Look Out: Zombie Satellite Out of Control in Orbit

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An intense solar storm in early April may have knocked an Intelsat communications satellite out of its orbit, and could cause possible signal interference with other nearby spacecraft, Space.com reports.
“In what industry officials called an unprecedented event, Intelsat’s Galaxy 15 communications satellite has remained fully ‘on,’ with its C-band telecommunications payload still functioning even as it has left its assigned orbital slot of 133 degrees west longitude 36,000 kilometers over the equator.”
The report said that the satellite, launched in 2005, first stopped communicating with ground controllers last month, and that it has begun moving eastward into the path of other satellites.
Everyone is apprised of the situation, including competing firms. The satellite is still pointing towards Earth, and will likely continue to do so until late July or August, assuming ground control can’t recover it before then.
The satellite was built by Orbital Sciences Corp. of Virginia; the first possible satellite in its path is the AMC-11 C-band satellite, owned by SES of Luxembourg. (Image credit: Orbital Sciences/Intelsat 18 rendering)

Avatar Director, NASA Building 3-D Mars Rover Camera

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James Cameron, the Oscar-winning director of Avatar and Titantic, has linked up with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory to build a high resolution 3-D camera for Curiosity, the next-generation Mars rover, Discovery News reports.
Malin Space Science Systems, the company behind the fixed-focal-length lens cameras for the rover, will build the actual 3-D mast camera as well, with Cameron listed as “co-investigator,” the report said.
Back in 1999, Cameron produced a TV mini-series and an IMAX film depicting the first humans to live on Mars. No word yet on what kind of glasses we’re all going to need to see the 3-D images coming down from the rover for the first time.

Scientists Create Clouds With Laser

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Researchers in a German lab figured out how to generate small clouds on demand using a laser, pointing the way (at least in theory) for humans to control when it rains, New Scientist reports.
The new method builds on the old idea of cloud seeding, which consisted of sprinkling silver iodide crystals into clouds high in the atmosphere, the report said.
The new laser-based method involves firing very short pulses of infrared laser light–220-millijoules into just 60 femtoseconds each, equivalent to 1000 power plants–into a water-saturated air chamber at -24 degrees Celsius, creating linear clouds in the laser’s wake, according to the report.
Lest you think this occurred entirely in a lab environment, the scientists repeated the experiment in the skies over Berlin; while the results were invisible to humans, weather LIDAR picked up a huge increase in the density and size of water droplets.
The next step is to figure out how to replicate the experiment in a way that creates larger droplets that could fall as rain. (Image credit: Jean-Pierre Wolf/University of Geneva)

NASA Refutes Claims of Life on Mars

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NASA is strongly refuting claims circulating in the intertubes that it has just discovered life on Mars.
On Wednesday, the U.K.’s “The Sun” newspaper ran an article entitled, “NASA: Evidence of Life on Mars,” saying that the agency had discovered “compelling evidence” for organisms, Space.com reports.
NASA officials and veteran Mars scientists alike are all saying that it’s not true. “This headline is extremely misleading,” said Dwayne Brown, a NASA spokesperson, in the report. “This makes it sound like we announced that we found life on Mars, and that is absolutely, positively false.”
The piece reported that the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity discovered pond scum, which the paper said contains “the building blocks of life as we know it.” But Steve Squyres, the mission’s principal investigator, disputed the claim. “I can only assume that the Sun reporter misunderstood,” Squyres said in the report. “What Spirit and Opportunity have found is sulfate minerals… not organic materials, not pond scum, and not the building blocks of life as we know it.”
Back in 1996, NASA did announce that they found evidence of life on Mars on a Martian rock, but over the course of the following decade, many scientists found non-living explanations for the rock’s various markings, as the report points out. (Image credit: NASA)

NASA to Amp Up Search for Extraterrestrial Life

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Alien life is making news lately, and now NASA looks to lead the charge.
The agency announced eight possible missions Wednesday that would closely examine tiny microorganisms and minerals, according to CNN.
“Astrobiology and the search for life is central to many of the most important missions that we are studying,” Steve Squyres, the Cornell astronomer leading the Mars Exploration Rover Mission, said on a conference call with reporters.
The missions include robotic soil sample-and-return missions to Mars, and looking for life in water on distant moons, the report said. Specifically, they include sending landers to Mercury, analyzing methane on Mars, probing Europa’s oceans, searching for organic materials on Titan, and more closely examining comets.
None of the missions have been approved, according to the report. Separately, Squyres announced Wednesday that in an effort to maximize newly limited budgets, NASA is considering a plan to stretch out missions to return samples from Mars into three parts, Reuters reports. (Image credit: NASA/Terrestrial Planet Finder concept)

Frosty Asteroid Points to Origin of Earths Oceans

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It’s well known that comets are made primarily of ice. But the recent discovery of frost on an asteroid–the first ever–has scientists looking for clues that icy rocks could have been the source of the Earth’s oceans, Scientific American reports.
Two studies in the journal Nature detail how scientists have used an infrared telescope to spectroscopically examine asteroid 24 Themis’s surface, the report said. The resulting chemical signature looked like a match for water ice.
Previously, asteroids were thought to be free of ice. 24 Themis first attracted attention because all of its neighbors are icy comets.
The asteroid is one of the largest in the belt just outside Mars, with a diameter of 129 miles. Let’s hope that one stays away from Earth. (Artist concept credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle)

Scientists: Some Moon Craters May Be Electrified

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New NASA calculations show that the moon’s north and south poles may be a little more interesting than previously thought–and perhaps even dangerous.
Solar winds streaming over the craggy lunar surface may be strong enough to electrically charge polar crater on the moon, Space.com reports. That’s despite the presence of water ice; scientists believe it’s because of the moon’s orientation to the sun, which keeps the craters shielded and brings temperatures down to minus 400 degrees Fahrenheit, the report said. 
That’s enough to store water for billions of years, but the addition of solar winds presents additional problems for astronauts, said NASA lead author William Farrell in the article.
“Our research suggests that, in addition to the wicked cold, explorers and robots at the bottoms of polar lunar craters may have to contend with a complex electrical environment as well, which can affect surface chemistry, static discharge, and dust cling,” Farrell said.

NASA Broadens Space Station Lab Research

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NASA announced that it is seeking research ideas from private entities that may want to perform experiments on board the International Space Station, according to NetworkWorld.
The agency wants to expand the ISS’s role in technology development, basic and applied research, and industrial processing for commercial firms, non-profits, and academia, the report said.
Specifically, NASA listed two areas of expansion: Payload Integration and Operations Support Services, and Support Equipment and Instrumentation. The goal is to aid development of applications in biotechnology, energy, engineering, and remote sensing, according to the article.
The subtext here is that NASA is looking to give the ISS more to do. So far, during the course of nine years of ISS-based research, about 550 experiments have either already been completed or are still underway.

ESO Chooses Location for Extremely Large Telescope

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The European Southern Observatory organization has chosen Cerro Armazones, a nearly 10,000-foot mountain in Chile’s Atacama Desert, for its next-generation observatory, BBC News reports, a location that should be good for 320 days of clear observing per year.
The E-ELT (European Extremely Large Telescope) will feature a primary mirror that’s 187 feet (not inches) in diameter. Each of its 984 hexagonal segments will be 57 inches wide; all will combine with four smaller mirrors to generate each final image.
The resulting telescope will be five times the width of today’s best optical telescopes, and can gather 15 times more light. It’s expected to take images that are 15 times sharper than that of the Hubble Space Telescope, according to the article.
The $1 billion euro E-ELT will also feature improved optics techniques that correct for atmospheric distortions, the report said; construction could start as early as 2011, with the telescope going online sometime in 2018.

Hawking: Avoid Contact With Alien Life

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Fabled astrophysicist Stephen Hawking warned in a new Discovery Network series last night that humans shouldn’t try and make contact with alien lifeforms.
Like many astronomers before him, Hawking believes there is indeed extraterrestrial life out there somewhere. But given the way humans tend to behave, he said it wouldn’t be a good idea to communicate with them, especially since a given species could be millions of years more advanced than our own society.
For example, Hawking said aliens may have figured out how to capture the energy from a star like our Sun–which we need in tip-top working condition, the last time I checked.
“If aliens visit us, the outcome would be much as when Columbus landed in America, which didn’t turn out so well for the Native Americans,” Hawkings said in the debut episode, which aired at 9 PM EST on the Discovery Channel. (Image credit: Discovery Network)