Orbital Sciences becomes second private firm to resupply the ISS

Orbital Sciences becomes second private firm to resupply the ISS

More than four years after winning a contract (along with Space X) to resupply the International Space Station, Orbital Sciences has finally docked its Cygnus capsule with the space outpost. The achievement makes it the second private outfit to have run a resupply mission to the station, with Musk and Co. beating them to the punch last October. Achieving the rendezvous with the ISS didn’t go without a hitch, however: a data format bug delayed the planned September 22nd berthing until a software fix was applied. Once Monday morning rolls around, the craft’s hatch will be opened to reach 1,300 pounds worth of supplies, which include clothing, food and student experiments. In 30 days’ time, the cargo vessel will detach and head for a destructive reentry over the Pacific Ocean.

[Image credit: NASA, Instagram]

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Source: NASA, Orbital Sciences

NASA picks eight astronaut trainees that may go to asteroids and Mars (video)

NASA picks eight new astronauts that may go to asteroids and Mars

If you like space exploration, you’ll want to get used to these eight faces — odds are that you’ll see at least some of them again. They represent NASA’s 2013 astronaut candidate class, and they’ll start training in August for a chance at going on missions to the International Space Station, asteroids and even Mars. The trainee pool is more eclectic than usual this time around. Half the picks are women, while three of the candidates come from non-military outfits such as Harvard Medical School and NOAA. Check out the full roster after the break.

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Via: Space Travel

Source: NASA

Watch Live: ISS emergency spacewalk to fix ammonia leak (Update)

Watch Live: ISS emergency spacewalk to fix ammonia leak

Yesterday NASA reported that an ammonia leak had been discovered on the ISS. Astronauts Tom Marshburn and Chris Cassidy are embarking on an emergency spacewalk to fix the problem. NASA TV is broadcasting the walk live, and you can follow along on the somewhat safer journey past the break.

Update (3:54PM ET): Nasa has reported within the last or so that the faulty pump has been successfully replaced. The entire spacewalk took about six and half hours to complete, according to NASA’s Twitter.

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Source: Space.com, NASA (Twitter)

NASA reports ammonia leak on ISS, says inhabitants ‘in no danger’

NASA reports ammonia leak on ISS, says inhabitants 'in no danger'

The International Space Station has been a font of good news and scientific progress since it received its first human residents at the start of the millennium, but now it may be starting to show its age. The current crew reported seeing damage to the vessel’s truss structure yesterday and NASA has since confirmed there’s been a leak of ammonia from the station’s cooling system. The Agency says the problem isn’t dangerous and that regular ISS-style activities are continuing as normal while earth-bound helpers figure out a way of re-routing power channels before part of the cooling system shuts down. If you want to hear what unflustered voices sound like at an altitude of over 200 miles, check out the audio of Commander Hadfield’s initial report of the leak at the source link below.

Update: Commander Hadfield has also confirmed on Twitter that there’s been a “big change in plans,” and that astronauts Chris Cassidy and Tom Marshburn will perform a spacewalk today to fix the leak.

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Via: SlashGear, Spaceflight Now, CBC News

Source: NASA

Canada puts its robot arms on $5 bills, leads the space currency race

Canada puts its robot arm on $5 bills, leads the space currency race

Americans like to tease Canadians about their colorful (and often animal-themed) money, but we think the tables might just have turned. When the Bank of Canada issues a new $5 polymer bill this November, one side will include both the Canadarm2 and Dextre manipulator robots in tribute to the nation’s work on both the Space Shuttle and International Space Station. Let that sink in for a moment: a country’s currency will reference space robots alongside the usual politicians. The only thing dampening the awesomeness is the irony of it all, as it’s an ode to technology in a format that’s being destroyed by technology. Still, we’ll consider the $5 note a victory for geeks everywhere when we’re buying a box of Timbits.

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Source: Bank of Canada

PSA: Watch the AMS dark matter results announcement at 1:30PM ET (video)

PSA: Watch the AMS dark matter results announcement at 1:30PM ET (video)

The universe is thought to be composed of stuff, non-stuff and maybe some other stuff. We’re referring, of course, to matter, anti-matter and as-yet illusive dark matter. While we know a fair amount about matter and its opposite, dark matter is still largely theoretical. That might change in around half an hour, though, as folks from NASA, MIT and the US Department of Energy hold a press conference to explain exactly what the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS) strapped to the ISS has been seeing during almost two years of space-scanning. Samuel Ting from MIT, who will be on the panel, implied back in February that today’s results will provide the first evidence of dark matter’s existence — if that’s the right term. The press conference is due to start at 1:30PM EDT, so make sure to tune in to the NASA TV livestream embedded below for what could be the biggest scientific news since Higgs and his boson.

[Image Credit: NASA]

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Via: Space.com

Source: NASA

New Soyuz route cuts travel time to ISS from two days to six hours

New Soyuz route cuts travel time to ISS from two days to six hours

Normally, a trip from Earth to the ISS takes about two days. Thursday, a Soyuz capsule docked with the orbiting laboratory after less than six hours of flight time, setting a record. Accelerating the trip wasn’t an issue of newer technology or more powerful engines, necessarily, but of better math and planning. The Russian vehicle essentially took a shortcut that required precisely timed steering over the course of four orbits, putting three crew members (including one American astronaut) on the space station at 10:28pm ET — just five hours and 45 minutes after takeoff from Kazakhstan. Russian engineers are already looking at ways to trim more time off the trip, by cutting two more orbits from the route. Obviously the human cargo appreciates spending less time in the cramped quarters of the Soyuz. But getting equipment and materials for experiments to the ISS quicker should also yield better and more reliable scientific results. For a few clips of liftoff and the docking itself check out the NASA link in the source.

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Source: Discovery, NASA

CASIS wants to send your research project into space, give Engadget readers $100 off the application fee

We already told you about the CASIS and MassChallenge startup accelerator partnership aiming to find the next great research project to send into space, and give that project over $100,000 to help bring it to fruition. Now, Engadget wants to help make it easier for you, dear reader, to get your idea into orbit by offering the chance to trim $100 off the $199 application fee.

The process is simple: you click the source link below and fill out a short form outlining your idea and providing your contact info. Then, should CASIS like what it sees, it’ll send out promo codes to ten of you to be used when submitting the full application on the MassChallenge website. Sound good? Well, hop to it folks, because CASIS is looking to deliver the promo codes by April 1st. Not that you should need much incentive to jump on the opportunity… we’re talking about sending your pet project into space, after all.

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Source: Research proposal form

Space Exploration After the Shuttle liveblog

Space Exploration After the Shuttle liveblog

America’s space shuttle program may have come to an end when Atlantis was laid to rest at the Kennedy Space Center, but that’s done nothing to dampen our interest in the universe through which we float. NASA’s Curiosity captivates us with pictures and data from the Martian surface, and private ventures are popping up to replace shuttered, publicly funded programs. Join the SS Engadget for our panel on the future of space exploration — introduced by Patrick O’Neill of the ISS, steered by our captain Brian Heater, and manned by Tom Rivellini of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Alexandra Hall of Google’s Lunar X PRIZE, and Michael Laine of the LiftPort Group.

March 17, 2013 11:30 AM EST

For a full list of Expand sessions, be sure to check out our event hub.

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Live from Expand: Space Exploration After the Shuttle (video)

Live from Expand Space Exploration After the Shuttle

Space travel’s undergone a major transformation over the past few decades, with the end of the shuttle and the rise of commercial companies. We’ll be joined by representatives from Google Lunar X Prize, NASA, LiftPort and the International Space Station.

March 17, 2013 12:30 PM EDT

For a full list of Expand sessions, be sure to check out our event hub.

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