NASA robotic rover exploring the crater Gale on Mars
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SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
This episode of SpaceTime is brought to you with the support of Incogni - take back control of your data online by getting Incogni for not very much money. To check our sprcial SpaceTime listeners deal, visit www,incogni.com/spacetime.In this episode of SpaceTime, we uncover groundbreaking discoveries and updates from the cosmos. First, NASA's Curiosity Rover has revealed evidence of a carbon cycle on Mars, with significant carbon deposits found in Gale Crater. This finding, detailed in the journal Science, brings researchers closer to understanding Mars's potential to support life in its past. We discuss the implications of these findings and what they mean for the Red Planet's climatic history and habitability.Square Kilometer Array UpdateNext, we provide an exciting update on the billion-dollar Square Kilometer Array (SKA) project, the world's largest radio telescope currently under construction in Australia and South Africa. We explore how this massive facility will revolutionize our understanding of the universe, operating at unprecedented speeds and sensitivities. With 132,000 antennas spread over vast distances, the SKA aims to answer fundamental questions about gravity, magnetism, and the evolution of galaxies.Busy Times at the International Space StationFinally, we take a look at the bustling activity aboard the International Space Station. With recent crew returns and new cargo deliveries, including groundbreaking experiments on time measurement and gravitational research, the ISS continues to be a hub of scientific advancement. We discuss the latest missions and what they mean for future exploration and research in space.www.spacetimewithstuartgary.com✍️ Episode ReferencesSciencehttps://www.science.org/Square Kilometer Arrayhttps://www.skao.int/NASAhttps://www.nasa.gov/Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/spacetime-space-astronomy--2458531/support.00:00 This is space Time Series 28, episode 53 for broadcast on 2 May 202500:25 NASA's Mars Curiosity Rover finds evidence of a carbon cycle on the Red Planet03:51 Construction works well advanced on world's largest radio telescope, the SKA07:40 Scientists are building the world's largest radio telescope to probe the deep universe10:40 Three crew members from the International Space Station have successfully returned to Earth13:44 Previous studies suggested H5N1 bird flu could spread easily between mammals16:33 Australian Skeptics has debunked 15 popular supernatural claims20:00 Some of the things people take seriously have since been proved to Be fake24:23 Haunted locations are always dangerous. Are ghosts always dangerous?
Astronomy Daily - The Podcast: S03E225Welcome to Astronomy Daily, your Daily dose of space and Astronomy news. I'm your host, Anna, and we've got an absolutely packed show for you today with some incredible developments from across the space sector.Highlights:- Vega C Rocket Launch Triumph: Celebrate Europe's successful return to space with the Vega C rocket launch from Kourou, marking a critical milestone in European space independence and resilience.- Artemis Moon Mission Delays: Delve into NASA's revised timeline for the Artemis program, including safety considerations and the financial scope of returning humans to the moon.- Mysterious Planet X Evidence: Explore groundbreaking research from Princeton University that bolsters the likelihood of a mysterious Planet X in our solar system, potentially revolutionizing our cosmic understanding.- Hubble's Quasar Revelation: Marvel at the Hubble Space Telescope's unprecedented observations of Quasar 3C273, offering new insights into these energetic cosmic phenomena.- Curiosity Rover's Next Mars Mission: Discover the Curiosity rover's upcoming exploration of massive spiderweb formations on Mars, promising to shed light on the planet's watery past.- Artemis Heat Shield Investigation: Learn about NASA's findings on the Artemis heat shield performance and the solutions driving improvements for future missions.For more cosmic updates, visit our website at astronomydaily.io. Sign up for our free Daily newsletter to stay informed on all things space. Join our community on social media by searching for #AstroDailyPod on Facebook, X, YouTubeMusic, Tumblr, and TikTok. Share your thoughts and connect with fellow space enthusiasts.Thank you for tuning in. This is Anna signing off. Until next time, keep looking up and stay curious about the wonders of our universe.✍️ Episode ReferencesVega C rocket[ESA Vega-C](https://www.esa.int/Enabling_Support/Space_Transportation/Vega-C)NASA Artemis program[NASA Artemis](https://www.nasa.gov/specials/artemis/)Hubble Space Telescope[Hubble](https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/main/index.html)Curiosity rover[Mars Curiosity Rover](https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/home/)Princeton University[Princeton University](https://www.princeton.edu/)Vera C. Rubin Observatory[Rubin Observatory](https://www.lsst.org/)Copernicus Earth Observation program[Copernicus](https://www.copernicus.eu/en)Quasar 3C273[Quasar 3C273](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3C_273)Wind Cave National Park[Wind Cave National Park](https://www.nps.gov/wica/index.htm)Astronomy Daily[Astronomy Daily](https://astronomydaily.io)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/astronomy-daily-the-podcast--5648921/support.
This episode features Amish Munshi, Founder of RERX Fund and Capital, a seasoned professional with extensive experience in consulting, particularly within real estate and technology. Amish discusses his background, expertise, and the innovative strategies he employs in the real estate debt investing space to help individuals retire with confidence and generate consistent cash flow. Amish emphasizes the significance of debt investment in real estate, especially in California, as well as prioritizing community impact and investor relations as crucial elements of his company's growth and success. Key Takeaways: Amish's journey from a technology background to real estate and founding RERX Fund and Capital Leveraging debt investments in real estate to preserve capital and generate consistent cash flow without the headaches of property ownership Insights into the California real estate market highlighting its potential for debt investors Transitioning from fix-and-flip projects to real estate debt The shift from one-on-one interactions to scaling up communication and outreach More about Amish: Amish, with over 20 years of consulting expertise in real estate and technology, holds an MBA in Global Business Strategy from Rutgers University and an Information Technology Engineering degree from Mumbai University. His consulting spans diverse sectors like government, finance, insurance, pharmaceuticals, education, healthcare, banking, technology, and non-profits. Amish has spearheaded projects for renowned entities including the US Federal Government, California State Government, IBM, VISA, and others. Notable involvements include Mars Curiosity Rover with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and initiatives for Affordable Healthcare and Indian language computing localization. As a dedicated husband and father of two, Amish is now a key figure in real estate investment, aiding professionals from various fields to retire confidently while generating consistent cash flow through innovative options in real estate debt investment. Ways to connect with Amish: http://rerxfunds.com/ Useful links and resources: https://findmoreinvestors.com/apply Join our new capital raising community group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/capitalraisingtalkwithcapitalraisingprosgroup Free Trainings on “How To Raise More Capital & Find High Net-Worth Investors on Auto-Pilot”: findmoreinvestors.com/capital Enter our monthly raffle by leaving a 5-star review and emailing a screenshot to: reviews@findmoreinvestors.com Connect with Yakov: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yakovsavitskiy/ https://www.facebook.com/yakov.smart3 The following music was used for this media project: Music: Positive Fat Bass Intro Loop by WinnieTheMoog Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/6093-positive-fat-bass-intro-loop License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Artist website: https://linktr.ee/taigasoundprod The following music was used for this media project: Music: Just Keep Going (Loopable) by chilledmusic Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/7245-just-keep-going-loopable License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license The following music was used for this media project: Music: Business Of Dreams by MusicLFiles Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/9392-business-of-dreams License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Artist website: https://cemmusicproject.wixsite.com/musiclibraryfiles #realestateinvesting #capitalraising #realestate #passiveinvesting
The OSIRIS-REx mission will return to Earth on Sunday with samples collected from asterois Bennu after a 5 year mission. SpaceX's Starship is now waiting for Fish and Wildlife officials to sign off on their next launch. The Mars Curiosity Rover has successfully made it to the Gediz Vallis Ridge. The Parker Solar Probe was blasted by a CME and given us an amazing view of the blast. And the JWST has given some new data about ancient galaxies and caused astronomers to question the age of those galaxies.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
This episode of SpaceTime is brought to you with the support of NordVPN. To check out the special deal we have for, please visit www.nordvpn.com/stuartgary - you'll be glad you did.In this episode:**Mars Curiosity Rover's Discovery**: Unearth the secrets of the Red Planet with NASA's latest findings. Ancient mud cracks suggest potential life-friendly conditions on Mars. Dive deep into the significance of these hexagonal patterns and what they mean for the history of microbial life. - **Europe's Eucalyptus Spacecraft's Journey**: Join the European Space Agency as their spacecraft reaches its final orbit. Discover its mission alongside the James Webb Space Telescope and the mysteries they aim to unravel. - **Fiery Skies Over Melbourne**: Experience the awe as Melbourne's sky lights up with space junk from a Russian Soyuz rocket. Learn about the mission behind this rocket and where the debris finally settled. - **Euclid's Mission to Uncover Dark Matter**: Embark on a cosmic journey with the European Space Agency's Euclid spacecraft. Delve into its mission to study dark matter, dark energy, and the accelerating expansion of the universe. - **Science Report Highlights**: Explore the latest in science, from the tragic history of Europe's first human inhabitants to the alarming climate changes in Asia. Stay updated with the most recent discoveries and studies shaping our understanding of the world. Stay tuned with "SpaceTime with Stuart Gary" for more exciting space adventures and scientific revelations.
How can we create accurate models of galaxies, both ours and others? To find out, Dr. Charles Liu and co-host Allen Liu welcome Paco Holguin, a graduate researcher at the University of Michigan Dept. of Astronomy who specializes in computational astrophysics and galactic simulations. As always, though, we start off with the day's joyfully cool cosmic thing: neutron decay. The scientists at Los Alamos National Lab have recently determined that the half-life of a neutron is 877+/- 0.5 seconds, or about 14.5 minutes! Moving on, Paco tells us how his love for video games and simulations led him to his field of studies, which includes the study of cosmic rays, charged particles and magnetic fields as he models galaxies. And of course, no discussion of Cosmic Rays can possibly pass without a discussion of the Fantastic Four, whose superpowers in the Marvel Comics derived from their exposure to cosmic rays. For our first student question, Will from the Pingree School Astronomy Club wants to know about other extreme objects other than black holes and neutron stars in our galaxy. Paco starts by explaining how some types of cosmic rays, called ultra-high energy cosmic rays, qualify as extreme objects. Find out about the “Oh My God” particle, which moves so close to the speed of light that if it raced a photon across the galaxy, the photon would only be ahead by a meter after 300,000 years. (To avoid possible confusion, we're not talking about the so-called “God Particle”, aka the Higgs boson.) Paco explains how sometimes when he models a galaxy, it's going along well and all of a sudden, it simply explodes. Because he uses extremely complex equations to simulate galaxies, Paco decided to take a graduate math class to better understand those equations. Next up, Jayla from North Andover asks if there is an upper limit to the size of a black hole. As Paco and Charles discuss the possibility, agreeing that while we don't know whether there is an actual upper limit, or we just haven't found it yet, we have measured black holes that have billions of times the mass of our Sun. Finally, Paco discusses what he's been doing recently at Los Alamos, where for the past two summers he worked on machine learning projects with a diverse set of scientists and researchers. One of the projects he worked on was analyzing data from the Mars Curiosity Rover's Chemcam using machine learning with mathematicians and computer scientists. Paco also shared with us that now that he's finishing up his PhD, he's off to the Applied Physics Lab at Johns Hopkins University to work on projects including exploratory space probe missions, national security issues, and more. We hope you enjoy this episode of The LIUniverse, and, if you do, please support us on Patreon. Credits for Images Used in this Episode: Curiosity's Chemcam – Credit: NASA, Public Domain Los Alamos National Labs, aerial view – Credit: Los Alamos National Labs
A rerun of one of our most popular episodes! David is the former flight director for the Mars Curiosity rover and shares some of his experiences working for NASA.David Oh is the former flight director for the Mars Curiosity rover, and current systems engineering manager and system architect at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) for the upcoming Psyche launch.On this episode, David shares his insights and experience working with large engineering teams on mission-critical systems and subsystems. He also shares what it is like living on “Martian time” (with his family, no less).He also recounts the indescribable excitement and fulfillment when got the success of a space mission. Specifically, it 2 am and he was in the control room when he knew they were the first people on earth to learn something new about our neighboring planets.Update – David asked me to include this quick correction to the podcast: when the Curiosity rover landed on Mars in 2012, it actually took 14 minutes (not 7 minutes as stated in the interview) for the signal from the rover to reach the Earth. It takes seven minutes to land on Mars, so when we received the first data showing the rover had entered the Martian atmosphere, it had actually already been on the surface of Mars for seven minutes. For more information, see the video “Seven Minutes of Terror” on YouTube.Aaron Moncur, hostWe hope you enjoyed this episode of the Being an Engineer Podcast.Help us rank as the #1 engineering podcast on Apple and Spotify by leaving a review for us.You can find us under the category: mechanical engineering podcast on Apple Podcasts.Being an Engineer podcast is a go-to resource and podcast for engineering students on Spotify, too.Aaron Moncur and Rafael Testai love hearing from their listeners, so feel free to email us, connect on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and subscribe on Apple Podcast and Spotify! About Being An EngineerThe Being An Engineer podcast is a repository for industry knowledge and a tool through which engineers learn about and connect with relevant companies, technologies, people resources, and opportunities. We feature successful mechanical engineers and interview engineers who are passionate about their work and who made a great impact on the engineering community.The Being An Engineer podcast is brought to you by Pipeline Design & Engineering. Pipeline partners with medical & other device engineering teams who need turnkey equipment such as cycle test machines, custom test fixtures, automation equipment, assembly jigs, inspection stations and more. You can find us on the web at www.teampipeline.us
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 118*Curiosity reaches a key targetNASA's Mars Curiosity Rover finally arrived at a long sought after target on its journey to climb the red planet's Mount Sharp.*NASA orders more Orion SpacecraftNASA has ordered three more Orion Crew capsules from Lockheed Martin for future manned missions to the Moon.*A food run to the space stationA Russian Progress cargo ship has successfully docked to the International Space Station's Poisk module two days after launching aboard a Soyuz 2.1a rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Central Asian republic of Kazakhstan.*Skyrora fails in first space launch attemptThey say space is hard and Scottish company Skyrora has learnt that lesson the hard way after the maiden test flight of their new Skylark L suborbital rocket failed to reach space.*November SkywatchThe constellation of the winged horse Pegasus, the giant galaxy M31-Andromeda barrelling towards us, and three meteor showers in one month are among the highlights of the November night skies on SkyWatch…Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you…To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts.For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://biteszhq.com Your support is needed...SpaceTime is an independently produced podcast (we are not funded by any government grants, big organisations or companies), and we're working towards becoming a completely listener supported show...meaning we can do away with the commercials and sponsors. We figure the time can be much better spent on researching and producing stories for you, rather than having to chase sponsors to help us pay the bills.That's where you come in....help us reach our first 1,000 subscribers...at that level the show becomes financially viable and bills can be paid without us breaking into a sweat every month. Every little bit helps...even if you could contribute just $1 per month. It all adds up.By signing up and becoming a supporter at the $5 or more level, you get immediate access to over 280 commercial-free, double, and triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. You also receive all new episodes on a Monday rather than having to wait the week out. Subscribe via Supercast (you get a month's free trial to see if it's really for you or not) ... and share in the rewards. Details at Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ Details at https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com or www.bitesz.com
British Airways pilot getting sucked out of the cockpit, how progress is made, people complaining about subscriptions, and more! TIMESTAMPS: (0:00) A thank you to our followers (2:00) Subscriptions (7:00) Karen mentality (8:00) The Mars Curiosity Rover (10:30) Are chiropractors legit? (13:00) Phobias & blood test needles (17:40) Insightful quotes (22:30) "I didn't ask to be alive" (25:10) Pilot sucked out of cockpit (29:40) Don't walk towards a helicopter propeller (31:25) Outro FOLLOW THE 2AM PODCAST: VISIT OUR WEBSITE FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL GRAB SOME MERCH
On The Space Show for Wednesday, 7 September 2022: Angelo Di Grazia reports from the Kennedy Space Centre on the two scrubbed launch attempts for the Artemis I test mission Quinlan Buklap - A data scientist in space medicine takes us on a virtual journey to the Moon at the Moon Village Association conference MOXIE (Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment) generates oxygen on the surface of Mars Curiosity Rover searches for signs of life on Mars for 10 years Solar Orbiter hit by a coronal mass ejection
Hi guys! Ricky Pope here. This week on the Christian Nerds Unite podcast I interview a real NASA rocket scientist Ms. Wanda Harding the Senior Mission Manager for the Mars Curiosity Rover launch. She is a believer, educator, and served 20 years with NASA and NOAA. If you want to stay up to day with Wanda follow her on Twitter. https://twitter.com/wandajharding (https://twitter.com/wandajharding) or on her website https://www.wandaharding.com/ (https://www.wandaharding.com/) Buy the book When I Consider...God's Amazing Universe https://amzn.to/3CVb0Jc (https://amzn.to/3CVb0Jc) I want to make a special announcement. After much thought and prayer, I am going to take at least a month off from the podcast starting next week. With my wife still in the hospital and with me recovering from my second stay in the hospital myself I think it will be for the best. The video version is here: https://www.youtube.com/christiannerdsunite?sub_confirmation=1 (https://www.youtube.com/christiannerdsunite?sub_confirmation=1) I host my podcast with Captivate, the world's only growth-oriented podcast host™ - you can too, and get your first 7-days totally free! Clicking: https://www.captivate.fm/signup?ref=rickypope (https://www.captivate.fm/signup?ref=rickypope) My Microphone - Electro-Voice RE20: https://amzn.to/2VVg1ya (https://amzn.to/2VVg1ya) Join our Parteon: https://www.patreon.com/christiannerdsunite (https://www.patreon.com/christiannerdsunite) Some of the links are affiliate links meaning at no additional cost to you I may earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
The Astronomy, Technology, and Space Science News Podcast.SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 89*The ongoing search for Dark MatterScientists have placed new limits on where the mysterious invisible substance known as dark matter could be hiding.*Another win for Modified Newtonian dynamics over dark matterAstronomers have unexpectedly found strong evidence supporting Modified Newtonian dynamics or MOND rather than dark matter to best explain the observations of the gravitational tidal effects in the Fornax Cluster on a population of dwarf galaxies.*NASA's Mars Curiosity rover marks ten years on the red planetNASA's car sized Mars Curiosity Rover has celebrated its first decade exploring the red planet.*Another Blue Origin flight reaching the edge of spaceBlue Origin's New Shepard has undertaken its sixth space tourism flight to the edge of space.*More dangerous Chinese space junkBeijing has come in for more criticism following the de-orbit of yet another out of control spacecraft.*Beijing tests a reusable spacecraftChina's growing concern about the success of America's X-37b space shuttle program has seen Beijing launch its own reusable experimental spacecraft.*New Russian spy satellite spies on other satellitesRussia have just launched a new spy satellite designed to spy on other satellites.*Salt could be key to life on water worldsA new theoretical study suggests oceans on water-rich worlds could be enriched with electrolytes, including salts such as sodium chloride which is an important factor in the search for life.*The Science ReportNew evidence triggers fresh calls for an independent investigation into the origins of COVID.A new study warns that the Arctic is warming faster than previously thought.Finally, some good news for coral growth on the Great Barrier Reef.Environmental damage from the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster still detectable.The closest thing so far to a fountain of youth.Alex on Tech new Samsung galaxy Z flip and fold 4 releasedSkeptic's guide Forget the Gaia Sausage now there's a Spanish oneListen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you…To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts.For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://biteszhq.com Your support is needed...SpaceTime is an independently produced podcast (we are not funded by any government grants, big organisations or companies), and we're working towards becoming a completely listener supported show...meaning we can do away with the commercials and sponsors. We figure the time can be much better spent on researching and producing stories for you, rather than having to chase sponsors to help us pay the bills.That's where you come in....help us reach our first 1,000 subscribers...at that level the show becomes financially viable and bills can be paid without us breaking into a sweat every month. Every little bit helps...even if you could contribute just $1 per month. It all adds up.By signing up and becoming a supporter at the $5 or more level, you get immediate access to over 240 commercial-free, double, and triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. You also receive all new episodes on a Monday rather than having to wait the week out. Subscribe via Patreon or Supercast (you get a month's free trial with Supercast to see if it's really for you or not)....and share in the rewards. Details at Patreon www.patreon.com/spacetimewithstuartgary or Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ Details at https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com or www.bitesz.com #jwst #spacenews #astronomynews #sciencenews #podcast #spacetime
Former NASA Senior Mission Manager Wanda Harding joined Matthew to discuss the 10-year anniversary of the famed Mars Curiosity Rover landing and her role in the momentous moment plus career. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Items in this news podcast: SMT Designs releases all of their rocketry designs to public domain Steve Thatcher: "With my upcoming LDRS 40 trip and TRA Tech session there on "3D Printed Modular Avionics Bays", I wanted to make an announcement, so here it is..." Steve Thatcher says “I am in the process of releasing all of my rocketry designs to the public domain under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International” You can read the licensing in detail at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ You can find the designs on http://www.tinkercad.com/ by simply doing a "People" search for "SteveThatcher". Once you find the profile, click it to view the parts. Steve has also tagged the parts with “SMTDESIGNS”, “AVBAY”, and “ROCKETRY”, but you will get more "hits" that way of other non-related parts. My intent in doing this is to propagate the footprint standard I created for devices and batteries over the last years, so the rocketry community could benefit. Thatcher says “I would also like to see my designs come to a greater use by making them available for no cost to those that have the required equipment.” Steve asks that the footprints for carriers and platforms remain unchanged. Thatcher says”I recognize the need to change things when necessary, but changing footprints negates the universal benefit they provide. Take the time to look at my entire library of parts to get a system view of why things were done.” Steve will be available to answer questions through SMT Designs, and the SMT Designs facebook page. _______________________________ Tripoli News During the LDRS 40 Member's Banquet it was announced that that the Tripoli Wisconsin Association, Tripoli Green Bay, and Tripoli Chicago will be hosting LDRS 41 at the Richard Bong Recreation Area located in Kenosha County, Wisconsin. The event is planned to take place July 6, 7, 8 and 9, 2023. More details and information will be coming soon. _______________________________ New Unified TRA Safety Code https://www.tripoli.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=795696&module_id=520420 Tripoli Rocketry Association unveiled its new “unified” safety code on May1 of this year. President Bob Brown notes that: Under this safety code, there are no longer Commercial launches or Research launches, just Tripoli launches. There are some changes to the current safety code, such as a common safe distance table, a safety code for both model rockets as well as radio-controlled boosted gliders as well as other changes. Tripoli asks all members to please take the time to read the document in its entirety. Mr. Brown notes that “While your first reaction will probably be there seem to be a lot more rules under this new document, in fact, almost nothing more restrictive has been adopted it's just compiled into one document now.” TRA notes that they owe a huge thank you to Steve Shannon, “who undertook the daunting task of compiling the information from the original four documents and writing (in plain English, not legalese) a document we can all understand and follow”. ____________________________________ Reminder on NARAM 63 NARAM-63 will be July 16-22, 2022. Sport flying begins on Saturday, July 16, and will run through the following Friday, July 22. The US Team Flyoffs/North Coast Cup flying will begin Saturday, July 16, and run through Monday, July 18. NARAM competition flying begins on Monday, July 18, and runs through Friday, July 22. Friday evening, July 15, will include a sport flyers briefing as well as a US Team Flyoffs/North Coast Cup briefing and model check in. Where is NARAM-63? Springfield, Missouri, located in the southwestern part of the state, is this year's host city. The Oasis Hotel is the official hotel of NARAM-63, and will host nearly all of the evening activities. The flying field is located west of Springfield. Sport Range Tripoli Mo-Kan will be running the sport range along with support from SLRA. Launch pads with 1010 and 1515 rails will be available as well as 1/8″, 3/16″, 1/4”, 3/8”, and 1/2″ rods. Rockets with up to M motor class can be accommodated with an FAA waiver to 6,000 feet. Come and sport fly for the weekend or stay for the whole week. Contest Range Saturday through Monday will feature the US Team Flyoffs/North Coast Cup. NARAM competition starts Monday morning with Chad Ring serving as the NARAM Contest Director. NARAM at Night In addition to sport and contest flying each day, join us for the traditional NARAM evening events throughout the week including the Manufacturers Forum, Cannon Fund Rocketry Memorabilia Auction, NAR Town Hall Meeting, FREE Ice Cream Social, Beer Lofting, and other events culminating with the Awards Banquet on Friday evening. ______________________________________________ Reminder: NAR Board of Trustees voting window is open « Board of Trustee Voting You can vote in-person at NARAM during the Town Hall meeting, online, or by mail-in ballot. You can only vote once! The Town Hall Meeting will be held Monday, July 18, 2022. To vote online, please go to the NAR.ORG site, check in under Member Resources. Mail-in ballots are in The Model Rocketeer, which was mailed with the May/June, 2022 issue of Sport Rocketry magazine. Under the NAR Bylaws, Senior and Leader members who joined the NAR at least one year prior to July 18, 2022 (NAR number 112135 or lower) are eligible to vote. For voting purposes, a Leader member is defined as one who has reached his/her 16th birthday as of July 18, 2022. This Year's Board member candidates (New Candidate) Don Carson - Macon , NC (Current Board Member) Becky Green - San Rafael, CA (Current board member) Lynn Thomas, Indianapolis, IN Bios are available on the NAR.Org site voting page. _________________________ 2022 NASA Student Launch results Each year, NASA challenges middle school, high school, college, and university students from across the United States to design, build and launch a high-powered amateur rocket, fly it to an altitude between 4,000 and 6,000 feet, and make a successful landing. Middle and high school teams could choose to attempt the college/university division challenge or develop their own science or engineering experiment. Teams in the college/university division tackled a new task that mirrors NASA's missions like the Mars Curiosity Rover. Teams had to design a payload capable of autonomously locating where their rocket landed by identifying the rocket's grid position on an aerial image of the launch site while transmitting the data back to their ground station. This had to be accomplished without the use of GPS. The requirement simulates a challenge faced by NASA's mission managers – communicating with spacecraft and payloads on distant plan mmmm etary bodies, where use of GPS is not an option. Sixty teams from 22 states including Puerto Rico took part in this year's competition, with 27 teams launching April 23 near NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Teams that did not travel were allowed to conduct their final test flights at a home launch field. For the second year in a row, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte won the launch division, while Tarleton State University in Stephenville, Texas, won first place in the design division of NASA's 2022 Student Launch rocketry competition. The University of North Carolina at Charlotte will receive $5,000 for first place in the launch division, and Tarleton State University will receive $2,500 for first place in the design division. The top five teams in the launch division are: University of North Carolina at Charlotte University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee University of Florida, Gainesville Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana The top two teams in the design division are: Tarleton State University, Stephenville, Texas New York University ______________________________________ American Rocketry Contest (TARC) https://rocketcontest.org/result/2022/ 1) Newport High School - Team 2 from Bellevue, WA (22-1326) $20,000 (Flight 1) 2 (Flight 2) 11 Total Score = 13 2) Newport High School - Team 1 from Bellevue, WA (22-1804) $15,000 (Flight 1) 2 (Flight 2) 12 Total Score 14 3) All Saints Episcopal School from Haslet, TX (22-1126) $12,500 (Flight 1) 6.12 (Flight 2) 11 Total Score = 17.12 4) Spring Grove Area Intermediate School - Team 2 from Spring Grove, PA (22-1534) $10,000 (Flight 1) 13 (Flight 2) 6.8 Total Score = 19.8 5) Coleman High School from Coleman, TX (22-1645) $7,500 (Flight 1) 10.12 (Flight 2) 10 Total Score = 20.12 6) Creekview High School - Team 3, from Canton, GA $3,500 (Flight 1) 17.2 (Flight 2) 7 Total Score = 24.2 7) Camas High School from Camas, WA (22-1495) $2.500 (Flight 1) 9, (Flight 2) 16.16 Total Score = 25.16 8) Young Engineers in Action from Hawaiian Gardens, CA (22-1500) $2,500 (Flight 1) 19.64, (Flight 2) 10, Total Score = 29.64 9) Thomas Jefferson High School - Team 9 from Alexandria, VA (22-1764) $2,500 (Flight 1) 7 (Flight 2) 26.8, Total Score = 33.8 10) Tharptown High School from Russellville, AL (Flight 1) 1 (Flight 2) 34.12, Total Score = 35.12 Each school or organization for teams 1-5 also receives $1,000. Each school or organization for teams 6-10 also receives $500.
Today for our Explorers Club series, we are about to be hit by a meteorite of space knowledge as we have a wildly accomplished scientist and researcher entering our atmosphere, Dr. Nina Lanza. She is the Team Lead for Space and Planetary Exploration in Space and Remote Sensing at Los Alamos National Laboratory. She is also the Principle Investigator of the ChemCam instrument on the Mars Curiosity Rover (sadly not sponsored by us) and a team member for the SuperCam instrument on the Mars Perseverance rover. She's an expert on Mars and does a lot of research on meteorites and minerals that can tell us about the interactions between rocks, soil, atmosphere, and water on the planet.Nina Lanza Interview from 4/23/22Dr. Nina Lanza - About Ninahttps://www.ninalanza.com/about-nina/NASA's Curiosity Rover Measures Intriguing Carbon Signature on Marshttps://mars.nasa.gov/news/9113/nasas-curiosity-rover-measures-intriguing-carbon-signature-on-mars/?site=msl2020 Mission Perseverance Rover - SuperCamhttps://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/spacecraft/instruments/supercam/Mount Sinai - Manganesehttps://www.mountsinai.org/health-library/supplement/manganese#:~:text=Manganese%20is%20a%20trace%20mineral,clotting%20factors%2C%20and%20sex%20hormones.Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to get smarter with Calli and Nate — for free! Still curious? Get exclusive science shows, nature documentaries, and more real-life entertainment on discovery+! Go to https://discoveryplus.com/curiosity to start your 7-day free trial. discovery+ is currently only available for US subscribers.Find episode transcripts here: https://curiosity-daily-4e53644e.simplecast.com/episodes/explorers-club-nina-lanza
The Stuph File Program Featuring voice over specialist, David Tyler; Marc Hartzman, author of Chasing Ghosts: A Tour of Our Fascination with Spirits and the Supernatural; & science writer Andrew Fazekas, author of National Geographic Backyard Guide to the Night Sky Download Voice over specialist, David Tyler, who is the imaging voice, both regionally and nationally for CTV News. He's also embarked on another venture called David Tyler Speaks. Marc Hartzman, from WeirdHistorian.com and the author of Chasing Ghosts: A Tour of Our Fascination with Spirits and the Supernatural is back, with the weird story of February which deals with a big telepathy experiment. Science writer, Andrew Fazekas, The Night Sky Guy, author of National Geographic Backyard Guide to the Night Sky, talks about the plans for missions to Mars with Starship from Elon Musk's SpaceX and more. (Patreon Stuph File Program fans, there is a Patreon Reward Extra where Andrew and I go deeper into space to talk about China's 2022 plans for space; the latest on the James Webb Telescope; the Mars Curiosity Rover and its busted wheel and more). Now you can listen to selected items from The Stuph File Program on the new audio service, Audea. A great way to keep up with many of the interviews from the show and take a trip down memory lane to when this show began back in 2009, with over 600 selections to choose from! This week's guest slate is presented by Rob Braide, a broadcaster and my former boss. He was the general manager at Astral Media, which before that was Standard Broadcasting. He's also a Member of Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame. And he's a Board Chair for Studio Bell, which is home of The National Music Centre in Calgary, a place that amplifies the love, sharing and understanding of music.
Using FreeBSD's pkg-audit, 20 year old bug that went to Mars, FreeBSD on Slimbook, LLDB FreeBSD kernel core dump support, Steam on OpenBSD, Cool but obscure X11 tools, and more NOTES This episode of BSDNow is brought to you by Tarsnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/bsdnow) and the BSDNow Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/bsdnow) Headlines Using FreeBSD's pkg-audit (https://klarasystems.com/articles/using-freebsds-pkg-audit-to-investigate-known-security-issues/) The 20 year old bug that went to Mars (http://blog.securitymouse.com/2014/06/raising-lazarus-20-year-old-bug-that.html) It's rare that you come across a bug so subtle that it can last for two decades. But, that's exactly what has happened with the Lempel-Ziv-Oberhumer (LZO) algorithm. Initially written in 1994, Markus Oberhumer designed a sophisticated and extremely efficient compression algorithm so elegant and well architected that it outperforms zlib and bzip by four or five times their decompression speed. I was impressed to find out that his LZO algorithm has gone to the planet Mars on NASA devices multiple times! Most recently, LZO has touched down on the red planet within the Mars Curiosity Rover, which just celebrated its first martian anniversary on Tuesday. In the past few years, LZO has gained traction in file systems as well. LZO can be used in the Linux kernel within btrfs, squashfs, jffs2, and ubifs. A recent variant of the algorithm, LZ4, is used for compression in ZFS for Solaris, Illumos, and FreeBSD. With its popularity increasing, Lempel-Ziv-Oberhumer has been rewritten by many engineering firms for both closed and open systems. These rewrites, however, have always been based on Oberhumer's core open source implementation. As a result, they all inherited a subtle integer overflow. Even LZ4 has the same exact bug, but changed very slightly. Because the LZO algorithm is considered a library function, each specific implementation must be evaluated for risk, regardless of whether the algorithm used has been patched. Why? We are talking about code that has existed in the wild for two decades. The scope of this algorithm touches everything from embedded microcontrollers on the Mars Rover, mainframe operating systems, modern day desktops, and mobile phones. Engineers that have used LZO must evaluate the use case to identify whether or not the implementation is vulnerable, and in what format. News Roundup FreeBSD on Slimbook -- 14 months of updates (https://euroquis.nl/freebsd/2021/12/11/slimbook.html) LLDB FreeBSD kernel core dump support (https://www.moritz.systems/blog/lldb-freebsd-kernel-core-dump-support/) Steam on OpenBSD (https://dataswamp.org/~solene/2021-12-01-openbsd-steam.html) Beastie Bits • [OpenSSH Agent Restriction](http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20211220061017) • [OpenBSD's Clang upgraded to version 13](http://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20211220060327) • [Cool, but obscure X11 tools](http://cyber.dabamos.de/unix/x11/) Tarsnap This weeks episode of BSDNow was sponsored by our friends at Tarsnap, the only secure online backup you can trust your data to. Even paranoids need backups. Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv (mailto:feedback@bsdnow.tv)
Welcome to Scatterbrain Podcast - Episode 87: Glitches In The Matrix. Thanks for hanging tough through a pretty brutally sad period for Ian. But, life is a tragic comedy, and Scatterbrains have to find and create happiness and joy whenever and wherever they can. Grief can't destroy a Scatterbrain! Thank you all for listening and supporting us. It means everything to us! First we blather about the Mars Curiosity Rover, a correction from last episode about Aaron Rodgers, and what would happen if every person on Earth jumped into the oceans of the world. Then we review the new album "Malignant Reality" from the New Jersey trio Replicant. And finally, we have a fun discussion on so-called glitches in the matrix. De Ja Vu, missing time, premonitions, synchronicity, birds and airplanes frozen in mid-air, and Dan and Ian's own experiences with odd and inexplicable happenings. Welcome to the simulation. Get used to it. This was a really fun episode to record. We hope you enjoy it! Scatterbrain Podcast with Ian and Dan. Available on all major platforms that support podcasts, as well as Twitter and Instagram.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
The Astronomy, Technology, and Space Science News Podcast.SpaceTime Series 24 Episode 102*Perseverance collects its first samples of the red planetIt was a case of second time lucky as NASA's Mars Perseverance Rover successfully collected a sample of red planet rock for the first time.*Curiosity celebrates nine years on MarsNASA's Mars Curiosity Rover has just drilled its 32nd hole into the surface of the red planet marking nine years of exploration in Gale Crater.*Will it be safe for humans to fly to Mars?Once you have all the technical issues ironed out – the biggest problem facing humans return to the Moon or for that matter undertaking the far longer journey to the red planet Mars will be radiation.*September SkywatchThe September Equinox, the constellation Capricorn and the Aurigids and Epsilon Perseids meteor showers are among the highlights of the September night skies.For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ Your support is needed...SpaceTime is an independently produced podcast (we are not funded by any government grants, big organisations or companies), and we're working towards becoming a completely listener supported show...meaning we can do away with the commercials and sponsors. We figure the time can be much better spent on researching and producing stories for you, rather than having to chase sponsors to help us pay the bills.That's where you come in....help us reach our first 1,000 subscribers...at that level the show becomes financially viable and bills can be paid without us breaking into a sweat every month. Every little bit helps...even if you could contribute just $1 per month. It all adds up.By signing up and becoming a supporter at the $5 or more level, you get immediate access to over 240 commercial-free, double, and triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. You also receive all new episodes on a Monday rather than having to wait the week out. Subscribe via Patreon or Supercast (you get a month's free trial with Supercast to see if it's really for you or not)....and share in the rewards. Details at Patreon www.patreon.com/spacetimewithstuartgary or Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ Details at https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com or www.bitesz.com Sponsor Details:This episode is brought to you with the support of NameCheap…cheap domain names is just the beginning of your own online presence. We use them and we love them. Get our special deal…just visit: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/namecheap and help support the show.
I, for one, bow down to our robot overlords. Robots have been all around us for many years. Why do we have such an obsession for these audacious automata? Jay and Shua look at robots in movies, TV, and life in general on Enjoy Stuff. Bang your head with some heavy metal! Robots have become a regular part of our life. We look at the history of robots and how they have programmed their way into our pop culture. This week on Enjoy Stuff, it's The Life Robotic with 5T3V3-Z1550U. News -The purchase of Casa Bonita by Matt Stone and Trey Parker is official -Mexico will soon be able to enjoy Krispy Kreme Donut Cereal -Dress up for breakfast with some Fruity and Cocoa Pebbles Cereal makeup What we're Enjoying Jay and Shua are both tremendously enjoying the Apple+ series Ted Lasso with Jason Sudekis. It has heart and humor with some great messages thrown in. Enjoy Life Where did robots come from? How long have they been around? It may surprise you to find out that the first automated machine dates back to 1737. Though ‘Digesting Duck' may have been a far cry from Boston Dynamic's Spot robot, it was still the humble beginnings of centuries of mechanized men. Once we got our first glimpse of a non-biological creature doing its thing, we couldn't get enough. Soon they were beeping their way into books, movies, toys, and everyday life. We use them to entertain, to do jobs that are too dangerous for humans, and for companionship. (I love you, Roomba!) To head off the imminent threat of a Cylon takeover, Isaac Asimov created three laws that should keep them in their place. But writers have been challenging that concept in many stories ever since. But what makes a robot a robot? Could it be classified as an android or a cyborg? What kinds of robots do you have a magnetic attraction to? Johnny 5? Wall-E? Or do you have more dark tastes and would like to snuggle up with the Terminator? Did you play with robot toys growing up? Or did you wait until we had real robots of today, like the Mars Curiosity Rover? We would love to hear your thoughts on those plastic pals that are fun to be with. Let us know in the Discord channel or send us an email to podcast@enjoystuff.com
Astrophysicist Dr. Hakeem Oluseyi returns to the podcast! He and Chris talk about science education, the Mars Curiosity Rover, and cross-pollinating your career with different interests. Hakeem also talks about his upcoming memoir, "A QUANTUM LIFE: My Unlikely Journey from the Street to the Stars" out June 15th and the new season of "How the Universe Works", Wednesdays at 8pm on The Science Channel and streaming on Discovery+!
It's been 8 years since NASA's Mars Curiosity Rover celebrated its first birthday on Mars. Join Murray and Tamika for today's Flashcast as they discuss this $2 billion space vehicle. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's been 8 years since NASA's Mars Curiosity Rover celebrated its first birthday on Mars. Join Murray and Tamika for today's Flashcast as they discuss this $2 billion space vehicle. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
“They were a bunch of adventurous kids, trying to mix chemicals at Caltech and see which one blows up more. This is the story of JPL." Born and raised in Lebanon, Dr. Charles Elachi always looked out for what's beyond his mundane life in the city of Zahlé. After studying physics in France, Elachi travelled west. In 1970, he joined NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory where he worked on the construction and operation of planetary robotic spacecrafts. After getting 4 master's degrees and a PhD from Caltech, Elachi became the director of JPL. Under his tenure, NASA launched Genesis, the Spitzer Space Telescope, and most importantly the Mars Curiosity Rover. He then became the Vice President of Caltech and now is a professor emeritus of Electrical Engineering and Planetary Science there. He wants the young space enthusiasts to know that JPL can be their "serious playground". With innovation and multiple mistakes, JPL managed to send the most technologically advanced rover to Mars. So what's stopping you? Listen to "All Roads Lead to Space (feat. Dr. Charles Elachi)" this Friday on all streaming platforms.
NASA engineer Bobak Ferdowsi's work — and hair — thrust him into the national spotlight following the successful deployment of NASA's Mars Curiosity Rover. He's taking us inside the arc of his career, the make-or-break moments behind Curiosity, and his rise to overnight celebrity.Modulus https://twitter.com/modulusmagHostsBrian McManus https://twitter.com/TheBrianMcManusStephanie Sammann https://twitter.com/stephaniesammaSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
David Oh is the former flight director for the Mars Curiosity rover, and current systems engineering manager and system architect at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) for the upcoming Psyche launch. During this episode David shares his insights and experience working with large engineering teams on (literally) mission critical systems and subsystems. He also shares what it is like living on “Martian time” (with his family, no less), as well as the indescribable excitement and fulfillment one feels when experiencing the success of a space mission at 2am in the control room knowing you and your team are the first people on earth to learn something new about our neighboring planets. Update - David asked me to include this quick correction to the podcast: when the Curiosity rover landed on Mars in 2012, it actually took 14 minutes (not 7 minutes as stated in the interview) for the signal from the rover to reach the Earth. It takes seven minutes to land on Mars, so when we received the first data showing the rover had entered the Martian atmosphere, it had actually already been on the surface of Mars for seven minutes. For more information, see the video “Seven Minutes of Terror” on YouTube. The Being An Engineer podcast (not affiliated with or endorsed by NASA) is brought to you by Pipeline Design & Engineering. Pipeline partners with medical device engineering teams who need turnkey equipment such as cycle test machines, custom test fixtures, automation equipment, assembly jigs, inspection stations and more. You can find us on the web at www.testfixturedesign.com and www.designtheproduct.com NASA, Systems engineering, Mars Curiosity Rover, Psyche, Martian time, JPL, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
E236 Geologist and NASA/JPL Scientist human, Dr. Fred Calef, is the geospatial information scientist for the Mars Curiosity Rover and maps the terrain of the red planet. We discuss his work, the transpermia theory, rocks, microbes, Rovers, humans living off-Earth and what I’d look like if I’d been born on Mars. For more information and […]
Wes talks with Shawn about comet NEOWISE, volcanoes on Venus, solar activity, and the Mars Curiosity Rover's Summer road trip
When Nagin Cox was born in Bangalore, India she couldn’t have imagined she’d one day have an asteroid named after her. This space-obsessed kid grew up in Kansas City, and Kuala Lumpur. Her experiences as a girl in a multicultural household showed her how easily we separate ourselves based on gender, race, or nationality, and inspired her to do something that brings people together. Now as a Tactical Mission Lead on the Mars Curiosity Rover, international and TedTalk speaker, Nagin loves to share the wonders of space with the world.There are a lot of ways you can get involved with space:JPLThe Mars Lander ProgramYou can follow Nagin's work on Facebook and Instagram and TwitterYou can check out her TedxTalk: What Time Is It On Mars?Find inspiration with Carl Sagan's Cosmos, or Star Trek, or Chesley BonestellLearn more about Nagin's favorite organization: Human Rights WatchLearn more about the self defense training where Nagin and I met
Class of 1991 Flinn Scholar Michelle Minitti is the principal of Framework, a consultancy specializing in planetary-science research and Mars mission operations. Michelle is a co-investigator for the Mars Curiosity Rover, working with members of the engineering and operations teams utilizing the Mars Hand Lens Imager and the Mars Descent Imager projects; as co-investigator for the Mars 2020 Rover, she contributes to planning for operations of the Wide Angle Topographic Sensor for Operations and Engineering (WATSON) investigation. Michelle is a graduate of the University of Arizona and earned a Ph.D. in geological sciences from Brown University. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ajay-karpur/message
This week on Science I look back at some of the more exciting news stories to come from space news in the last month. From NASA tweeting about some spooky galactic imagery to a new selfie from the Mars Curiosity Rover, there was a lot to touch on. Plus, 20 new moons were found orbiting Saturn and you can help name them! Also, the new Artemis spacesuit designs have been unveiled and the historic All Women spacewalk happened to great success.
Supporters: Patreon: Michael M. Subscribe Star: Charles R. M. PayPal: Warren Z. Kory B. Philip A Dick S. Michael V. Felix S. Stanley P. Nick W. #### NEWS #### Bill Mahr Conspiracy Rant: VIDEO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bV7VuPtveVs Male Genital Mutilation is a Joke on Talk Show : VIDEO https://youtu.be/G-kdXGfxY6o We Tried It: The $650 ‘Penis Facial’ That Sandra Bullock and Cate Blanchett Swear By https://people.com/style/we-tried-it-cate-blanchett-sandra-bullock-penis-facial/amp/ MT Tech professor claims UFOs are time machines from future : VIDEO https://kxlf.com/news/local-news/2019/03/23/mt-tech-professor-claims-ufos-are-time-machines-from-future/ The UFO community still believes — and science is starting to listen https://www.philly.com/news/nation-world/ufo-sightings-believers-mufon-unidentified-flying-objects-outer-space-20190322.html Life on Mars shock claim as ‘growing FUNGI’ spotted in Mars Curiosity Rover snaps https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/8719987/life-on-mars-fungi-mushroom-mars-curiosity-rover-nasa/ Experiments Suggest Humans Can Directly Observe the Quantum https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/sensorium/201903/experiments-suggest-humans-can-directly-observe-the-quantum Clean Up In Aisle 3, Ghost In Aisle 4 At Wilmington Market Basket https://patch.com/massachusetts/wilmington/clean-aisle-3-ghost-aisle-4-wilmington-market-basket Chupacabra Kills Man in Honduras https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=es&u=https://tn8.tv/america-latina/471527-extrano-ser-mata-dos-campesinos-en-honduras-video/&prev=search Trump Plans Executive Order To Study Risks Of EMP Attack https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-03-26/trump-plans-executive-order-study-risks-emp-attack Teen Pays Her Way Through College by Helping Chinese Parents Name Their Babies https://www.odditycentral.com/news/teen-pays-her-way-through-college-by-helping-chinese-parents-name-their-babies.html Man Spikes Co-Workers’ Drinks with LSD Because They Had “Negative Energy” https://www.odditycentral.com/news/man-spikes-co-workers-drinks-with-lsd-because-they-had-negative-energy.html Russian City Hosts Painful Face-Slapping Championship https://www.odditycentral.com/events/russian-city-hosts-painful-face-slapping-championship.html Human Contact Is Now a Luxury Good https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/23/sunday-review/human-contact-luxury-screens.html U.S. Mercenaries Arrested in Haiti Were Part of a Half-Baked Scheme to Move $80 Million for Embattled President https://www.cryptogon.com/?p=54620 Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. ▀▄▀▄▀ LINKS ▀▄▀▄▀ ► Phone: 614-388-9109 ► Website: http://obdmpod.com ► Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/obdm ► Subscribe Star: https://www.subscribestar.com/obdm ► YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/ourbigdumbmouth ► YouTube 2nd Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrj4SPfo5ySkEnyaQAW5zvA ► Twitter: https://twitter.com/obdmpod ► Instagram: obdmpod ► RSS: http://ourbigdumbmouth.libsyn.com/rss ► iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/our-big-dumb-mouth/id261189509?mt=2 ► Twitter: https://twitter.com/obdmpod ► Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/obdmnews ► Everything we do could be considered performance art ► Satire and Parody are often used
Spencer from Seattle talks Space We had a cosmic conversation with Spencer Anunsen (first time guest, long time listener), who is a mechanical engineer at Synchronous. Synchronous is a company doing work in the space industry whose website boasts the tagline, “building the barely possible”. Spencer talks building trebuchets, is actually from Seattle, and has great taste in beer. We talked with him at length about his childhood in Seattle (how weird!), his work with the Mars Curiosity Rover project as an intern at Jet Propulsion Laboratories, the privatized space industry, the point of mining asteroids, billionaires and their rockets, future space missions and much, much more. It was a hell of a time. Spencer ONLINE Linkedin Also if you want to tell us about all the questions you would ask Spencer, we’d love to hear them or forward them on. Just write to us at seattlesworstpodcast@gmail.com Links See more links in the show minutes. Hayabusa 2 Twitter: https://twitter.com/haya2e_jaxa Spacecraft my company (Synchronous) is contributing to: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_2020 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psyche_(spacecraft) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europa_Clipper Scott Manley Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxzC4EngIsMrPmbm6Nxvb-A Space News Sites: https://spacenews.com/ http://www.parabolicarc.com/ https://spaceflightnow.com/ Show Notes Podcasters (Stephen, Sean, Grant, Ben) 2m - Intro 4m - Old Business 5m - Sean is Having a Baby/Full Term at the Midterms 7m - Anxiety Level: Carseat 8m - Kavanaugh 9m - S Blocks the News 13m - KBF 15m - Men Need to be Afraid 18m - Space! 19m - Grant Does a Dramatic Reading – Some People are Saying It's the Best, Big League 24m - Trebuchets 29m - Careers in Space 30m - Book Recommendation – Roving Mars 34m - Book Recommendation – Sex & Rockets 37m - Rovers in Movies 38m - Working on Curiosity 47m - The Stress of Watching a Project Launch 51m - Grant’s Dating Space Program 53m - Asteroid Mining 55m - Startup Culture 58m - Spencer's Work was Featured on the Daily Show 62m - Privatized Space Industry financial models 66m - Upcoming Space Missions - What Mission Should We Follow? Mars 2020 Parker Solar Probe Mars Quakes Europa Clipper Asteroid Stuff (Hyabusa II) 73m - Stephen Edits/F Tesla 74m - The Garage 75m - Who Gets Paid? Why Spend Money in Space? 76m - Decadal Survey 78m - Private Space Companies/Public Space Relies on Private Industry 83m - Failure as a Positive Permission Structure 84m - Insane Copper Rod Project 87m - The Space Garbage Island/Space is Cluttered AF 92m - Spencer Goes Deep on our Podcast Space Project 95m - Radiation in Space 97m - Some People Say MIT is the UMR of the East 101m - Mushrooms/Paul Stamets 104m - Is Space an Earth-Friendly Industry? 106m - Initiative 1631: Yes 107m - What to Say to a Person Who Thinks Space Exploration is Worthless 110m - Resources for Following Space Stuff Special Acknowledgements/Mentions RIP Paul Allen Corrections It was incorrectly stated that Orbital-ATK was bought by Lockheed-Martin (46th minute) when it was actually bought by Northrop-Grumman Hashtag City #Seattle #SPACE #EuropaClipper #SpaceForce #billionaires #trebuchets #MarsRover #Curiosity #Mars2020 #PaulStamets #mushrooms #CarbonTax #PrivatizedSpace #Kavanaugh #Kavanope #Birth #Paternity #FirstChild #DramaticReading #RovingMars #SexAndRockets #DailyShow #SpacePioneers #NeilDeGrasseTyson #NDT #Tesla #SpaceGarbage #YesOn1631 #PlanetaryResources #SynchronousLLC #JPL #JetPropulsionLab #NASA #RPI #Rensselaer
Building instruments to search for the building blocks of life in the rocks of Mars is no small feat. These gadgets must endure spaceflight, landing on the Martian surface, intense radiation, wild swings in temperature, uneven surfaces and then beam data collected millions of kilometers away back to expectant researchers on Earth. In this episode, NASA geochemist Jennifer Stern gives an insider's view of the ups and downs of testing and deploying one of these instruments - a mass spectrometer used on the Mars Curiosity Rover. Listen to Jennifer describe testing this instrument in some of the harshest environments on Earth, including the Atacama Desert in Chile and Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago near North Pole. Jennifer's path to NASA was an adventurous one that found her sampling methane in Florida landfills as a doctoral student, braving anoxic caves in Mexico, and a hazing ritual that included singing death metal songs in Norway.
Trump is keeping North Korea guessing about next week’s summit in Singapore. Kurt Schlichter joins me to wrap up the week as we talk Mueller, Comey, North Korea, and MSNBC’s Joy Reid. The Mars Curiosity Rover makes an interesting discovery. And as Triple Crown hopeful Justify heads into tomorrow’s Belmont Stakes, we find out he has a secretive owner that might make conservatives think twice about betting on him.
Astrophiz 59 Dr Ian Musgrave ~ Astrophotography 101 A full-length feature episode on astrophotography and astroimaging with Dr Ian Musgrave of Astroblogger fame. Ian is a University toxicology lecturer, amateur astronomer and astrophotographer, and he explains how to plan for a shoot, using telescopes, point&shoot cameras, and smartphone astrophotography, some worthwhile targets, some imaging software to try, and the sky visualisation softwares he uses. Then he presents his regular segment ‘What’s Up Doc? where he tells us what's up in the evening, night and morning skies for the next two weeks, and how, when and where to look to find the asteroid Vesta as a naked eye object. In the news: Mars Curiosity Rover discovers organics on Mars, and Mars methane levels are found to be seasonal, and we inch closer to a conclusion that life *may* be ubiquitous. However we are reminded that ‘organics’ means carbon compounds that are also found in comets, asteroids, Ceres, Titan, Pluto, meteorites and in interstellar space. So no, Washington Post, NASA did not find ‘traces of ancient life on Mars’ Follow @ianfmusgrave on Twitter and get his weekly observation tips on his astrobloggger website and on his Southern Skywatch blog. Just put Astroblogger and Southern Skywatch into your search engine. Ian's blogs come up #1 in searches. Follow @Astrophiz on Twitter, FB & Insta Subscribe to our fabulous podcast on iTunes or Soundcloud or your fav podcatcher
Weird Wednesday is here, and I've got a truck load of strange facts for you - from dog farts and silly law suits, to VHS and the Mars Curiosity Rover.
We're back with video this week and our double-fisted pun guns are locked and loaded! So acquire the target and shoot to thrill! Wait, did I just quote AC/DC? Anyway, here are the topics for this week! All topics and times are approximate and not necessarily indicative of the actual topic of discussion. It's almost like I put these here to get closer to some arbitrary SEO word counter! https://youtu.be/7ZOBLQJVmMk Miitopia | 0:05:01 MSI, Asus, computer parts | 0:18:46 Megabots | 0:26:44 Suidobashi | 0:26:53 Eagle Prime mk. 3 | 0:27:30 Kuratas | 0:27:40 China and its Monkey King | 0:37:05 Maker Faire | 0:41:08 Makezine, Make Magazine | 0:41:38 NASA Planetary Protection Officer | 0:48:56 9 yr old applies for job | 0:48:59 Double-fisted pun guns | 0:51:43 Peter Sunde, co-founder of Pirate Bay, says we've lost the internet to capitalists | 0:52:06 Mark Zuckerberg | 0:53:29 Net Neutrality | 0:56:45 Pirating | 1:01:50 Happy birthday to the Mars Curiosity Rover | 1:04:15 Ready Player One trailer | 1:05:57 Source Material | 1:16:12 Kung Fury | 1:16:53 Solar Eclipse | 1:20:36 Shadowrun | 1:35:31 #MIITOPIA, #STUPIDGAME, #CANTSTOPWONTSTOP Interested in writing geek-centric articles? Got a fever to let your inner writer out? Email us with an article to be published for thousands of readers to see! Also visit the bazaar! http://www.duelingogres.com/bazaar-dueling-ogres-store/ SMASH ALL THOSE LIKES AND SHARES AND SUBSCRIBES FOREVER! They help us stay alive one more day! Literally, there are larger ogres over us. They're ruthless and terrifying. We cry tears of blood! CALL or TEXT us so we can play/read your question on air @ !! (Intro uses the "" track by Kevin Macleod (). Licensed under . Outtro: , licensed under .) [widget id="text-6"]
Tot i que en Dani ens torni a fallar altra volta, tornem a repassar l’actualitat científica i entrevistem Clara Suñer, una de les organitzadores de la “Marxa per la ciència” a Barcelona (http://scientistsdatingforum.org/manifesto-march-for-science-barcelona/), una iniciativa que es va celebrar a més de 500 ciutats del món el passat 22 d’abril. A les recomanacions de la xarxa tenim: - El canal de Youtube de Joe Hanson: It's Okay To Be Smart (https://www.youtube.com/user/itsokaytobesmart) - Els comptes d’Instagram de: National Geographic (@natgeo https://www.instagram.com/natgeo/), de la National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) (@NOAAfisheries https://www.instagram.com/noaafisheries/) i del Mars Curiosity Rover (@marscuriosity http://instagram.com/marscuriosity) I acabem amb “La Rumba del Temps” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20vdHUvPDs0) de Joan Miquel Oliver, del seu últim àlbum, que fa referència a la Teoria de la Relativitat Especial.
Rob Manning is a man of many hats at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California-- including the chief engineer of the Mars Curiosity Rover. Rob is well-positioned to give us an overview of what's happening on Mars now, and what we can expect in the years ahead. Full show notes are available at http://ktla.com/frankbuckleyinterviews.
The Mars Curiosity Rover has an impressive suite of instruments, but none incite as much excitement as ChemCam, a laser/camera combo that vaporizes rocks and analyzes their components. ChemCam is firing more than it ever has before, and Nina Lanza, a staff scientist on its team, is helping make some pretty remarkable discoveries with it. On this episode, Nina tells us about a high concentration of manganese recently uncovered that tells us a lot about Mars' past, and suggests that it might have been complete with a lot more oxygen than we initially thought. Links Press Release for Nina Lanza's paper Nina's Twitter Account ChemCam's website Video showing ChemCam in action Curiosity's website Los Alamos National Lab WeMartians Theme Song is "RetroFuture" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
The Moon Landing. The Mars Curiosity Rover. Star Trek Beyond. Do those names put chills in/on your SPACE loving SPINE?! I hope so you BONERS, because here we are again dear listener LOVERS with a Probably Sounds Awful Podcast! This one is FILLED with SPACE ( and YES Brian Elon Musk ) and Science Talk! … More PSA Podcast Episode 41: Top News, Space Talk and The Sickest We Have Ever Been
In the first episode of Spark Science, we talk with Dr. Melissa Rice about the Mars Curiosity Rover, the geology of Mars, Missions to Mars and Mars related movies!Image Courtesy of NASA
Buy his book on Amazon - http://lon.tv/6bjb6 (affiliate link) Rob Manning is an experienced engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He's an expert on landing spacecraft on the surface of Mars utilizing very creative techniques like airbags (Pathfinder, Spirit and Opportunity) and the skycrane maneuver on Curiosity. Manning recently published a book Mars Rover Curiosity: An Inside Account from Curiosity's Chief Engineer where he details the very difficult challenges involved with designing a spacecraft that lands itself on another planet. I really enjoyed speaking with him and I hope you enjoy the interview! Subscribe to my email list to get a weekly digest of upcoming videos! - http://lon.tv/email Visit the Lon.TV store to purchase some of my previously reviewed items! http://lon.tv/store Want to help the channel? Start a Patreon subscription! http://lon.tv/patreon Follow me on Facebook! http://facebook.com/lonreviewstech Follow me on Twitter! http://twitter.com/lonseidman Follow me on Google+ http://lonseidman.com
Tin Star (Roaring Brook Press) Skylight Books' very own Cecil Castellucci returns to launch her newest YA novel, a sci-fi adventure for the ages. Cecil will follow a reading from her novel with a Q&A with JPL scientist Steve Collins! On their way to start a new life, Tula and her family travel on the "Prairie Rose," a colony ship headed to a planet in the outer reaches of the galaxy. All is going well until the ship makes a stop at a remote space station, the Yertina Feray, and the colonist's leader, Brother Blue, beats Tula within an inch of her life. An alien, Heckleck, saves her and teaches her the ways of life on the space station. When three humans crash land onto the station, Tula's desire for escape becomes irresistible, and her desire for companionship becomes unavoidable. But just as Tula begins to concoct a plan to get off the space station and kill Brother Blue, everything goes awry, and suddenly romance is the farthest thing from her mind.Cecil Castellucci is a two-time MacDowell Colony fellow, an award-winning author of five books for young adults, and the YA and children's book editor of the Los Angeles Review of Books. Born in New York City, Cecil lives in Los Angeles. For the research of Tin Star, Cecil attended LaunchPad, a NASA funded workshop intended to teach writers of science fiction about the most up-to-date and correct space science. Steve Collins is an Attitude Control engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Most recently Cruise ACS System Engineer for the Mars Curiosity Rover, Steve has worked on numerous NASA/JPL missions including Epoxi, Dawn, Deep Impact, MER, Deep Space One, Galileo and Mars Observer. In flight, Steve's job includes keeping the spacecraft pointed in the right direction, performing trajectory corrections and figuring out "what the heck just happened??" When he's not flying a robotic spacecraft around the solar system, Steve can be found playing soccer, racing his Miata, jamming on the Theremin with the band Artichoke, or acting on-stage with TACIT, Caltech's resident theater company.
Where we cover SCIENCE happening live, as the Mars Curiosity Rover lands to a huge reaction. We also talk RBIs, we preview the 49ers, and Tim doesn’t like Pete’s line of questioning.
This week we're considering the Mars Curiosity Rover with Dr. Sheldon Moon. We'll also welcome back Leslie and Constance Kincaid for our favorite segment Consider the Source.
On this week's RAWtalk, Stephen and I discuss some of the major news stories from the prior week. SIGMA finally announced pricing for its much anticipated 18-35 F1.8 lens. A photographer is suing BuzzFeed for $3.9 Million. Is this the Canon 3D in this blurry photos??? Rumors are flying that Adobe may drop the price of Photoshop and Creative Cloud soon and NASA gives us a first-hand look at what cameras are on the Mars Curiosity Rover. Get ready for another action-packed, levels busting Flying Solo Portion of RAWtalk where I answer your questions directly.
1:48 Slicks trip to Korea 17:17 Xbox One, OR SHOULD I SAY - 180 - HAR HAR 24:40 Steam to possibly allow friends to share/borrow games! 34:30 Microsoft offering schools/offices 199$ RT Tablets, Apple scores $30Mill LA school district deal 39:30 Mars Curiosity Rover returns billion pixel photo of awesomeness 49:18 How should we work with Noctua? 59:04 Erotic Adventure with Occulus Rift 1:01:08 Austrian computer companies talk to eachother 1:05:12 AMD 5GHZ CPU! Will not sell through retail... :( 1:15:27 Best CPU's for the money 1:21:18 Nvidia Licenses out Kepler Arch 1:31:10 China now has the worlds fastest super computer... by a lot 1:34:42 Build Log of the Week
Gil takes The Mutant Season on a field trip to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory! He gets a tour of the campus and then sits down with Bobak Ferdowsi, the flight director of the Mars Curiosity Rover to talk about Mars, spaceships and life on other planets!
Guest: Rod Pyle. Topic: Destination Mars
Listen Up! Welcome to podcast number 205. Isn't that how many electoral votes Mitt Romey got?Happy Thanksgiving!Rich corrects an error from the last show where he incorrectly called the Big Green song "Disruption," when it is really "Disruptive"Paul discusses Land Of The LostWe discuss the Hostess snack foods situationPaul Saw Mitt Romney at a gas station. Or what is really Elvis?We discuss the Elmo/Kevin Clash SituationTune 1: The Narrator by the DoneforsJohan Bruyneel and his lavish living with ill-gotten moniesJohn McCain missed an inteligence briefingPapa John Schnatter changes his storyThe Johan Bruyneel Twitter post that was the inspiration for this topicTune 2: Ain't She Sweet as performed by Miss Rose & Her Rhythm Percolators (written by Milton Ager and Jack Yellen)We discuss the Mars Curiosity Rover discovery, that hadn't been released yetWill you be shopping on Black Friday in order to be able to see the Walmart Strike?See you on the flip side!Some of these sounds were used in the making of this podcast.
NASA hosted a media teleconference on Wednesday, September 19 to provide a status update on the Curiosity rover's mission to Mars' Gale Crater. During the briefing researchers discussed an unusual football-size rock that will be the first for the rover's arm to examine. Participants in the teleconference were Richard Cook, JPL; Mars Science Laboratory Project Manager, John Grotzinger, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena; Mars Science Laboratory Project Scientist, Mark Lemmon, Texas A&M University, College Station; Mars Science Laboratory Science Team Co-Investigator.
Potato Revolution begins with one word. That word is potato. And then it goes on. ...And on. ...And on. Come along with Andy and Mog as they shed some light on the all the important issues (and some of the unimportant ones too) in a desperate attempt to figure out what everything is all about. Season 2 was a hell of a ride. Recorded: 9th September, 2012 Doc of Dirty Chapters returns to the studio as we share our views on Gina Rinehart (who can get fucked), the adventures of the Mars Curiosity Rover, and Mog's socialising difficulties, and we Skype Kieran Eaton to talk about the difference between the comedy scene of Melbourne and Perth. Topics for discussion: Gina Rinehart (Can Get Fucked), Mars Curiosity Rover, Total Recall, Socialising Difficulties, Heraldry. GUEST: Murdoch Anderson, Kieran Eaton.
NASA hosted a media teleconference at 10 a.m. PDT (1 p.m. EDT) on Thursday, Sept. 6, to provide a status update on the Curiosity rover's mission to Mars' Gale Crater. The Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft is one month into a two-year mission to investigate whether conditions have been favorable for microbial life and preserving clues in the rocks about possible past life.
We have Minecraft fever! Well, three of us do anyway. We yell at those young whippersnappers, adore Weird Al, and try to get Gungam Style out of our heads!Not sure if you saw this yet but the pirate bay is launching a free VPN called PrivitizeVPN.Just thought you may be interested.regards,Mike Who should be held responsible if your online info is stolen?I think it depends. Social sites it should be a matter of common sence, if you post content you relinquish ownership in some cases. If however you store content on a site specifically designed for content storage and or backup then that site should be held responsible. For sites like email then you use their service in good faith that they can keep your account safe, so yes they should be held responsible also. All financial or personal data sites like medical info should also be held responsible. If you download something for free, buy something from an unknown app developer, or use opensource software then you can only blaim yourself should anything happen. Likening this to the lemonade thing, if you buy little susies lemonade its something usually made by a child so you are accepting the risk of getting sick, its common sence. If however you go to a fast food or reseraunt and buy a soda or something then its supposed to be a drink from a reputable source and your buying it in good faith that it wont make you sick, and therfore the resteraunt or fast foos place should be held responsible. Its basically common sence law.Sorry about the spelling, my tablet doesn't seem to have, or I can' find the spell checker. I have auto correct off cause it was driving me nuts. (Sort drive)Thanks, Toven. Headlines:Android needs a new imageSony has a big-ass TV. We want Sony's big-ass TV.LulzSec . . . we're still after them?Joss Whedon to bring S.H.I.E.L.D to televisionIran is now cut off from World of Warcraft. War starting in 3....2....1.....No one knows what the cloud is!The Zune is all but dead(more)Java has some problemsSamsung trades a Galaxy S III for an epic drawing of a dragon A wild Trogdor appears in the comments.Fast Lane:The HD photos taken by the Mars Curiosity Rover have been stitched together at Gigapan, allowing people to zoom in and inspect the Martian landscape for themselves. Unfortunately, it also lets people snap pictures and leave comments about how every rock looks like an alien.Move over Tupac! The Republican National Convention actually made a holographic Ronald Reagan but shelved it at the last minute due to fears it might upstage GOP candidate Mitt Romney. I’m actually not making any of that up.The day is for Bond, James Bond. On October 5th the world will celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the world’s greatest spy.Bic has come out with a pen specifically designed for women prompting much ridicule online. What? Men with small hands don’t need to write too? And why is it that things are just “for women?” Yogurt? I like to poop just as much as my wife, maybe more...Talking Point: The increasing speed of technology adoption and early adoptersZuke’s potential favorite: What in the name of all that is holy . . . ?Stark’s Favorite: What was Patrick Stewart and Simon Pegg doing during the London Olympics?Zohner’s Favorite: Lego Serenity is AWESOMESchmidty’s Favorite: The best Old Spice Ad Ever! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
PodGravy 206: Noodle-Baking Time! We're baaaaack... Sorry about the unexpected week off, but the gang's all here and ready to settle down to business this week. It's a heavy dose of Inner and Outer Space, as they talk about the Mars Curiosity Rover, the merits of exploring our universe, and our efforts to live long enough to see it all. Plus, we touch on Kody's "alleged" digital hoarding problem, the mysteries of Usenet vs. bittorrent, and the new pull-string doll: "Optimistic Coolness"...
An update about the Mars Science Laboratory mission including questions from the media. As well new images from the Curiosity rover have been released as part of a NASA teleconference that took place on Friday, Aug. 17, 2012. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/telecon/index.html
This month's Micropod looks at the possibility of microbial life in space. Dr Louisa Preston talks about extremophiles (or extreme-lovers as she calls them) which live in hostile environments on earth. These places are extremely hot, acidic, cold, alkaline and can be used as potential analogues for other-worldly environments. Then we hear from BBC Horizon star, Dr Lewis Dartnell, who chats about the Mars Curiosity Rover that's due to land on the red planet on 6 August 2012. He tells us about his use of Raman spectroscopy to look for organic molecules and microbes, as well as the ExoMars rover that will fly this instrument to Mars. Look out for more on Astrobiology in the September issue of Microbiologist.
The Mars Curiosity Rover is one the most ambitious projects in human history -- and it's also taking one of humanity's strangest road trips. Listen in to learn more about the Curiosity. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
An update about the Mars Science Laboratory mission including questions from the media. As well new images from the Curiosity rover have been released as part of a NASA teleconference that took place on Tuesday, Aug. 14, 2012. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/telecon/
First ever edition of “Georges’ Thoughts” lol not exactly pro but not bad for being fully composed on my iPhone (yes every little bit of it lol) so in my day to day work and home life I figure what the hay, go broadcaster on my lunch break hehe. This is really a template im working on and its time to record and start uploading. This Webcast topic is the Mars Rover landing, its short and sweet to test audio quality and bandwidth restrictions.
The heat shield is off, and the supersonic parachute is deployed - this episode of the CultCast is ready for touchdown! On this new ep., we ponder the Mars Curiosity Rover, and how a team full of Mac users landed it safely on another world. Then, let us regale you with the tale of how one very well-known tech writer got all his devices erased when hackers stole his Apple ID. We'll tell you how you can prevent your datas from getting thieved and which backup strategies we use to keep ours safe. And finally, Facebook questions! You told us what you wanted us to cover on our new Facebook page, we're ready to work! ------------------------- Thanks To Our Sponsors ------------------------- DigiDNA, makers of DiskAid 5, the iPhone, iPad, and iPod transfer tool for Mac and PC. Try DiskAid 5 for free at http://DigiDNA.net, and save 30% on a license at checkout with code THECULTCAST at checkout. -- And thanks to Pimp My Screen, the app that makes it super easy to customize your iOS device with different home and lock screens and so much more. New and exclusive art is being added daily, and Pimp My Screen is half-off right now on the iOS App Store — grab it for just 99 cents!
Anthropologist Dr. Sasha Lessin and UFO researcher Janet Kira Lessin share with hosts Rich and Marla, the ancient history of the 8-foot-tall humans who built a rocket base to transship gold from Earth to the planet Nibiru to powder and scatter in the air as a shield that planet's atmosphere. Sasha details the exile, death and commemmoration of the deposed King Alalu on Mars, the subject of the statue head at the Martian site, Cyndonia, before NASA bombed the statue down to a mesa. Dr. Lessin contends NASA (= Never A Straight Answer)is misleading the public re Mar's history and is covering up the destruction by a missile--documented in photographs--of the Phoebos 2 probe. Janet relates several experiencer/ET contactee episodes she and her clients experienced. Dr. L. gives a guided ET-contact experience for listeners to try or to awaken repressed earlier experiences. The gang kids around about alien plucking. Enjoy Renegade Nation Listen to Sky Pilot Radio 60's 70's and the 80's http://www.skypilotradio.com
We saw the Mars Curiosity Rover successfully land on Mars. It was an incredible moment and Sam Ebertz and Ryan Rampersad reflect on our thoughts during those moments and what we thinking will become of this landing and more to come.
Since the mid 1970s six spacecraft (Viking 1 & 2, Sojourner, Opportunity, Spirit and Phoenix) have successfully landed on the surface of Mars. In probably the most audacious, breathtaking and risky space missions, in less than two days, another Mars Curiosity Rover will arrive on Mars. Using a technique never used before, NASA has described […] The post Episode 55: 4 August 2012: Mars Curiosity Rover appeared first on AstrotalkUK.
NASA launched the Mars Curiosity rover to the red planet on November 26, 2011. Read more at CTTechjunkie.com.