Jan 21, 2013 | Asteroid Exploration, Blog, Commercial Space, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, NASA, Our Solar System, Planet Earth, Space and Science, Space Research, Why Space
The private space group – Planetary Resources – headquartered near Seattle, Washington is pushing forward on its Arkyd-100 – the firm’s space telescope and technology demonstrator for their Arkyd series of asteroid prospecting missions. The Arkyd-100 series is the...
Jan 20, 2013 | Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Space and Science, Space Research
The Red Planet’s early evolution appears to be one that’s water rich, and could have been wet environments to support potential niches for ancient life. New evidence of a wet underground environment on Mars stems from orbital observations by a NASA spacecraft of the...
Jan 18, 2013 | European Space Agency, Exploration, International Cooperation, International Space Station, Mars, NASA, The Moon
NASA has forged its first international partner in plans to develop a future human deep space exploration capability. The European Space Agency will furnish the U. S. Orion/Multipurpose Crew Vehicle with the service module for its first unpiloted test flight atop the...
Jan 18, 2013 | Benefits of Space Exploration, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, NASA, Space and Science, Space Research
Oxygen…you can’t live without it. And you can’t leave Earth without it either. On long duration space travel, astronauts need to carry out rigorous exercise to help combat the effects of microgravity on the body. NASA engineers at the Glenn Research Center in...
Jan 16, 2013 | Blog, Commercial Space, Education Station, Exploration, International Space Station, Kids Space, NASA, NASA News, Space Race, Space Tourism
NASA formally announced today a newly planned addition to the International Space Station – the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM). The partnership to attach BEAM to the ISS involves the space agency and the private company, Bigelow Aerospace of North Las...
Jan 16, 2013 | Ask the Expert, Ask the Experts — Answers, Blog, Book Reviews, Education Station, International Space Station, Kids Space, Multimedia, NASA, Planet Earth, Space Research
What to do about human-made space junk? A first step is get up to speed on speeding orbital clutter! The NASA Academy of Program/Project & Engineering Leadership (APPEL) has made public release of Orbital Debris Management and Risk Mitigation, its first...
Jan 13, 2013 | Benefits of Space Exploration, Education, European Space Agency, Exploration, International Cooperation, International Space Station, NASA, Space Research
It’s not on commercial television, nor are the teams of high school students ranked weekly by the sports media. Yet the competition is intense as student teams sponsored by NASA and the European Space Agency and their respective partners compete for the...
Jan 11, 2013 | Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, NASA, Our Solar System, Pluto, Space and Science
NASA’s Pluto-bound New Horizons spacecraft has come out of hibernation mode to carry out system checks, as well as receive a new flight software upload and churn out science data downloads. The mission operations team at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics...
Jan 9, 2013 | Asteroid Exploration, European Space Agency, Exploration, International Cooperation, NASA, Our Solar System, Space and Science, The Sun
Observations with NASA’s Spitzer space telescope and the European Space Agency’s Herschel Space Observatory have detected familiar looking asteroid/cometary belts around Vega, a young star and one of the brightest objects in the northern night sky....
Jan 8, 2013 | Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Space Research
Phobos, one of the two moons of Mars, might be explored one day by a jumping robotic probe. Marco Pavone, an assistant professor in Stanford’s Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, is working on “hedgehogs” – spiked, roughly spherical rovers that hop, tumble and...