Don’t miss LeVar Burton, Ben Heck, Adafruit and Planetary Resources at Expand NY!

Don't miss LeVar Burton, Ben Heck, Adafruit and Planetary Resources at Expand NY!

We’re getting more and more excited watching the Expand NY agenda come together. We’ve already announced our first set of speakers (by which we mean people on stage, not those kind of speakers) including legendary game designer Peter Molyneux, Pebble CEO Eric Migicovsky, io9 editor-in-chief Annalee Newitz and the man responsible for clogging the Internet’s tubes with funny cats: Ben Huh.

But wait, there’s more! Joining us at Javits Center this November will be:

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Researchers Identify 12 Asteroids Close Enough for Space Mining

Researchers Identify 12 Asteroids Close Enough for Space Mining

Common sense would suggest that humans would want to do everything possible to discourage the asteroids hurdling through solar system from heading towards Earth. But in the too-futuristic era of space rock mining that’s just not the case anymore.

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Planetary Resources shows off full-scale Arkyd-100 space telescope prototype

Planetary Resources is the company that famously plans to one-day mine asteroids for precious metals and other materials. The company has recently unveiled a full-scale prototype of its Arkyd-100 space telescope. The company plans to use these small space telescopes for its Arkyd Series prospecting missions.

pr-arkyd-100

The company says that one of the decisions it made was to build as much as possible in-house. Planetary Resources says that the ability to build things in-house will allow it to mass produce its spacecraft at extremely low cost. The company also points out that the space telescope is incredibly small.

As you can see in the photograph above, the space telescope is significantly smaller than other space telescopes such as the Hubble. Planetary Resources says that the small size of the space telescope will cut the cost of deep space missions below anything we are accustomed to. The space telescope weighs 11 kg and has deployable solar arrays.

The space telescope also has an integrated avionics bay, and instrument sensor package, and a optical assembly. The company also says that it is making significant developments in flight software. The company promises that its tiny space telescope will be the most advanced spacecraft per kilogram that exists today. The manufacturer is using computer-controlled machines to create single piece parts to serve as major structural elements of its telescope.

[via Planetary Resources]


Planetary Resources shows off full-scale Arkyd-100 space telescope prototype is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Planetary Resources shows off Arkyd-100 prototype, gives a tour of its workspace

Planetary Resources shows off Arkyd100 prototype, gives a tour of its workspace video

We last heard about Planetary Resources back in April of last year, when the team formally announced plans to mine asteroids for things like water and precious metals like platinum. Chris Lewicki, who sports the unspeakably cool title of president and chief asteroid miner, assures us all that his team has been very hard at work in the interim. While he’s not quite ready to show everything off just yet (due, in part, to intellectual property concerns), the space executive gave the internet a glimpse of the Arkyd-100 mechanical prototype, a space telescope and technology demonstrator packed into a dense 11 kilograms.

In the below video, Lewicki give a quick walk around the lightweight, low-cost prototype. There’s also a glimpse of the of the company’s Class 10,000 clean room and Arkyd-100 manufacturing facility.

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Source: Planetary Resources