24/7 Coverage of GPS News
June 25, 2018
MOON DAILY
NASA will seek partnership with US Industry to develop lunar gateway



Washington DC (SPX) Jun 25, 2018
As part of the agency's Exploration Campaign, NASA's Gateway will become the orbital outpost for robotic and human exploration operations in deep space. Built with commercial and international partners, the Gateway will support exploration on and near the Moon, and beyond, including Mars. NASA released a draft solicitation through a Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) June 21, 2018, for proposals for partnership for the first element of the Gateway. NASA is seeking a high-power, 50-kW solar electric p ... read more

MOON DAILY
Queqiao satellite the bridge to China's lunar exploration
Beijing (XNA) Jun 25, 2018
If all goes to plan, China will soon make history as the first country to put a lander and a rover on the far side of the moon. Information gleaned from such a mission may answer questions about the ... more
MOON DAILY
Chinese satellite could link world to Moon's far side: space expert
Beijing (XNA) Jun 19, 2018
A satellite with a huge golden umbrella-shaped antenna is in an orbit more than 400,000 km from Earth, waiting for Chang'e-4, which is set to be the first ever probe to land softly on the Moon's far ... more
MOON DAILY
Long suspected theory about the moon holds water
Sendai, Japan (SPX) Jun 15, 2018
A team of Japanese scientists led by Masahiro Kayama of Tohoku University's Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Sciences, has discovered a mineral known as moganite in a lunar meteorit ... more
MOON DAILY
Micro satellite developed by Chinese university starts to work around Moon
Beijing (XNA) Jun 18, 2018
A micro satellite, developed by the Harbin Institute of Technology in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province and sent into an orbit around the Moon, has started to transmit data back to Earth. ... more
ADVERTISEMENT



Previous Issues Jun 22 Jun 21 Jun 20 Jun 19 Jun 18
ADVERTISEMENT



MOON DAILY
Relay satellite for Chang'e-4 lunar probe enters planned orbit
Beijing (XNA) Jun 15, 2018
The relay satellite for the Chang'e-4 lunar probe, which is expected to land on the far side of the Moon at the end of the year, has entered the planned orbit, the China National Space Administratio ... more
MOON DAILY
Thank the moon for Earth's lengthening day
Madison WI (SPX) Jun 06, 2018
For anyone who has ever wished there were more hours in the day, geoscientists have some good news: Days on Earth are getting longer. A new study that reconstructs the deep history of our plan ... more
MOON DAILY
SpaceX delays plans to send tourists around Moon: report
Washington (AFP) June 4, 2018
SpaceX will not send tourists around the Moon this year as previously announced, and will delay the project until the middle of next year, US media reported on Monday. ... more
MOON DAILY
Chinese relay satellite brakes near moon for entry into desired orbit
Beijing (XNA) May 28, 2018
A Chinese relay satellite Friday braked near the Moon, completing a vital step before entering a desired orbit, according to the China National Space Administration. The satellite, Queqiao, br ... more
MOON DAILY
Moonwalking astronaut-artist Alan Bean dies at 86
Washington (AFP) May 26, 2018
US astronaut Alan Bean, the fourth person to walk on the moon, has died, his family announced in a statement released by NASA. He was 86 years old. ... more
24/7 Space News Coverage
24/7 Technology News Coverage
24/7 China News Coverage

ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT

MOON DAILY
NASA: Commercial Partners Key to Sustainable Moon Presence
Washington DC (SPX) May 25, 2018
As NASA shifts human exploration back to the Moon, U.S. commercial partnerships will be a key to expediting missions and building a sustainable presence on the lunar surface. The agency is orchestra ... more
MOON DAILY
Dozens of volunteers apply for joint US-Russian simulated Lunar orbital flight
Moscow (Sputnik) May 24, 2018
About 50 people from various countries have shown interest in an experiment simulating the flight to an orbital station near the Moon, a representative of the Institute of Medicobiological Problems ... more
MOON DAILY
Dutch Radio Antenna To Depart For The Moon On Chinese Mission
Dwingeloo, Netherlands (SPX) May 18, 2018
On 21 May 2018, the Chinese space agency will launch the relay satellite Chang'e 4 to an orbit behind the Moon. On board will be a Dutch radio antenna, the Netherlands Chinese Low-Frequency Explorer ... more
ROCKET SCIENCE
Aerojet Rocketdyne demonstrates low-cost, high thrust space engine
Redmond WA (SPX) May 24, 2018
Aerojet Rocketdyne successfully completed hot-fire testing of a new in-space engine, designated ISE-100. Developed for commercial in-space applications, ISE-100 has the potential to be a critical el ... more
MOON DAILY
China satellite heralds first mission to dark side of Moon
Beijing (AFP) May 21, 2018
China launched on Monday a relay satellite that will allow a rover to communicate with the Earth from the far side of the Moon during an unprecedented mission later this year. ... more


Planet hunter snaps test image on Lunar flyby on route to final orbit

DRAGON SPACE
China's Queqiao satellite carries "large umbrella" into deep space
Xichang, China (XNA) May 22, 2018
The relay satellite, launched Monday for China's Chang'e-4 lunar probe, is carrying the largest communication antenna ever used in deep space exploration, according to Chinese experts. The lau ... more
INTERN DAILY

ADVERTISEMENT



SINO DAILY
Hong Kong independence leader found guilty of rioting
Hong Kong (AFP) May 18, 2018
One of Hong Kong's leading independence activists was found guilty of rioting Friday, convicted for his involvement in some of the city's worst protest violence for decades. ... more
DRAGON SPACE
Chinese rewrite record, live 370 days in self-contained moon lab
Beijing (XNA) May 16, 2018
Chinese volunteers have completed a one-year test living in a simulated space lab in Beijing, setting a new record for the longest stay in a self-contained cabin. Four students, two males and ... more
MOON DAILY
Chinese volunteers emerge from virtual moon base
Beijing (AFP) May 15, 2018
A group of Chinese volunteers has emerged from 110 days of isolation in a virtual "lunar lab", state media reported Tuesday, as the country pursues its ambition to put people on the moon. ... more
MOON DAILY
Take me to the Moon
Bethesda, MD (SPX) May 08, 2018
Last December, President Trump signed the first set of National Space Council recommendations under Space Policy Directive 1. Vice President Pence recently noted that, "We will send American astrona ... more
MOON DAILY
Russian cosmonaut could ride US spacecraft to Moon for first mission
Moscow (Sputnik) May 07, 2018
The first flight of a Russian cosmonaut to the moon could take place aboard of the US Orion spacecraft in 2024, a space industry source told Sputnik on Friday. "Within the framework of talks, ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage

Opportunity sleeps during a planet-encircling dust storm
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 25, 2018
The dust storm on Mars is now a Planet-encircling Dust Event (PEDE). It shows no indication of receding at this time. Since the last contact with the rover on Sol 5111 (June 10, 2018), it is likely that Opportunity has experienced a low-power fault, putting herself to sleep only to wake when the skies eventually clear. If the atmospheric opacity or the solar array dust factor has got ... more
+ Martian Dust Storm Grows Global; Curiosity Captures Photos of Thickening Haze
+ Explosive volcanoes spawned mysterious Martian rock formation
+ Unique microbe could thrive on Mars, help future manned missions
+ NASA spacecraft studying massive Martian dust storm
+ Opportunity rover sends transmission amid Martian dust storm
+ NASA encounters the perfect storm for science on Mars
+ Martian dust storm silences NASA's rover, Opportunity
Surprising magnetic reconnection spotted on Saturn's dayside
Paris (ESA) Jun 11, 2018
Data from the international Cassini mission has revealed that a phenomenon called magnetic reconnection can occur on the dayside of Saturn, within the planet's magnetic environment. Reconnection happens when two magnetic fields collide - for example when the Earth's magnetic field is hit by the stream of charged particles released by the Sun as the solar wind. The magnetic field arou ... more
+ Cosmic Ravioli And Spaetzle
+ Titan topographic map unearths cookie-cutter holes in moon's surface
+ Cassini finds Titan has 'sea level' like Earth


Charon at 40: four decades of discovery on Pluto's largest moon
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 25, 2018
The largest of Pluto's five moons, Charon, was discovered 40 years ago today by James Christy and Robert Harrington at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona - only about six miles from where Pluto itself was discovered at Lowell Observatory. They weren't even looking for satellites of Pluto - Christy was trying to refine Pluto's orbit around the Sun. Before NASA's New Horizons s ... more
+ A dark and stormy Jupiter
+ NASA shares more Pluto images from New Horizons
+ Juno Solves 39-Year Old Mystery of Jupiter Lightning
+ NASA Re-plans Juno's Jupiter Mission
+ New Horizons Wakes for Historic Kuiper Belt Flyby
+ Collective gravity, not Planet Nine, may explain the orbits of 'detached objects'
+ Scientists reveal the secrets behind Pluto's dunes
Astronaut Sally Ride's legacy of encouraging young women to embrace science and engineering
College Station TX (SPX) Jun 20, 2018
On June 18, 1983, 35 years ago, Sally Ride became the first American woman to launch into space, riding the Space Shuttle STS-7 flight with four other crew members. Only five years earlier, in 1978, she had been selected to the first class of 35 astronauts - including six women - who would fly on the Space Shuttle. Much has happened in the intervening years. During the span of three decade ... more
+ Space tourism not far off, rocket maker says
+ Five NASA innovations that could change the way we live and explore
+ Deep space navigation: tool tested as emergency navigation device
+ NASA Administrator Statement on Space Policy Directive-3
+ Hague, Ovchinin talk ISS mission during presser
+ ESA celebrates Unispace+50
+ ASRC Federal subsidiary awarded $1B NASA contract for advanced computing services
Squeezing light at the nanoscale
Boston MA (SPX) Jun 18, 2018
Researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have developed a new technique to squeeze infrared light into ultra-confined spaces, generating an intense, nanoscale antenna that could be used to detect single biomolecules. The researchers harnessed the power of polaritons, particles that blur the distinction between light and matter. This ultra ... more
+ A new way to measure energy in microscopic machines
+ AI-based method could speed development of specialized nanoparticles
+ Researchers use magnets to move tiny DNA-based nano-devices
+ Atomically thin nanowires convert heat to electricity more efficiently
+ Change the face of nanoparticles and you'll rule chemistry
+ Novel method to fabricate nanoribbons from speeding nano droplets
+ Columbia researchers squeeze light into nanoscale devices and circuits
Air Force contracts SpaceX for satellite launch
Washington (UPI) Jun 21, 2018
Space Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, will send a satellite into orbit atop its Falcon Heavy rocket in 2020, the U.S. Air Force announced on Thursday. The massive rocket will deliver a secretive military satellite, known as AFSPC-52, into space, in a $130 million fixed-price contract. Two proposals for the launch were offered to the Air Force, from SpaceX and United La ... more
+ SpaceX's new rocket scores big satellite launch contract
+ S7 space mulls restoring production of heavy rocket engines in Russia
+ Russia to deliver US new rocket engines
+ Arianegroup tests innovative technology for next generation upper stage rocket engine
+ ESA Council commits to Ariane 6 and transition from Ariane 5
+ Re-generatively cooled RL10 Thrust Chamber Assembly test validates 3D printing process
+ Sample Return Technology Successfully Tested on Xodiac Rocket


China confirms reception of data from Gaofen-6 satellite
Beijing (XNA) Jun 07, 2018
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) confirmed that one of its institutes Monday successfully tracked and received imaging data from the newly-launched Earth observation satellite Gaofen-6. The Aerospace Information Research Institute said the Miyun station of China Remote Sensing Satellite Ground Station received the first batch of observation data from the Gaofen-6 satellite. There was ... more
+ Experts Explain How China Is Opening International Space Cooperation
+ Beijing welcomes use of Chinese space station by all UN Nations
+ China upgrades spacecraft reentry and descent technology
+ China develops wireless systems for rockets
+ China's Queqiao satellite carries "large umbrella" into deep space
+ Russia May Help China Create International Cosmonauts Rehabilitation Center
+ Sunrise for China's commercial space industry?
Futuristic data storage
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 20, 2018
The magnetisation of nanometric square material is not fixed. It moves around in a helical motion. This is caused by the electron whose degree of freedom, referred to as spin, which follows a precession motion centred on the middle of a square nano-magnet. To study the magnetisation of such material, physicists can rely on two-dimensional arrays of square nanomagnets. In a paper published ... more
+ Space objects will still be hard to protect despite new policy
+ The right chemistry, fast: employing AI and Automation to map out and make molecules
+ Game-changing finding pushes 3D-printing to the molecular limit
+ From face recognition to phase recognition
+ Electronic skin stretched to new limits
+ Cementless fly ash binder makes concrete 'green'
+ Rutgers physicists create new class of 2D artificial materials


Precise gravitation lens test confirms general relativity
Washington (UPI) Jun 21, 2018
The theory of general relativity states that objects and their gravitational pull distort the spacetime around them. The phenomenon explains the gravitational lens effect, the bending of light in a lens-like shape around large galaxies and cosmic structures. Recently, astronomers successfully measured the gravitation lensing effect around the elliptical galaxy ESO 325-G004, located 450 ... more
+ VLT makes most precise test of Einstein's general relativity outside Milky Way
+ Scotland's space expertise key to gravitational waves study
+ Gravitational wave event likely signaled creation of a black hole
+ GRACE-FO Spacecraft Ready to Launch
+ Just Five Things About GRACE Follow-On
+ Searching for Continuous Gravitational Waves
+ Feature: Every second counts to trace a gravitational wave
The Rosetta stone of active galactic nuclei deciphered
Bonn, Germany (SPX) Jun 25, 2018
A galaxy with at least one active supermassive black hole - named OJ 287 - has caused many irritations and questions in the past. The emitted radiation of this object spans a wide range - from the radio up to the highest energies in the TeV regime. The potential periodicity in the variable optical emission made this galaxy a candidate for hosting a supermassive binary black hole in its centre. ... more
+ Old star clusters could have been the birthplace of supermassive stars
+ Gaia confirms extra-tidal stars around globular cluster
+ Mysterious IceCube event may be caused by a tau neutrino
+ Research shows short gamma-ray bursts do follow binary neutron star mergers
+ Proof of dark matter in dwarf galaxies is refuted
+ Exploring planetary plasma environments from your laptop
+ NASA awards the short wave infra-red sensor chip assembly for WFIRST


China confirms reception of data from Gaofen-6 satellite
Beijing (XNA) Jun 07, 2018
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) confirmed that one of its institutes Monday successfully tracked and received imaging data from the newly-launched Earth observation satellite Gaofen-6. The Aerospace Information Research Institute said the Miyun station of China Remote Sensing Satellite Ground Station received the first batch of observation data from the Gaofen-6 satellite. There was ... more
+ Experts Explain How China Is Opening International Space Cooperation
+ Beijing welcomes use of Chinese space station by all UN Nations
+ China upgrades spacecraft reentry and descent technology
+ China develops wireless systems for rockets
+ China's Queqiao satellite carries "large umbrella" into deep space
+ Russia May Help China Create International Cosmonauts Rehabilitation Center
+ Sunrise for China's commercial space industry?


Sounding rocket takes a second look at the sun
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jun 20, 2018
Tom Woods knows about space gunk. As the principal investigator for the Extreme Ultraviolet Variability Experiment, or EVE, instrument aboard NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, he's all too familiar with the ways that exposure to the harsh space environment can lead to a spacecraft instrument's degradation. "Since its launch in 2010, EVE's sensitivity has degraded by about 70 percent at so ... more
+ Revised launch date targeted for Parker Solar Probe
+ The true power of the solar wind
+ How solar prominences vibrate
+ Expedition Measures Solar Motions Seen During Last Summer's Total Eclipse
+ As Solar Wind Blows, Our Heliosphere Balloons
+ NASA's Hi-C Launches to Study Sun's Corona
+ Study shows how Earth slows the solar wind to a gentle breeze
Forget Galileo - UK space sector should look to young stars instead
London, UK (SPX) Jun 19, 2018
"British security firms could be BANNED from helping EU with Galileo satellite project," the Mail Forget Galileo - UK space sector should look to young stars instead screamed. "Brexit to 'force work on Galileo sat-nav system out of UK'," said the BBC. Then Airbus offered to build a new UK system - "BREXIT REVENGE," said the Express. Scepticism followed - "Brexit Britain's space ambit ... more
+ A milestone in securing ESA's future role in the global exploration of space
+ GomSpace and Aerial Maritime Ltd enter MOU for delivery and operation of a global constellation
+ US FCC expands market access for SES O3b MEO constellation
+ Liftoff as Alexander Gerst returns to space
+ Lockheed Martin Announces $100 Million Venture Fund Increase
+ Iridium Continues to Attract World Class Maritime Service Providers for Iridium CertusS
+ The European Space Agency welcomes European Commission's proposal on space activities


NASA, federal agencies aim to be better prepared for near-Earth objects
Washington (UPI) Jun 20, 2018
The federal government wants to be better prepared for a possible asteroid impact. A new interagency report offers plans for improving the government's ability to detect, predict, plan for and respond to a near-Earth object impact. "The National Near-Earth Object Preparedness Strategy and Action Plan" outlines opportunities for improvements to NASA's NEO detection, tracking, and ... more
+ Rosetta image archive complete
+ Hayabusa2 and MASCOT lander nearing Ryugu
+ What prevents space companies from mining asteroids for rare minerals
+ Organics on Ceres may be more abundant than originally thought
+ What it takes to discover small rocks in space
+ Tiny asteroid first discovered Saturday disintegrates over Africa
+ NEOWISE Thermal Data Reveal Surface Properties of Over 100 Asteroids
Rutgers researchers develop automated robotic device for faster blood testing
New Brunswick NJ (SPX) Jun 22, 2018
Rutgers researchers have created an automated blood drawing and testing device that provides rapid results, potentially improving the workflow in hospitals and other health-related institutions to allow health care practitioners to spend more time treating patients. A study describing the fully automated device is published online in the journal TECHNOLOGY. "This device represents th ... more
+ SNU researchers developed electronic skins that wirelessly activate fully soft robots
+ Robots learn by checking in on team members
+ Future robots need no motors
+ A fast, low-voltage actuator for soft and wearable robotics
+ 'iPal' robot companion for China's lonely children
+ Self-healing material a breakthrough for bio-inspired robotics
+ C2-A2 AGRODROID the world's new Smart Farming product
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Buy Advertising Media Advertising Kit Editorial & Other Enquiries Privacy statement
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2018 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement