Anonymous ID: af7d15 Sept. 4, 2023, 6:51 a.m. No.19488163   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8169 >>8337 >>8367

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

Sep 4, 2023

 

Cygnus: Bubble and Crescent

 

As stars die, they create clouds. Two stellar death clouds of gas and dust can be found toward the high-flying constellation of the Swan (Cygnus) as they drift through rich star fields in the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy. Caught here within the telescopic field of view are the Soap Bubble (lower left) and the Crescent Nebula (upper right). Both were formed at the final phase in the life of a star. Also known as NGC 6888, the Crescent Nebula was shaped as its bright, central massive Wolf-Rayet star, WR 136, shed its outer envelope in a strong stellar wind. Burning through fuel at a prodigious rate, WR 136 is near the end of a short life that should finish in a spectacular supernova explosion. Discovered in 2013, the Soap Bubble Nebula is likely a planetary nebula, the final shroud of a lower mass, long-lived, Sun-like star destined to become a slowly cooling white dwarf. Both stellar nebulas are about 5,000 light-years distant, with the larger Crescent Nebula spanning about 25 light-years across. Within a few million years, both will likely have dispersed.

 

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html?

Anonymous ID: af7d15 Sept. 4, 2023, 7:03 a.m. No.19488221   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8227 >>8237

Space Tango names new CEO

September 1, 2023

 

WASHINGTON — Space Tango, a Kentucky-based startup that conducts research and science experiments on the International Space Station, on Sept. 1 announced the appointment of S. Sita Sonty as its new chief executive officer.

 

Sonty succeeds co-founder Twyman Clements, who will remain with the company as president.

 

Clements said Sonty will help the company grow its business in “microgravity applications for hardware, software, materials science, biotech and medicine.”

 

Sonty said Space Tango has “proven flight payload heritage, a dedicated customer base, and cutting-edge commercial use cases, which have the potential to revolutionize medicine and additive manufacturing in space.”

 

Sonty previously led the space industry practice for the Boston Consulting Group, a management consulting firm; and was head of human spaceflight sales at SpaceX.

 

Space Tango was founded in 2014 from a partnership between then graduate-student Clements and Kris Kimel, then CEO of the Kentucky Science and Technology Corp. They sought to simplify and increase access to space-based R&D and product development.

 

The company is a commercial spinoff of Kentucky Space — a nonprofit consortium of universities, and public and private organizations — based in Lexington, Kentucky, with offices in Texas, Florida, California, and Washington, D.C.

 

Through a NASA Space Act Agreement, Space Tango since 2017 has provided facilities on the International Space Station to support R&D and manufacturing.

 

https://spacenews.com/space-tango-names-new-ceo/

Anonymous ID: af7d15 Sept. 4, 2023, 7:09 a.m. No.19488249   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8255 >>8297 >>8337 >>8367

NASA holds top secret conferences to discuss what the space agency should do if its $10B James Webb telescope finds ALIENS, scientist reveals

UPDATED: 01:51 EDT, 4 September 2023

 

  • Dr Michelle Thaller made the revelation during a gathering in New York City

  • Dr Thaller said NASA has held meetings to discuss what to do if they find aliens

  • Thaller previously said she believes it's only matter of time until alien life is found

 

A NASA scientist has revealed the space agency has discussed what they should do if the James Webb telescope finds evidence of aliens.

 

Dr Michelle Thaller, NASA's assistant director of science communication, said they were open to the possibility the powerful telescope may discover new forms of life.

 

The telescope, launched on Christmas Day in 2021, was sent by NASA to 'solve mysteries in our solar system, look beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probe the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it,' the agency said.

 

We actually work with SETI - the search for extraterrestrial intelligence,' said Thaller. 'There are extra scientists that are searching the sky for signs of alien civilizations.

 

'We've had conferences about what happens if the James Webb Space Telescope observes an atmosphere of a planet around another star and we see things that don't look natural.'

 

She said suspicious signs could be pollution coming from a planet, and said that she felt it was only a matter of time before alien life was detected - perhaps microbial life on Venus, Mars, or Saturn's largest moon, Titan.

 

She told the gathering that the $10 billion telescope, which provides detailed new images every day, was giving a remarkable array of data.

 

'The Webb Telescope has the ability to actually detect chemicals, gases that are in planets around other stars,' she said.

 

'We've done this already with Webb but all the planets have been very different from Earth. I'm hoping this year maybe that we find one that's very similar to Earth.'

 

Last month the Department of Defense unveiled a new website that will provide official declassified information on UFOs - about a month after a prominent UFO whistleblower delivered bombshell testimony before Congress.

 

Still under construction, the web page will offer pictures and videos for the public to easily peruse once completed, with several already online just hours after its release.

 

Its existence was announced during a briefing from Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder, weeks after former intelligence official David Grusch claimed the Pentagon is covering up evidence related to extraterrestrials.

 

Other information the will soon be available, the general said, includes reports and frequently asked questions about unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs), as well as links to reports, transcripts, and other resources that's been declassified.

 

Federal officials said the release shows how 'committed' the Defense Department is to 'transparency with the American people' about their work on UAPs - the government's term for UFOs.

 

'This website will serve as a one-stop shop for all publicly available information related to the Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) and UAP,' the release reads,

 

Defense officials said the 'AARO will regularly update the website with its most recent activities and findings as new information is cleared for public release.'

 

The new site can be accessed via the domain aaro.mil, the department added - where users will be able to also find links to other available government aircraft, balloon, and satellite tracking sites.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12477453/nasa-james-webb-telescope-alien-life.html

Anonymous ID: af7d15 Sept. 4, 2023, 7:22 a.m. No.19488318   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8333 >>8337 >>8352 >>8367

Moon base: Bangor scientists design fuel to live in space

Sep 3, 2023

 

Scientists have developed an energy source which could allow astronauts to live on the Moon for long periods of time.

 

The Nasa-led Artemis Program hopes for an outpost on the Moon by around 2030.

 

Bangor University has designed nuclear fuel cells, the size of poppy seeds, to produce the energy needed to sustain life there.

 

Prof Simon Middleburgh from the university said the work was a challenge - "but it was a fun one".

 

The Moon, which is seen by some to be the gateway to Mars, contains a lot of valuable resources needed for modern technology.

 

The hope is that it could be used as a springboard to reach the planets beyond.

 

As space technology advances at a rapid pace, the BBC was given exclusive access to the Bangor University Nuclear Futures Institute's laboratory.

 

The Bangor team, which is a world leader on fuels, works with partners such as Rolls Royce, the UK Space Agency, Nasa and the Los Alamos National Laboratory in the US.

 

Prof Middleburgh from the Nuclear Futures Institute said the team hoped to fully test the nuclear fuel "over the next few months".

 

On parts of the Moon, temperatures plummet to astonishing lows of -248C because it has no atmosphere to warm up the surface.

 

Bangor University is a major player in the quest to generate another way of producing energy and heat to sustain life there.

 

The researchers have just sent the tiny nuclear fuel cell, known as a Trisofuel, to their partners for testing.

 

This Trisofuel cell could be used to power a micro nuclear generator, created by Rolls Royce.

 

The generator is a portable device, the size of a small car and "something you can stick on a rocket," Prof Middleburgh said.

 

That will now be fully tested and put through forces similar to being blasted up into space, ready for a Moon base in 2030.

 

He added: "You can launch them into space, with all the forces… and they'll still function quite safely when they're put onto the Moon."

 

Earlier this month, India made a historic landing near the Moon's south pole with its robotic probe Chandrayaan-3.

 

One of the mission's major goals is to hunt for water-based ice which, scientists say, could support human habitation on the Moon in future.

 

Prof Middleburgh said Bangor University's work was putting Wales on the map.

 

"I would say that we're really pushing things [globally]," he said.

 

The university hopes the micro generators could also be used here on Earth, such as in disaster zones when electricity has been cut off.

 

The team at Bangor is also working on a nuclear system to power rockets, led by Dr Phylis Makurunje.

 

She said: "It is very powerful - it gives very high thrust, the push it gives to the rocket.

 

"This is very important because it enables rockets to reach the farthest planets."

 

Dr Makurunje said the new technology could almost halve the time it takes to get to Mars.

 

"With nuclear thermal propulsion - you're looking at about four to six months getting to Mars. The current duration is nine months plus," she said.

 

Moon bases in the 2030s

The geopolitical author and journalist, Tim Marshall, said the breakthrough over fuel was a step towards a global race to the lunar south pole.

 

He said: "I'm confident there will be moon bases in the 2030s. Probably a Chinese one; probably an American-led one.

 

"I'm confident because I don't think that major powers can afford not to be there just in case this is, what is likely to be, a massive breakthrough.

 

"So the Chinese are talking about 2028, putting the first brick down, probably symbolically to say they were the first one. But by the early 2030s, both will have a base.

 

"It's thought there is titanium, lithium, silicon, iron, and many other minerals which are used for all sorts of 21st Century technologies.

 

"The actual amount is unknown… but most companies are confident that it's enough to make it economically viable."

 

He warned things could become complicated as space is commercialised, citing outdated space laws.

 

"The rules of the road, such as they are, were written in 1967 - the Outer Space Treaty.

 

"It's still a template but it's 50 years out of date because it didn't know about modern technology, the competition that's out there and the commercial aspects - because then it was very much state-led.

 

"So without updated laws, agreed by the United Nations, it is a little bit of a free-for-all for everybody - and that brings dangers.

 

"Because if you haven't got the guidelines within which to operate, then the clear competition that will happen is operating without a legal framework."

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-wales-66687056