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Thijs Versloot

This "Space Glass" Lets You Drink Whiskey In Orbit - 3 views

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    Photo credit: The glass has a number of interesting innovations. Ballentine's. A liquor company has created a " Space Glass" that they say can work in the microgravity environment of space. The Open Space Agency's James Parr was commissioned to create the product, and the results are actually quite interesting.
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    Makes sense specially after seeing very good japanese whiskey arriving at the ISS :-) http://phys.org/news/2015-08-japanese-whisky-international-space-station.html
Ma Ru

The latest Nikon equipment to be used in the Russian segment of the International Space... - 1 views

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    Just right for joint space-photography geeks like me...
Joris _

Robot's space debut 'giant leap for tinmankind' - 2 views

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    a robot Juxi talked about in a report, soon in the ISS
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    They made him mute so that he can't say at some point "I'm afraid I can't do that, Barratt"...
Christos Ampatzis

Butterflies in the ISS - 5 views

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    learning to flap wings without gravity
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    is there something more than a video where nothing happens...?
Nina Nadine Ridder

Europe offers space station as platform for climate science - Technology News - SINA E... - 0 views

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    The European Space Agency is looking at proposals for using the International Space Station as a platform for climate science, ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain said on Thursday.
jmlloren

Experimental verification of the feasibility of a quantum channel between space and Earth - 0 views

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    Extending quantum communication to space environments would enable us to perform fundamental experiments on quantum physics as well as applications of quantum information at planetary and interplanetary scales. Here, we report on the first experimental study of the conditions for the implementation of the single-photon exchange between a satellite and an Earth-based station. We built an experiment that mimics a single photon source on a satellite, exploiting the telescope at the Matera Laser Ranging Observatory of the Italian Space Agency to detect the transmitted photons. Weak laser pulses, emitted by the ground-based station, are directed toward a satellite equipped with cube-corner retroreflectors. These reflect a small portion of the pulse, with an average of less-than-one photon per pulse directed to our receiver, as required for faint-pulse quantum communication. We were able to detect returns from satellite Ajisai, a low-Earth orbit geodetic satellite, whose orbit has a perigee height of 1485 km.
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    hello Jose! Interesting it was proposed to do the same with the ISS as part of the ACES experiment. I don't remember the paper but i can look if you're interested
LeopoldS

SPACE.com -- Japanese Astronaut Craves Sushi - 0 views

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    did not know about this heroic! experiment to wear the same underwear for two months!
ESA ACT

ESA - Intranet - Corporate - Space food - getting tastier by the day, part II - 0 views

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    bon appetit ....
ESA ACT

NASA - space station crew schedules - 0 views

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    just in case you were wondering what astronauts are officially doing all day long ...
Luís F. Simões

Following SpaceX down the rabbit hole -- The Space Review - 4 views

  • He then went on to remind the press that his company’s goal is to continue to lower the cost of access to space because high launch costs were “the fundamental factor preventing humanity from becoming a spacefaring civilization.”
  • First, two Falcon Heavy launches could field a return to the Moon
  • Second, a single Falcon Heavy could launch a Mars sample return mission.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Also possible with a single launch: a first ever human mission to an asteroid.
  • what effect Falcon Heavy might have on the costs of supporting the International Space Station. The ability to launch twice the supply capacity provided by the shuttle at something on the order of 20 percent of the cost changes the calculus entirely. So much so in fact, it opens the door for contemplating an entirely different future for ISS in which it never follows Mir into the Pacific.
  • Following conclusions offered by the Augustine Committee, the Obama Administration cancelled Project Constellation as unaffordable under existing budget limits, and supported instead the ambling, but cost-contained “flexible path.” If the Falcon Heavy is available, however, the rationale for selecting the flexible path—because it’s the only thing we can afford—simply doesn’t exist.
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    an analysis of implications of the Falcon Heavy announcement
Ma Ru

Ambition - 0 views

shared by Ma Ru on 15 Mar 13 - No Cached
LeopoldS liked it
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    Today we released the Astro Drone app. People that have the Parrot AR drone can freely download the game. While they fly their drone in the real world, they are trying to dock to the ISS in the virtual world. But the app is more than a game. Players can choose to participate in a scientific crowd sourcing experiment that aims to improve autonomous capabilities of space probes, such as landing, obstacle avoidance, and docking. If participating, the app extracts visually salient features from the images made by the drone's camera. The features are then combined with the estimates of the drone's state and uploaded. The data is then used in a research aiming to improve robot navigation.
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    Visit the main ESA website and you'll be greeted with a 6-minute Rosetta promo movie by a kickass Polish artist... P.S. You can also find the video here. P.P.S It seems I've just discovered a way to hijack old diigo entries ;-)
gpetit

Intrinsic functional connectivity reduces after first-time exposure to short-term gravi... - 1 views

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    Loss of connectivity in the multisensory integration cortical areas after short term microgravity experience, which could explain astronauts decrease of performance in sensorimotor tasks and spatial working memory. However, the effect should wear off after a few days in microgravity and after adaptation to incongruent vestibular information. ISS experiment needed...
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