Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts

Thursday, November 21, 2013

NASA's Next Frontier: Growing Plants On The Moon


A small team at NASA’s Ames Research Center has set out to “boldly grow where no man has grown before” – and they’re doing it with the help of thousands of children, a robot, and a few specially customized GoPro cameras.

In 2015, NASA will attempt to make history by growing plants on the Moon.  If they are successful, it will be the first time humans have ever brought life to another planetary body.  Along the way, they will make groundbreaking contributions to our understanding of biology, agriculture, and life on other worlds.  And though they may fail, the way they are going about their mission presents a fascinating case study of an innovative model for public-private collaboration that may very well change space entrepreneurship.

The Lunar Plant Growth Habitat team, a group of NASA scientists, contractors, students and volunteers, is finally bringing to life an idea that has been discussed and debated for decades.  They will try to grow arabidopsis, basil, sunflowers, and turnips in coffee-can-sized aluminum cylinders that will serve as plant habitats.  But these are no ordinary containers – they’re packed to the brim with cameras, sensors, and electronics that will allow the team to receive image broadcasts of the plants as they grow.  These habitats will have to be able to successfully regulate their own temperature, water intake, and power supply in order to brave the harsh lunar climate.

However, it won’t just be NASA scientists who are watching the results closely – the success of this experiment will require the assistance of schools and citizen scientists.


Read more ...
Posted By: This and That

NASA's Next Frontier: Growing Plants On The Moon

International Space Station Celebrates 15th Year in Orbit


The International Space Station celebrates its 15th birthday Wednesday, marking the day in 1998 when a Russian rocket lifted the first piece of what is now the largest manmade structure ever built in space.

The launch of the module named Zarya ("sunrise" in Russian) kicked off an unprecedented international undertaking to build the astronaut outpost one piece at a time. Five different space agencies representing 15 countries contributed to the project, and by 2000, rotating crews of spaceflyers were — and still are — living on the $100 billion International Space Station.

Today, the space station is about the size of a football field with roughly the same amount of liveable space as a six-bedroom house. It ranks second only to the moon among bright objects in the night sky.


Read more ...
Posted By: This and That

International Space Station Celebrates 15th Year in Orbit

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Asteroids' close encounters with Mars

Scientists find that Mars, not Earth, shakes up some near-Earth asteroids.


IMAGE: NASA
For nearly as long as astronomers have been able to observe asteroids, a question has gone unanswered: Why do the surfaces of most asteroids appear redder than meteorites — the remnants of asteroids that have crashed to Earth?

In 2010, Richard Binzel, a professor of planetary sciences at MIT, identified a likely explanation: Asteroids orbiting in our solar system’s main asteroid belt, situated between Mars and Jupiter, are exposed to cosmic radiation, changing the chemical nature of their surfaces and reddening them over time. By contrast, Binzel found that asteroids that venture out of the main belt and pass close to Earth feel the effects of Earth’s gravity, causing “asteroid quakes” that shift surface grains, exposing fresh grains underneath. When these “refreshed” asteroids get too close to Earth, they break apart and fall to its surface as meteorites.

Since then, scientists have thought that close encounters with Earth play a key role in refreshing asteroids. But now Binzel and colleague Francesca DeMeo have found that Mars can also stir up asteroid surfaces, if in close enough contact. The team calculated the orbits of 60 refreshed asteroids, and found that 10 percent of these never cross Earth’s orbit. Instead, these asteroids only come close to Mars, suggesting that the Red Planet can refresh the surfaces of these asteroids. 

“We don’t think Earth is the only major driver anymore, and it opens our minds to the possibility that there are other things happening in the solar system causing these asteroids to be refreshed,” says DeMeo, who did much of the work as a postdoc in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences. 

DeMeo and Binzel, along with former MIT research associate Matthew Lockhart, have published their findings in the journal Icarus. 

Asteroid roulette

The idea that Mars may shake up the surface of an asteroid is a surprising one: As Binzel points out, the planet is one-third the size of Earth, and one-tenth as massive — and therefore exerts a far weaker gravitational pull on surrounding objects. But Mars’ position in the solar system places the planet in close proximity with the asteroid belt, increasing the chance of close asteroid encounters. 

“Mars is right next to the asteroid belt, and in a way it gets more opportunity than the Earth does to refresh asteroids,” Binzel says. “So that may be a balancing factor.”

DeMeo, who suspected that Mars may have a hand in altering asteroid surfaces, looked through an asteroid database created by the International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center. The database currently consists of observations of 300,000 asteroids and their orbits; 10,000 of these are considered near-Earth asteroids. 

Over the past decade, Binzel’s group has tracked the brightest of these asteroids, measuring their colors to determine which may have been refreshed recently. For this most recent paper, the researchers looked at 60 such asteroids, mapping out the orbit of each and determining which orbits had intersected with those of Earth or Mars. DeMeo then calculated the probability, over the last 500,000 years, that an asteroid and either planet would have intersected, creating a close encounter that could potentially generate asteroid quakes. 

“Picture Mars and an asteroid going through an intersection, and sometimes they’ll both come through at very nearly the same time,” Binzel says. “If they just barely miss each other, that’s close enough for Mars’ gravity to tug on [the asteroid] and shake it up. It ends up being this random process as to how these things happen, and how often.”

Refreshing the face of an asteroid

From their calculations, the researchers found that 10 percent of their sample of asteroids only cross Mars’ orbit, and not Earth’s. DeMeo explored other potential causes of asteroid refreshing, calculating the probability of asteroids colliding with each other, as well as the possibility for a phenomenon called “spin-up,” in which energy from the sun causes the asteroid to rotate faster and faster, possibly disrupting its surface. From her calculations, DeMeo found no conclusive evidence that either event would significantly refresh asteroids, suggesting that “Mars is the only game in town,” Binzel says.

Although 10 percent of 60 asteroids may not seem like a significant number, DeMeo notes that given Mars’ small size, the fact that the planet may have an effect on one out of 10 asteroids is noteworthy. “Mars is more powerful than we expected,” she says. 

Vishnu Reddy, associate research scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Ariz., says the possibility that Mars may weather passing asteroids provides scientists with one of potentially many weathering sources in space. 

“On each of the asteroids we have visited so far, every one of them has shown a different kind of space weathering,” says Reddy, who was not involved in the research. “So it appears that not only is composition an important factor, but also the location of the asteroid with respect to the sun.”

The researchers add that now that Mars has been proven to refresh asteroids, other planets, such as Venus, may have similar capabilities — particularly since Venus is closer in mass to Earth. 

“You think about these asteroids going around the sun doing their own thing, but there’s really a lot more going on in their histories,” says DeMeo, who is now a postdoc at Harvard University. “This gives you a dynamic idea of the lives of asteroids.”

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation.
Read more ...
Posted By: This and That

Asteroids' close encounters with Mars

Thursday, November 14, 2013

How NASA Will Use 3D Printers in Space


Starting next fall, astronauts on the International Space Station won't have to wait months for replacement parts to be launched from Earth. Instead, they can use a newly arrived 3-D printer to fabricate the tools and materials they need.

"The 3D printer that we're going to fly on space station will actually be the first-ever 3-D printer in space," Niki Werkheiser, 3-D Print project manager at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., said in a video about the space station 3-D printer that posted online Oct. 30.

"It is the first step toward [the 'Star Trek' replicator]," Werkheiser added, referring to the machine in the science-fiction franchise capable of creating meals and spare parts.

Read more ...
Posted By: This and That

How NASA Will Use 3D Printers in Space

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Gigantic Galaxy Cluster Blazes in Amazing New Hubble Photo


A new image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows an enormous collection of galaxies and star clusters in stunning detail.

Hubble spied 10,000 or so of the estimated 160,000 globular star groupings thought to reside in the huge galaxy cluster Abell 1689, which lies about 2.25 billion light-years away from Earth. For comparison, our own Milky Way galaxy has only about 150 globular clusters, which are spherical clumps of old stars tightly bound by gravity.

The telescope's new observations — which focused on the center of Abell 1689 and incorporated both visible and infrared data — could help shine a light on dark matter in the galaxy cluster's region. Dark matter is a mysterious substance believed to make up much of the universe but which can only be seen through its effects on other objects.

See more from Source Mashable
Read more ...
Posted By: This and That

Gigantic Galaxy Cluster Blazes in Amazing New Hubble Photo

About

Your Source for Social Media News!

Connect

twitterfacebookgoogle pluslinkedinrss feed