Report: Earths Atmosphere Disappearing Faster than Mars
Posted in: NASA, science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliInternational Space Station Now at Full Capacity
Posted in: NASA, science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliWorlds Strongest Laser Debuts in California Lab
Posted in: science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliLooks like things are going smashingly well: the world’s most powerful laser, dubbed the National Ignition Facility, was unveiled Friday at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California near San Francisco, according to the Associated Press.
As we reported in April, the NIF consists of 192 separate beams, each one capable of traveling 1,000 feet per thousandth of a second and converging on a single target “the size of a pencil eraser.”
The report said that federal officials plan to use the super laser to maintain aging nuclear weapons without having to test them underground. Other applications will include astrophysics (including simulations of new planet and solar system formations), green energy development, and–here’s the one I always find fun–creating “controlled fusion reactions similar to those found in the sun.”
Opportunity Rings Up 10 Miles on Mars
Posted in: NASA, science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliBalloon Observatory to Study Suns Surface
Posted in: NASA, science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliNASA Names New Mars Rover: Curiosity
Posted in: NASA, science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliObama Picks Former Astronaut to Head NASA
Posted in: NASA, science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliPresident Obama has announced the nomination of General Charles F. Bolden Jr, a 34-year Marine Corps veteran, four-time NASA space shuttle astronaut, and current CEO of aerospace consulting firm JackandPanther, for the position of NASA administrator.
What you are looking at here is the very first image ever taken of the surface of Mars. It was acquired by NASA’s Mariner 4 using a television camera, and rendered using crayons. Look closer:
After Mariner 3 failed to take images because of a hardware problem, Mariner 4 became NASA’s next big hope to get images of the Red Planet. There were going to be ten Mariner missions, but they wanted these badly.
The spacecraft did its first flyby on July 15, 1965, at 00:18:36 UT. It took 21 pictures alternating green and red filters, which were saved to tape. Then, the probe went behind the planet and the signal was lost. Scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, waited impatiently, listening to static as Mariner 4 travelled fearless across the dark side of Mars.
At 03:13:04 UT signal was reacquired. All systems were nominal, cruise mode was re-established, and transmission of the images started 8.5 hours later. It lasted until August 3.
The people at the JPL were so excited to receive the images that they couldn’t wait for them to be processed by the lab’s imager. As the first picture was beamed down as a stream of 8-bit numbers—each point indicating a brightness point—they thought of a quick way to get an image straight away: Print the numbers indicating brightness in paper strips, put them together, and color them with pastel crayons.
I don’t know about you, but I like the crayon version better than the actual image. [Images from the Data+Art exhibit at the Pasadena Museum of California Art, co-curated by Dan Goods]
NASAs Lunar Orbiter on Schedule for June Launch
Posted in: NASA, science, space, Space Tech, Today's ChiliReady for a return to the moon? NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) will collect information about the moon’s poles, measure radiation, and check out potential sites for an eventual human return to the moon’s surface in 2020–and it’s on track for a June 17th launch aboard an Atlas V rocket, according to Space.com.
NASA is launching the orbiter in tandem with the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS), which will plunge into the surface of the moon in an attempt to find water ice. LRO’s seven instruments will help scientists compose high resolution,
three-dimensional maps of the lunar surface as well as complete a survey of the far ultraviolet spectrum, the report said. (Image credit: NASA)