Why does NASA’s Curiosity want Mars dirt anyway?

Mars explorer Curiosity is about to grab itself a scoopful of soil, the first time the sample gathering system has been used while the robotic rover has been on the red planet, but just what is the NASA ‘bot hoping to find? According to NASA, the mission – which will see Curiosity flex its incredibly slow claw – is both a test of the rover’s hardware and of the Martian surface itself, an important double-hit to help show whether Curiosity is made out for exploration, and whether Mars was once hospitable to life.

“We now have reached an important phase that will get the first solid samples into the analytical instruments in about two weeks,” Mission Manager Michael Watkins of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California said of the new trials. In the meantime, Curiosity will do some cleaning of its sample collecting kit: the first two scoopfuls of dirt, exposed by scuffing the surface of the planet with one of its wheels, will be shaken up and then discarded, so as to remove any particulates that have been brought with the rover from Earth.

“It is standard to run a split of your sample through first and dump it out, to clean out any residue from a previous sample. We want to be sure the first sample we analyze is unambiguously Martian, so we take these steps to remove any residual material from Earth that might be on the walls of our sample handling system” Joel Hurowitz, JPL team

The scoop itself has a small capacity – it can dig down to 1.4-inches, and is just 1.8-inches wide and 2.8-inches long – and moves particularly slowly; in the video below, filmed during tests pre-launch back on Earth, the footage is in fact being played at four-times normal speed.

Scooping process:

The third sample collected will be put under the microscope, of sorts, with Curiosity’s mast cameras, though a small amount will be loaded into the Chemistry and Mineralogy X-ray powder diffraction and fluorescence instrument (CheMin). This instrument, designed and developed by NASA scientists, uses X-rays to identify different crystalline structures, using the fact that they refract such rays at predictable angles to figure out the composition.

A fourth scoopful will repeat that CheMin testing, but also be provided to the Sample analysis at Mars (SAM) system. This instrument – a combination of multiple tests and the collaborative work of NASA scientists and counterparts from around the world – includes a Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer, a gas chromatograph and a tunable laser spectrometer, and will primarily be used to identify oxygen and carbon isotope ratios in carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4).

Such testing will help Curiosity to figure out whether those atmospheric gases were created geochemically or biologically, and an important step in understanding what the atmosphere of the planet was like in the past.

Curiosity’s appetite for filth won’t be sated by a couple of scoopfuls in the next few weeks, however. Assuming all goes to plan, the rover will travel roughly 100 yards to the east, and then pick out a rock which will be the first subject for its drill. That can carve a hole 1.6cm wide and up to 5cm deep, and then collect more samples for further testing.


Why does NASA’s Curiosity want Mars dirt anyway? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


NASA Is Engineering Space Bugs To Produce Bricks on Mars [Space]

There’s a fundamental stumbling block when it comes to building a base on Mars, and that’s getting all the building materials there in the first place. No problem, though, because NASA is busy engineering space bugs that will turn the crap on the planet into building materials to help make the hostile planet habitable. More »

Astronomers Discover new star circling a black hole in the center of our galaxy

Astronomers at UCLA have discovered something said to be crucial to revealing the fabric of space and time around a black hole. The astronomers have reported the discovery of a star that orbits an enormous black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy. The star orbits the black hole in 11 1/2 years.

The scientists say that the orbit time of 11 1/2 years makes the star’s orbit the shortest known of any star near the black hole. The star in question is called S0-102, and scientists hope that it could help them determine whether Einstein was correct in the fundamental predictions of how black holes are able to warp space and time. Before discovering the star, astronomers knew of only one other start with a very short orbit near the black hole.

That other star is called S0-2 and has an orbit that takes 16 years to go all the way around the black hole. Einstein’s theory of general relativity predicts that mass distorts space and time and slows down the flow of time and stretchers or shrinks distances. According to the scientists as the stars approach their closest distance to the black hole; their motion will be affected by the curvature of space-time.

The light traveling from the stars to us will be distorted due to the effect on their motion. Star S0-2 is said to be 15 times brighter than the newly discovered S0-102. S0-2 will make its closest approach to the black hole in 2018.


Astronomers Discover new star circling a black hole in the center of our galaxy is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder radio telescope starts searching the skies today

Scientists and researchers in Australia have a new tool to study the heavens with the launch of one of the world’s fastest telescopes set for today. Rather than being an optical telescope, this is a radio telescope dubbed the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder. The radio telescope is in Western Australia and has 36 antennas each with a diameter of 40 feet.

The telescope cost $155 million to construct and is expected to start capturing radio images today. The radio telescope forms part of the world’s biggest radio telescope project, the Square Kilometer Array. The massive telescope is located at the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory, which is situated 196 miles northeast of Geraldton in the Western Australian desert.

The new telescope is expected to be able to scan the sky faster than existing telescopes. One reason for the telescope’s expected speed is that there is limited interference from man-made radio signals in the remote area where it is installed. This radio telescope is part of the larger Square Kilometer Array that will begin construction in 2016.

Scientist Doctor John O’Sullivan says that the new radio telescope isn’t very big, but it’s still a very powerful survey instrument. The telescope will be used to survey the sky and probe the origins of stars and galaxies in the heavens. The telescope is also being used in a research project to search for black holes.

[via BBC News]


Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder radio telescope starts searching the skies today is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Häagen-Dazs’ Ice Moon Ice Cream Cakes Will Take You to the Moon and Back

I’m not particularly fond of sweets but I’m willing to make an exception for Häagen-Dazs’ Ice Moon Ice Cream Cakes that are coming this Christmas. Who knew ice cream could be done up artistically?

Ice Moon WhiteWhat you see above looks like the moon (or a sculpture of it) but it’s actually Häagen-Dazs’ Ice Moon dessert. These ice cream cakes might look simple on the outside, but they’re just brimming with flavor and delightful fillings on the inside.

The white moon consists of a pistachio biscuit base, layers of macadamia nut ice cream and meringue and a coating of raspberry ice cream. The orange moon has crunchy chocolate at the bottom, layers of nutty ice cream and salted caramel and a coating of vanilla ice cream.

Ice Moon White Inside

The Ice Moon is a result of the efforts of Nipa Doshi and Jonathan Levien of Doshi Levien after the ice cream giant hired them to create the ice cream cakes for this Christmas season. I think they did a marvelous job at incorporating the jolly flavors of the holidays with the Ice Moon.

Ice Moon Orange

Here’s a look inside the orange Ice Moon:

Ice Moon Orange Inside

As to why they chose the moon, Doshi Levien explained:

We imagined the shape and texture of an ice cream scoop being like the moon as in a famous childhood Bollywood song. We were reminded of the stop frame movie Le Voyage dans la Lune by Georges Méliès. We were inspired by Armenian surrealist Léon Tutundjian’s relief work of 1929. We found some early examples of the ‘Bombes’ ice-cream that are near spherical.

[via Dezeen via Laughing Squid]


NASA considers space station on the moon’s far side

NASA is mulling over a plan that would put a deep-space station on the moon’s far side. NASA is considering a plan, which would place astronauts at an Earth-Moon liberation point to help forward the agency’s goal of pushing beyond low-Earth orbit with its Orion spacecraft design. Placing astronauts and an orbiting station at the Earth-Moon L2 Gateway has many benefits according to supporters of the plan.

One big benefit of this orbiting platform in the moon’s far side would be a boost in multinational cooperation that has worked well with the International Space Station. A plan to use Russian-supplied hardware at the L2 point is under review currently reports Space.com. Insiders say that the plan is also considering surplus space shuttle hardware and ISS-flight ready spares for the space station.

The Russian hardware being considered is said to be similar to the Russian ISS modules currently being developed including the Multipurpose Laboratory Module in the Scientific-Power Module. The hardware placed on the far side of the moon would be used as a base of operations for exploration missions. NASA believes that by exploring and working beyond Earth’s protective radiation belts more can be learned about space radiation protection.

Protecting astronauts from space radiation is a critical and key component of sending astronauts to Mars or any other deep-space mission. The Earth-Moon liberation point 2 is also known as EML-2, and is a location where gravity allows a ship to “park” in a stationary location. Earlier this year NASA associate administrator William Gerstenmaier wrote a memo that noted NASA would form a team to develop a cohesive plan to exploring placing a spacecraft at the EML-2 location.

[via Space.com]


NASA considers space station on the moon’s far side is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


NASA Curiosity Rover checks in using foursquare

I think most everyone is familiar with foursquare. This is a service that lets you check in to show people where you are or where you’ve been. The more check-ins you make at a specific place, the closer you come the being the mayor of whatever that specific place is. Curiosity is one-step closer to being the mayor of Mars.

NASA is using foursquare to check in with the Curiosity Rover as it cruises around Gale Crater on Mars. NASA’s Curiosity rover checked-in from the surface of Mars, using the mobile application foursquare, marking the services first check-in from another planet. Curiosity checked-in about 16 hours ago with a black-and-white photograph showing its shadow on the surface of the red planet.

NASA says that it is using foursquare as a tool to share the rover’s new location as it explores Mars. NASA believes that using foursquare will help involve the public with the mission and allow people to keep track of where exactly the Rover is during its 23-month mission. Curiosity is currently heading towards Mount Sharp, which is a mountain that is about 3 miles tall.

Along the way, Curiosity is conducting experiments and looking for clues locked inside soil samples and rocks to indicate whether or not Mars could have harbored life at one time. NASA has used foursquare as a tool to keep the public interested in space missions for a while. Previously, NASA facilitated the first check in using foursquare from the orbiting international space station.


NASA Curiosity Rover checks in using foursquare is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


NASA’s Curiosity rover checks in on Foursquare, gives Mars its first mayor

DNP Foursquare is out of this world, as Curiosity checks in at the Red Planet

Yes, seriously. NASA announced on Wednesday that its Curiosity rover had “checked in” on Mars via Foursquare. Marking the first check in from another world, the robotic rover will utilize the location-minded social network to share updates and pictures while visiting the Red Planet. While Curiosity will continue to explore the possibilities of Mars being able to sustain life, it would appear that the fourth planet from the sun just got a brand new mayor. Something tells us the universe’s rarest badge is about to be bestowed.

Continue reading NASA’s Curiosity rover checks in on Foursquare, gives Mars its first mayor

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