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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 36 declined, 17 accepted (53 total, 32.08% accepted)

Space

Submission + - Rosetta To Probe "Pioneer Anomaly" (esa.int)

DynaSoar writes: On Friday November 13th, ESA'a Rosetta probe will get its third and final gravity assist slingshot from Earth on its way to it primary targets, the asteroid Lutetia and Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. But the slingshot itself will allow ESA scientists to examine the trajectory for unusual changes seen in several other probes' velocities. An unaccountable variation was first noticed as excess speed in Pioneers 11 and 12, and has since been called the Pioneer Anomaly. More troubling than mere speed increase is the inconsistencies in the variations. While Galileo and NEAR had appreciable speed increases, Cassini and Messenger did not. Rosetta itself gained more speed than expected from its 2005 fly by, but only the expected amount from its 2007 fly by. Several theories have been advanced, from mundane atmospheric drag to exotic variations to special relativity, but none are so far adequate to explain both the unexpected velocity increases and the lack of them in different instances. Armed with tracking hardware and software capable of measuring Rosetta's velocity within a few millimeters per second while it flies past at 45,000 kilometers per hour, ESA will be collecting data which it hopes will help unravel the mystery.
NASA

Submission + - Ares 1-X Ready On Pad, Launch Set For 1200 GMT (space.com)

DynaSoar writes: NASA’s new Ares I-X rocket is undergoing final preparations for its planned launch test Tuesday, October 27. Launch time is scheduled for 8 AM EDT (1200 GMT). As of noon Monday it appeared that there was a 60% chance of showers and/or high altitude clouds interfering. However, the launch has a an eight hour window of opportunity through 2000 GMT, and would require only 10 minutes of clear skies within that time to fly. Of interest to engineering types, both those who favor the new vehicle's design and its critics, will be to see whether the predicted linear "pogo stick" oscillation will occur, and whether the dampening design built into it prevents damaging and possibly destructive shaking. Extensive coverage is being presented by Space.com at http://www.space.com/special_reports/1x.html For NASA TV streaming video, schedules and downlink information, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/ntv"
Sci-Fi

Submission + - Number Six Returns: AMC Releasing "The Prisone (amctv.com)

DynaSoar writes: "Of the many excellent TV shows to appear during the 1960s' "The Prisoner" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prisoner remains one of the most influential and enduring. This single season (1967-68), 17 episode series, starring its co-writing, co-directing executive producer Patrick McGoohan http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001526/ , already famous for his acclaimed "Secret Agent Man" (US)/"Danger Man" (UK, maintains a steady fan base and gains more with each syndication re-release. For over 40 years there have been announced intentions and projects to resurrect this surreal psychodrama combining science fiction, allegory and spy thriller in a new series or movie (but always without McGoohan, who adamantly refused, saying "he'd done it."). Finally, as of December 2008, a remake has been "in the can" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prisoner_(2009_TV_miniseries) . In November 2009, AMC will begin airing an original six-part mini-series of The Prisoner http://www.amctv.com/originals/the-prisoner/ starring James Caviezal http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001029/ as the spy who resigns only to find himself abducted and transported to "The Village", where he is renamed (or rather renumbered) Number Six, and where the minds behind his incarceration attempt to pry and/or trick secrets from his brain. Chief among those minds is the visible face of the administration, Number Two, played by Ian McKellen http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005212/ . Unlike the original, with a new Number Two in each episode, McKellen appears throughout. To promote the upcoming release, AMC is presenting (along with a ton of 'additional material' stuff) the entire original 17 episodes, free for the streaming."
Announcements

Submission + - Fermilab Detects "Doubly Strange" Particle (fnal.gov)

DynaSoar writes: "While its cousin/competitor site, the Large Hadron Collider at CERN remains offline http://science.slashdot.org/science/08/09/24/1451233.shtml Fermilab's Digital Hadron Calorimeter continues to produce significant results. Recently Fermilab announced discovery of the Omega-sub-b baryon, a 'doubly-strange' particle http://www.fnal.gov/pub/presspass/press_releases/CDF-Omega-observation.html . This baryon, containing two strange quarks and one bottom quark, has six times the mass of a proton. "The Omega-sub-b is the latest entry in the "periodic table of baryons." Baryons are particles formed of three quarks, the most common examples being the proton and neutron. ... The observation of this "doubly strange" particle, predicted by the Standard Model, is significant because it strengthens physicists' confidence in their understanding of how quarks form matter. In addition, it conflicts with a 2008 result announced by CDF's sister experiment, DZero. In August 2008, the DZero experiment announced its own observation of the Omega-sub-b based on a smaller sample of Tevatron data. This result contradicted some predictions of the Standard Model, suggesting a 'new physics'. The new result leads to the possibility that the prior results are not accurate." To observe this particle, analysis of DHC data required pouring through a trillion (10^15) observations, finding only 16 instances of the predicted outcome."
NASA

Submission + - NASA Requests Help With Von Braun's Notes (wired.com)

DynaSoar writes: "According to a Wired article http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/06/nasadata-2/ NASA is soliciting ideas from the public on how best to catalog and digitize the collected notes of Werner von Braun. "We're looking for creative ways to get it out to the public," said project manager Jason Crusan. "We don't always do the best with putting out large sets of data like this." The notes http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/363387main_von_Braun_notes_RFI_Appendix_1.pdf [pdf] are those of rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, the fist director of NASA's Marshall Spaceflight Center in Huntsville, Alabama and are typed with copious hand written notes in the margin. According to the official request for information http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/363386main_von_Braun_notes_RFI.pdf [pdf], NASA needs ideas on what format to use, how to index the notes and how to create a useful database. The unique nature and historical value of the data, literally discovered in boxes six months ago, is what motivated NASA to ask the public for ideas."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Banned Words List Carries Its First Emoticon (yahoo.com)

DynaSoar writes: "Lake Superior State College in Michigan's Upper Peninsula ("The land of four seasons: June, July, August and Winter") has just published its 34th annual List of Words to Be Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-use, Over-use and General Uselessness. Besides such unsurprising inclusions such as "green" corporations being "game changing" due to concern with their "carbon foot print", this year's list contains an emoticon for the first time — not a smiley face or variant, but the 'heart' symbol made from the characters 'less than' and 'three'. It's perhaps a sign of the evolution of language, or at least of this volunteer linguistic watchdog group, that a symbol compounded of two characters, neither of them a letter, is considered not only a word, but a particularly egregious one."
NASA

Submission + - NASA Outsources ISS Resupply to SpaceX, Orbital (msn.com)

DynaSoar writes: "NASA has signed two contracts with US commercial space ventures totaling $3.5 billion for resupply of the International Space Station. SpaceX will receive $1.6 billion for 12 flights of SpaceX's planned Dragon spacecraft and their Falcon 9 boosters. The agency has also doled out $1.9 billion to Orbital for eight flights of its Cygnus spacecraft riding its Taurus 2 boosters. Neither of the specified craft has ever flown. However, the proposed vehicles are under construction and based on proven technology, whereas NASA has often contracted with big aerospace for services using vehicles not yet even designed."
Space

Submission + - Obama Transition Team Examining Space Solar Power (spacefrontier.org)

DynaSoar writes: "The Space Frontier Foundation pointed out http://spacefrontier.org/blog/space-solar-power/2008/12/09/obama-space-team-seeks-public-comment-space-solar-power-white-pape that President-elect Obama's transition team has published for public comment a white paper http://www.scribd.com/doc/8736849/Space-Solar-Power-SSP-A-Solution-for-Energy-Independence-Climate-Change entitled Space Solar Power (SSP) — A Solution for Energy Independence & Climate Change. The paper was prepared and submitted by the Space Frontier Foundation and other citizen space advocates, and calls for the new Administration to make development of Space Solar Power a national priority. The SSP white paper was among the first ten released by the Obama transition team. It is the first and only space-related white paper released by the transition team to date. With 145 comments http://change.gov/open_government/entry/space_solar_power_ssp_a_solution_for_energy_independence_climate_change/ thus far, it is already among the top five most-discussed of the 20-some white papers on Change.gov."
Space

Submission + - Spaceport America Gets FAA License (personalspaceflight.info)

DynaSoar writes: "According to the Las Cruces Sun-News (as recounted by Personal Spaceflight http://www.personalspaceflight.info/ ) Spaceport America received an early and double holiday gift this week. First, the expected (positive) FAA environmental impact report, and second, the hoped for but not immediately expected "launch site operator's license". With this license, and with the previously accomplished creation of a tax district, two of three pieces required by the New Mexico legislature to receive its funding package are in place. The third, a lease with a space services tenant to use the facility, may come this week also, in the form of a contract with Virgin Galactic. While timing is impossible to predict when it comes to Sir Richard and The Rutan Clan, the contract is a virtual certainty. The New Mexico Spaceport Authority fully expects it, and so has projected late 2010 for completion of hangar and terminal facilities. Virgin Galactic also seems confident, as they have already screened and submitted their first 100 customers (called the Virgin Galactic Founders) to their contracted medical and training supervisor Wyle http://www.californiaspaceauthority.org/html/press-releasesandletters/pr070713-1.html and is busy screening their second 100 "spaceflight participants" (NASA and RKA having decided that only those who can tack "career" on the front of it deserve to be called "astronauts" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaceflight_participant )."
Space

Submission + - Esther Dyson To Train For Space Flight (personalspaceflight.info)

DynaSoar writes: "Esther Dyson http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esther_Dyson known to many as a founding and consistently guiding member of ICANN, and for working with the startups of Flickr, de.icio.us, Medscape and others, is now expanding her interests upwards. She recently announced that she will be heading to Moscow to train as backup astronaut for Charles Simonyi, who plans to fly aboard Soyuz TMA-14 next year. http://www.personalspaceflight.info/2008/10/07/esther-dyson-to-be-simonyis-backup/ The US$3million price tag won't her first cash contribution towards personal space flight. She's already an investor in Space Adventures, the company that arranges the space tourist flights on Soyuz."
NASA

Submission + - "Dark Flow" Outside Observable Universe (space.com)

DynaSoar writes: "NASA astrophysicists have discovered what they claim is something outside the observable universe exerting an effect on the observable http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/080923-dark-flows.html . The material is pulling clusters of galaxies towards a region of space known not to contain sufficient matter to create the effect. They can only speculate on what the material is and how space might differ there: "In these regions, space-time might be very different, and likely doesn't contain stars and galaxies (which only formed because of the particular density pattern of mass in our bubble). It could include giant, massive structures much larger than anything in our own observable universe. These structures are what researchers suspect are tugging on the galaxy clusters, causing the dark flow.""
Patents

Submission + - Alexander Graham Bell: Patent Theif? (msn.com)

DynaSoar writes: "MSNBC is carrying an AP article reviewing a book due out January 7, that claims to show definitive evidence that Bell stole the essential idea for telephony from Elisha Gray http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22400009/. Author Seth Shulman shows that Bell's notebooks contain false starts, and then after a 12 day gap during which he visited the US Patent Office, suddenly show an entirely different design, very similar to Gray's design for multiplexing Morse code signals. Shulman claims that Bell copied the design from Gray's patent application and was improperly given credit for earlier submission, with the help of a corrupt patent examiner and aggressive lawyers. Shulman also claims that fear of being found out is the reason Bell distanced himself from the company that carried his name. And if Gray Telephone doesn't seem to roll off the tongue, Shulman also noted that both of them were two decades behind the German inventor Johann Philipp Reis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philipp_Reis who produced the first working telephony system."
Space

Submission + - 2008: The Year of the Spaceship (personalspaceflight.info)

DynaSoar writes: "That's according to a Flight International article by Will Whitehorn http://www.flightglobal.com/articles/2007/12/07/220152/virgin-galactic-sets-out-year-of-the-spaceship.html Virgin Galactic intends to unveil White Knight 2 as well as Spaceship 2 during the next year, at this point planning for January. Burt Rutan, always reticent to comments on progress of any project, says nothing to support or contradict Virgin Galactic's announcement. However, the report states that Spaceship 2 is 50% complete and White Knight 2 is 60% complete. In addition, Virgin Galactic is considering using White Knight 2, or possible its successor White Knight 3, to put small satellites in orbit for a cost of US$3 million, less than half the current front runner in (projected) low cost orbital launches; SpaceX's Falcon at US$6.7 million. Tourism aside, this could be an extremely lucrative spin off of Virgin Galactic's original plans. If this turns out to be a profitable endeavor, the cost of tourism flights could drop significantly."
Announcements

Submission + - Astronomers Explode Virtual Supernova

DynaSoar writes: "Scientists at the University of Chicago's Center for Astrophysical Thermonuclear Flashes have created a simulation of a white dwarf exploding into a type 1a supernova http://space.com/scienceastronomy/070322_stellar_e xplosion.html. Using 700 processors and 58,000 hours, they produced a three second movie showing the initial burst that is thought to be the source of much of the iron in the universe. Understanding these supernova is also important to testing current cosmological theories regarding dark matter and dark energy, as their brightness is used as a measurement of distance, and discrepancies found in the brightness of very distant supernovae consistently seem to indicate a change in the speed of expansion of the universe over time."

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