Thursday it would not review plans for a missile defense system in Europe if Iran gave up its sensitive uranium enrichment program. Any review of the controversial plan would occur only if there was a change in the overall threat posed by Iran, including from its missiles, the State Department said. It was clarifying remarks by Assistant Secretary of State Daniel F ... more Neandertals And Humans Share Key Changes To Language Gene Leipzig, Germany (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 A new study published online on October 18th in Current Biology reveals that adaptive changes in a human gene involved in speech and language were shared by our closest extinct relatives, the Neandertals. The finding reveals that the human form of the gene arose much earlier than scientists had estimated previously. It also raises the possibility that Neandertals possessed some of the prerequisi ... more Genetic Ancestral Testing Cannot Deliver On Its Promise Berkeley CA (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 For many Americans, the potential to track one's DNA to a specific country, region or tribe with a take-home kit is highly alluring. But while the popularity of genetic ancestry testing is rising - particularly among African Americans - the technology is flawed and could spawn unwelcome societal consequences, according to researchers from several institutions nationwide, including the University ... more Cold Colony Vulnerable To Environmental Challenge Brisbane, Australia (SPX) Oct 19, 2007 Australia and other owners of the Antarctic territories may be ill-prepared to face a major environmental challenge to the continent, according to a Queensland University of Technology academic. QUT media and communication lecturer Dr Christy Collis said that, with its massive resources of fresh water and unknown quantities of oil, Antarctica could be ripe for exploitation once resources in the ... more |
human:
water-earth: gas: battery: |
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