Anonymous ID: df1809 Oct. 21, 2023, 8:09 a.m. No.19776022   🗄️.is 🔗kun

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

Oct 21, 2023

 

Quarter Moons

 

Half way between New Moon and Full Moon is the Moon's first quarter phase. That's a quarter of the way around its moonthly orbit. At the first quarter phase, half the Moon's visible side is illuminated by sunlight. For the Moon's third quarter phase, half way between Full Moon and New Moon, sunlight illuminates the other half of the visible lunar disk. At both first and third quarter phases, the terminator, or shadow line separating the lunar night and day, runs down the middle. Near the terminator, long shadows bring lunar craters and mountains in to sharp relief, making the quarter phases a good time to observe the Moon. But in case you missed some, all the quarter phases of the Moon and their calendar dates during 2022 can be found in this well-planned array of telephoto images. Of course, you can observe a first quarter Moon tonight.

 

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

Anonymous ID: df1809 Oct. 21, 2023, 8:58 a.m. No.19776215   🗄️.is 🔗kun

NASA Makes It Easier to Find Assistive Technologies for Licensing

Oct 17, 2023

 

NASA develops a variety of technologies to explore space and beyond for the benefit of humanity. One measure of its success is the impact on the daily lives of millions of people with injuries and disabilities who are assisted with innovative treatments and products developed from NASA-derived technology.

 

After all, it was thanks to NASA’s resources that Adam Kissiah, an electronics instrumentation engineer at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, was able to create what would become the cochlear implant. This assistive technology is now considered a medical wonder and has restored hearing to hundreds of thousands of adults and children across the planet since its creation nearly 50 years ago.

 

And now, NASA is making it easier than ever to find and access patented inventions born from space exploration that could help design or manufacture assistive technologies. To help spur the next generation of assistive technologies, NASA has compiled patented technologies with potential applications to this industry in one place. Companies are invited to browse the list for innovations that can help improve an existing product or launch the creation of something new.

 

“NASA is no stranger to improving the world of health and medicine. Our technologies benefit all humanity, and making them easier to find for companies creating these tools to improve people’s quality of life just made sense,” said Dan Lockney, program executive for NASA’s Technology Transfer program. “We can’t wait to learn how these innovations born from NASA expertise will help people lead healthy, productive, and independent lives.”

 

According to the Assistive Technology Industry Association (ATIA), assistive technologies are products, equipment, and systems that enhance learning, working, and daily living for people with disabilities. This includes everything from hardware, such as prosthetics, hearing aids, and wheelchairs, to software like screen readers and communication programs.

 

Another notable NASA assistive technology spinoff is JORDY, or Joint Optical Reflective Display. The device enables people with low vision to read and write. JORDY enhances an individual’s remaining sight by magnifying objects up to 50 times and allowing them to change contrast, brightness, and display modes, depending on what works best for their low-vision condition.

 

The curated list on technology.nasa.gov features hardware and software available for licensing, including:

 

  • A robotic upper body exoskeleton that helps the user control the shoulder and elbow to rehabilitate people suffering from the effects of a stroke or traumatic brain injury

  • A glove to help reduce the grasping force needed to operate tools for an extended period of time, born from a collaboration to build a robotic astronaut

  • 3D printing techniques to help build delicate or complex parts

  • New and improved processes to fabricate circuitry

 

In January 2024, representatives from NASA’s Technology Transfer program will be present at the ATIA conference in Orlando, Florida. Attendees will be able to learn more about the assistive technologies available for licensing.

 

NASA’s Technology Transfer program, managed by the Space Technology Mission Directorate, ensures technologies developed for missions of exploration and discovery are broadly available to the public, maximizing the benefit to humanity. Learn more by visiting the Technology Transfer Portal at:

 

https://technology.nasa.gov/

 

https://www.nasa.gov/technology/tech-transfer-spinoffs/nasa-makes-it-easier-to-find-assistive-technologies-for-licensing/

Anonymous ID: df1809 Oct. 21, 2023, 9:04 a.m. No.19776235   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6259 >>6492

Pakistan becomes latest country to join China’s ILRS moon project

Oct 20, 2023

 

Pakistan officially joined China’s International Lunar Research Station, the China National Space Administration announced Friday.

 

Zhang Kejian, CNSA administrator, and Moin ul Haque, the ambassador of Pakistan to China, signed an understanding between China National Space Administration and the Pakistan Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) Oct. 18 on cooperation on the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS), according to the CNSA statement Oct. 20.

 

The signing was witnessed by Chinese Premier Li Qiang and Pakistans’s interim prime minister, Anwaar ul Haq Kakar. The agreement will see CNSA and SUPARCO carry out extensive cooperation in the demonstration, implementation, operation and application of the ILRS, as well as training and other areas, according to the statement.

 

The China-led ILRS project aims to construct a permanent lunar base in the 2030s, with precursor missions in the 2020s. The initiative is seen as a China-led, parallel project and potential competitor to the NASA-led Artemis Program.

 

The announcement marks Pakistan’s formal participation in the International Lunar Research Station program. It follows the announcement Oct. 8 that Azerbaijan had joined the project.

 

CNSA and SUPARCO also signed a Memorandum of Understanding on cooperation on space debris and space traffic management.

 

Pakistan is already involved in the Chang’e-6 lunar sample return mission, due to launch in mid-2024. It is working on the ICUBE-Q cubesat for the mission in cooperation with Shanghai Jiaotong University.

 

Pakistan has a handful of satellites in orbit, including the Pakistan Remote Sensing Satellite-1 (PRSS-1) built and launched by China in 2018. The experimental, SUPARCO-made PakTES-1A was also aboard the Long March 2C flight. CNSA and SUPARCO have previously been reported to be working towards signing a framework agreement on human spaceflight cooperation.

 

Russia, Venezuela and South Africa are the other known national or space agency-level signatories. The Asia-Pacific Space Cooperation Organization (APSCO), Swiss firm nanoSPACE AG, the Hawaii-based International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA), and the National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (NARIT) have also signed joint statements.

 

China and Russia presented a joint road map for the ILRS in St. Petersburg in June 2021. Beijing has however since apparently taken the role of lead of the project since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. A Chinese official at the 74th International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Baku, Azerbaijan, earlier this month presented ILRS mission slides showing only Chinese Long March 9 rockets involved in launching infrastructure. The new slide omits the Russian super heavy-launch vehicles displayed in the 2021 roadmap.

 

China is setting up an organization, named ILRSCO, in the city of Hefei in Anhui province to coordinate the initiative.

 

The Deep Space Exploration Laboratory (DSEL), under CNSA, stated earlier this year that China aims to complete the signing of agreements with space agencies and organizations for founding members of ILRSCO by October.

 

The U.S. and China are separately and competitively working on respective robotic and crewed lunar plans as part of a renewed interest in the moon and separate efforts to assert leadership in space exploration. The rivalry is also illustrative of a possible development of discrete international space industry ecosystems and plans.

 

The U.S. is growing the number of signatories to its Artemis Accords, the political underpinning of the Artemis lunar program. Last month Germany became the 29th country to sign up.

 

NASA plans to launch its Artemis 2 crewed circumlunar mission in November 2024. It will be followed by Artemis 3, a crewed lunar landing at the lunar south pole, no earlier than late 2025.

 

China has announced a plan to put a pair of astronauts on the moon before 2030. It will launch the Chang’e-7 and Chang’e-8 ILRS precursor missions in 2026 and 2028 to verify necessary technologies for the ILRS.

 

https://spacenews.com/pakistan-becomes-latest-country-to-join-chinas-ilrs-moon-project/

Anonymous ID: df1809 Oct. 21, 2023, 9:21 a.m. No.19776303   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The search for extraterrestrial intelligence gets a new home at Oxford

Oct 19, 2023

 

The University of Oxford in the United Kingdom has been selected as the new international headquarters for the world's largest SETI project, the Breakthrough Listen initiative.

 

SETI, which stands for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, received a huge boost in 2015 with the launch of Breakthrough Listen. This $100-million-dollar private venture by the Breakthrough Initiatives foundation focuses on searching for technosignatures, signals from or indications of technologically-advanced extraterrestrial species.

 

Breakthrough Listen has previously been headquartered at the University of California, Berkeley, but the new international headquarters at the Department of Physics at Oxford will take better advantage of the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), which is a huge array of radio dishes and antennas in South Africa and Australia.

 

The SKA should be operational by around 2030. It will transform radio astronomy, observing the radio sky with 50 times the sensitivity of other radio-telescope arrays, and will be capable of surveying the sky 10,000 times faster. Physicists at Oxford have played a leading role in building hardware and writing software for the SKA, and will be able to tailor specific instrumentation for SETI.

 

Joining the team at Oxford will Andrew Siemion of the University of California, Berkeley, who has been Breakthrough Listen's Principal Investigator since its inception. "We are delighted to launch a new era of Listen here at Oxford," concluded Breakthrough's Executive Director, Peter Worden. "This collaboration will be a tremendous fusion of knowledge, resources, and passion to understand our place in the cosmos."

 

"This is an extraordinarily exciting partnership, bringing a large-scale SETI program to the UK," said Rob Fender, who is Oxford's Head of Astrophysics, in a statement. "This move recognizes how the University of Oxford's existing astrophysics programs in radio astronomy instrumentation, astrophysical transients and exoplanetary studies make it the perfect base for Breakthrough Listen."

 

The timing coincides with Breakthrough Listen's other new partnership with South Africa's MeerKAT array of 64 radio antennas, which has been a technological precursor for the SKA. MeerKAT began listening to a million stars for extraterrestrial radio signals in December 2022.

 

Breakthrough Listen, like most SETI projects, focuses on searching for radio signals, but it also encompasses technosignatures in general. These are defined as evidence for the activity of technological extraterrestrial species, but SETI astronomers deliberately keep the definition open-ended so as not to allow human biases to rule anything out. For example, one area in which astronomers search for technosignatures is in anomalous astrophysical transients — bursts of energy or light with no obvious explanation, which could potentially originate from extraterrestrial engineering on scales vastly greater than we can conceive.

 

Breakthrough Listen scientists will search for anomalous astrophysical transients in data collected as part of the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) that will be conducted by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile when it becomes operational in 2024.

 

Breakthrough Listen also searches for possible "megastructures," giant non-natural objects, in transits detected by the likes of NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), with the best example being Tabby's Star, which was revealed in 2015 to be experiencing irregular and very deep dimming events caused by unknown objects passing in front of it and dimming its light. It was later revealed that the objects were huge clouds of dust, but any real megastructures orbiting a star would result in similar transit events.

 

In particular, the Oxford group will place emphasis on the search for life on the nearest exoplanets. And all of the above will be done by developing new cutting-edge machine-learning algorithms that can analyze large amounts of data faster and in greater detail than more traditional methods.

 

Already, astronomers have used machine learning to detect eight possible SETI signals in data from the Green Bank radio telescope in West Virginia.

 

Looking a little further ahead, proposals for a lunar far side radio telescope to be used for SETI will also be developed by scientists at Oxford. The far side of the moon is a radio-quiet area, shielded from all the radio frequency interference put out by human activity on Earth, meaning it can obtain an unprecedented sensitivity for listening for faint radio signals.

 

https://www.space.com/seti-search-for-extraterrestrial-life-oxford

Anonymous ID: df1809 Oct. 21, 2023, 9:59 a.m. No.19776448   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6462 >>6480

House Members to meet with Inspectors General in SCIF to discuss UAPs

October 19, 2023

 

WASHINGTON, D.C., (Oct. 19, 2023) – Members of the U.S. House of Representatives will meet separately with the Department of Defense Inspector General (DOD IG) and the Intelligence Community Inspector General (IC IG) in classified settings to discuss Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs).

 

On October 26, 2023, members will meet with the DOD IG to discuss the office’s recent evaluation on how the administration analyzes and tracks UAPs.

 

On November 16, 2023, members will meet with IC IG to discuss the office’s ongoing work on evaluating UAPs and its role in investigating UAP and retaliatory claims by personnel in the intelligence community.

 

Each meeting will be held in a sensitive compartmented information facility known as a SCIF.

 

https://twitter.com/RepTimBurchett/status/1715053620574474633

https://burchett.house.gov/media/press-releases/house-members-meet-inspectors-general-scif-discuss-uaps

Anonymous ID: df1809 Oct. 21, 2023, 10:26 a.m. No.19776541   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19776480

The Honorable Robert P. Storch

 

Department of Defense Inspector General

 

Robert P. Storch is the Inspector General (IG) of the Department of Defense (DoD). He is the first DoD IG to be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate since early 2016, and assumed his responsibilities at the DoD Office of Inspector General (OIG) in December 2022.

 

Before coming to the DoD OIG, Rob served for close to 5 years as the first presidentially appointed, Senate-confirmed IG for the National Security Agency/Central Security Service (NSA), where he worked to enhance the impact, independence, and transparency of the office’s work. He also spent several years at the Department of Justice (DOJ) OIG, where he served as the Deputy IG and as the DOJ OIG’s first Whistleblower Ombudsperson, leading efforts related to whistleblower rights and protections that he continued to emphasize at the NSA OIG and now at the DoD OIG.

 

He has been active in the IG Community, currently serving as the Chair of the Technology Committee of the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency (CIGIE) and a member of the CIGIE Executive Council that helps set policy and direction for the organization. Additionally, Rob serves as a member of the Government‑wide Pandemic Response Accountability Committee (PRAC), which was statutorily established to provide oversight of pandemic-related spending, and as Chair of the PRAC Identity Fraud Reduction and Redress Working Group.

 

Following a Federal judicial clerkship in the Central District of California, Rob started his legal career at the law firm of Covington and Burling in Washington, D.C., before serving for some two dozen years as a Federal prosecutor at two U.S. Attorney’s Offices and, between them, the Public Integrity Section of the DOJ’s Criminal Division. He served as a Resident Legal Advisor for the DOJ in Ukraine and returned to provide technical assistance for the United States in the drafting and implementation of Ukraine’s anti-corruption legislation. He received his A.B., magna cum laude, from Harvard University, and his law degree from Columbia Law School, where he was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar.

 

https://www.dodig.mil/Biographies/Bio-Display/Article/3239269/the-honorable-robert-p-storch/