Planning our lunar return? Get a telescope
Science & Technology

Planning our lunar return? Get a telescope

NASA Space Technology Perhaps you’re a propulsion engineer making lunar landers as part of NASA’s CLPS program. Perhaps you’re a lawyer specializing in the OST. Or you are a chemist cracking the codes of lunar ISRU.If you are any of these things or even if you just know what those acronyms mean, you’re part of the lunar revival, our return to the dramatic wilds of the moon, a return for science and industry and, just maybe, helping to make life multi-planetary.I absolutely support those goals, but I also have a telescope. Anyone planning our lunar future should have one too or, at least, regular access to one. Why? Because we won’t have a lunar future worth having if we don’t really see the moon. And if we don’t really see the moon, we’ll miss how...
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NASA Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month 2024

NASA Space Technology In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month, we recognize Hispanic astronauts who have flown in space. The table below lists these individuals of various nationalities who have made significant contributions to their space programs. The first Hispanic astronauts completed short flights to a Soviet space station and aboard the space shuttle. In the past 23 years, many more have completed flights to the International Space Station and contributed to its assembly, operations, and research activities.Table of Hispanic astronauts who have flown in space.Arnaldo Tamayo Méndez of Cuba holds the title of the first person of Hispanic heritage to fly in space. He spent eight days aboard the Salyut-6 space station in September 1980 as part of the Soviet Union’s Interkosmos program to fly cosmonauts from friendly socialist countries. The first Hispanic to fly...
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NASA awards Rocket Lab study contract for Mars Sample Return
Science & Technology

NASA awards Rocket Lab study contract for Mars Sample Return

NASA Space Technology WASHINGTON — NASA has awarded a contract to Rocket Lab to study alternative concepts for Mars Sample Return (MSR), joining several other efforts to improve the cost and schedule of the program.Rocket Lab said Oct. 7 that it received a contract to study what it called “a simplified, end-to-end mission concept” for MSR that would deliver samples being collected by the Perseverance rover to Earth for a “fraction” of currently projected costs, estimated to be as high as $11 billion, and several years earlier than 2040.NASA solicited concepts for industry studies to look at alternative architectures for MSR or key elements of it, like the Mars Ascent Vehicle (MAV) rocket that will launch the collected samples into orbit around Mars. NASA selected seven companies in June for those studies, but Rocket Lab...
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Dominican Republic signs Artemis Accords
Science & Technology

Dominican Republic signs Artemis Accords

NASA Space Technology The Dominican Republic became the 44th nation to sign the Artemis Accords. Credit: NASAORLANDO, Fla. — The Dominican Republic has signed the Artemis Accords, the 44th nation to do so, NASA announced Oct. 7.The agency said that Sonia Guzmán, ambassador of the Dominican Republic to the United States, signed the Accords on Oct. 4. Unlike some other countries to do so in recent months, there was no formal signing ceremony publicized by NASA or the Dominican Republic.“This marks a historic step in our commitment to international collaboration in space exploration,” Guzmán said in a statement. “By joining the global effort to explore the moon, Mars and beyond, we are also expanding the opportunities particularly for our young Dominicans in science, education, and economic development.”“The Dominican Republic has made important strides toward a...
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