24/7 News Coverage
October 04, 2018
MOON DAILY
Lockheed Martin Reveals New Human Lunar Lander Concept



Denver CO (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
At this week's International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Bremen, Germany, Lockheed Martin experts revealed the company's crewed lunar lander concept and showed how the reusable lander aligns with NASA's lunar Gateway and future Mars missions. The crewed lunar lander is a single stage, fully reusable system that incorporates flight-proven technologies and systems from NASA's Orion spacecraft. In its initial configuration, the lander would accommodate a crew of four and 2,000 lbs. of cargo paylo ... read more

MARSDAILY
UCF selling experimental Martian dirt - $20 a kilogram, plus shipping
Orlando FL (SPX) Oct 01, 2018
The University of Central Florida is selling Martian dirt, $20 a kilogram plus shipping. This is not fake news. A team of UCF astrophysicists has developed a scientifically based, standardized ... more
MARSDAILY
Opportunity Remains Silent For Over Three Months
Pasadena CA (JPL) Oct 01, 2018
No signal from Opportunity has been heard in over 115 sols, since Sol 5111 (June 10, 2018). It is expected that Opportunity has experienced a low-power fault. Perhaps, a mission clock fault an ... more
MARSDAILY
Software finds the best way to stick a Mars landing
Boston MA (SPX) Oct 01, 2018
Selecting a landing site for a rover headed to Mars is a lengthy process that normally involves large committees of scientists and engineers. These committees typically spend several years weighing ... more
MARSDAILY
How a tiny Curiosity motor identified a massive Martian dust storm
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Sep 27, 2018
There is no shortage of eyeballs, human and robotic, pointed at Mars. Scientists are constantly exploring the Red Planet from telescopes on Earth, plus the six spacecraft circling the planet from it ... more
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MARSDAILY
Martian moon likely forged by ancient impact, study finds
Washington (UPI) Sep 24, 2018
New research suggest Mars' largest moon, Phobos, was formed from Martian debris excised by an ancient impact. ... more
MARSDAILY
Martian moon may have come from impact on home planet
Washington DC (SPX) Sep 26, 2018
The weird shapes and colors of the tiny Martian moons Phobos and Deimos have inspired a long-standing debate about their origins. The dark faces of the moons resemble the primitive asteroids o ... more
MARSDAILY
Opportunity emerges in a dusty picture
Pasadena CA (JPL) Sep 26, 2018
NASA still hasn't heard from the Opportunity rover, but at least we can see it again. A new image produced by HiRISE, a high-resolution camera aboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), ... more
MARSDAILY
NASA sees its stalled Martian robot, but still no signals
Washington (AFP) Sept 25, 2018
NASA scientists can now see their solar-powered probe that was lost in a Martian dust storm more than 100 days ago - but the vintage robot hasn't shown any signs of life. ... more
EXO WORLDS
NASA is taking a new look at searching for life beyond Earth
Washington DC (SPX) Sep 26, 2018
Since the beginning of civilization, humanity has wondered whether we are alone in the universe. As NASA has explored our solar system and beyond, it has developed increasingly sophisticated tools t ... more
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MARSDAILY
First to red planet will become Martians: Canada astronaut
Ottawa (AFP) Sept 21, 2018
Astronauts traveling through space on the long trip to Mars will not have the usual backup from mission control on Earth and will need to think of themselves as Martians to survive, Canada's most famous spaceman half-jokingly said Friday. ... more
MARSDAILY
Ancient Mars had right conditions for underground life
Providence RI (SPX) Sep 25, 2018
A new study shows evidence that ancient Mars probably had an ample supply of chemical energy for microbes to thrive underground. "We showed, based on basic physics and chemistry calculations, ... more
MARSDAILY
NASA's MAVEN Selfie Marks Four Years in Orbit at Mars
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Sep 24, 2018
Today, NASA's MAVEN spacecraft celebrates four years in orbit studying the upper atmosphere of the Red Planet and how it interacts with the Sun and the solar wind. To mark the occasion, the team has ... more
MARSDAILY
ScanMars demonstrates water detection device for astronauts on Mars
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Sep 21, 2018
Analogue astronauts have successfully trialed a radar that could help future Mars explorers identify where to dig for water. ScanMars is an Italian experiment that was used to identify subsurface wa ... more
WATER WORLD
Hit-and-Run Heist of Water by Terrestrial Planets in the Early Solar System
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Sep 20, 2018
A study simulating the final stages of terrestrial planet formation shows that 'hit-and-run' encounters play a significant role in the acquisition of water by large protoplanets, like those that gre ... more


Opportunity silent since June 10

MARSDAILY
Candy-Pink lagoon serves up salt-rich diet for potential life on Mars
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Sep 21, 2018
The discovery of a microorganism that gives a candy-pink lagoon in central Spain its startling colour is providing new evidence for how life could survive on a high-salt diet on Mars or Europa. ... more
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MARSDAILY
Recent tectonics on Mars
Paris (ESA) Sep 20, 2018
These prominent trenches were formed by faults that pulled the planet's surface apart less than 10 million years ago. The images were taken by ESA's Mars Express on 27 January, and capture par ... more
MARSDAILY
Attempting Contact With Opportunity Multiple Times A Day
Pasadena CA (JPL) Sep 19, 2018
The Opportunity team is increasing the frequency of commands it beams to the rover via the dishes of NASA's Deep Space Network from three times a week to multiple times per day. No signal from ... more
MARSDAILY
ExoMars orbiter highlights radiation risk for Mars astronauts
Berlin, Germany (ESA) Sep 19, 2018
Astronauts on a mission to Mars would be exposed to at least 60% of the total radiation dose limit recommended for their career during the journey itself to and from the Red Planet, according to dat ... more
MARSDAILY
River basin provides evidence of ancient ocean on Mars
Washington (UPI) Sep 14, 2018
Mars was once home to a giant ocean, new research suggests. ... more
MARSDAILY
Curiosity Surveys a Mystery Under Dusty Skies
Pasadena CA (JPL) Sep 07, 2018
After snagging a new rock sample on Aug. 9, NASA's Curiosity rover surveyed its surroundings on Mars, producing a 360-degree panorama of its current location on Vera Rubin Ridge. The panorama ... more
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Lockheed Martin Reveals New Human Lunar Lander Concept
Denver CO (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
At this week's International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Bremen, Germany, Lockheed Martin experts revealed the company's crewed lunar lander concept and showed how the reusable lander aligns with NASA's lunar Gateway and future Mars missions. The crewed lunar lander is a single stage, fully reusable system that incorporates flight-proven technologies and systems from NASA's Orion space ... more
+ NASA, Israel Space Agency Sign Agreement for Commercial Lunar Cooperation
+ China planning probes, manned missions, ultimately a base on moon - Space Chief
+ Russia's lunar exploration program should be part of internatinal project
+ China aims to explore polar regions of Moon by 2030
+ India Aims to Establish Firmest Conclusion of Water, Minerals on Moon's Surface
+ Russia's Roscosmos Says to Remain Participant of 1st Moon Orbit Station Project
+ Airbus wins ESA studies for future human base in lunar orbit
China launches Centispace-1-s1 satellite
Jiuquan (XNA) Oct 01, 2018
China launched its Centispace-1-s1 satellite on a Kuaizhou-1A rocket from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China at 12:13 p.m. Saturday. This is the second commercial launch by the Kuaizhou-1A rocket. The first launch in January 2017 sent three satellites into space. The Kuaizhou-1A was developed by a rocket technology company under the China Aerospace Science and Industr ... more
+ China tests propulsion system of space station's lab capsules
+ China unveils Chang'e-4 rover to explore Moon's far side
+ China's SatCom launch marketing not limited to business interest
+ China to launch space station Tiangong in 2022, welcomes foreign astronauts
+ China solicits international cooperation experiments on space station
+ Growing US unease with China's new deep space facility in Argentina
+ China developing in-orbit satellite transport vehicle


Hayabusa-2 drops another lander on the surface of Ryugu
Washington (UPI) Oct 3, 2018
Hayabusa-2, Japan's asteroid-orbiting probe, has put another miniature lander on the surface of Ryugu. The box-shaped lander, Mobile Asteroid Surface Scout, or MASCOT, was designed by a team of engineers from Germany and France. Engineers at the German Aerospace Center, DLR, confirmed MASCOT's safe landing on the asteroid's surface. "It could not have gone better," MASCOT ... more
+ Touchdown! Japan space probe lands new robot on asteroid
+ Shooting stars create their own aurora
+ Astrophysicists study comet Giacobini-Zinner's coma profile
+ NASA's OSIRIS-REx executes first asteroid approach maneuver
+ Two Years after Rosetta
+ Japan Deploys Jumping Robots on Distant Asteroid
+ ESA choosing CubeSat companions for Hera asteroid mission
New Horizons Team Rehearses For New Year's Flyby
Laurel MD (SPX) Oct 01, 2018
You never know what you're going to see when you visit a world for the first time - particularly when it's on the solar system's most distant frontier - but you can get ready to see it. NASA's New Horizons science team recently wrapped up a three-day rehearsal of the busiest days around the mission's Dec. 31- Jan. 1 flyby of Ultima Thule, a Kuiper Belt object orbiting a billion miles beyon ... more
+ Extremely distant Solar System object found
+ Juno image showcases Jupiter's brown barge
+ New research suggest Pluto should be reclassified as a planet
+ Tally Ho Ultima
+ New Horizons makes first detection of Kuiper Belt flyby target
+ Deep inside the Great Red Spot hints at water on Jupiter
+ Water discovered in the Great Red Spot indicates Jupiter might have plenty more
Dust storms on Titan spotted by Cassini for the first time
Paris (ESA) Sep 25, 2018
Data from the international Cassini spacecraft that explored Saturn and its moons between 2004 and 2017 has revealed what appear to be giant dust storms in equatorial regions of Titan. The discovery, described in a paper published in Nature Geoscience, makes Titan the third body in the Solar System where dust storms have been observed - the other two are Earth and Mars. The observati ... more
+ Cassini's final view of Titan's northern lakes and seas
+ Saturn's Famous Hexagon May Tower Above the Clouds
+ Hubble observes energetic light show at Saturn's north pole
+ Cassini data yields super sharp infrared images of Titan
+ Listen: Sound of Electromagnetic Energy Moving Between Saturn, Enceladus
+ Signatures of complex organic molecules spotted on Saturn's moon Enceladus
+ Complex organics bubble up from ocean-world Enceladus
ICESat-2 Laser Fires for 1st Time, Measures Antarctic Height
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
The laser instrument that launched into orbit last month aboard NASA's Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite-2 (ICESat-2) fired for the first time Sept. 30. With each of its 10,000 pulses per second, the instrument is sending 300 trillion green photons of light to the ground and measuring the travel time of the few that return: the method behind ICESat-2's mission to monitor Earth's changing i ... more
+ UM researchers find precipitation thresholds regulate carbon exchange
+ How Earth sheds heat into space
+ New airborne campaigns to explore snowstorms, river deltas, climate
+ Three Earth Explorer ideas selected
+ Scientists locate parent lightning strokes of sprites
+ Scientists ID Three Causes of Earth's Spin Axis Drift
+ Quick and not-so-dirty: A rapid nano-filter for clean water


Russian scientists develop high-precision laser for satellite navigation
Saint Petersburg, Russia (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
Scientists from ITMO University developed a laser for precise measurement of the distance between the Moon and Earth. Short pulse duration and high power of this laser help to reduce error in determining the distance to the Moon to just a few millimeters. This data can be used to specify the coordinates of artificial satellites in accordance with the lunar mass influence to make navigation ... more
+ Indian astronaut could ride Russian Soyuz to ISS in 2022
+ NASA skeptical on sabotage theory after mystery ISS leak
+ Russia finds ISS hole made deliberately: space chief
+ NASA Unveils Sustainable Campaign to Return to Moon, on to Mars
+ Partnership, Teamwork Enable Landmark Science Glovebox Launch to Space Station
+ US-Russia space cooperation needs continued insulation from politics
+ Russia May Help India to Launch Country's First Manned Space Mission
Astronomers find first evidence of possible moon outside our Solar System
Baltimore MD (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
Using NASA's Hubble and Kepler space telescopes, astronomers have uncovered tantalizing evidence of what could be the first discovery of a moon orbiting a planet outside our solar system. This moon candidate, which is 8,000 light-years from Earth in the Cygnus constellation, orbits a gas-giant planet that, in turn, orbits a star called Kepler-1625. Researchers caution that the moon hypothe ... more
+ New tool helps scientists better target the search for alien life
+ 'Spacesuits' protect microbes destined to live in space
+ The only known white dwarf orbited by planetary fragments has been analyzed
+ Breakthrough Listen expands SETI to Southern Hemisphere with MeerKAT
+ Liquid crystals and the origin of life
+ Cosmologists use photonics to search Andromeda for signs of alien life
+ Did key building blocks for life come from deep space?


General Atomics to provide technical services for Gray Eagle drones
Washington (UPI) Oct 1, 2018
General Atomics has received a $441.6 million contract for technical services for U.S. Army Gray Eagle Unmanned Aircraft Systems. Work locations and funding for the contract, announced Friday by the Department of Defense, will be based on each order, with an estimated completion date of September 2023. The Gray Eagle is a derivative of the Predator unmanned aerial drone designed ... more
+ Raytheon to deliver small drone decoys to the U.S. Navy
+ Self-flying glider 'learns' to soar like a bird
+ General Atomics contracted for Reaper drone ground control work
+ RUDN University mathematicians proposed to improve cellular network coverage by using UAVs
+ Airborne Response teams with Edgybees and UgCS to provide UAS software to responders
+ Self-deploying drone pilots may hinder hurricane response efforts
+ Lockheed Martin and Drone Racing League Launch AI Innovation Challenge
Illuminating First Light Data from Parker Solar Probe
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Sep 20, 2018
Just over a month into its mission, Parker Solar Probe has returned first-light data from each of its four instrument suites. These early observations - while not yet examples of the key science observations Parker Solar Probe will take closer to the Sun - show that each of the instruments is working well. The instruments work in tandem to measure the Sun's electric and magnetic fields, particle ... more
+ Solar Orbiter to leave factory for testing
+ NASA-funded Rocket to View Sun with X-Ray Vision
+ Solar eruptions may not have slinky-like shapes after all
+ European researchers develop a new technique to forecast geomagnetic storms
+ JPL roles in NASA's Parker Solar Probe
+ How scientists predicted corona's appearance during total solar eclipse
+ Discovering trailing components of a coronal mass ejection


SLS chief engineer driven by 'challenge' of building rocket
Huntsville AL (SPX) Oct 02, 2018
Space Launch System (SLS) Chief Engineer Garry Lyles received the 2018 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) George M. Low Award for Space Transportation. AIAA cited Lyles "visionary leadership" in the development of NASA's SLS rocket. "Building the world's most powerful rocket has been challenging," Lyles said. "There is tremendous complexity in how all the pieces and ... more
+ Nucleus completes successful first launch
+ SpaceX uses dumping to drive Russia out of space launch market claims Roscosmos
+ A decade of commercial space travel - what's next?
+ Jeff Bezos space project lands big rocket partnership
+ Europe's Ariane 5 rocket blasts off for 100th time
+ DARPA invests in propellant-free rocket theory
+ Japan firm signs with SpaceX for lunar missions
Scientists discover new nursery for superpowered photons
Houghton MI (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
One of the weirdest objects in the Milky Way just got weirder. Scientists have discovered a new source of the highest-energy photons in the cosmos: a strange system known as a microquasar, located in our neck of the galaxy a neighborly 15,000 light years from Earth. The discovery could shed light on some of the biggest, baddest phenomena in the known universe. Their findings appear in the ... more
+ Gaia spots stars flying between galaxies
+ Hubble's Warped View of the Universe
+ Black holes ruled out as universe's missing dark matter
+ Gamma rays seen from exotic Milky Way object
+ Hyper Suprime-Cam Survey reveals detailed dark matter map of the universe
+ Neutron star jets shoot down theory
+ Cosmological constraints from initial Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam survey


GRACE-FO Satellite Switching to Backup Instrument Processing Unit
Pasadena CA (JPL) Sep 17, 2018
The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow-On (GRACE-FO) mission team plans to switch to a backup system in the Microwave Instrument (MWI) on one of the twin spacecraft this month. Following the switch-over, GRACE-FO is expected to quickly resume science data collection. A month after launching this past May, GRACE-FO produced its first preliminary gravity field map. The mission ha ... more
+ Boosting gravitational wave detectors with quantum tricks
+ Household phenomenon observed by Leonardo da Vinci finally explained
+ GRAVITY Confirms Predictions of General Relativity Near Galactic Center
+ How to weigh stars with gravitational lensing
+ Could Gravitational Waves Reveal How Fast Our Universe Is Expanding?
+ Einstein's Theory of Gravity Still Passes the Test
+ VLT makes most precise test of Einstein's general relativity outside Milky Way
Single atoms break carbon's strongest bond
Upton NY (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
An international team of scientists including researchers at Yale University and the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have developed a new catalyst for breaking carbon-fluorine bonds, one of the strongest chemical bonds known. The discovery, published on Sept. 10 in ACS Catalysis, is a breakthrough for efforts in environmental remediation and chemical synthesis. ... more
+ New simulation sheds light on spiraling supermassive black holes
+ The faint glow of cosmic hydrogen
+ A universe aglow: lyman-alpha emission across the entire sky
+ How long does a quantum jump take?
+ New observations to understand the phase transition in quantum chromodynamics
+ Matter falling into a black hole at 30 percent of the speed of light
+ Wave-particle interactions allow collision-free energy transfer in space plasma


No more Iron Man: submarines now have soft, robotic arms
Boston MA (SPX) Oct 04, 2018
The human arm can perform a wide range of extremely delicate and coordinated movements, from turning a key in a lock to gently stroking a puppy's fur. The robotic "arms" on underwater research submarines, however, are hard, jerky, and lack the finesse to be able to reach and interact with creatures like jellyfish or octopuses without damaging them. Previously, the Wyss Institute for Biolog ... more
+ Machine learning could help regulators identify environmental violations
+ Machine-learning system tackles speech and object recognition, all at once
+ Amazon aims to make Alexa assistant bigger part of users' lives
+ Spray coated tactile sensor on a 3D surface for robotic skin
+ 'Robotic skins' turn everyday objects into robots
+ Russian scientists send FEDOR robot to Roscosmos for launch
+ Google Mini captures top spot in connected speaker market: survey
China launches Centispace-1-s1 satellite
Jiuquan (XNA) Oct 01, 2018
China launched its Centispace-1-s1 satellite on a Kuaizhou-1A rocket from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China at 12:13 p.m. Saturday. This is the second commercial launch by the Kuaizhou-1A rocket. The first launch in January 2017 sent three satellites into space. The Kuaizhou-1A was developed by a rocket technology company under the China Aerospace Science and Industr ... more
+ China tests propulsion system of space station's lab capsules
+ China unveils Chang'e-4 rover to explore Moon's far side
+ China's SatCom launch marketing not limited to business interest
+ China to launch space station Tiangong in 2022, welcomes foreign astronauts
+ China solicits international cooperation experiments on space station
+ Growing US unease with China's new deep space facility in Argentina
+ China developing in-orbit satellite transport vehicle
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