Saturday, July 16, 2016

Control of space!

The control of space is not considered critical to the US by Congress! Everbody needs to let them know how the people feel--- spread the word--- yours / family's future depends on he USA superiority in space!

Friday, July 15, 2016

Fwd: Sierra Nevada Corp. completes first milestone on ISS commercial cargo contract



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Begin forwarded message:

From: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Date: July 12, 2016 at 11:27:34 AM CDT
To: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Subject: FW: Sierra Nevada Corp. completes first milestone on ISS commercial cargo contract

 

http://spacenews.com/wp-content/themes/spacenews/assets/img/logo.png

Sierra Nevada Corp. completes first milestone on ISS commercial cargo contract

by Jeff Foust — July 12, 2016

A cargo version of Sierra Nevada Corp.'s Dream Chaser vehicle attached to the International Space Station in this illustration. Credit: Sierra Nevada Corp.A cargo version of Sierra Nevada Corp.'s Dream Chaser vehicle attached to the International Space Station in this illustration. Credit: Sierra Nevada Corp.

WASHINGTON — Sierra Nevada Corp. (SNC), who won one of three contracts from NASA in January to deliver cargo to the International Space Station, said July 11 that it is has completed the first milestone under that award.

The company said that NASA approved of its program integration plan for the design, development, test and evaluation of SNC's Dream Chaser vehicle. The company did not disclose the value of any payment it received from NASA for completing the plan.

The milestone is the first in the company's Commercial Resupply Services (CRS) 2 contract it received from NASA in January to transport cargo to and from the ISS. SNC was one of three companies to receive CRS-2 contracts, along with Orbital Sciences Corp. and SpaceX, who won the original CRS cargo contracts in 2008. Each company is guaranteed at least six cargo flights though the mid-2020s.

"The accelerated completion of the first milestone under the CRS-2 contract award marks significant progress for SNC and the Dream Chaser program," Mark Sirangelo, corporate vice president of SNC's Space Systems division, said in a statement announcing the milestone.

The CRS-2 contract breathed new life into Dream Chaser, a lifting body design that SNC had been working on as part of NASA's commercial crew program. The company lost to Boeing and SpaceX in a 2014 competition for contracts to complete development of those vehicles and perform initial crewed flights to the ISS. SNC filed a protest, which the U.S. Government Accountability Office denied in January 2015.

SNC still has work to complete under an earlier commercial crew award it received from NASA in 2012. Sirangelo, speaking at the Space Frontier Foundation's NewSpace 2016 conference in Seattle June 22, said the Dream Chaser engineering test article, which SNC compares to the prototype space shuttle Enterprise, would be shipped to NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center in California "somewhere in the August timeframe" for a new phase of unpowered flight tests.

Those tests, which will include at least one glide test to a runway landing similar to what the test article performed in October 2013, will help test the design for the cargo version of Dream Chaser under development. "We're testing a lot of the stuff for the orbital vehicle now," he said. "We don't know how many tests we'll do, but it will be as many as we need."

SNC is also currently building the first Dream Chaser orbital vehicle that will fly those cargo flights. The first flight of that vehicle is planned for the second half of 2019, Sirangelo said, depending on NASA's schedule. He added he expected NASA to start making decisions on cargo mission manifests for the CRS-2 contract awardees by the end of the year.

 © 2016 SpaceNews, Inc. All rights reserved.

 


 

 

So you think space capability a big waste? Better do some research, your survival depends on US control of space!

Fwd: [JSC-nasa-Retiree-Dist] FW: [NASA HQ News] NASA's Next Mars Rover Progresses Toward 2020 Launch



Sent from my iPad

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Moon, Larry J. (JSC-EA411)" <larry.j.moon@nasa.gov>
Date: July 15, 2016 at 12:29:58 PM CDT
To: "JSC-nasa-Retiree-Dist@lists.nasa.gov" <JSC-nasa-Retiree-Dist@lists.nasa.gov>
Subject: [JSC-nasa-Retiree-Dist] FW: [NASA HQ News] NASA's Next Mars Rover Progresses Toward 2020 Launch

Fyi

 

 

From: hqnews @ On Behalf Of NASA News Releases
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2016 11:31 AM

 

 

July 15, 2016 
RELEASE 16-077
NASA's Next Mars Rover Progresses Toward 2020 Launch

Mars 2020 rover design

This image is from computer-assisted-design work on the Mars 2020 rover. The design leverages many successful features of NASA's Curiosity rover, which landed on Mars in 2012, but also adds new science instruments and a sampling system to carry out new goals for the 2020 mission.

Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

After an extensive review process and passing a major development milestone, NASA is ready to proceed with final design and construction of its next Mars rover, currently targeted to launch in the summer of 2020 and arrive on the Red Planet in February 2021.

The Mars 2020 rover will investigate a region of Mars where the ancient environment may have been favorable for microbial life, probing the Martian rocks for evidence of past life. Throughout its investigation, it will collect samples of soil and rock and cache them on the surface for potential return to Earth by a future mission.

"The Mars 2020 rover is the first step in a potential multi-mission campaign to return carefully selected and sealed samples of Martian rocks and soil to Earth," said Geoffrey Yoder, acting associate administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. "This mission marks a significant milestone in NASA's Journey to Mars – to determine whether life has ever existed on Mars, and to advance our goal of sending humans to the Red Planet."

To reduce risk and provide cost savings, the 2020 rover will look much like its six-wheeled, one-ton predecessor, Curiosity, but with an array of new science instruments and enhancements to explore Mars as never before. For example, the rover will conduct the first investigation into the usability and availability of Martian resources, including oxygen, in preparation for human missions.

Mars 2020 will carry an entirely new subsystem to collect and prepare Martian rocks and soil samples that includes a coring drill on its arm and a rack of sample tubes. About 30 of these sample tubes will be deposited at select locations for return on a potential future sample-retrieval mission. In laboratories on Earth, specimens from Mars could be analyzed for evidence of past life on Mars and possible health hazards for future human missions.

Two science instruments mounted on the rover's robotic arm will be used to search for signs of past life and determine where to collect samples by analyzing the chemical, mineral, physical and organic characteristics of Martian rocks. On the rover's mast, two science instruments will provide high-resolution imaging and three types of spectroscopy for characterizing rocks and soil from a distance, also helping to determine which rock targets to explore up close.

A suite of sensors on the mast and deck will monitor weather conditions and the dust environment, and a ground-penetrating radar will assess sub-surface geologic structure.

The Mars 2020 rover will use the same sky crane landing system as Curiosity, but will have the ability to land in more challenging terrain with two enhancements, making more rugged sites eligible as safe landing candidates.

"By adding what's known as range trigger, we can specify where we want the parachute to open, not just at what velocity we want it to open," said Allen Chen, Mars 2020 entry, descent and landing lead at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California. "That shrinks our landing area by nearly half."

Terrain-relative navigation on the new rover will use onboard analysis of downward-looking images taken during descent, matching them to a map that indicates zones designated unsafe for landing.

"As it is descending, the spacecraft can tell whether it is headed for one of the unsafe zones and divert to safe ground nearby," said Chen. "With this capability, we can now consider landing areas with unsafe zones that previously would have disqualified the whole area. Also, we can land closer to a specific science destination, for less driving after landing."

There will be a suite of cameras and a microphone that will capture the never-before-seen or heard imagery and sounds of the entry, descent and landing sequence. Information from the descent cameras and microphone will provide valuable data to assist in planning future Mars landings, and make for thrilling video.

"Nobody has ever seen what a parachute looks like as it is opening in the Martian atmosphere," said JPL's David Gruel, assistant flight system manager for the Mars 2020 mission. "So this will provide valuable engineering information."

Microphones have flown on previous missions to Mars, including NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander in 2008, but never have actually been used on the surface of the Red Planet. 

"This will be a great opportunity for the public to hear the sounds of Mars for the first time, and it could also provide useful engineering information," said Mars 2020 Deputy Project Manager Matt Wallace of JPL.

Once a mission receives preliminary approval, it must go through four rigorous technical and programmatic reviews – known as Key Decision Points (KDP) — to proceed through the phases of development prior to launch. Phase A involves concept and requirements definition, Phase B is preliminary design and technology development, Phase C is final design and fabrication, and Phase D is system assembly, testing, and launch. Mars 2020 has just passed its KDP-C milestone.

"Since Mars 2020 is leveraging the design and some spare hardware from Curiosity, a significant amount of the mission's heritage components have already been built during Phases A and B," said George Tahu, Mars 2020 program executive at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "With the KDP to enter Phase C completed, the project is proceeding with final design and construction of the new systems, as well as the rest of the heritage elements for the mission."

The Mars 2020 mission is part of NASA's Mars Exploration Program. Driven by scientific discovery, the program currently includes two active rovers and three NASA spacecraft orbiting Mars. NASA also plans to launch a stationary Mars lander in 2018, InSight, to study the deep interior of Mars.

JPL manages the Mars 2020 project and the Mars Exploration Program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

For more information about Mars 2020, visit:

http://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020

-end-

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Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Loss of capabilities

Alex Burford President Nixon and the Illegal Occupants of the White House, Draft Dodging Traitor Willie Clinton and non American Moslem Obama, did the MOST damage to the Space Program b/c of their Apathy to it and desire to move funds for it into other areas, mostly gim crack, dead end social welfare programs that sap money like a black hole.
The Constellation Program was RIGHT ON TRACK, but its critics, which include the non American Obama, had it cancelled, but had NOTHING to replace it. Their Idiot mentality was the usual, "Leave it to the Private Sector," even though the Private Sector has shown that it needs Gov't. Funding too....but Politicians are not known for their ability to Think, Understand and Rationalize.
Non American Obama was STUNNED when Congressmen and Women and Senators from the "South's Space Crescent" took action to save the Orion CEV/MPCV which Obama said he would cancel to free up funds for Stupidity Programs. 
We are now awaiting the culmination of the years that are required to develop new Space Systems and get Our Astronauts back into Space where they belong.
Don't worry about the Chineses, the Russians, the Europeans or the Indians. NONE of them are at the level that the United States is and it will take YEARS for ANY or ALL of them to be a threat to U.S.
Remember, America has explored every Planet in the Solar System, placed twelve Men on the Moon, has four planetary probes now on interstellar trajectories and has an expanding tech base [SpaceX, ATK, OSC] by which the tech to get back to the Moon and on to Mars is taking shape like it never has before.
America....the World's ONLY Space Super Power!!!!!
UnlikeReply219 minsEdited
Bobby Martin Great summary! Hope you are correct re China,etc. Still believe we should regain our pre Obama capabilities ASAP! We must maintain supremacy in space! The liberals including RINO's do not seem to think space capabilities are important!

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Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Must get capability back!

Don't GET IT! Country's Survival Dependent on CONTROL of SPACE !!!

Our space program gone to very Close to Nothing, yet I hear very few talking, blogging about its destruction!! Supposedly, 60 percent of general public supported the shuttle!

WAKE UP !! SPREAD the Word!!!!!!!