Archive for April, 2007

Mining Plans For The Moon

Friday, April 27th, 2007

Extracting resources from the moon plays an important part in the US Congress- endorsed vision for space exploration.

The powdery lunar surface and the fact that the moon has only a sixth of the earth’s gravity “makes it ideal for cheap mining and mineral processing”.

The minerals present on the moon include anorthite, which is similar to the mineral bauxite, from which aluminium is produced on earth.  Read more

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SpaceX To Launch From Cape Canaveral

Friday, April 27th, 2007

SpaceX has been approved for a five-year contract  to launch its rockets from Launch Complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.

Launch Complex 40 (LC-40) is located on Merritt Island, Cape Canaveral, Florida. It was previously used by the U.S. Air Force for Titan III and Titan IV launches and to send off the Mars Observer spacecraft and the Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn.

On April 26, 2007, private space transportation company SpaceX (formally called Space Exploration Technologies) was granted the use of LC-40 for the next five years by the 45th Space Wing of the U.S. Air Force Space Command.   Read more

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NASA Engineer Remembered

Friday, April 27th, 2007

The people closest to David Beverly, the NASA engineer shot to death in his space-center office last week, asked his friends and colleagues at a memorial service Wednesday to share in his passions for work, play and family.

Beverly, 62, was as much at home straddling a motorcycle on a cross-country trip or skippering his 41-foot sailboat through Galveston Bay as he was troubleshooting electronics gear for the space shuttle, the international space station or NASA’s new moon ship.

“David had such a great passion for his work for NASA and being a part of a great program,” his widow, Linda Beverly, told an audience of several hundred people who filled a space center auditorium.  Read more

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NASA Brings Astronaut Home Early

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

NASA managers decided Thursday to bring U.S. astronaut Sunita Williams back to Earth on an earlier shuttle flight than

Her original return flight from the international space station was scheduled for late June, but a hail storm in February that damaged the space shuttle Atlantis’ fuel tank delayed the 2007 schedule by months.

Atlantis, originally due to launch in March, is now scheduled to lift off in early June. Space station and shuttle managers agreed to swap out the station crew members then, instead of on the shuttle Endeavour’s June flight as initially planned. Endeavour’s flight was pushed back to August. Read more

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The Queen To Visit NASA’s Goddard

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh will visit NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., on Tuesday, May 8. The tour of Goddard is occurring near the end of the queen’s visit to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the Jamestown settlement in Virginia.

Goddard is home to the largest organization of scientists and engineers in the United States dedicated to learning and sharing knowledge of the Earth, sun, solar system and universe. The visit gives the royal couple the opportunity to meet 21st century explorers of new worlds. The visit is indicative of the long history of collaboration with the United Kingdom, including the Hubble Space Telescope and Solar Dynamics Observatory.  Read more

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NASA’s Security Reviewed After Shooting

Wednesday, April 25th, 2007

Workers at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, were back on the job Monday after a disgruntled contractor shot himself and one bystander.

William Arthur Phillips, aged 60, entered Building 44 on the center’s sprawling campus on 20 April with a .38-calibre revolver and shot 62-year-old engineer David Beverly in the chest. Phillips was a long-time contractor at Jacobs Engineering who had recently received a poor job review from Beverly. Phillips also detained a second NASA employee, Francelia Crenshaw, but did not harm her. After a three-hour standoff, Phillips took his own life.  Read more

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Space Studies Comments from Lennard Fisk

Wednesday, April 25th, 2007

In January, the new Congress finally passed the budget for FY2007. The budget was based on the Continuing Resolution that had been in effect since last October, and so NASA was denied the increase over FY2006 that it had expected. In early February, the President proposed his budget for FY2008, and the screws on NASA tightened yet again.

The requested FY2008 budget for NASA is essentially what was promised to the agency in FY2007. In that sense the Administration is consistent. However, essentially none of the problems were solved that were identified in the FY2007 requested budget, and are now exacerbated with an enacted budget for FY2007 equal to the FY2006 budget. (In the newsletter articles that follow, the Chairs of several of the standing committees of the Space Studies Board and other Board members express their personal opinions on the impact of the FY2008 budget request on their disciplines.)  Read more

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National Space Trophy For Kranz

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

The Rotary National Award for Space Achievement (RNASA) Foundation presented Apollo “Failure is Not An Option” Flight Director Eugene F. “Gene” Kranz with the prestigious 2007 National Space Trophy at their annual gala held April 20 at the Houston Hyatt Regency hotel.

The award has been presented annually for the past 21 years to an individual who has excelled in furthering national goals in the field of space. The winner is selected by the prestigious RNASA Board of Advisors.

Mr. Kranz’s citation read: “For outstanding achievements in his pivotal role in the development of flight control operations for all NASA manned space flights. World renowned for his resolve during the Apollo 13 trans-lunar abort rescue, failure was never an option.” — Joseph P. Kerwin, former Astronaut and President Wyle Labs (Retired).  Read more

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Orion Development Contract Modified

Monday, April 23rd, 2007

Late this afternoon NASA announced that it was making a significant modification to the Orion development contract with Lockheed Martin. The announcement of the modification, at a total cost of $385 million, was formally released at 4:00 pm, after Wall Street had shut down for the day.

The change in the contract will add two test flights of Orion’s launch abort system, halt production of a pressurized cargo version of Orion, and most significantly, add two years to the design phase of Orion development - thus slipping the initial delivery of flight hardware.   Read more

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NASA Prepares for Change

Monday, April 23rd, 2007

With only three years remaining before the space-shuttle fleet’s planned retirement, NASA managers have begun tackling the thorny issues that will dictate the program’s end.

Critical facilities must be overhauled to support planned human missions to the moon. Billions of dollars’ worth of obsolete shuttle hardware must be disposed of. And, most difficult of all, thousands of jobs must be shifted or eliminated as the shuttle era ends and the new Constellation project takes off.  Read more

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