"Titan has the ingredients for living organisms, ... but not in the right combinations."
+ 3 - 4 | § ¶Europeans following up on Titan triumphAfter Huygens, agency targets Venus, Mars and comet
+ 3 - 3 | § ¶Project Pluto: The Flying CrowbarThis one's for Mr. Tutor: "At the dawn of the atomic age, scientists began work on what might have been the nastiest weapon ever conceived."
+ 3 - 3 | § ¶Amazon founder unveils space center plansBlue Origin to build Texas space base.
+ 2 - 4 | § ¶Hubble Robot Repair Deal Given to Canadian FirmA $154 million information contract has been issued.
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Time remaining until the STS-122 launch of Atlantis:
The "All These Worlds" Space Blog is maintained by David Hitt. Be sure to check out the full blog.
NET 10/23 -- STS-120 launch
NET 12/6 -- STS-122 launch
1/31 -- Jules Verne ATV launch
FebruaryNET 2/14 -- STS-123 launch
April4/8 -- Exp. 17 Soyuz launch
NET 4/24 -- STS-124 launch
NET 8/7 -- STS-125 launch
September? -- Dragon I launch
NET 9/18 -- STS-126 launch
October10/12 -- Exp. 18 Soyuz launch
? -- LRO launch
NET 11/6 -- STS-119 launch
? -- Japanese HTV-1 launch
MarchNET 3/12 -- STS-127 launch
AprilNET 4/15 -- Ares I-X launch
NET 4/9 -- STS-128 launch
NET 7/9 -- STS-129 launch
SeptemberNET 9/30 -- STS-130 launch
December? -- Silver Dart orbital test flight
Mid-year -- Silver Dart flight
Fall -- Mars Science Lab launch
? -- DreamChaser suborbital flight
? -- Rocketplane XP first flight
NET 4/1 -- STS-132 launch
? -- Ares I-Y launch
? -- Orion 1 launch
September? -- Orion 2 crewed launch
On this date:Keywords: apollo,history,monkeys,nasa,space
Per Space.com:
The Huntsville Times today has an article about the discussions as to what sort of launch vehicle will be used for human exploration missions, looking at the pros and cons of various options.
NASA has announced that it will undertake a new spacecraft, the Interstellar Boundary Explorer (or "IBEX") that will launch in 2008 to travel to the edge of our solar system and study the boundary between the end of our sun's influence and the beginning of interstellar space. This area is currently being explored by the Voyager probes, but only as an extended mission after their primary purpose.
ESA has released the first images of the moon taken by its SMART-1 orbiter.
According to SpaceDaily, German astronaut Thomas Reiter will serve on the ISS later this year, becoming the first non-NASA or Rosaviakosmos spacefarer to make a long-duration stay on the Station. Reiter has previously stayed on Mir for 179 days. The story doesn't explain exactly how or when this will happen, noting only that it will be in the second half of the year, and will depend on when the Shuttle returns to flight.
NASA's SOHO solar observatory has already discovered around 900 comets, and is well on its way to finding a nice, even 1,000, likely sometime this summer.
The Hubble Space Telescope has provided more support for claims that an extrasolar world has been directly imaged for the first time, this time capturing infrared images of the "candidate planet."
I'm generally not the superstitious type, but, given the time of year, I was very happy to hear this morning than the International Space Station's Expedition 10 crew is safely back inside the Station after a five-and-a-half-hour spacewalk this morning. There were a few challenges (a longer-than-allowed workday, problems getting real-time video on the ground, attitude control difficulties), but no major problems.
Per Floriday Today:
The Expedition 10 crew of the International Space Station will make the first spacewalk of their increment tomorrow morning, beginning at 1:25 a.m. CST. Per SpaceDaily, the crew "will install a work platform, mount a robotics experiment, check vents on systems that help control the Station's atmosphere and install a scientific experiment." This will be Chiao's fifth EVA, and Sharipov's first. The EVA will be televised and webcast on NASA TV, and if you watch it, you're a better person than I.
For those willing to read through it, NASA's Crew Exploration Vehicle glossary has a few interesting facts, such as the fact that current plans are for a Mars CEV flyby prior to human landings on the Red Planet.
Now that the east coast has marked the one-year anniversary of Opportunity's landing on Mars, Space.com has an article on the highlights of the rover's martian exploration.
On this date last year, Opportunity joined Spirit on the surface of Mars. (Note: For anyone east of the Central time zone, read this tomorrow.)
According to Cosmic Log, Greg Olsen, who was a space tourist candidate last year before being disqualified, reportedly for medical reasons, is once again in line for a Soyuz flight.
So the other day, Tutor said he had thought about blogging about the robotic Hubble servicing mission being cancelled, but that he figured he'd wait and let me do it. I told him to go ahead, that he would probably have more to say about it than I. Well, there's still no Tutorblogging on the subject, so here goes. (more)
Due to a busy schedule Friday I'm late blogging this, but ESA released a lot of info about Titan, which is the first wet world we've ever visited. Scientists said it may have rained at the landing site only days before.
The Washington Post on comments by Rep. Tom Feeney (R-FL) about Buzz Aldrin at inaugural events yesterday:Keywords: apollo,collectspace,funny,history,moon,music,space
The strange rock spotted on Mars by Opportunity that I posted about earlier has been confirmed to be an iron meteorite, making it the first meteorite found on another planet."Think about where an iron meteorite comes from: a destroyed planet or planetesimal that was big enough to differentiate into a metallic core and a rocky mantle."
According to Alan Boyle's Cosmic Log, a warm-up exposition for the X Prize Cup competition is being planned for September. No word what the expo will feature, since there is currently only one flight-worthy private manned spacecraft in the world, and it hasn't flown since October, and Rutan has said it may not fly again.
The smaller circle in the picture to the right is our sun, presented for comparison purposes. The funky bigger oval thing is the star Regulus, which astronomers have discovered is oblong due to an unusually rapid rotation rate.
Space.com has a good story about the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which is scheduled to rocket to the Red Planet in August of this year.
Inducted into the Astronaut Hall of Fame in April will be Bruce McCandless, the first person to freely spacewalk without a tether; Gordon Fullerton, one of the Space Shuttle's first test pilots and mission commanders, and Joe Allen, the first astronaut to capture a satellite in space.
Per The Orlando Sentinel:
Mean to post this on the day of the launch last week, but here's a cool animation of Deep Impact's comet collision, scheduled for July 4.
Science@NASA has an article on "The Sights and Sounds