Nov 18, 2011 | Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Our Solar System, Space and Science
NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover is set for a November 25th liftoff. Its destination is Mars’ Gale Crater, with the robot slated to land there in August of next year. During the nearly two-year prime mission of the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL), the nuclear-powered rover...
Nov 18, 2011 | Asteroid Exploration, Exploration, International Cooperation, International Space Station, Mars, NASA, Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle, Space and Science, The Moon
NASA needs new astronauts, and the competition for up to 15 opening is underway. As of Friday, 400 people had applied for a chance to “fly NASA” as a future astronaut assigned to a tour of duty aboard the International Space Station or a mission...
Nov 12, 2011 | Blog, Book Reviews, Commercial Space, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, Space and Science, Space Race, Space Research, Space Tourism, Spaceports
Out of This World – New Mexico’s Contributions to Space Travel by Loretta Hall; Rio Grande Books, Los Ranchos, New Mexico; $19.95 (Paperback); 2011. For a good many readers, I’m sure you’re hungry to slip into a spacesuit and head for the heavens. No doubt you are...
Nov 10, 2011 | Asteroid Exploration, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, International Cooperation, Kids Space, NASA, Our Solar System, Planet Earth, Space and Science
NASA’s Swift Observatory caught space rock 2005 YU55 as it zoomed past Earth in the early morning hours of November 9th. The telescopes aboard the Swift spacecraft joined professional and amateur astronomers around the globe in monitoring the fast-moving Near Earth...
Nov 10, 2011 | Asteroid Exploration, Exploration, Mars, NASA, Space and Science, The Moon
NASA’s muscular J-2X rocket roared to life for a 500 second, full duration ground test firing on Wednesday at NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Bay St. Louis, Miss. Derived from NASA’s legendary Saturn V Apollo-era moon rocket, the J-2X is...
Nov 8, 2011 | Asteroid Exploration, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, NASA, Space and Science
Here it comes! Scientists will be tracking an asteroid the size of an aircraft carrier as it flies by Earth today. Scientists working with NASA’s 230-foot-wide (70-meter) Deep Space Network antenna at Goldstone, Calif., have generated a short movie clip of asteroid...
Nov 8, 2011 | Asteroid Exploration, NASA, Our Solar System, Planet Earth, Space and Science
The image is grainy, but the bottom line is clear. Asteroid 2005 YU 55 is one large space rock. The blunt object, about the size of a U. S. Navy aircraft carrier, is on a course to glide past the Earth on Tuesday, making its closest approach at 5:28 p.m., EST....
Nov 6, 2011 | Blog, Book Reviews, Education Station, European Space Agency, Exploration, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Planet Earth, Space and Science
Drifting on Alien Winds – Exploring the Skies and Weather of Other Worlds by Michael Carroll; Springer Science + Business Media, LLC, New York: $39.95 (Hardcover); 2011. From the creative and artistic mind of Michael Carroll comes an original and fact-filled look at...
Nov 3, 2011 | Exploration, Mars, NASA, Our Solar System, Space and Science
Life on Mars — if it ever arose — most likely flourished underground, according to scientists, who base their new conclusions on clay minerals detected by a pair of U. S. and European spacecraft circling the Red Planet. The findings, collected...
Oct 28, 2011 | Benefits of Space Exploration, Planet Earth, Space and Science
The $1.5 billion NPOESS Preparatory Project mission was off to a successful start early Friday, as a Delta II rocket carrying the spacecraft and five new instruments designed to improve weather forecasting and climate change studies lifted off from Vandenberg...