NASA Hitches A Ride

NASA signed a contract with the Russian Federal Space Agency to hitch rides to the International Space Station for crew transportation as well as rescue and related services from 2014 to 2016. The contract covers comprehensive Soyuz support, training and preparation for launch, flight operations, landing and crew rescue of long-duration missions for 12 individual space station crew members. Station crew members may launch on Soyuz vehicles during this 24-month period. At least 12 American astronauts are already set to ride on Soyuz vehicles during this time period. NASA also noted it will continue efforts to create privatized domestic commercial fleets.

"The president's 2012 budget request boosts funding for our partnership with the commercial space industry and prioritizes our efforts to ensure that American astronauts and the cargo they need are transported by American companies rather than continuing to outsource this work to foreign governments," Charles Bolden, NASA Agency Administrator, said in a statement.

To stimulate these efforts, NASA created the Commercial Crew Development awards in 2010. These awarded companies in the private sector and encouraged them to develop human spaceflight capabilities. NASA anticipates availability of domestic commercial crew services by the middle of the decade.

"This new approach in getting our crews and cargo into orbit will create good jobs and expand opportunities for our American economy. If we are to win the future and out build our competitors, it's essential that we make this program a success," Bolden said.

http://cygo.com/nasa-hitches-ride/

Free Event on Sustainability at NASA

Thursday, January 13, 2011

7:00 PM ET - Presentation.
7:45 PM ET - Question and Answer Session.

A Webcast Presentation.

Strengths & Challenges of
Sustainability at NASA:

 

           
                        A Presentation and Discussion with
Olga Dominguez,

NASA Senior Sustainability Officer
Headquarters Office for Strategic Infrastructure

This is a FREE and VIRTUAL event.

To attend this Seminar, please RSVP to brielle.welzer@sefora.org
We welcome all SEA members to attend our seminars.
If you are not already a member, sign up here.
 

Seminar Summary:

In October of 2009, President Barack Obama announced an Executive Order titled FEDERAL LEADERSHIP IN ENVIRONMENTAL, ENERGY, AND ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE. From this directive, NASA and other federal agencies began working with the Council of Environmental Quality (CEQ) and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to pursue agency-wide plans for reductions in carbon dioxide emission.
        NASA's teams, specifically, drafted the Strategic Sustainability Performance Plan. Olga Dominguez greatly took the lead in the planning of this document as NASA's Chief Sustainability Officer. Join us next Thursday to hear Ms. Dominguez's presentation on sustainability at NASA, and prepare your own inquiries for the following Question and Answer Session - which will take place immediately after the featured presentation.

ISS Achieves 10 Years of Continuous Human Presence on Nov. 2

Space Station to Achieve 10 Years of Continuous Human Presence on Nov. 2


International Space Station looking at another two decades Image Credit/NASA

Tuesday will mark an historic milestone, as the United States, Russia, the European Space Agency, Japan and Canada celebrate the 10th anniversary of a continuous human presence aboard the NASA-led International Space Station.

Does a decade with at least two humans and more recently a half-dozen men and women always living and working aboard mean the orbital outpost has turned a corner?

Will the station become that symbolic foot hold that launches an international human migration into deep space?

Those are large questions.

But some of those involved in the program’s earliest days at NASA tackled them this week in a series of forums sponsored by NASA’s Washington headquarters as well by  the Johnson Space Center, Kennedy Space Center and Marshall Space Flight Center. If nothing else, the orbiting lab’s longevity has given those questions more credibility than they had when NASA’s Bill Shepherd and Russia’s Sergei Krikalev and Yuri Gidzenko floated aboard as the first tenants on Nov. 2, 2000.

Challenges ahead

“Our challenge in the next couple of years is to see how we can effectively use the station,” said Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA’s associate administrator for space operations and a former station program manager. “Can we put modules on the ISS to go places? Can we use it as more of a test bed?” We need to keep reaching out.”

Two years ago, Congress established NASA’s internal and external research facilities on the station as a National Laboratory, opening their use to other federal agencies, the private sector and university scientists.  The National Institutes of Heath and  the  Department of Agriculture are among the agencies taking part in the new arrangement.

Space Station's Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer will study dark matter, anti-matter. Image credit/NASA

President Obama has tasked NASA with fostering new commercial space transportation companies that can carry astronauts as well as supplies to and from the station. They could make access to the station for medical, biology and physics research more routine.

Part of a new industrial revolution

“This signifies the end of the dawn of the next industrial revolution,” said Mark Uhran, NASA’s assistant associate administrator for space station.   ”This is a classic disruptive technology. It changes biology, chemistry and physics — if we have the wisdom to use it right.”

His predictions were some of the most optimistic from the forums.

“It almost slipped between our fingers,” said Uhran, as he and others recalled a Congressional vote in 1993 in which the station’s over budget development was saved by a single vote. “I think we are destined to succeed with it ultimately.”

There are new hurdles, some just as daunting as the old ones.

The shuttle is nearing retirement after three decades of operations. Two, possibly three missions remain as the station’s assembly comes to a close.

Will NASA’s commercial transportation strategy unfold quickly enough to take up the slack? Will European and Japanese supply craft follow up on their promising first missions?  Russia’s Progress supply craft seems like a solid bet for deliveries, but it takes seven of the capsules to supply as much as one space shuttle.

Past Obstacles, Future promise

A look to the past suggests the U. S.-led partnership is up to the task. The U. S. and Russia succeeded in overcoming their long adversarial Cold War relationship to provide the station’s foundation. Russia and the other partners rushed to support the station in the aftermath of the 2003 shuttle Columbia tragedy.

In August, NASA responded in kind to stave off a threat to the station’s future when half of the lab’s external cooling system shutdown, severely restricting the distribution of solar power. With three rapid fire spacewalks, NASA astronauts replaced the faulty equipment.

Mike Suffredini, NASA’s station program manager, believes the orbital outpost can function reliably through at least 2028, or eight years longer than Congress recently specified in legislation signed by the president.

“It’s an amazing spacecraft,” said Suffredini. “The feat we have accomplished as a team with our international partners is nothing short of the most difficult thing ever attempted by humankind.”

During his tenure, the station has graduated from three to six full time crew members with the addition of life support systems that recycle air and water. The advances have set the stage for future use.

...

ISS Water System Successfully Activated

International Space Station Water System Successfully Activated

NASA has announced the successful activation of new hardware that will support water production services aboard the International Space Station.

The Sabatier system can create up to 530 gallons of water per year from byproducts of the station's Oxygen Generation System and Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly. The process is named for Paul Sabatier, a 1912 Nobel Prize winner in chemistry

.

Poll: California likely to retain flagship climate change law

Poll: California likely to retain flagship climate change law
Business Green -- The US clean tech sector may have at least one thing to celebrate following next month's mid-term elections, after polls over the weekend suggested Californians are preparing to vote down a proposition that would roll back the state's pioneering climate change legislation.



As Arctic warms, increased shipping likely to accelerate climate change

Uni. of DE -- Growing Arctic ship traffic will bring with it air pollution that has the potential to accelerate climate change in the world's northern reaches. And it's more than a greenhouse gas problem -- engine exhaust particles could increase warming by some 17-78 percent, the researchers say.

Asteroid-caused 66ft tsunami hit NYC 2300 years ago

Researchers have evidence suggesting that an asteroid roughly 200 yards (183 meters) wide crashed off the coast of New Jersey and sent tsunamis surging toward what is now New York City some 2,300 years ago. [Video – Recreating an Ancient Tsunami]

"Our models suggest the tsunamis were up to 20 meters (66 feet) high when they entered the Hudson River," said researcher Dallas Abbott, a geologist at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in New York.


http://www.livescience.com/environment/asteroid-impact-possibly-caused-prehistoric-nyc-tsunami-101025.html

Canadarm can't even move itself -- on earth

The Canadarm can move some heavy stuff in space, but it can't even move itself on earth.

"Meant for a weightless environment, Canadarm cannot even lift itself off the ground in Earth's gravity. A special test room was built to allow the arm to flex its joints under operating conditions. In addition, a computer-based simulation facility, much like a video game, was built to evaluate controllability and provide training for astronauts."

http://www.asc-csa.gc.ca/eng/canadarm/backgrounder.asp

Space settlement club thinks in future

Space settlement club thinks in future


Students at Tehachapi High School are designing a mining colony to be built on an asteroid later in the 21st century.

The complex project is a warm-up for the members of the Space Settlement Design club as it prepares for the 2011 international Space Settlement Design competition.

Their design must accommodate humans and all their needs, business, operations, and security as well as contingency plans for a catastrophe like radiation contamination or a collision between the asteroid and a cargo vessel.

Some time this fall, the competition organizers will provide the official 2011 Request for Proposal (RFP) for a fictional asteroid colony.

The RFPs are written instructions for the colony's general contractor.

... 

Section 4.3 of Green's RFP states: “Show spacesuit design, with stowage and donning/doffing procedures and airlock designs for the station as well as those to be built into the asteroid. Show mine design as well as mining equipment.”

Section 4.2, dealing with the human factor, states: “Provide designs of typical residences, clearly showing room sizes; home designs will be no smaller than 600 sq. ft. and no larger than 1,400 sq. ft. Identify sources or manufacture of furniture and appliances. Anticipated demography: married adults 35 percent, unmarried men 35 percent, unmarried women 28 percent, children 2 percent.”

...

The colony, according to the RFP, “must provide a safe and robust living and working environment for 2,000 full-time residents, plus an additional transient population of no more than 50 at Initial Operational Capacity (IOC) and increasing by 10 per year for at least 50 years.”

http://www.tehachapinews.com/content/space-settlement-club-thinks-future/32186