spaceshuttle

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  • Satellite watching with GoSatWatch for iPhone

    by 
    Steve Sande
    Steve Sande
    04.23.2009

    Viewing earth-orbiting satellites, the Space Shuttle, and the International Space Station with the naked eye is a blast. I've been hooked on watching satellites since my folks pointed out Echo-1 to me when I was just 3 years old. Now I find myself looking skyward every time I'm under a dark sky, hoping to catch a glimpse of a tiny light speeding across my field of view. If you're going to try to watch a satellite pass, it helps to know when the shiniest spacecraft are going to be zooming overhead. Amateur radio enthusiasts who want to make AMSAT or ARISS contacts need the same information. There's a cool new iPhone app called GoSatWatch (US$9.99, click opens iTunes) that makes looking for earth-orbiting spacecraft a piece of cake.Once the app is loaded on your iPhone, all you need to do is tap the colorful icon to start the app, then do some initial setup. You should set up your location and allow the iPhone 3G's GPS receiver to determine your local latitude and longitude (iPhone and iPod touch users can enter that information in by hand if desired). More than one observing location can be pre-set in the app.

  • SpaceX conducts successful static launch of Falcon 9 rocket

    by 
    Joshua Fruhlinger
    Joshua Fruhlinger
    08.03.2008

    Remember Space Exploration Technologies Corp, otherwise known as SpaceX? You know, the private space transport company started by PayPal founder Elon Musk that won the NASA Commercial Commercial Orbital Transportation Services competition for its Falcon rocket? Last we heard from SpaceX it had lost Falcon 1 during a test launch, but this week its Falcon 9 launch vehicle was successfully fired up. While it didn't go anywhere, the successful static launch was good news for the company, and the test run was even two months ahead of schedule, which could mean good things for the rockets' ultimate place in runs to the International Space Station once the Space Shuttle goes out of service in 2010.

  • EADS Astrium unveils European manned spaceship

    by 
    Joshua Fruhlinger
    Joshua Fruhlinger
    05.28.2008

    It's been a great week for space geeks, what with the Phoenix Lander doing its Mars sniffing and toilet drama at the space station. Meanwhile, over in Europe, EADS Astrium Space Transportation is showing off a manned version of its Automated Transfer Vehicle (also known as the Jules Verne). This space vehicle has already been used to bring equipment to the International Space Station, but new designs reveal that Germany, France, and Italy are on board to retrofit the vehicle with seats and touch screens for humans. There's just one little problem -- the Jules Verne can't return non-humans (let alone humans) to Earth safely yet. Astrium is hoping to get the stage flying by 2013 on top of the Ariane 5 rocket in time for the end of the American Space Shuttle program in 2010, when it would replace it as the largest-payload space transport.

  • 50 years of NASA footage hits Discovery in HD this summer

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    05.09.2008

    Sure now we get live HD from the ISS like it's nothing, but much of the last half century of space exploration has never been seen by most in anything other than grainy analog broadcasts. That'll change in June once When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions debuts on Discovery Channel, drawing from more than 150 hours of NASA footage, called a cross between The Right Stuff and EHD fave Planet Earth. The Orlando Sentinel mentions the new doc is part of a push to ensure funding to speed further space explorations, as long as they provide more great HD opportunities we're all for it. Look for the Blu-ray boxed set July 24 for $79.95.

  • Hard drive recovered from shuttle Columbia used to complete experiment

    by 
    Nilay Patel
    Nilay Patel
    05.06.2008

    Although it's been several years since the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, it looks like some of the data gathered during the orbiter's final mission will be put to good use. A hard drive salvaged from the wreckage contains the results of an experiment to study the way xenon gas flows in microgravity, and the results were published in the April edition of a journal called Physical Review E. The 400MB Seagate drive was originally thought to be destroyed, but workers and engineers reconstructing the orbiter from the remaining debris found it during the process and sent it off for recovery, where 99 percent of the data was extracted. It then took several years for lead researcher Robert Berg and his team to analyze the findings, but they're happy with the results -- we only wish they hadn't come at so dear a price.[Thanks, Laura]

  • iPod takes one small step for PMPs, one giant leap for consumer electronics

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    03.15.2008

    Oh sure, iPods have found their way outside of our atmosphere before, but there's just something magical about spotting one front and (off) center on the Space Shuttle Endeavour. Dollars to donuts it's perpetually repeating the discography of Air.

  • Rocket Phone returns in white, maintains unsightliness

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    10.19.2007

    No, your eyes are not deceiving you. Pictured above (and after the break, for the courageous) is the inexplicably ugly Rocket Phone all dressed up in white. We know you want one, but for your own good, just pretend it's not for sale.

  • Microsoft, NASA team up on 3D photo shoot of Endeavour

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    08.07.2007

    As NASA awaits the newly rescheduled launch of its latest mission, Microsoft has been busy creating a "3D montage" of the space shuttle Endeavour. According to the team, this venture will enable individuals around the globe to "view 3D images of Endeavour and surrounding buildings at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida before it launches into space." The environments are being constructed using hundreds of snapshots and an imaging technology dubbed Photosynth, which stitches together 2D digital images to give a three-dimensional view "that can be navigated and explored in a highly intuitive manner." This go 'round, it seems that the goal was simply to provide a wow-factor to remote onlookers, but both entities are reportedly "looking into ways of using this new technology to support future missions." Check out the results here.[Via PCWorld]

  • Top Gear builds, launches Space Shuttle car

    by 
    Donald Melanson
    Donald Melanson
    02.22.2007

    As if the folks at Top Gear didn't already have the best job in the world, they recently went and completely outdid themselves, building their own Space Shuttle out of a Reliant Robin, roughly the British equivalent of a Pinto or a Gremlin (minus a wheel). As you can see, it all came together quite nicely, complete with an external fuel tank, solid rocket boosters, and a spot-on paint job, although there doesn't seem to have been any room left for passengers, with the whole lot remotely-controlled instead. That proved to have been for the best, however, with the impressive launch followed by a less-than-successful landing, though that was still more than enough to claim the title of the largest rocket flown in the U.K. While it's unclear if they'll ever have another go at it, you can check out the complete rise and fall of this attempt in the video after the break.[Via Tech E Blog, thanks Grant B]

  • Sept. 16: What's on HDTV today

    by 
    Todd W. Carter
    Todd W. Carter
    09.16.2005

     What we're watching: Not much on HDTV tonight. HBO HD is showing the three episodes of Rome it has already aired, so you can catch up on that series if you want. Also, there's HDNet boxing at 9:30 p.m. with Jaidon "The Don" Codrington and Curtis "Showtime" Stevens. Over on ESPN 2-HD, there's NCAA Football: Houston at UTEP, but I'm afraid I can't tell you what UTEP stands for because I don't know. Here are some other HDTV programs showing on selected networks today:ABC: Hope & Faith (9 p.m.), Less than Perfect (9:30 p.m.)CBS: Threshold (9 p.m.), Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m.)NBC: Crossing Jordan (10 p.m.), The Tonight Show (11:35 p.m.)Fox: Bernie Mac (8 and 8:30 p.m.), Reunion (9 p.m.)WB: What I Like About You (8 p.m.), Twins (8:30 p.m.), Reba (9 p.m.), ESPN-HD: NFL Live (3:30 p.m.), Baseball Tonight (10 p.m.), SportsCenter (11 p.m.)ESPN 2-HD: NCAA Football: Houston at UTEP (8 p.m.)