June 11
Hunting for Martian Water in
3-D
The three-dimensional images of Mars snapped by
NASA's Spirit and Opportunity rovers can be a fun novelty for non-scientists,
but they help researchers learn the lay of the Martian land and at least one
university has began using the pictures to teach students.
At the Visualization Laboratory at Northwestern
University in Chicago, Illinois, students don 3-D glasses to gain a better
understanding of Martian astronomy and geology.
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 A
3-D look at the rock Adirondack. (Click to
Enlarge)
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"The 3-D images make Mars more real," explained Suzan
van der Lee, an assistant professor of geological sciences at Northwestern who
used the three-dimensional imagery to discuss whether or not water existed on
the red planet today. "Everyone had the funny glasses on and we were able to
view the same images used by NASA scientists conclude that there was a shallow,
salty sea on the surface of Mars."
The Visualization Laboratory turned raw Mars images
provided by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California into
teachable material using computer programs designed to align and view stereo
photographs. In addition to the Mars images, the laboratory is also developing
three-dimensional views of the Eros 433 asteroid visited by NASA"s Near Earth
Asteroid Rendezvous Spacecraft (NEAR), as well as dense clusters of stars and
galaxies.
-- SPACE.com
Staff
June 10
Buckle Up! Rough Air
Ahead
A new radar system that sniffs out dangerous
turbulence for commercial aircraft may soon help prevent in-flight injuries and
reduce airsickness to an unhappy memory in a paper bag for
passengers.
Researchers with NASA's Langley Research Center and
Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines are putting their Turbulence Prediction and
Warning System (TPAWS) radar to the test this summer on regular flights between
the United States and South America aboard a Boeing 737 passenger aircraft. The
turbulence system, they hope, will help flight crews steer around rough weather
or warn passengers to stay in their seats, buckle up their safety belts and
hopefully keep dinner in their stomachs.
TPAWS' enhanced radar seeks out air turbulence by
tracking moisture as it moves through stormy air. The system has already shown
itself to be more accurate then the typical Doppler and weather radar aboard a
research aircraft, and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) will evaluate
TPAWS' performance on commercial flights over the next nine months.
Turbulence due to weather is the leading cause of
injuries to passengers and flight crews in non-fatal aircraft accidents. About
58 passengers aboard U.S. airlines are hurt each year due to such accidents,
most of which occur when people don't have their seatbelts buckled, according to
FAA statistics.
The project is part of NASA's Airline Safety and
Security Program.
-- Tariq
Malik
June 9
Ex-NASA Chief Richard Truly
Retiring
GOLDEN, Colo. (AP) -- Richard Truly, a former
astronaut and NASA administrator who has headed the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory since 1997, said Tuesday he will retire in November.
The lab, owned by the Department of Energy, develops
renewable energy and energy-efficient technology.
Truly, 66, was NASA's chief from 1989 to 1992 under
President George H. W. Bush. As associate administrator for space flight, he led
NASA's investigation of the 1986 explosion of the space shuttle
Challenger.
Truly flew on two space shuttle missions, as a pilot
in 1981 and commander in 1983. He retired from the Navy as a vice
admiral.
Kansas City-based Midwest Research Institute, which
manages the lab with Battelle Science & Technology International, will begin
a search for a new director.
-- Associated Press
June 7
China Spells Out Lunar
Plans
One of China's top lunar scientists, Ouyang Ziyuan,
has reiterated that country's multi-phase robotic plans to study the Moon out to
the year 2017.
Speaking before the 12th conference of the Chinese
Academy of Sciences (CAS) on June 6 in Beijing, Ouyang said China has a
three-step plan for lunar exploration. First, an orbiter -- Chang'e I (named
after a fabled fairy who flew to the Moon) - would be launched.
Chang'e I would precisely chart the Moon in 3D,
scouting out mineralogical elements, including helium-3 through remote
instruments. Environmental, topographical, and other geological data would also
be amassed by the lunar orbiter, Ouyang noted.
A second phase of lunar study is to develop an
automated lander to acquire more detailed information on the Moon, Ouyang said.
A third phase would involve a robotic craft landing on the Moon, specially
designed to snag and then return samples to Earth, he added.
After the three phases, Ouyang said, China would
consider how and when to launch a piloted Moon mission, according to an account
of the scientist's talk in People's Daily Online. He was identified as a senior
researcher at the national observatory.
In the same report, Ye Peijian, a CAS academician,
said Moon exploration is a vital step for China after it successfully launched
its first person into space.
Ye said that there are several technological
obstacles for lunar exploration, such as space probe control, data transmission,
navigation, as well as spacecraft heat and power issues.
Ouyang explained that, in recent years, developed
countries have recast their intent in exploring the Moon. "They have more
specific goals in building bases on the Moon," he said.
"The Moon belongs to nobody, but pace-makers could
undoubtedly benefit," Ouyang said.
-- Leonard David
June 4
Heading to Saturn: Four Hot Numbers
When the Huygens space probe lands in Saturn's
largest moon, Titan in January it will deliver four songs recorded back in 1997
before the mission launched.
Nobody will be there to listen, but mission officials
conceived the idea to help raise interest in the mission among young people. The
probe is a project of the European Space Agency and it is piggybacked on NASA's
Cassini spacecraft, which goes into orbit around Saturn later this
month.
The music was composed by French musicians Julien
Civange and Louis Haeri. The scheme, called Music2Titan, represents furthest
distance at which human-made sounds will have landed on another celestial
body.
The four songs, "Hot time", "Bald James Deans",
"Lalala" and "No love" were recorded at the Sony Studios in New York City under
the direction of producer Kirk Yano.
"Music2Titan reflects our will to embellish Earth and
space with unconventional artistic projects, as well as to familiarize
youngsters with space missions and the search for traces of extraterrestrial
life, communicate about space science outside a scientific framework, and
disseminate dreams," Civange said.
The songs can be heard here.
-- SPACE.com Staff
June 3
SOHO Spots Venus Nearing the Sun
Venus is drawing closer to the Sun from our
perspective as it nears a rare event June 8, when it will cross in front of the
Sun. Venus is now disappearing from the evening sky and has just entered the
view of the orbiting SOHO spacecraft.
The planet is entering the field of view from the
left. The Sun's main disk is blocked out by a device in the spacecraft's camera
that allows it to see the solar atmosphere and other nearby objects that would
otherwise be overpowered by the bright light.
As seen from many parts of Earth,
Venus will be visible in front of the Sun for more than 6 hours during the
Tuesday transit. From SOHO's perspective -- 930,000 miles (1.5 million
kilometers) from Earth and slightly off the Sun-Earth axis -- the planet Venus
will not pass in front of the Sun but glide beneath the solar disk.
However, Venus will be visible against the emission
from the diffuse solar atmosphere, or corona. Scientists will be able to take
advantage of this Venus transit to improve the quality of data gathered by SOHO,
officials said in a statement today.
Other telescopes will webcast the transit live from
planet Earth. For a complete list of webcasts, plus when and how to safely view
the event yourself, see SPACE.com's Venus Transit Headquarters.
Interested viewers can watch Venus' progress starting
now in regularly updated images on the SOHO site.
-- Robert Roy
Britt
June 2
Small Satellite: Big
Views
Hurled into space in October 2001, the European Space
Agency's Proba micro-satellite has been busily clicking away - relaying up-close
imagery of major landmarks on Earth. The snapshots have been taken by an
extremely compact high resolution camera system.
Proba -- Project for On Board Autonomy -- is the size
and shape of a small washing machine. The micro-satellite was originally created
as a technology demonstration mission, and has a high degree of onboard
autonomy. Its 'intelligent' payload and has the ability to observe the
same spot on Earth from a number of different angles and different combinations
of optical and infra-red spectral bands.
Operators on the ground send up the raw inputs of a
target to be imaged -- latitude, longitude, and altitude -- and Proba itself
does the rest.
Proba keeps track of its orbital position with a
Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver - no big deal. What's innovative is
that the tiny spacecraft supplements GPS with an onboard star tracker system
called the Advanced Stellar Compass (ASC).
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 The Barringer
Meteorite Crater (Click to Enlarge)
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The ASC compares observed luminous objects to a star
catalogue database containing thousands of stars in order to accurately
calculate its orientation in relation to its desired target.The ESA
micro-satellite was built by an industrial consortium led by the Belgian company
Verhaert, and launched from India. It is operated from ESA's Redu Ground Station
in Belgium.
Proba was designed to be a one-year technology
demonstration mission of ESA but has since had its lifetime extended as an Earth
Observation mission. A follow-on mission, Proba-2, is due to be deployed by ESA
around 2005.
-- Leonard
David
June 1
Set Phasers on Scan
It may look like a phaser from Star Trek - and
even spit radiation - but NASA researchers assure that their latest tool is not
an instrument of destruction. The pistol-shaped piece of equipment is actually
meant to prevent accidents by verifying that the materials used to build
spacecraft are made of the right stuff.
The straightforwardly-named Vacuum Enhanced X-ray
Fluorescent Scanner is a portable device used to determine the integrity of
aluminum spacecraft materials, such as the composite alloy skin of an external
tank for NASA's space shuttle, to be sure they don't contain substandard
components that could affect spacecraft performance in the future.
The four-pound (1.8-kilogram) handheld analyzer uses
three weak X-ray beams to make material composition measurements. Since the
X-ray beams are so weak that ordinary air would block them, the scanner is
pressed against a target and generates a vacuum between the two to allow an
accurate measurement.
"It's very handy," said Fred Schramm, technology
utilization manager with the Technology Transfer Department at NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. "Other than this instrument, we
don't really have any ways of doing these analyses in the field."
|
 The Vacuum
Enhanced X-ray Fluorescent Scanner (Click to
Enlarge)
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Schramm worked with researchers at Kennewick,
Washington-based KeyMaster Technologies to develop the scanner, which performs
the same functions that once required equipment that filled an entire chemical
laboratory.
NASA officials at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape
Canaveral, Florida are currently investigating whether the scanner could be used
on launch pads during hardware checks, Schramm said.
-- Tariq
Malik
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