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Juxi Leitner

Astrobotic announces expanded opportunities to send payloads to the Moon : Astrobotic T... - 1 views

  • The remaining 229 pounds are available for $700,000 per pound, plus a $250,000 fee per payload to cover the engineering costs of integrating it into either the expedition’s lander or its solar-powered robot.
LeopoldS

BBC NEWS | Science & Environment | Plans for UK satellite launcher - 0 views

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    ".... taking at least 50kg of payload into a polar orbit with a minimum altitude of 400km (248 miles), but engineers would aim to get significant additional performance. "We'd be looking at a range from 50 to up to a maximum of 200kg because you'd want to do different sizes of satellite," said Mr Whitehorn."
Nina Nadine Ridder

Public Invited To Pick Pixels on Mars :: Elites TV - 0 views

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    HiRISE team gives public the oppotunity to propose imaging targets on Mars... i.e., they kind of stole our idea from the secondary payload brainstorm!
johannessimon81

Tiny Quantum Refrigerator Has Super Cooling Power - 0 views

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    Solid state tunnel junction can cool "payload" to sub-Kelvin temperatures. This would be much more convenient than for example helium3-helium4 mixing. Proposed use for cooling sensors on spacecraft - could extend lifetime of satellites like ESA's about to switched off Herschel almost indefinitely.
Lionel Jacques

NASA studying solar-electric propulsion for "space tugboat" - 0 views

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    NASA announced it was seeking proposals for mission concept studies of a high-power solar electric propulsion (SEP) system that could be used in a "space tugboat." Such a ship would be used ferry payloads in low Earth orbit (LEO) into higher energy orbits,
LeopoldS

Nature article on "walking on liquids" ... as Johannes has shown us - 5 views

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    nice article - with related podcast interviewing the former prof of Johannes ... my usual question: can we use it for space :-)
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    Eventually for damping purposes. Place a payload in it, surrounded by the fluid, and high frequency shocks might be damped. Of course, damping properties might turn out to be not good.
Juxi Leitner

UK Space Agency - UK Space Agency to launch Britain's first CubeSat - 2 views

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    haha, seems super small !!!
Joris _

Spaceflight Now | Breaking News | Sweden's Prisma satellites go their separate ways - 1 views

  • exotic green propellant maneuvering systems
  • In the two months since launch, controllers have powered up the satellites' navigation and formation flying equipment, tested its green propellant thruster, and successfully navigated around orbital debris threats.
  • a smorgasbord of payloads
Francesco Biscani

Commercial Spaceflight Federation - 2 views

  • CSF Welcomes Historic NASA Commitment of $75 Million for Commercial Suborbital Flights, Payloads
LeopoldS

Spaceflight Now | Atlas Launch Report | Air Force spaceplane is an odd bird with a twis... - 3 views

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    Juxi are you following this one? any idea on its purpose?
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    Not that I'm an expert in the field in any way, but there are two things I could think of: 1) possibility of bringing the payload back means that it can collect huge amounts of data which wouldn't be possible to be transferred via radio in reasonable time and/or you can bring back data you don't want to be intercepted by enemy 2) I remember reading somewhere that possibility of re-entry from orbit means you can strike any country without violating the airspace of the neighbouring countries. As the project is now managed by military, a purely civil purpose can be safely ruled out in my opinion.
Juxi Leitner

A More Affordable, High G force Magnetic Space Launcher Proposal - 0 views

  • The launcher operates 350 days and launches 100 kg payload every 30 min (This means about 5000kg/day and 1750 tons/year). Then additional cost from installation is $2.86/kg then total cost is $6/kg
  • The railgun does not have this limit, but produces some engineering problems such as the required short (pulsed) gigantic surge of electric power, sliding contacts for some millions of amperes current, storage of energy, etc.
  • A short rail way (412 m) would launch 7500 Gs into orbit.
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    another rail-gun try
LeopoldS

SpaceX Targets 2013 for Launch of Falcon Heavy | SpaceNews.com - 1 views

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    big big booster coming ... !
  • ...1 more comment...
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    In similar story (http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-spacex-rocket-elon-musk-20110405,0,3234336.story) the quote: " "This is a rocket of truly huge scale," said Musk, adding it would have the capability to one day enable moon or Mars missions." tells a lot about the ambition of it...
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    even bigger booster also coming: China Aims To Build World's Largest Rocket "Back in March, China revealed it is studying the feasibility of designing the most powerful carrier rocket in history for making a manned moon landing and exploring deep space, according to Liang Xiaohong, vice head of the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology. The rocket is envisaged to have a payload of 130 tonnes, five times larger than that of China's current largest rocket. This rocket, if built, will eclipse the 53 tonne capacity of the planned Falcon 9 Heavy from SpaceX. It will even surpass the largest rocket ever built, the 119-tonne Saturn V."
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    still only "is studying the feasibility of designing a powerful carrier rocket" - we could easily do the same at no cost almost ... but still ... they might be serious ...
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