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Posts Tagged ‘Mars’

New global map of Mars suggests Red Planet once had ocean

In a new study, scientists used an innovative computer program to produce a new and more detailed global map of the valley networks on Mars, which adds to the growing body of evidence suggesting the Red Planet once had an ocean.
The study was carried out by scientists from Northern Illinois University and the Lunar and [...]

NASA Aims to Get Mars Rover Moving

In what will probably be the last effort to get the Mars rover Spirit moving again, NASA is mounting an effort Nov. 16 to extricate the mobile robot from the sand trap it has been stuck in since April 23.
– NASA will begin a long-shot attempt Nov. 16 to free the Mars rover Spirit from
the quot;Martian sand trap quot; it has been mired in since April 23. quot;Researchers
expect the extraction process to be long and the outcome uncertain, quot; NASA
said in a news release Nov. 12.

quot;This is g…


Members of Mars Volta: Tour in Two Bands this Nov

Members of The Mars Volta Tour Together in

Zechs Marquise and Free Moral Agents This November

Considering how The Mars Volta‘s songs are so complexly intertwined, it would only make sense that the band’s ever-expanding family of related projects are bound together as well. In November, two such groups, Zechs Marquise and Free Moral Agents take to the road to show us how this brood continues to grow.

Zechs Marquise features multi-instrumentalist Marcel Rodriguez-Lopez (who also plays in The Mars Volta) and bassist Marfred Rodriguez-Lopez, both siblings to legendary guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez. Free Moral Agents is a collective of musicians founded by The Mars Volta’s Grammy Award-winning keyboardist Isaiah “Ikey” Owens. A new promotional video has been released courtesy of Rodriguez Lopez Productions:

While sharing The Mars Volta’s penchant for expansive passages, Zechs Marquise takes a hazier, psych-laden approach to its songs, as evident on its 15-track debut album Our Delicate Stranded Nightmare which was released in Fall 2009 via Rodriguez Lopez Productions (listen to: “Chase Scene” and “Sirenum Scopuli”). Stream the entire album HERE.

ZECHS MARQUISE with FREE MORAL AGENTS TOUR:

11/07/09 Sat Black Market El Paso, TX

11/08/09 Sun The Mohawk Austin, TX (w/ …Trail of Dead, An Albatross, Dark Meat)

11/09/09 Mon Star Bar Beaumont, TX

11/10/09 Tue Sadies Lafayette, LA

11/11/09 Wed Low Key Arts Hot Springs, AR

11/12/09 Thu Smoke and Barrel Fayetteville, AR

11/13/09 Fri The Brick Kansas City, MO

11/14/09 Sat Reggie’s Rock Club Chicago, IL

11/15/09 Sun The Frequency Madison, WI

11/16/09 Mon Mixtapes East Moline, IL

11/17/09 Tue Bourbon Theatre Lincoln, NE

11/18/09 Wed Old Curtis Street Bar Denver, CO

11/19/09 Thu High Mayhem Studio Santa Fe, NM


Russia delays Mars probe launch until 2011: report

Russia will pushed back its flagship satellite mission to Mars’ moon until 2011 in a move which will delay the joint launch of China’s first Mars probe, space sources were cited as saying Wednesday. “The prospects of the spacecraft Phobos’ flight to Mars was discussed at a conference of

NASA Testing Nuclear Power for Moon, Mars Base

Three successful NASA tests push forward the option for using nuclear power for life support, performing experiments, recharging rovers and mining resources on future manned missions.
– NASA and the Department of Energy are encouraged by recent testing that could enable possible use of
nuclear power on the surface of the moon or Mars. According to NASA, a fission surface power system
could use a small nuclear reactor to produce 40 kilowatts of energy,
enough electricity to power…



Europe’s Mars rover slips to 2018

By Jonathan Amos and Paul Rincon
Science reporters, BBC News

NEW EXOMARS MISSION CONCEPT

  • Now likely to leave Earth in 2018; primary aim is to search for life
  • Current proposal is to use a US Atlas rocket to launch ExoMars
  • US also to look after the rover’s entry, descent and landing
  • Hardware likely to be the same as for US 2013 rover, Curiosity
  • ExoMars would be targeted at key methane hotspots on the planet
  • It will have the capacity to drill 2m into the Martian ground
  • Esa states still have to sign off the plan and a budget

ExoMars concept (Esa)

Europe’s flagship robotic rover mission to Mars now looks certain to leave Earth in 2018, two years later than recently proposed, the BBC understands.

The ExoMars vehicle is intended to search the Red Planet for signs of past or present life.

The delay is the third for the mission originally planned to launch in 2011.

While the switch will disappoint many people, officials say the change will open up a greatly expanded programme of exploration at the Red Planet.

The European Space Agency (Esa) will now join forces at Mars with the US space agency (Nasa). The two organisations believe they can achieve far more by combing their expertise and budgets.

The basis for this approach was agreed at bilateral discussions in Plymouth, UK, last month.

Since then, scientists and engineers on both sides of the Atlantic have been working up the basic architecture for a series of missions in 2016, 2018 and 2020 (launch opportunities to Mars come up roughly every two years).

Mass issues

The plan, or baseline, for this programme is now starting to emerge.

It would see the agencies launch a European orbiter to the Red Planet in 2016. Its main aim would be to track down the sources of methane recently detected at Mars. The presence of methane is intriguing because its likely origin is either present-day life or geological activity.

Confirmation of either would be a major discovery.

Mars Express (Esa)

The American Atlas rocket used for this mission would also have capacity to carry sufficient mass to put some sort of static lander on the surface. The European orbiter would act as its data relay to Earth.

The 2018 launch opportunity would be taken by ExoMars, again launching on a US Atlas rocket. This mission window is actually one of the most favourable in terms of planetary alignment for many years, and that makes it possible to send a very heavy surface mission.

The proposal on the table currently is that ExoMars should be joined by a slightly smaller rover in the class of the US Spirit and Opportunity vehicles that are on the surface today.

ExoMars and its smaller cousin could be targeted at the Methane sources identified by the 2016 orbiter.

The 2020 launch opportunity would probably then be taken by a network of instrumented static landers.

Technological goals

Both Esa and Nasa will have tight finances going forward and will have to constrain their ambitions accordingly.

Curiosity and skycrane (Nasa)

European ministers pledged sufficient monies at their major triennial gathering last year to take the budget for ExoMars to 850m euros. Esa officials believe the proposals they are formulating with Nasa can broadly match the cost requirements and the technological goals of both parties.

For Europe, the primary goals are to land, to rove and to drill on Mars. However, under the plan outlined above, these objectives could not all be achieved during the ExoMars opportunity.

In 2018, it is likely the entry, descent and landing (EDL) of Europe’s rover would be handled by the Americans, using the "skycrane" system they have designed for their big 2013 rover known as Curiosity.

If Europe really does want to do EDL, the option is open for it to take responsibility for the 2016 surface package of instruments.

Esa’s director-general, Jean-Jacques Dordain, has promised to report to his member states in the autumn with firm proposals for a re-scoped Mars exploration programme.

Industrial jigsaw

Two months of intensive discussions will now take place in those member states, and in European industry which will be responsible for building the spacecraft systems.

If financial contributions to the mission from Esa member states were to change substantially, the space agency might have to re-visit the balance of industrial work allocated to different countries through the process of "juste retour".

Prototype ExoMars rover

Esa’s rules of juste retour ensure the work which returns to a member state reflects the financial contribution it makes to a programme.

One senior European space executive called at the recent Paris air show for the whole ExoMars industrial programme to be re-opened to competition.

The ExoMars rover was originally conceived as a small technology demonstration mission.

It was approved in 2008 and should have been launched in 2011. Then, as ambitions grew and the design was beefed up, the launch was put back.

At first, it was shifted to 2013. Last year, a decision was taken to move it even further back, to 2016, because of budget concerns.

Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk

Paul.Rincon-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Molten Mars may have prevented life to evolve on its surface

In a new research, scientists have found that the surface of Mars was molten for more than 100 million years after it formed, preventing any early life evolving on the planet.
According to a report in Discovery News, the findings are based on an analysis of rare Martian meteorites at NASA’’s Johnson Space Center in [...]

Science Weekly Extra: Nasa’s Mars vision

Dr John Olson from Nasa discusses America’s plans for manned missions to the moon and Mars


Obama hails Apollo 11 astronauts

US President Barack Obama has praised the "heroism" of the astronauts who made first landing by man on the Moon, marking 40th anniversary of the event.

Mr Obama said the nation continued to draw inspiration from Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins.

"I think that all of us recall the moment in which mankind finally was untethered from this planet," he said.

Earlier, Mr Aldrin and Mr Collins called for renewed efforts to send a manned mission to Mars.

Neil Armstrong, the first man on the Moon, said the race to get to the Moon had been the ultimate peaceful contest.

He said it was an "exceptional national investment" for the US and ex-USSR.

He spoke at an event at Washington DC’s National Air and Space Museum to mark 40 years since their mission.

"Sometimes I think I flew to the wrong place. Mars was always my favourite as a kid and it still is today"

Michael Collins
Apollo 11 crew

Shortly afterwards the three astronauts met Mr Obama at the White House.

Mr Obama – who was seven years’ old when Mr Armstrong and Mr Aldrin took mankind’s first steps on the lunar surface – said it was "wonderful" to be in the company of the three history-makers.

"The moment in which we had one of our own step on the moon and leave that imprint… is there to this day," Mr Obama said.

He praised the astronauts for the "heroism, the calm under pressure, the grace" with which they operated.

Their achievement, Mr Obama said "was somehow able to lift our sights, not just here in the United States but around the world".

‘Great symbol’

The American space industry wants the Obama administration to agree to send Nasa crews back into space, first to the Moon and then to Mars, reports the BBC’s Kevin Connolly, in Washington.

A decision could be due later this year, although there is no guarantee Mr Obama will make funds available, our correspondent says.

HAVE YOUR SAY

"Man’s first crossing to the Red Planet should be undertaken as a team effort"

Yvonne Miranthis, Cyprus

Send us your comments

Speaking at the museum, Mr Armstrong said the Moon race was a "diversion" in the Cold War battle between the US and the USSR.

"Eventually, it provided a mechanism for engendering co-operation between former adversaries. In that sense, among others, it was an exceptional national investment for both sides."

Fellow astronaut Mr Aldrin praised President John F Kennedy’s bold decision to pronounce that the US would land men on the Moon before the end of the 1960s.

"Apollo 11 is a symbol of what a great nation and a great people can do if we work hard, work together and have strong leaders with vision and determination," he said.

But he also pushed for a mission to Mars: "The best way to honour and remember all those who were part of the Apollo programme is to follow in our footsteps; to boldly go again on a new mission of exploration."

Mr Collins, who circled the Moon alone while Mr Armstrong and Mr Aldrin walked on it, said Mars was more interesting than the Moon.

"Sometimes I think I flew to the wrong place. Mars was always my favourite as a kid and it still is today."

"My glass has been half empty for three decades at least. Hopefully, we can turn that around because what we did then is do-able again"

Eugene Cernan, former Nasa astronaut

He urged further exploration, saying Mars was a "much more worthwhile destination".

Other Nasa astronauts gave a news conference at Nasa headquarters in Washington DC on Monday.

Eugene Cernan, who was the last astronaut to step off the Moon, in 1972, concurred with the Apollo 11 astronauts urging a new focus on Mars.

"We need to go back to the Moon, we need to learn a little bit more about what we think we know already, we need to establish bases, put new telescopes there, get prepared to go to Mars. The ultimate goal, truly, is to go to Mars," he told journalists.

"I think the next major goal is not to spend three days, or three weeks or three months on the Moon, but to have you folks, or your kids, or your grand-kids sit here and talk to a group of guys who can tell you what it was like to go to Mars."

But Mr Aldrin disagreed with the view that astronauts should test capabilities for a long-duration flight on the Moon before attempting a journey to Mars.

"Why go to the most difficult place to do that Why not do it on the International Space Station," he said.

Mr Aldrin added: "One day, we are going to send some people to the surface of Mars. And if we think we’re going to send them there for a year-and-a-half and then bring them back, and then send another group there for a year-and-a-half and bring them back, Washington will find another way to spend that money.

"That’s unless we have declared our objective is an increasing, permanent space settlement."

The US space agency’s currently stated aim is to return astronauts to the Moon by 2020. But that vision is under review, along with the space vehicles that would get them there.

Nasa is due to retire its space shuttles next year and replace them with the Orion spacecraft, an Apollo-like capsule that would launch on a new rocket called Ares 1.

Another rocket, Ares V, would have the capability to launch heavy payloads – service and cargo modules – that would be needed to service Moon missions.

</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Moon astronauts urge Mars mission

Two of the astronauts who took part in the first Moon landing 40 years ago have called for renewed efforts to send a manned mission to Mars.

At a rare public reunion of the Apollo 11 crew, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins said Mars instead of the Moon should be the focus of exploration.

Neil Armstrong, the first man on the Moon, said the race to get to the Moon had been the ultimate peaceful contest.

He said it was an "exceptional national investment" for the US and ex-USSR.

The trio spoke at an event at Washington DC’s National Air and Space Museum to mark the 40th anniversary of their mission.

Mr Armstrong told the audience: "It was the ultimate peaceful competition: USA vs USSR.

"I’ll not assert that it was a diversion which prevented a war, nevertheless it was a diversion.

"Sometimes I think I flew to the wrong place. Mars was always my favourite as a kid and it still is today"

Michael Collins
Apollo 11 crew

"Eventually, it provided a mechanism for engendering co-operation between former adversaries. In that sense, among others, it was an exceptional national investment for both sides."

Fellow astronaut Mr Aldrin spoke of the inspiration provided by then-President John F Kennedy which led to the "betterment of America, and ultimately the ending of the Cold War".

"Apollo 11 is a symbol of what a great nation and a great people can do if we work hard, work together and have strong leaders with vision and determination," he said.

But he also pushed for a mission to Mars: "The best way to honour and remember all those who were part of the Apollo programme is to follow in our footsteps; to boldly go again on a new mission of exploration."

Mr Collins, who circled the Moon alone while Mr Armstrong and Mr Aldrin walked on it, said Mars was more interesting than the Moon.

"Sometimes I think I flew to the wrong place. Mars was always my favourite as a kid and it still is today."

He urged further exploration, saying: "I worry that the current emphasis on returning to the Moon will cause us to become ensnared in a technological briar patch needlessly delaying for decades the exploration of Mars – a much more worthwhile destination."

The US space agency’s currently stated aim is to return astronauts to the Moon by 2020. But that vision is under review, along with the space vehicles that would get them there.

Nasa is due to retire its space shuttles next year and replace them with the Orion spacecraft, an Apollo-like capsule that would launch on a new rocket called Ares 1.

Another rocket, Ares V, would have the capability to launch heavy payloads – service and cargo modules – that would be needed to service Moon missions. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

4th spacewalker Alan Bean says US should focus on Mars now

Captain Alan Bean, the fourth person to walk on the moon, says that it’s time of the U.S. to forget about going back, and to join forces with the international community to focus on a mission to Mars instead.
The presently 77-year-old man, who was part of the Apollo 12 mission, thinks that scientists should now [...]

Aldrin: NASA Needs To Put People On Mars

WASHINGTON — Former Apollo astronaut Buzz Aldrin says NASA should set its sights on a bigger target in the future: Mars.

Aldrin made the comments on the eve of the 40th anniversary of his landing on the moon on the Apollo 11 mission. He…

Minerals on Mars influence the measuring of its temperature

In a new study, scientists from the CSIC-INTA Astrobiology Centre in Madrid have confirmed that the type of mineralogical composition on the surface of Mars influences the measuring of its temperature.
The study will be used to interpret the data from the soil temperature sensor of NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) vehicle, whose launch [...]

Monolith Music Fest at Red Rocks: Mars Volta, Yeahs, Ward, MSTR

Monolith Announces 2009 Lineup

Indie Rock Fest Set To Go Down September 12 & 13 at Red Rocks

The final touches are being put on the lineup of the Monolith Music Festival which includes Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Mars Volta, Girl Talk, MSTRKRFT, Phoenix, The Walkmen, Health, and Cymbals Eat Guitars amongst others. Full lineup below.

The annual festival, which is quickly becoming one of the premier independent music festivals, will give attendees an opportunity to see over 50 bands on five different stages at one of the most awe inspiring music venues in the world. Single day passes are currently on sale for $52, while two-day passes are going for $95.

Tickets can be purchased at monolithfestival.com/tickets.

Full Lineup:

Monolith 2008 by Dwenger

Saturday, September 12

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Girl Talk

Of Montreal

M. Ward

DOOM

The Walkmen

OK Go

Ida Maria

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

Frightened Rabbit

Thao with the Get Down Stay Down

Hollywood Holt + Million $ Mano

Starf*cker

Thunderheist

Woodhands

These United States

Cymbals Eat Guitars

The Antlers

Cotton Jones

Gregory Alan Isakov

Lydia

Generationals

Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros

The Answering Machine

Roadside Graves

Danielle Ate the Sandwich

Speakeasy Tiger

Autovaughn

Avi Buffalo

Wendy Darling

Boulder Acoustic Society

Caitlin Rose

Sunday, September 13

The Mars Volta

MSTRKRFT

Method Man & Redman

Phoenix

The Dandy Warhols

Chromeo

The Glitch Mob

Passion Pit

WALE

The Thermals

Harlem Shakes

Monotonix

The Grates

HEALTH

Deer Tick

The Twilight Sad

The Features

Spindrift

Savoy

Bad Veins

We Were Promised Jetpacks

Beats Antique

Tigercity

French Horn Rebellion

The Pirate Signal

Neon Indian

The Knew

A Shoreline Dream

The Royal Bangs

Red Wire Black Wire

Jim McTurnan & the Kids That Killed the Man

Rachel Goodrich

Check our coverage of Monolith 2008 here.


Men emerge from capsule testing Mars trip isolation

By Rupert Wingfield-Hayes
BBC News, Moscow

The men

Six European volunteers have emerged from a simulated space capsule in Moscow after spending more than three months locked inside.

They were part of an experiment into how astronauts might deal with the very cramped conditions and prolonged isolation of a journey to Mars.

The four Russians, a German and a Frenchman seemed none the worse for wear after their "trip".

The capsule, without windows, had never left the ground during the 105 days.

It was designed to make them feel as isolated as they would be on a real trip to Mars, including very cramped accommodation and radio communication delayed by up to 20 minutes.

Just before coming out on Tuesday, the German member of the group admitted that he had completely lost all track of time.

However, 105 days is not nearly long enough to get to Mars and back.

So next year another group of volunteers will enter the same cramped capsule and be sealed inside for a daunting 520 days – nearly a year and a half.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Gunfire Mars Arafat Rally

GAZA CITY – At least seven people were killed and 150 were injured after
Hamas security forces opened fire yesterday as hundreds of thousands
gathered (picture) to mark the third death anniversary of Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat.

The shots brought an abrupt end to the largest public display of support
for the rival Fatah movement since Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip
in June.

Shots rang out after the crowds started chanting “Shia, Shia” – accusing
Hamas of being a proxy for Shia Iran and its ally Syria, witnesses said.

Television images showed protesters and armed men running through the
streets and opened fire at random.

The city had been filled with a sea of yellow flags, the colour of the
Fatah party that Mr Arafat had founded.

The crowds waved Palestinian flags and held portraits of the iconic leader
as Fatah party officials called for unity.

“We say to Hamas and these armed militias, stop your crimes. “These crimes
will not shake our determination,” said Mr Zakaria Al Agha, chief of Fatah
in Gaza, reading a statement from Fatah leader President Mahmoud Abbas.

Senior Fatah official Ahmed Hellis said the event had drawn up to 500,000
people.

The Hamas-run Executive Force, a paramilitary group that has policed Gaza
since taking power, was out in force and had earlier confiscated tens of
thousands of portraits of Mr Arafat and Mr Abbas.

Mr Arafat died on Nov 11, 2004, and remains a symbol of Palestinian
unity. – Agencies