Showing posts with label SPACE. Show all posts

LEGO to Release Mars Rover Curiosity as Toy Model

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NASA's Mars rover Curiosity, which for almost a year has been driving across the Red Planet, will be the next model to roll off LEGO's CUUSOO production line, the toy company announced on June 14.

The Denmark-based LEGO Group chose a fan-built model of the car-size rover to be the next release in its CUUSOO line of building brick toys.

"We learned that this product has niche appeal and strong demand from the space and education communities," said LEGO's Tim Courtney in a blog posted to the company's website. "The product aligns well with the LEGO Group's mission to 'inspire and develop the builders of tomorrow,' including those who will build our future in outer space." Read more…

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This Extraordinary 'Disco Ball' Is Now Orbiting Earth

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One of the most subtle effects predicted by general relativity is a phenomenon known as rotational frame-dragging. This is caused by a massive spinning body, such as a planet, dragging space-time with it as it turns. That causes any small rotating particles in the vicinity to precess.

Needless to say, the effect is tiny and extremely hard to observe. The difference between Einstein’s predictions and Newton’s is in the region of one part in a few trillion.

Various attempts to measure this in orbit around Earth have had mixed success. The best was a $750 million spacecraft called Gravity Probe B that NASA launched in 2004.

The spacecraft consisted of four small, almost perfectly spherical gyroscopes, each coated with a superconducting layer in which the movement of electrons could be used to measure the rotation.

The idea was to monitor very tiny changes in the way these gyroscopes spun as the spacecraft orbited Earth. In theory, that should have allowed the measurement of frame-dragging with an accuracy of 1%. However, various problems with the spacecraft reduced its accuracy to about 20%.

Astrophysicists would dearly love to get a better measurement, but know that the chances of raising the cash required for another experiment of this type are as small as the effect itself.

But there is a much cheaper way of achieving the same goal, at least according to the Italian Space Agency ASI.

These guys put a “disco ball” in orbit around Earth and say that carefully measuring its orbit from the ground should produce a similar result.

This disco ball is an extraordinary object. It is entirely passive, with no thrusters or electronic components. Instead, it is a tungsten sphere about the size of a football, weighing 400 kg and covered with 92 reflectors that allow it to be tracked using lasers on Earth. These reflectors also make it look like a disco ball.

The ball’s small size but large mass make it the most perfect test particle ever placed in orbit, the first aerospace structure ever made from tungsten and the densest object orbiting anything anywhere in the solar system.

The ball is known as the Laser Relativity Satellite, or LARES. The Italians launched it in February of last year and have been carefully measuring its orbital characteristics ever since.

Today, Antonio Paolozzi at the University of Rome La Sapienza and Ignazio Ciufolini at the University of Salento described the results of this process.

To be sure, this experiment will be no easy ride. The idea is to measure the ball’s orbit by bouncing lasers off it and then to compare this with the theoretically predicted orbit that takes account of all the different forces that must act on the satellite.

The problem, of course, is that the many effects are often subtle and can swamp the signal they are looking for.

To cancel out the effects of the most subtle of these forces, the team need to compare data from LARES with other similar test particles in orbit. As luck would have it, the Italians have a couple of other disco balls already in orbit: LAGEOS 1 and 2.

Although these aren’t as perfect as LARES, they have been providing data for several years.

Paolozzi and Ciufolini are confident that the analysis will finally produce an accurate measurement of rotational frame dragging. “By adding the LARES orbital data, it will be possible to eliminate also the effects of [these perturbations], thus allowing the achievement of about 1% accuracy,” they said.

That will be impressive, not least because it will have been achieved at a tiny fraction of the cost of Gravity Probe B.

But it’s still too early to pop the champagne corks. As physicists who have attempted to measure this effect can testify, these highly sensitive experiments have a tendency to spring the odd surprise.

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Heat-Sensitive Telescope Could Find Aliens

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We might be able find aliens using the heat their civilizations give off, astronomers say, but it will take a megatelescope to do the job. The development of such a telescope is in the works.

The telescope — called Colossus — would be a massive 250-foot (77-meter) telescope, which is more than double the aperture of any telescope yet constructed.

To keep costs down, the proposed $1 billion telescope would use thin mirror technology and few large aperture mirror segments to build Colossus. The sensitivity of the scope could be enough to spot cities or other signs of aliens for planets as far as 60 to 70 light-years from Earth, its backers said. Read more…

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Floating Robotic Spheres to Compete on Space Station

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Astronauts tweeting from space have quietly captivated followers for a while now, but when Chris Hadfield's cover of David Bowie's "Space Oddity" went viral, the YouTube video seemed to revive people's interest in just how thrilling it is when space and Earth are bridged by simple, everyday technology.

To appeal to this new wave of fascination, the European Space Agency (ESA) and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have created the Zero Robotics Competition, a tournament in which high school students can compete for points by controlling robotic, basketball-sized spheres that will float inside the International Space Station (ISS). Read more…

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New Asteroid-Mining Venture Unveiled

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A new asteroid-mining company launched Tuesday with the goal of helping humanity expand across the solar system by tapping the vast riches of space rocks.

The new firm, called Deep Space Industries, Inc., announced today (Jan. 22) that it plans to launch a fleet of prospecting spacecraft in 2015, then begin harvesting metals and water from near-Earth asteroids within a decade or so. Such work could make it possible to build and refuel spacecraft far above our planet's surface, thus helping our species get a foothold in the final frontier.

"Using resources harvested in space is the only way to afford permanent space development," Deep Space CEO David Gump said in a statement. Deep Space Industries will hold a press conference today in Santa Monica, Calif., at 10 a.m. PST (1 p.m. EST/1800 GMT) to unveil more details of its bold mission plan; you can watch the webcast live at SPACE.com.

"More than 900 new asteroids that pass near Earth are discovered every year," Gump explained. "They can be like the Iron Range of Minnesota was for the Detroit car industry last century — a key resource located near where it was needed. In this case, metals and fuel from asteroids can expand the in-space industries of this century. That is our strategy."

Deep Space is the second company to jump into the asteroid-mining business. The first, the billionaire-backed firm Planetary Resources, had its own unveiling last April. Read more…

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