WASHINGTON — An experimental NASA cubesat launched Oct. 8 has an attitude control problem that is preventing its laser communications payload from being tested, the agency said Oct. 13.
Showing posts with label NASA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NASA. Show all posts
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Experimental NASA Cubesat Suffers Attitude Control Problem
WASHINGTON — An experimental NASA cubesat launched Oct. 8 has an attitude control problem that is preventing its laser communications payload from being tested, the agency said Oct. 13.
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
These Mysterious Blazing-Fast Ripples Racing Around a Star Defy Explanation
Researchers have spotted strange, fast-traveling ripples speeding around the disk of dust surrounding the young star AU Microscopii. Images from the Hubble Space Telescope and ESA's Very Large Telescope show the ripples' movement over the course of four years. The scale bar at the top of the image stretches the length of Neptune's orbit around the sun. |
Scientists were looking for planets forming in the large disk of dust surrounding a young star when they encountered a surprise: fast-moving, wavelike arches racing across the disk like ripples in water.
Friday, September 25, 2015
Revisiting the Veil Nebula
Deriving its name from its delicate, draped filamentary structures, the beautiful Veil Nebula is one of the best-known supernova remnants. It formed from the violent death of a star twenty times the mass of the Sun that exploded about 8000 years ago. Located roughly 2100 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Cygnus (The Swan), this brightly coloured cloud of glowing debris spans approximately 110 light-years.
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Space station dark-matter experiment hits a glitch
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The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer has flown on the International Space Station since 2011 |
“We are analysing a whole host of possibilities” for what went wrong with the cooling pump and how to fix it, says Mark Sistilli, the AMS programme manager at NASA's headquarters in Washington DC. Tests have already ruled out one possibility, that radiation fried the broken pump’s electronics.
The AMS continues to gather science data using the three remaining pumps. They are part of a liquid carbon dioxide cooling system that is meant to dissipate heat as the AMS, which is on the outside of the space station, cycles in and out of sunlight during each 90-minute orbit of Earth.
Only one pump is needed at any given time. One failed in February 2014 and at least one of the other three is showing possible signs of trouble.
Since the 8.5-tonne AMS began operating in 2011, it has tracked more than 69 billion cosmic rays flying through its detectors. Its goal is to search for antimatter and dark matter. In 2013, AMS scientists reported measuring numbers and energies of positrons that hinted at, but did not confirm, the existence of dark matter.
Extended run
Initially the AMS was supposed to run for only three years. Its original design called for a superconducting magnet that would accomplish the science more quickly, but engineers swapped it with an ordinary magnet months before launch. Tests had shown that the superconducting magnet warmed up more than expected, and the team worried it might consume all of its helium coolant before its three years were up.
Now, cooling systems are again the problem. The pumps, which are in a part of the AMS known as the silicon tracker, are the same ones that were designed to last three years with a superconducting magnet.
The cooling system was built by an international team led by the National Aerospace Laboratory in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. A representative there referred questions to the AMS science group at CERN near Geneva in Switzerland, which is headed by Nobel laureate Samuel Ting of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.
Ting, who guided the AMS through years of development and setbacks, exhibited little patience for questions about the cooling pumps. “We have four pumps — we only need one,” he says. “We expect to operate for the lifetime of the space station.”
How to fix the problem depends on what it turns out to be. One simple solution could be to upload software that operates the remaining pumps in a different way to allow them to last longer, Sistilli says. Another possibility would be to install a thermal blanket on or near the pumps to control temperatures and reduce their load; other parts of the AMS already have such insulating blankets. A worst-case scenario would involve astronauts doing a spacewalk to replace parts.
It may be six months to a year before the AMS team decides on a solution, Sistilli says.
Meanwhile, a second and smaller dark-matter experiment, the Calorimetric Electron Telescope, arrived at the space station last month. Led by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, it will hunt cosmic rays at energies higher than those in the AMS studies.
Initially the AMS was supposed to run for only three years. Its original design called for a superconducting magnet that would accomplish the science more quickly, but engineers swapped it with an ordinary magnet months before launch. Tests had shown that the superconducting magnet warmed up more than expected, and the team worried it might consume all of its helium coolant before its three years were up.
Now, cooling systems are again the problem. The pumps, which are in a part of the AMS known as the silicon tracker, are the same ones that were designed to last three years with a superconducting magnet.
The cooling system was built by an international team led by the National Aerospace Laboratory in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. A representative there referred questions to the AMS science group at CERN near Geneva in Switzerland, which is headed by Nobel laureate Samuel Ting of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.
Ting, who guided the AMS through years of development and setbacks, exhibited little patience for questions about the cooling pumps. “We have four pumps — we only need one,” he says. “We expect to operate for the lifetime of the space station.”
How to fix the problem depends on what it turns out to be. One simple solution could be to upload software that operates the remaining pumps in a different way to allow them to last longer, Sistilli says. Another possibility would be to install a thermal blanket on or near the pumps to control temperatures and reduce their load; other parts of the AMS already have such insulating blankets. A worst-case scenario would involve astronauts doing a spacewalk to replace parts.
It may be six months to a year before the AMS team decides on a solution, Sistilli says.
Meanwhile, a second and smaller dark-matter experiment, the Calorimetric Electron Telescope, arrived at the space station last month. Led by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, it will hunt cosmic rays at energies higher than those in the AMS studies.
Thursday, August 27, 2015
NASA's Next Nuclear-Powered Mars Rover: Building the Beast
MONROVIA, California — NASA's next nuclear-powered Mars rover, slated to launch in 2020, is slowly coming together. And while the Mars 2020 mission is largely based on NASA's Mars rover Curiosity, which is now exploring the Red Planet, there are a variety of distinctions that set it apart.
Thursday, July 30, 2015
A possible ‘super-Earth’ located in the habitable zone
Sen—NASA researchers announced today the tantalizing discovery by the Kepler Space Telescope team of a massive world that may resemble Earth, orbiting in the habitable zone of a distant Sun-like star.
Monday, July 20, 2015
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New close-up images of a region near Pluto's equator reveal a giant surprise -- a range of youthful mountains rising as high as 11,000 feet (3,500 meters) above the surface of the icy body. |
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Is Mars humid enough to support life?
It might look as dry and arid as a desert, but scientists claim that Mars has a surprisingly high amount of moisture in its atmosphere, leading some experts to ponder whether or not the Red Planet could actually be humid enough to support life.
Friday, June 12, 2015
Three ISS astronauts return to Earth after month-long delay
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Three more astronauts are due to arrive at the International Space Station in July |
Monday, June 1, 2015
Vintage NASA Photos From the Golden Age of Space

In November 1966, NASA astronaut Buzz Aldrin made history with the first selfie in space. It's a modest-size print, eight by ten, and in the frame you can see his eyes—the rest of his face is obscured by his helmet—and in the background, a slice of earth set against the blackness of space.
Saturday, May 30, 2015
When the Sun Goes Quiet, Titan Gets Gassy
Observations from NASA's Cassini probe show that the level of methane in Titan's atmosphere depends on the Sun's 11-year cycle of magnetic activity.
Hacking a Climate Satellite to See Beneath the Ocean's Surface
When NASA launched its CALIPSO spacecraft, the space agency did not intend to estimate phytoplankton populations.
NASA launched its Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) mission in 2006 to study the impact of clouds in the atmosphere. The climate satellite uses lidar, which shoots laser light pulses at Earth’s surface and measures how they bounce back to measure the distance to objects below. The space agency’s goal is to combine that information with data from other satellites to show vertical structures, water content in clouds, and other climate indicators.
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Most Luminous Galaxy
Researchers using NASA’s Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) have discovered the most luminous galaxy to date. Dubbed WISE J224607.57-052635.0, this Extremely Luminous Infrared Galaxy (ELIRG) shines brighter in the infrared than 300 trillion suns and has an exceptionally supermassive black hole at its core. The sheer size of this black hole-gargantua is one of a few such entities that leave astronomers scratching their heads as to how in the world (or in this case, the universe) such giants can grow so big so quickly. We still don’t quite know the answer, but astronomers have a few ideas.
Saturday, May 23, 2015
'Deep Web Search' May Help Scientists
The First Martian Marathon
On Earth, the fastest runners can finish a marathon in hours. On Mars it takes about 11 years.
On Tuesday, March 24th 2015, NASA’s Mars rover Opportunity completed its first Red Planet marathon-- 26.219 miles – with a finish time of roughly 11 years and two months.
Thursday, May 21, 2015
Satellite Photos Aiding Nepal Earthquake Recovery Efforts
Friday, May 8, 2015
NASA to seek private rocket companies for future KSC launch sites
Saturday, April 25, 2015
Mysterious X-37B Military Space Shuttle to Fly Again Next Month
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