Space News from SpaceDaily.com
July 03, 2019
GPS NEWS
NASA Eyes GPS at the Moon for Artemis Missions



Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
GPS, a satellite-based navigation system used by an estimated four billion people worldwide to figure out where they are on Earth at any moment, could be used to pilot in and around lunar orbit during future Artemis missions. A team at NASA is developing a special receiver that would be able to pick up location signals provided by the 24 to 32 operational Global Positioning System satellites, better known as GPS. GPS is operated by the U.S. military about 12,550 miles above Earth's surface, ... read more

TECH SPACE
Space Weather causes years of radiation damage to satellites using electric propulsion
London, UK (SPX) Jul 02, 2019
The use of electric propulsion for raising satellites into geostationary orbit can result in significant solar cell degradation according to a new study. The extended journey results in greater expo ... more
NUKEWARS
NanoRacks to join consortium supporting DoE's national nuclear security administration goals
Atlanta, GA (SPX) Jul 02, 2019
A consortium of universities and laboratories has been selected by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) to develop new technologies to support the Department of Energy's nuclear scien ... more
MOON DAILY
NASA tests launch-abort system for moon-mission capsule
Washington (AFP) July 2, 2019
NASA carried out a successful test Tuesday of a launch-abort system for the Orion capsule designed to take US astronauts to the Moon. ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
LightSail 2 phones home to mission control
Pasadena CA (SPX) Jul 03, 2019
The Planetary Society's LightSail 2 spacecraft sprang loose from its Prox-1 carrier vehicle as planned, and sent its first signals back to mission control at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo in California. ... more
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TECH SPACE
ThinKom completes technology validation on Telesat low-earth orbit satellite
Hawthorne CA (SPX) Jul 03, 2019
ThinKom Solutions has announced the completion of the first live test of a commercially available phased-array antenna with Telesat's Phase 1 LEO satellite. The test was performed using a production ... more
MICROSAT BLITZ
Exolaunch has integrated 28 smallsats for July Soyuz launch
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Jul 03, 2019
Exolaunch has completed a successful payload integration for an upcoming Soyuz launch from the Vostochny launch site. In total, Exolaunch has contracted and integrated for launch 28 commercial and e ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Hubble, Spitzer telescopes conduct chemical survey of mid-size exoplanet
Washington (UPI) Jul 2, 2019
For the first time, scientists, with the help of a pair of NASA space telescopes, have identified the chemical signature of the atmosphere surrounding a mid-sized exoplanet. ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Relationship found between ordinary, dark matter in galaxy clusters
Washington (UPI) Jul 2, 2019
Scientists have discovered a fairly consistent relationship between the mass of ordinary matter and hot gas, and the mass of dark matter in galaxy clusters. ... more
TECH SPACE
ESA studying radiation impacts of hardware and humans
Paris (ESA) Jul 02, 2019
There is little known about the effects of space radiation on the human body. Astronauts cannot see or feel it, yet the high doses they are exposed to outside Earth's cocoon pose health hazards for ... more
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EARLY EARTH
A new normal: Study explains universal pattern in fossil record
Santa Fe NM (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
Throughout life's history on earth, biological diversity has gone through ebbs and flows - periods of rapid evolution and of dramatic extinctions. We know this, at least in part, through the fossil ... more
DRAGON SPACE
China plans to deploy almost 200 AU-controlled satellites into orbit
Beijing (Sputnik) Jul 02, 2019
The satellites, which will reportedly include Yaogan-class remote sensing vehicles and named after the Leo constellation, are expected to be equipped with a self-piloting system. Beijing plans ... more
CARBON WORLDS
Scientists teleport information inside a diamond
Yokohama, Japan (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
Scientists have successfully teleported quantum information inside a diamond. The breakthrough could provide a boost to quantum computing technologies. ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Theoretical physicists unveil one of the most ubiquitous and elusive concepts in chemistry
Trieste, Italy (SPX) Jul 02, 2019
Even if we study them at school, oxidation numbers have so far eluded any rigorous quantum mechanical definition. A new SISSA study, published in Nature Physics, reverses this state of affairs by pr ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Lightning bolt underwater
Bochum, Germany (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
Electrochemical cells help recycle CO2. However, the catalytic surfaces get worn down in the process. Researchers at the Collaborative Research Centre 1316 "Transient atmospheric plasmas: from plasm ... more


Safe, low-cost, modular, self-programming robots

TIME AND SPACE
Building a bridge to the quantum world
Klosterneuburg, Austria (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
Entanglement is one of the main principles of quantum mechanics. Physicists from Professor Johannes Fink's research group at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (IST Austria) have found ... more
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IRON AND ICE
When CubeSats meet asteroid
Paris (ESA) Jul 01, 2019
ESA's Hera mission for planetary defence, being designed to survey the smallest asteroid ever explored, is really three spacecraft in one. The main mothership will carry two briefcase-sized CubeSats ... more
IRON AND ICE
'Oumuamua Is Not an Alien Spacecraft
Honolulu HI (SPX) Jul 02, 2019
An international team of asteroid and comet experts, including two from the University of Hawaii, agrees on a natural origin for our first interstellar visitor. On October 19, 2017, the Panoramic Su ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
What a Space Vacation Deal
Bethesda, MD (SPX) Jul 02, 2019
Three weeks ago, NASA announced a new program to entice more commercial activities on the US side of the International Space Station (ISS). Starting in 2020, the station will be open to vacationers ... more
MOON DAILY
Scientists scramble to build payload for 2021 lunar landing
Berkeley CA (SPX) Jul 03, 2019
Scavenging spare parts and grabbing off-the-shelf hardware, University of California, Berkeley, space scientists are in a sprint to build scientific instruments that will land on the Moon in a mere ... more
TECH SPACE
ATLAS expands on-orbit customer base, bolsters global ground network
Traverse City MI (SPX) Jul 03, 2019
ATLAS Space Operations, a leading innovator of ground communications in the space industry, continues to grow its on-orbit customer base with two additional launches this past week. BlackSky Global' ... more
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What a Space Vacation Deal
Bethesda, MD (SPX) Jul 02, 2019
Three weeks ago, NASA announced a new program to entice more commercial activities on the US side of the International Space Station (ISS). Starting in 2020, the station will be open to vacationers and others at a per-night-rate of $35,000. While this is the first time the American side of the ISS has been promoted as a high-flying hotel, there have been five tourists who have visited the ... more
+ LightSail 2 phones home to mission control
+ Aerojet Rocketdyne Delivers Orion Auxiliary Engines for Artemis 2
+ Left in the Dust: Poll Reveals Americans Don't Believe US Leads in Space Exploration
+ Soyuz capsule safely returns three space station crew members to Earth
+ Planetary Society's LightSail 2 Launched by Falcon Heavy
+ First-Ever Space Oven and Microgravity Baking Experiment
+ Hacker used $35 computer to steal restricted NASA data
ULA says malfunction of Russian RD-180 rocket engine occurred in 2018 during Atlas V launch
Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 02, 2019
The US United Launch Alliance (ULA) spokeswoman Julie Arnold said that there was an emergency situation with Russian-made RD-180 rocket engine in 2018 during a launch of Atlas V carrier rocket, noting that the incident did not affect the flight. In June, the US Government Accountability Office released a report on NASA's Commercial Crew Program that noted an emergency situation with an eng ... more
+ Rocket Lab successfully launches seventh Electron mission, deploys seven satellites to orbit
+ ESA expertise to support Portugal's launch program
+ Last Test Article for NASA's SLS Rocket Departs Michoud Assembly Facility
+ GREEN propellant infusion mission to test AFRL-developed green propellant
+ Ariane 5 launches T-16 and EUTELSAT 7C satellites
+ Swedish Space Corporation to introduce a new service for easy access to space
+ Raytheon, Northrop Grumman partner on hypersonic missile system


Mars 2020 Rover Gets a Super Instrument
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 03, 2019
Engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, have installed the SuperCam Mast Unit onto the Mars 2020 rover. The instrument's camera, laser and spectrometers can identify the chemical and mineral makeup of targets as small as a pencil point from a distance of more than 20 feet (6 meters). SuperCam is a next-generation version of the ChemCam instrument operating on ... more
+ Mars 2020 Rover's 7-Foot-Long Robotic Arm Installed
+ Inflatable Decelerator Will Hitch a Ride on the JPSS-2 Satellite
+ A chaos found only on Mars
+ Paragon Space Development Corp awarded NASA contract for ISRU technology
+ Santorini volcano, a new terrestrial analogue of Mars
+ A Martian methane belch melts away
+ Life on Mars Was Possible After Last Great Meteorite Impact
China plans to deploy almost 200 AU-controlled satellites into orbit
Beijing (Sputnik) Jul 02, 2019
The satellites, which will reportedly include Yaogan-class remote sensing vehicles and named after the Leo constellation, are expected to be equipped with a self-piloting system. Beijing plans to deploy 192 artificial intelligence satellites into orbit to observe the Earth's surface by 2021, China Central Television (CCTV) reports. "It is safe to say that the satellites still remain ... more
+ Luokung and Land Space to develop control system for space and ground assets
+ Yaogan-33 launch fails in north China, Possible debris recovered in Laos
+ China develops new-generation rockets for upcoming missions
+ China's satellite navigation industry sees rapid development
+ China's Yuanwang-7 departs for space monitoring missions
+ China's tracking ship Yuanwang-2 starts new mission after retirement
+ China to build moon station in 'about 10 years'
Israeli space tech firm hiSky expands to the UK
London, UK (SPX) Jun 19, 2019
An innovative company looking to make satellite communications more accessible and affordable is set to create over 100 high-tech jobs in London and Oxfordshire. The Israeli company hiSky has established a UK limited company - hiSkySat Limited - based in London, with an R and D centre at Harwell to develop a satellite communications network management system (NMS) and operation centre. ... more
+ All-alectric Maxar 1300-Class comsat delivers broadcast services for Eutelsat customers
+ Newtec collaborates with QinetiQ, marking move into space sector
+ RBC Signals awarded SBIR Phase I contract by US Air Force
+ Apollo-era tech built foundation, but private industry now leads space innovation
+ Space agencies come together
+ Luxembourg Space Agency approves EUR 1 million grant to Kleos Space
+ American Astronomical Society issues position statement on satellite constellations
First taste of space for Spacebus Neo satellite
Paris (ESA) Jun 28, 2019
The thermal vacuum test campaign of the first Spacebus Neo satellite was completed on 25 June. Less than 100 metres from the Mediterranean Sea, the Konnect satellite has spent the past six weeks being exposed to the cold emptiness of space. These enormous test chambers, which can be cooled to minus 180 Celsius, are designed to accommodate an entire spacecraft and effectively replicate the ... more
+ ThinKom completes technology validation on Telesat low-earth orbit satellite
+ ATLAS expands on-orbit customer base, bolsters global ground network
+ Space Weather causes years of radiation damage to satellites using electric propulsion
+ ESA studying radiation impacts of hardware and humans
+ China unveils cloud-tech platform to serve commercial space industry
+ Mimicking the ultrastructure of wood with 3D-printing
+ Researchers verify 70-year-old theory of turbulence in fluids


Planet Seeding and Panspermia
Haifa, Israel (SPX) Jun 27, 2019
The first detection of an interstellar asteroid/comet-like object visiting the solar system two years ago has sparked the ideas about the possibility of interstellar travel. New research from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology suggests that such objects also raise far reaching implications about the origins of planets across the galaxy, and possibly even the initial formation of the sol ... more
+ ALMA Pinpoints Formation Site of Planet Around Nearest Young Star
+ NASA's TESS Mission Finds Its Smallest Planet Yet
+ Cyanide Compounds Discovered in Meteorites May Hold Clues to the Origin of Life
+ Using a 'Cave Rover,' NASA Learns to Search for Life Underground
+ Space station mold survives high doses of ionizing radiation
+ View of the Earth in front of the Sun
+ Most Comprehensive Search for Radio Technosignatures
Kuiper Belt Binary Orientations Support Streaming Instability Hypothesis
San Antonio TX (SPX) Jun 27, 2019
A Southwest Research Institute-led team studied the orientation of distant solar system bodies to bolster the "streaming instability" theory of planet formation. "One of the least understood steps in planet growth is the formation of planetesimals, bodies more than a kilometer across, which are just large enough to be held together by gravity," said SwRI scientist Dr. David Nesvorny, the l ... more
+ Study Shows How Icy Outer Solar System Satellites May Have Formed
+ Astronomers See "Warm" Glow of Uranus's Rings
+ Table salt compound spotted on Europa
+ On Pluto the Winter is approaching, and the atmosphere is vanishing into frost
+ Neptune's moon Triton fosters rare icy union
+ Juno Finds Changes in Jupiter's Magnetic Field
+ Gas insulation could be protecting an ocean inside Pluto


The far-future ocean: Warm yet oxygen-rich
Kiel, Germany (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
The oceans are losing oxygen. Numerous studies based on direct measurements in recent years have shown this. Since water can dissolve less gas as temperatures rise, these results were not surprising. In addition to global warming, factors such as eutrophication of the coastal seas also contribute to the ongoing deoxygenation. Will the oceans become completely oxygen-depleted at some point ... more
+ New research shows how melting ice is affecting supplies of nutrients to the sea
+ More Manila water shortages ahead as reservoir feeding city dries
+ Monsoon rains soak India's financial capital
+ Zambia, Zimbabwe set date for building hydro dam
+ A month under the Med: French divers launch daring deep-sea expedition
+ Deep submersible dives shed light on rarely explored coral reefs
+ Is a great iron fertilization experiment already underway?
NASA Eyes GPS at the Moon for Artemis Missions
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
GPS, a satellite-based navigation system used by an estimated four billion people worldwide to figure out where they are on Earth at any moment, could be used to pilot in and around lunar orbit during future Artemis missions. A team at NASA is developing a special receiver that would be able to pick up location signals provided by the 24 to 32 operational Global Positioning System satellit ... more
+ Planes landing in Israel see GPS signals disrupted
+ Lockheed Martin Delivers GPS III Contingency Operations
+ China to complete BeiDou-3 satellite system by 2020
+ China's satellite navigation industry scale to exceed 400 billion yuan in 2020
+ China to launch six to eight BDS-3 satellites this year
+ China Satellite Navigation Conference opens in Beijing
+ China launches new BeiDou navigation satellite


Centuries of Moon depictions on display in New York
New York (AFP) July 1, 2019
Some 400 years of depictions of the Moon, particularly via photography, are going on display at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art ahead of the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing. The Met will unveil its "Apollo's Muse: The Moon in the Age of Photography" on Wednesday, approximately two weeks before of the five-decade mark since the 1969 space trip that landed the first two people ... more
+ New camera system to offer high-resolution images, video of lunar landing
+ Guardians of Apollo: the curators preserving the Moon mission's legacy
+ Scientists scramble to build payload for 2021 lunar landing
+ NASA tests launch-abort system for moon-mission capsule
+ China's Chang'e-4 probe resumes work for 7th lunar day
+ ESA testing lunar rescue device tested underwater at NASA's NEEMO 23
+ To the Moon and back: 50 years on, a giant leap into the unknown
How Historic Jupiter Comet Impact Led to Planetary Defense
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 02, 2019
Twenty-five years ago, humanity first witnessed a collision between a comet and a planet. From July 16 to 22, 1994, enormous pieces of the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 (SL9), discovered just a year prior, crashed into Jupiter over several days, creating huge, dark scars in the planet's atmosphere and lofting superheated plumes into its stratosphere. The SL9 impact gave scientists the opportunity ... more
+ 'Oumuamua Is Not an Alien Spacecraft
+ When CubeSats meet asteroid
+ Tunguska inspires new, more optimistic asteroid predictions
+ NASA Tracked Small Asteroid Before It Broke Up in Atmosphere
+ UH Team Successfully Locates Incoming Asteroid
+ NRL researchers find insights into the formation of the solar system in ancient comet dust
+ Hera asteroid mission's brain to be radiation-hard and failure-proof


SSTL expertise enables new space mission for the FORMOSAT-7 weather constellation
Guildford UK (SPX) Jul 01, 2019
The successful launch on 24 June 2019 (EST) of 6 satellites for the FORMOSAT-7 joint US-Taiwanese weather forecasting constellation marks the start of another SSTL-enabled space mission, a cause for celebration at SSTL's UK HQ. The launch on the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket from the Kennedy Space Centre was attended by SSTL staff including Managing Director, Sarah Parker who said "We are ver ... more
+ Satellite image shows temperatures soaring across Europe
+ China's ocean observation satellites put into operation
+ Benin leaps into 21st century with new national map
+ NASA helps warn of harmful algal blooms in lakes, reservoirs
+ TanDEM-X reveals glaciers in detail
+ Airbus built SEOSAT Ingenio is finished and ready for testing
+ Satellite observations improve earthquake monitoring, response
Research details response of sagebrush to 2017 solar eclipse
Laramie WY (SPX) Jun 24, 2019
The total solar eclipse's swath across Wyoming and the United States in August 2017 provided an opportunity for scientists to study a variety of celestial and earthly phenomena, from learning more about the Sun's corona to the behavior of animals and plants. University of Wyoming botany and hydrology doctoral student Daniel Beverly used the eclipse to examine the impact of the Moon's shado ... more
+ NASA selects missions to study our sun, its effects on space weather
+ Northern lights' social networking reveals true scale of magnetic storms
+ UK scientists to work with NASA on new mission to study the Sun
+ NASA Selects PUNCH Mission to Image Beyond the Sun's Outer Corona
+ NASA scientists find Sun's history buried in lunar crust
+ Solar activity forecast for next decade favorable for exploration
+ A new method for 3D reconstructions of eruptive events on sun


Hubble, Spitzer telescopes conduct chemical survey of mid-size exoplanet
Washington (UPI) Jul 2, 2019
For the first time, scientists, with the help of a pair of NASA space telescopes, have identified the chemical signature of the atmosphere surrounding a mid-sized exoplanet. In size, mass and composition, Gliese 3470 b is like a cross between Earth and Neptune - a rocky core surrounded by a thick layer of gas. The exoplanet weighs 12.6 Earth masses. Neptune by comparison, weighs 17 Ear ... more
+ Lightning bolt underwater
+ Relationship found between ordinary, dark matter in galaxy clusters
+ A new property of light discovered
+ Cosmic cat and mouse: Astronomers capture and tag a fleeting radio burst
+ Hubble finds tiny "electric soccer balls" in space, helps solve interstellar mystery
+ NASA's Webb Telescope Tech Improves Patients' Vision
+ Astronomers Make History in a Split Second
Scientists capture atomic motion in four dimensions for the first time
Washington (UPI) Jun 27, 2019
Scientists have for the first time captured atomic nucleation in 4D, the movement of atoms across space and time. Nucleation is the coalescence of atoms and molecules that happens as matter changes states - during freezing, melting or evaporation. Using a new high-tech imaging technique, scientists were able observe the movement of atoms during nucleation in four dimensions. "Th ... more
+ Theoretical physicists unveil one of the most ubiquitous and elusive concepts in chemistry
+ Building a bridge to the quantum world
+ Scientists perform world's smallest MRI on single atoms
+ The observation of topologically protected magnetic quasiparticles
+ What is an atomic clock?
+ The first AI universe sim is fast and accurate - and its creators don't know how it works
+ New model explains appearance of supermassive black holes in early universe
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