Podcasts about nasa's perseverance

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Best podcasts about nasa's perseverance

Latest podcast episodes about nasa's perseverance

英语每日一听 | 每天少于5分钟
NASA Continues Mars Helicopter Experiments, Tests New Design on Earth

英语每日一听 | 每天少于5分钟

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 6:24


As the American space agency NASA continues to carry out tests of its Ingenuity helicopter on Mars, it is also testing a future aircraft design on Earth.美国宇航局美国宇航局继续在火星上对其“聪明号”直升机进行测试,同时也在地球上测试未来的飞机设计。NASA's Ingenuity has been making test flights on the Red Planet for the past two-and-a-half years. The experimental helicopter arrived on Mars along with NASA's Perseverance explorer, or rover, in February 2021.过去两年半以来,美国宇航局的“独创”号一直在这颗红色星球上进行试飞。 这架实验直升机于 2021 年 2 月与 NASA 的毅力号探测器或漫游者一起抵达火星。Both the rover and helicopter have been collecting images and data as they explore an area known as Jezero Crater. The goal of the exploration effort is to search for signs of ancient life on Mars.火星车和直升机在探索一个名为杰泽罗陨石坑的区域时一直在收集图像和数据。 探索工作的目标是寻找火星上古代生命的迹象。Ingenuity made history in April 2021 by becoming the first aircraft to complete a powered, controlled flight on another planet. NASA officials have said the helicopter has performed far above expectations. Agency engineers planned on Ingenuity completing just five experimental flights on Mars. But the helicopter has so far performed 66 flights. It has provided NASA with valuable data on building future aircraft to fly in space.Ingenuity 于 2021 年 4 月创造了历史,成为第一架在另一个星球上完成动力、受控飞行的飞机。 美国宇航局官员表示,这架直升机的表现远远超出了预期。 该机构的工程师计划“独创”号在火星上仅完成五次实验飞行。 但这架直升机迄今为止已执行了66次飞行。 它为美国宇航局提供了有关建造未来太空飞行飞机的宝贵数据。Travis Brown is Ingenuity's chief engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California. He said in a statement that with nearly every flight, the helicopter has progressed in new ways. Brown noted that over the past nine months, Ingenuity had doubled its top speed and height records. In addition, the aircraft's operating speed and landings improved.特拉维斯·布朗 (Travis Brown) 是位于加州 NASA 喷气推进实验室 (JPL) 的 Ingenuity 首席工程师。 他在一份声明中表示,几乎每次飞行,直升机都以新的方式取得进展。 布朗指出,在过去的九个月里,独创号将其最高速度和高度记录翻了一番。 此外,飞机的运行速度和着陆次数也有所提高。Most Ingenuity flights only last two to three minutes. This is because the helicopter has energy and temperature limitations.大多数 Ingenuity 航班仅持续两到三分钟。 这是因为直升机有能量和温度的限制。NASA engineers say they have also been careful not to try to fly Ingenuity too fast because this can cause problems with its navigation system. The helicopter uses a camera to identify rocks and other things on the surface as it travels. If the aircraft goes too fast, it might not be able to navigate the best way forward.美国宇航局工程师表示,他们也一直小心翼翼地不要试图让“聪明号”飞得太快,因为这可能会导致其导航系统出现问题。 直升机在飞行时使用摄像头来识别地面上的岩石和其他物体。 如果飞机速度太快,它可能无法以最佳的方式前进。Controllers on the ground have said that to help with this issue, they have sent commands to Ingenuity to fly at higher levels. This way the aircraft has less chance of losing its way because surface objects stay in view longer.地面管制人员表示,为了帮助解决这个问题,他们已向“聪明号”发出指令,让其在更高的高度飞行。 这样,飞机迷失方向的机会就会减少,因为表面物体在视野中停留的时间更长。NASA says Ingenuity established a new height record, on flight 61, of 24 meters as it examined Martian wind conditions. On flight 62, the helicopter set a new speed record of 10 meters per second. During this flight Ingenuity also identified a new place for the Perseverance rover to carry out science experiments.NASA 表示,Ingenuity 在第 61 次飞行中检查火星风况时创造了 24 米的新高度记录。 在第62次飞行中,直升机创下了每秒10米的新速度记录。 在这次飞行中,独创号还为毅力号火星车确定了一个进行科学实验的新地点。As that testing continues on Mars, teams on the ground have been experimenting with new rotor blades. These could be used in the future with a new generation of Mars helicopters. During the tests, engineers reported the rotor blades had reached speeds nearly equal to Mach 1, the speed of sound.随着火星测试的继续,地面团队一直在试验新的转子叶片。 这些可以在未来与新一代火星直升机一起使用。 在测试过程中,工程师报告说转子叶片的速度几乎等于 1 马赫(音速)。The blades tested on Earth are made of carbon material and are more than 10 centimeters longer than Ingenuity's. The blades were designed to be both faster and stronger. NASA has said such rotor blades should be able to support bigger, more complex helicopters. The team said in a statement the helicopter design must reach the right balance. If the blades spin too fast, this causes control issues that can increase the risk of crashes.在地球上测试的叶片由碳材料制成,比 Ingenuity 的叶片长 10 厘米以上。 刀片设计得更快、更强。 美国宇航局表示,这种旋翼叶片应该能够支持更大、更复杂的直升机。 该团队在一份声明中表示,直升机的设计必须达到适当的平衡。 如果叶片旋转太快,就会导致控制问题,从而增加碰撞风险。The Earth-based tests were carried out in September inside a space simulator at NASA's JPL. For these experiments, the simulator aimed to establish a Mars-like environment. The team was measuring tests of the rotor blades with sensors, cameras and other equipment. Many different speeds were tested and the blades were repeatedly repositioned to observe the best results.地面测试于 9 月份在 NASA 喷气推进实验室的太空模拟器内进行。 对于这些实验,模拟器的目的是建立一个类似火星的环境。 该团队正在使用传感器、摄像机和其他设备对转子叶片进行测量测试。 测试了许多不同的速度,并反复重新定位刀片以观察最佳结果。“We spun our blades up to 3,500 rpm, which is 750 revolutions per minute faster than the Ingenuity blades have gone,” said Tyler Del Sesto, a leader of the JPL testing. “These more efficient blades are now more than a hypothetical exercise. They are ready to fly,” he added.JPL 测试负责人 Tyler Del Sesto 表示:“我们将叶片旋转至 3,500 rpm,这比 Ingenuity 叶片的转速每分钟快 750 转。” “这些更高效的刀片现在不仅仅是一个假设的练习。 他们已经准备好起飞了,”他补充道。

One Sentence News
One Sentence News / September 12, 2023

One Sentence News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2023 4:12


Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.EU and US back trade corridor linking Europe, Middle East, and IndiaSummary: Over the weekend, leaders from India and the EU announced a new economic corridor meant to link Europe with the Middle East and India using train lines and sea lanes—a project that would initially link India, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan, Israel, and the EU, and which would speed up trade between these regions by up to 40%.Context: This project, called the Partnership for Global Infrastructure Investment, could help normalize relations between governments in the region—including Israel and the Gulf states—but would also serve as an economic counterweight to China's Belt and Road Initiative, which is meant to accomplish basically the same thing, connecting nations across Asia, Africa, and Latin America using the Chinese economy as a center of gravity and Chinese assets for loans and infrastructure build-out; China has been criticized for their approach, as it's left a lot of the involved countries with gobs of debt and not much economic benefit, and this project is ostensibly meant to do the same, but without that purported debt-trap diplomacy angle; announcing a project and building-out the requisite infrastructure and international deals are two separate things, though, and those involved with this new plan have said they'll lay out more complete plans over the next few months, at which point we should have a better idea of timelines, costs, and so on.—The GuardianOne Sentence News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Biden visits Vietnam to bolster alliance confronting ChinaSummary: US President Biden has made an official visit to Vietnam as part of a larger effort to build a wall of allies in Asia, and to make economic deals throughout the region that replace or exclude China.Context: Vietnam has in recent years become a medium-sized manufacturing powerhouse, and there have been all sorts of efforts by Western nations to amplify that, the hope being that manufacturing currently being done in China could move elsewhere in Southeast Asia, to governments that are more willing to play ball with the current international order than China's leadership seems to be—including that of Vietnam; this visit culminated with the announcement of a new, tight partnership between the US and Vietnam, which puts the US in the same, highest-tier diplomatic category as China and Russia, and some human rights activists are not thrilled about this, as Vietnam's government is an enthusiastic jailer of activists and journalists.—The Washington PostLithium cache found in US may be world's largestSummary: A new study estimates that a volcanic crater on the Nevada-Oregon border in the US may harbor the world's largest supply of lithium, weighing in at somewhere between 20 and 40 million metric tons.Context: If accurate, this would rival or far surpass the supply contained in Bolivia's salt flats, which contains about a fourth of the world's currently confirmed supply of the metal with about 23 million tons; the lithium in this caldera is reportedly contained in clay rather than brine, and is close to the surface, which would make it relatively cheap and easy to mine, and if these numbers are correct this could dramatically change the balance of global renewable energy manufacturing leverage—though there are environmental concerns with any potential mining project, and this one is contained in land Native American activists consider sacred and environmentalist groups have been trying to preserve, which makes further exploration and the utilization of this lithium anything but a done deal.—FuturismNearly 2,500 people have been confirmed dead following a 6.8-magnitude quake in Morocco, which has devastated a slew of populated regions and destroyed essentially all the buildings in some cities and towns; this was the strongest quake to hit the area in more than 100 years, and it was a shallow quake (located about 11 miles beneath the surface), which is part of why it was so destructive.—The Washington Post122 gramsVolume of oxygen created on the surface of Mars using a microwave-sized device called the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment (MOXIE) located on NASA's Perseverance rover.That's about as much oxygen as a small dog would breathe in 10 hours (this is the measurement all the press releases are using, which I think is great) and the device functions by converting some of the abundant CO2 on Mars into oxygen, demonstrating that this could be done on a larger scale if we were to put humans up there for long periods of time at some point (this small version of MOXIE produced about 12 grams of oxygen per hour, which was twice as much as NASA was hoping for).—CNNTrust Click Get full access to One Sentence News at onesentencenews.substack.com/subscribe

Are We There Yet?
Sierra Space's new Dream Chaser hopes to bring people into orbit

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2023 28:00


Sierra Space plans to launch humans on the company's Dream Chaser spacecraft. NASA's Perseverance rover found evidence of organic molecules on Mars.

Innovation Now
LEGO Rover Kit

Innovation Now

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2023


NASA's Perseverance rover and Ingenuity helicopter are busy exploring Mars, one-tenth-scale buildable models are touching down in homes around the globe.

WSJ’s The Future of Everything
NASA Plans to Bring Bits of Mars to Earth. It May Change How We See Space

WSJ’s The Future of Everything

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2023 26:32


NASA's Perseverance rover is currently collecting samples on the surface of Mars, and some of them will be coming to Earth—that is, if all goes well. NASA has a complex plan to bring bits of the Red Planet here, arriving in 2033, so scientists can study them to answer some burning questions. What's the planet's history? What is its dust like? And, are there any signs that life may have existed there? WSJ's Alex Ossola speaks to Lindsay Hays, an astrobiologist at NASA and deputy lead scientist for the Mars Sample Return mission, about how this mission could help us better understand the history of our own planet and shape future missions to Mars and beyond. Further reading:  NASA Lands Perseverance Rover Safely on Mars After ‘Seven Minutes of Terror'  NASA Collects Mars Rock Samples in Historic First for Perseverance Rover  NASA's Perseverance Rover Begins Its Search for Life on Mars  Mars Photos: See NASA's Perseverance Rover's First Visions of Red Planet   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
S25E142 - NASA's Perseverance Rover to Start Setting Up the Martian Sample Depot

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 31:22


SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 142 *NASA's Perseverance rover to start setting up the Martian sample depot NASA's Mars Perseverance Rover has started work to set up a Mars sample return depot on the red planet – the first to be established on another world. *A new satellite launched to monitor all the world's water The joint Franco-American scientific satellite has been successfully launched into orbit aboard a Falcon 9 rocket from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. *China sets a new record for the number of orbital launches in a year China appears to have finally wrapped up a busy orbital launch year conducting a record 62 missions in 2022. *The Science Report The UN to launch a satellite to monitor methane emissions and pin point the sources. Replacing red meat with chickpeas and lentils is good for your health, wallet and the climate. A versatile and nutritious new space food system for astronauts. Skeptics guide the beliefs of those who meditate For more SpaceTime visit https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com (mobile friendly). For enhanced Show Notes including photos to accompany this episode: https://www.bitesz.com/show/spacetime/blog/ RSS feed: https://www.spreaker.com/show/2458531/episodes/feed Email: mailto:SpaceTime@bitesz.com To receive the Astronomy Daily Newsletter free, direct to your inbox...just join our mailing list at www.bitesz.com or visit https://www.bitesz.com/p/astronomy-daily/ To receive the Astronomy Daily Newsletter free, direct to your inbox...just join our mailing list. Details at https://www.bitesz.com/show/spacetime/p/astronomy-daily/ If you're enjoying SpaceTime, please help out by sharing and telling your friends. The best recommendation I can get is one by you. Thank you… #astronomy #space #science #technology #news #astrophysics #NASA

Canary Cry News Talk
DEMON SKY PORTALS

Canary Cry News Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 164:09


Canary Cry News Talk #571 - 12.14.2022 - Recorded Live to Tape DEMON SKY PORTALS | Stone Dome, Elon Trump, Crypto Politics, Die Suddenly, Antarctic Balloons A Podcast that Deconstructs Mainstream Media News from a Biblical Worldview Harvard: Index of MSM Ownership (Harvard.edu) Logos Bible: Aliens Demons Doc (feat. Dr. Heiser, Unseen Realm) A Podcast that Deconstructs Mainstream Media News from a Biblical Worldview Harvard: Index of MSM Ownership (Harvard.edu) Logos Bible: Aliens Demons Doc (feat. Dr. Mike Heiser, Unseen Realm)     This Episode was Produced By: Executive Producer Kevin M** Leslie B**   Producers Gary H, Sir LX Protocol V2 Knight of the Berrean Protocol, Dame Gail Canary Whisperer and Lady of X's and O's, DrWhoDunDat, Sir Casey the Shield Knight, Veronica D, Sir Scott Knight of Truth, Runksmash   Audio Production Jonathan F   Visual Art Sir Dove Knight of Rusbeltia   CLIP PRODUCER Emsworth, FaeLivrin   TIMESTAPERS Jackie U, Jade Bouncerson, Christine C, Pocojoyo, Joelle S   SOCIAL MEDIA DOERS Dame MissG of the OV and Deep Rivers   LINKS HELP JAM   REMINDERS Clankoniphius   MICROFICTION Runksmash - From the throng the three dark wizards shout at the new Christian pilgrims, “Your Q God won't even accept you, you're all lab grown abominations!” But they're met with a ringing rebuke from an old man running as fast as the limp AUNT gave him allows.   The Sentinel - The three men sit around a campfire, “fried wormicorns, my favorite” one says. Just then they hear a screeching from above, a troop of airborne arachnids is diving straight for them. “Ambush!”   Stephen S - On a concall with Victor Borg9, the international weapons dealer, the techno giant Lone Scum received the progress of his experimental military project of embedding cyber-brain processors into Freedonia officers.    MissionWarrior - A hero steps into the picture An unknown character that no one expected Observing the world and seeing through the riddles The patience power has finally kicked into gear, after word of a current dystopian society, which has been forming for some time With artificial wombs and gender confusion on the rise The anti christ starts to show its face “Destroy the woman, she is the devil” “Replace the sacred womb and I will give you everlasting bodies!” Our hero overhears this blasphemous command Pondering with painful frustration crashing like waves There must be a way to warn the population   SHOW NOTES HELLO, RUN DOWN GATES OF THE GODS → Roger Stone selling Stone based on Kim Clement Prophecy (Twitter) Clip: Roger Stone claims demonic portal in Biden White House (Media Matters) → Seeing ghosts aliens means you have brain damage, expert (DailyStar) → Live Feed of White House (EarthTV)   DAY JINGLE/PERSONAL/EXEC.   FLIPPY Robots Set Their Sights on a New Job: Sewing Blue Jeans (US News)   SBF/MONEY/CRYPTO/POLYTIKS Senate Banking hearing target FTX crypto industry: ‘The largest Ponzi scheme in history' (CNBC) → The socially sanctioned arrogance of SBF (Vox) Clip: Rep. Emmers lays out facts about blockchain → Tom Emmers Blockchain Bill   ELON/TRUMP/FAUCI Elon Musk Is a Far-Right Activist (Atlantic) The Trumpification of Elon Musk (Wired) → Tim Pool flips on Neuralink (Twitter)   PARTY TIME: http://CANARYCRY.PARTY BREAK 1: TREASURE: https://CanaryCryRadio.com/Support   COVID/WACCINE DeSantis calls for grand jury to investigate Covid-19 vaccines (Politico)  Sports reporter Grant Wahl died of an aortic aneurysm at World Cup, wife says (CNN) Former UCF Football Player Dies Suddenly At 25 (Athlon Sports, Sports Illustrated subsidiary) Moderna's mRNA Cancer Vaccine Shows Promise in Preliminary Study (WSJ) (Archive)    AFROFUTURISM Clip: $55 billion to Africa next 3 years U.S. says to commit $55 bln to Africa ahead of summit (Reuters)   BREAK 3: TALENT   SCIENCE/ANTARCTICA Antihelium Offers Hope in the Search for Dark Matter (Wired) → Back to Antarctica with SPIDER (NewsWise)   BREAK 4: TIME END   ADDITIONAL STORIES ISIS Bomb Targets Chinese Diplomats, Executives in Afghanistan (Bloomberg) (Archive)  How Israel is preparing the next generation of cyber soldiers (DefenseOne) Russia Could Run Out Of Reliable Rockets, Artillery Early Next Year, Pentagon (Defense One) In a world that depends on internet, cybersecurity is king (Jerusalem Post) Nancy Pelosi's career chronicled in new film by her daughter (Washington Times) (Archive)  Republican support for Trump 2024 run collapsing, poll shows (NY Post)            FBI Reveals It Has More Information on Slain DNC Staffer Seth Rich (Epoch Times) (Archive)  Roger Stone claims “a demonic portal opened above the White House” when the Bidens moved in and “demons populate the Biden administration” (Media Matters)   'Even Judge Said I Did Noting Illegal': Bout Gives First Big Interview After Release From US Prison (Sputnik)  Freed Russian arms dealer Bout joins Kremlin-loyal ultranationalist party (Reuters) (Archive)  ‘Nazi'-inspired US prison guards, American ‘revolution' and Ukraine conflict: Highlights from Viktor Bout's RT interview (RT)  Ukraine shells holiday camp with US-made HIMARS – governor (RT)  For a Quicker End to the Russia War, Step Up Aid to Ukraine (WSJ) (Archive)  Poland aims to create largest land army in Europe: report (Remix News)  Exclusive: US finalizing plans to send Patriot missile defense system to Ukraine (CNN)  B-2 Stealth Bomber Damaged During Emergency Landing (The Drive)  Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried refuses to testify before Senate, committee says (CNBC)  Sam Bankman-Fried testifies before the House Financial Services Committee tomorrow (CNBC)  Sam Bankman-Fried is ARRESTED in the Bahamas after American prosecutors filed criminal charges against FTX founder (DailyMail)  'Depressed' Sam Bankman-Fried hugs his parents as he is DENIED bail and sent to overcrowded hellhole Bahamas jail as prosecutors say he hid $300m in Brazilian firm before collapse of FTX exchange (DailyMail)  Binance withdrawals jump to $3 billion in 24 hours, research firm says (CNN)  Binance Founder ‘CZ' Insists We Can Trust His Crypto Exchange – but Can We? (CoinDesk)  The Freedman's Savings and Trust Company and African American Genealogical Research (National Archives)  Freedman's Bank Demise (US Treasure)  The Freedman's Bank Forum obscures the bank's real history (WaPo) (Archive)  Massive Fire Burns Down Part of an N.Y.P.D. Evidence Center in Brooklyn (NYT) (Archive)  Massive fire breaks out at NYPD impound, evidence warehouse in Brooklyn (abc 7)  Blackouts Could Hit Texas on Christmas as Arctic Blast Threatens Grid (Newsweek)  → How safe are electrical power grids in the U.S.? (NPR)  Pope warns he has seen 'omens of even greater destruction and desolation' for mankind (DailyMail)  The eerie sound of Mars' 'dust devils': Recordings taken by NASA's Perseverance rover suggest whirlwinds reach over 387 FEET tall as they skim across the Red Planet (DailyMail)  BELIEVER Meats Breaks Ground on Largest Cultivated Meat Production Facility in The World (Cision PR Newswire)  Nuclear fusion: How long until this breakthrough discovery can power your house (CNN) → Explainer: Could fusion energy help fight climate change? (Reuters) Seti and Swan Hellinic partner to explore space at sea (Porthole) → Australian Antarctic 75 year anniversary (Twitter) Ameca at Dubai's Museum of the Future, assures staff she's not there to 'replace' them (DailyMail) 

The Tempest Universe
Are Aliens Demons?, Organic Matter on Mars, Kyiv UFO Discovery, and Bigfoot in South Carolina

The Tempest Universe

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 56:07


Visit www.thetempestuniverse.comShop at https://thetempestuniverse.myspreadshop.com/On today's podcast: Did life ever exist on Mars? NASA's Perseverance rover finds organic matter in rock samplesLink: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/09/16/nasa-perseverance-rover-organic-matter-mars/10395641002/Ukrainian Astronomers Claim UFOs Spotted Hovering in Skies Over KyivLink: https://www.news18.com/news/buzz/ukrainian-astronomers-claim-ufos-spotted-hovering-in-skies-over-kyiv-5983555.htmlReport Claims Bigfoot Was Seen in State Park: 'State of Amazement'Link: https://www.newsweek.com/report-claims-bigfoot-seen-state-park-state-amazement-south-carolina-1739593Aliens are 'demons' created by evil powers to feed on human passions, say scholarsLink: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/aliens-demons-created-evil-powers-27890712Podcast StuffFacebook: The Dark Horde - https://www.facebook.com/thedarkhordellcThe Tempest Universe - https://www.facebook.com/thetempestuniverseManny's Page - https://www.facebook.com/MannyPodcastYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/TheDarkHordeNetwork/featuredTwitter: The Tempest Universe - https://twitter.com/ufobusterradioThe Dark Horde - https://twitter.com/HordeDarkDiscord Group - https://discord.gg/ZzJSrGP

The Dark Horde Network
Are Aliens Demons?, Organic Matter on Mars, Kyiv UFO Discovery, and Bigfoot in South Carolina

The Dark Horde Network

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 56:07


Visit www.thetempestuniverse.com Shop at https://thetempestuniverse.myspreadshop.com/ On today's podcast: Did life ever exist on Mars? NASA's Perseverance rover finds organic matter in rock samples Link: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/09/16/nasa-perseverance-rover-organic-matter-mars/10395641002/ Ukrainian Astronomers Claim UFOs Spotted Hovering in Skies Over Kyiv Link: https://www.news18.com/news/buzz/ukrainian-astronomers-claim-ufos-spotted-hovering-in-skies-over-kyiv-5983555.html Report Claims Bigfoot Was Seen in State Park: 'State of Amazement' Link: https://www.newsweek.com/report-claims-bigfoot-seen-state-park-state-amazement-south-carolina-1739593 Aliens are 'demons' created by evil powers to feed on human passions, say scholars Link: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/aliens-demons-created-evil-powers-27890712 Podcast Stuff Facebook: The Dark Horde - https://www.facebook.com/thedarkhordellc The Tempest Universe - https://www.facebook.com/thetempestuniverse Manny's Page - https://www.facebook.com/MannyPodcast YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/TheDarkHordeNetwork/featured Twitter: The Tempest Universe - https://twitter.com/ufobusterradio The Dark Horde - https://twitter.com/HordeDark Discord Group - https://discord.gg/ZzJSrGP

The Dark Horde Network
Are Aliens Demons?, Organic Matter on Mars, Kyiv UFO Discovery, and Bigfoot in South Carolina

The Dark Horde Network

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 56:07


Visit www.thetempestuniverse.com Shop at https://thetempestuniverse.myspreadshop.com/ On today's podcast: Did life ever exist on Mars? NASA's Perseverance rover finds organic matter in rock samples Link: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/09/16/nasa-perseverance-rover-organic-matter-mars/10395641002/ Ukrainian Astronomers Claim UFOs Spotted Hovering in Skies Over Kyiv Link: https://www.news18.com/news/buzz/ukrainian-astronomers-claim-ufos-spotted-hovering-in-skies-over-kyiv-5983555.html Report Claims Bigfoot Was Seen in State Park: 'State of Amazement' Link: https://www.newsweek.com/report-claims-bigfoot-seen-state-park-state-amazement-south-carolina-1739593 Aliens are 'demons' created by evil powers to feed on human passions, say scholars Link: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/aliens-demons-created-evil-powers-27890712 Podcast Stuff Facebook: The Dark Horde - https://www.facebook.com/thedarkhordellc The Tempest Universe - https://www.facebook.com/thetempestuniverse Manny's Page - https://www.facebook.com/MannyPodcast YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/TheDarkHordeNetwork/featured Twitter: The Tempest Universe - https://twitter.com/ufobusterradio The Dark Horde - https://twitter.com/HordeDark Discord Group - https://discord.gg/ZzJSrGP

The Show on KMOX
Hour 3: Space is So Cool

The Show on KMOX

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 37:50


NASA's Perseverance rover has been collecting samples on Mars for over a year now and they may yield some interesting test results. Plus, Staff Sergeant Gabriel Colon talks about his job skydiving for the Golden Knights.

Science Signaling Podcast
Why the fight against malaria has stalled in southern Africa, and how to look for signs of life on Mars

Science Signaling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2022 23:33


On this week's show: After years of steep declines, researchers are investigating why malaria deaths have plateaued, and testing the stability of biosignatures in space First up on the podcast this week, freelance science journalist Leslie Roberts joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss why malaria deaths have plateaued in southern Africa, despite years of declines in deaths and billions of dollars spent. Leslie visited Mozambique on a global reporting grant from the Pulitzer Center where researchers are investigating the cause of the pause. Also this week, producer Kevin McLean talks with astrobiologists Mickael Baqué and Jean-Pierre de Vera of the German Aerospace Center. They discuss their Science Advances paper about an experiment on the International Space Station looking at the stability of biosignatures in space and what that means for our search for life on Mars. This week's episode was produced with help from Podigy. [Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS; Music: Jeffrey Cook] [alt: enhanced-color image of Mars' Jezero crater was taken by NASA's Perseverance with podcast overlay symbol] Authors: Sarah Crespi; Leslie Roberts; Kevin McLean Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ade7839 About the Science Podcast: https://www.science.org/content/page/about-science-podcast See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Science Magazine Podcast
Why the fight against malaria has stalled in southern Africa, and how to look for signs of life on Mars

Science Magazine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2022 23:33


On this week's show: After years of steep declines, researchers are investigating why malaria deaths have plateaued, and testing the stability of biosignatures in space First up on the podcast this week, freelance science journalist Leslie Roberts joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss why malaria deaths have plateaued in southern Africa, despite years of declines in deaths and billions of dollars spent. Leslie visited Mozambique on a global reporting grant from the Pulitzer Center where researchers are investigating the cause of the pause. Also this week, producer Kevin McLean talks with astrobiologists Mickael Baqué and Jean-Pierre de Vera of the German Aerospace Center. They discuss their Science Advances paper about an experiment on the International Space Station looking at the stability of biosignatures in space and what that means for our search for life on Mars. This week's episode was produced with help from Podigy. [Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS; Music: Jeffrey Cook] [alt: enhanced-color image of Mars' Jezero crater was taken by NASA's Perseverance with podcast overlay symbol] Authors: Sarah Crespi; Leslie Roberts; Kevin McLean Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ade7839 About the Science Podcast: https://www.science.org/content/page/about-science-podcast See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness
Can Asteroids Rock Our World? with Christina Hernández and Terik Daly

Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 61:48


It's a beautiful night—the sky is clear, the stars are twinkling. You see a shooting star! Or is it a comet! Maybe a meteor? Whatever it is, it's gone in an instant. But what if that whirring bit of space were headed... straight towards the Earth, not past it? Yeah, not so cute. This week, Christina Hernández and Terik Daly of NASA join Jonathan to talk about asteroids, what they're made of, and how we could protect the planet if one came hurtling towards the place we call home. Christina Hernández (she/her/hers) is a systems engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. She currently works on Psyche, NASA's mission to a metal world, as a flight systems engineer. She previously spent over 6 years working on NASA's Perseverance rover mission as a payload systems engineer. You can follow Christina on Twitter @estrellasycafe. Dr. Terik Daly is a planetary scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. He is the deputy instrument scientist for NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission, which is the world's first planetary defense test mission.For more information on NASA's upcoming missions, including those mentioned in this episode, you can follow @AsteroidWatch on Twitter. Interested in the worlds of our solar system? Visit @NASASolarSystem for the broad picture and @NASAPersevere to check in on our neighbor, Mars!Join the conversation, and find out what former guests are up to, by following us on Instagram and Twitter @CuriousWithJVN. Jonathan is on Instagram and Twitter @JVN and @Jonathan.Vanness on Facebook.Transcripts for each episode are available at JonathanVanNess.com. Love listening to Getting Curious? Now, you can also watch Getting Curious—on Netflix! Head to netflix.com/gettingcurious to dive in.Our executive producer is Erica Getto. Our associate producer is Zahra Crim. Our editor is Andrew Carson. Our theme music is “Freak” by QUIÑ; for more, head to TheQuinCat.com. Getting Curious merch is available on PodSwag.com.

Tech and Science Daily | Evening Standard
Living on Mars: breathing now possible

Tech and Science Daily | Evening Standard

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 6:59


Visiting Mars is one step closer as a lunch-box-sized device called Moxie produces breathable oxygen. The tech has been to the red planet as part of Nasa's Perseverance rover mission. IFA Berlin: Nokia on new sustainable phones and how the new ‘circular' subscription service works. Friendly robots helping to detect wellbeing issues in kids, we speak to the scientist…Plus: Unlocking your shoe: Balmain Paris teams up with Pokémon Unite Red tide kills thousands of fish in the San Francisco Bay Area North Sea wind farm claims title of world's largest Why a stroll by rivers and canals offers mental health support Titanic in 8k footage reveals wreckage in greatest ever seen detailFollow us on Twitter #TechScienceDaily Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Kottke Ride Home
Fri. 06/03 - This Is Your Voice On Mars

Kottke Ride Home

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 15:16


Some wild animal species might be evolving four times faster than we thought. Plus, what your voice would sound like on Mars. And the summer job in Wisconsin that makes teenagers jump off a moving boat to deliver mail.Sponsor:Shopify, Get a 14-day free trial at shopify.com/coolLinks:Evolution May Be Happening Up to 4 Times Faster Than We Thought, Massive Study Finds (Science Alert)Fuel of evolution' more abundant than previously thought in wild animals (University of Exeter)Sounds of Mars (NASA) NASA Scientists Made a Martian 'Soundscape' Using Audio Recorded by Perseverance Rover (Gizmodo)On Mars, NASA's Perseverance rover's playlist like no other (EurekAlert)Episode about designing the microphone on Perseverance (Cool Stuff Ride Home)Mail Jumper in action (Cruise Lake Geneva, Instagram)The Gravity-Defying Mail Jumpers of Lake Geneva (Atlas Obscura)Mail Boat Jumper Tryouts (Best of Lake Geneva) Who You Gonna Call? Explores the Life of Ray Parker Jr., the Man Behind the Ghostbusters Theme (Gizmodo)Jackson Bird on TwitterSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

New Scientist Weekly
#120: DeepMind claims artificial intelligence breakthrough; searching for ancient life on Mars; Stonehenge surprise; monkeypox latest

New Scientist Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 29:33


DeepMind's new artificial intelligence, Gato, is a step beyond anything we've seen before. But how close has it brought us to the coveted goal of creating ‘artificial general intelligence'? The team unpacks just how powerful this technology really is, and what it means for the future of machine consciousness.You can learn a lot from poop. In an archaeological detective story, 4500-year-old fossil excrement belonging to the people who built Stonehenge has been examined, and the team explains what it tells us about their eating habits.CRISPR gene editing has been used to make supercharged tomatoes, rich in vitamin D. The team finds out how they managed to do it, and explains why this breakthrough is particularly good news for vegans.Ever wondered what it's like to explore another planet? We hear from Sanjeev Gupta from Imperial College London, one of the scientists with the breathtaking job of helping Nasa's Perseverance rover navigate Mars, as it starts sampling an ancient river delta to look for ancient life.We're in the midst of the largest known outbreak of monkeypox. The virus is endemic to Central and West Africa, but has begun to spread to the rest of the world, with 170 cases now confirmed. The team examines the likelihood of this virus becoming the next global pandemic.On the pod are Rowan Hooper, Penny Sarchet, Jacob Aron and Corryn Wetzel. To read about these stories and much more, subscribe at newscientist.com/podcasts.Events and discount codes:Free giveaway: newscientist.com/4weeksfree20% Discount: newscientist.com/pod20 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

RNZ: Morning Report
Perseverance rover begins climb to find rocks

RNZ: Morning Report

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 4:26


NASA's Perseverance rover has reached a key stage in its mission on Mars. The robot will begin a climb up an ancient delta searching for rock samples which may have evidence of life. Mike Wall from Space.com spoke to Susie Ferguson.

The John Batchelor Show
#Mars: Ingenuity on support. Bob Zimmerman BehindtheBlack.com

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2022 15:00


Photo:  NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter stands on the Red Planet's surface as NASA's Perseverance rover (partially visible on the left) rolls away. #Mars: Ingenuity on support. Bob Zimmerman BehindtheBlack.com https://behindtheblack.com/behind-the-black/points-of-information/ingenuity-in-trouble/

BBC Inside Science
Declining Data, Climate Deadlines and the Day the Dinosaurs Died

BBC Inside Science

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 36:14


Covid-19 infections in the UK are at an all-time high. But most people in England can no longer access free Covid-19 tests, and the REACT-1 study, which has been testing more than 100,000 individuals since the pandemic began, ended last week after its funding stopped. Martin Mckee, Prof of European Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, shares his insights on what these changes might mean for ambitions to 'live with the virus'. This week, the UN's latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report has unveiled a to-do list of ways to save the planet from climate catastrophe. How do scientists reach a global consensus on climate change amid war, an energy crisis, and a pandemic? Vic Gill speaks to report co-author Jo House, University of Bristol, and Ukrainian climate scientist Svitlana Krakovska who took part in signing off every line of the report while sheltering from the war in Kyiv. And from our planet's present and future to its ancient past. Scientists working on the Tanis fossil site in North Dakota in the US have dug up a dinosaur's leg, complete with skin and scales. Is this 66-million-year-old fossil, alongside similar nearby victims, the key to unveiling those transformative minutes after the infamous Chicxulub asteroid struck the earth and ended the era of the dinosaurs? BBC science correspondent Jonathan Amos has seen the fossil and speaks with Paul Barrett of London's Natural History Museum about the significance of this un-reviewed new finds. And from earth to Mars. After a year of analysing audio recordings from NASA's Perseverance rover, scientists have found not one but two speeds of sound on Mars. Trevor Cox, Professor of Acoustic Engineering at the University of Salford, guides us through this sonic wonder, and how sound may become a key tool for exploring distant worlds. Mars audio credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/LANL/CNES/CNRS/ISAE-Supaéro

Tech and Science Daily | Evening Standard
Tesla profits rocket as electricity prices spike

Tech and Science Daily | Evening Standard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 6:35


Elon Musk's e-car firm announces bumper $3.2 billion profits for 2022, with customers footing the bill for supply chain hikes. One hour less on your phone daily will make you happier, German study finds. Spanish healthcare worker suffers double Covid in under three weeks. Daredevil pilot cousins race gravity to swap planes in 120mph nosedive record attempt. Nasa's Perseverance rover snaps rare Mars solar eclipse. Pokémon buys manufacturer of its trading cards as demand soars. Actors band together to save jobs from artificial intelligence deep fakes. Netflicker...how our ancestors created artworks by firelight. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Tech News Now
Apple Watch Series 3 Rumored to Be Discontinued This Year

Tech News Now

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 2:43


In today's top stories, after being on the market for nearly five years, the Apple Watch Series 3 is rumored to be discontinued later this year. In other news, NASA's Perseverance is heading to an enthralling river delta region on Mars and it's going at breakneck speed.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
Astronomers Shocked By the Nearest Ever Fast Radio Burst

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2022 33:12


SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 32*Astronomers shocked by the nearest ever Fast Radio BurstAstronomers have tracked a mysterious cosmic flash known as a Fast Radio Burst down to a globular cluster in a nearby spiral galaxy called M81.*CHEOPS reveals a rugby ball-shaped exoplanetThe European Space Agency's -- CHaracterising ExOPlanets Satellite CHEOPS – has discovered a strange rugby ball shaped exo-planet.*NASA's Perseverance rover gets rocked on MarsNASA's Mars Perseverance Rover has successfully cored and extracted its seventh sample of rock for eventual return to Earth.*Lots more Starlink satellites launchedSpaceX has been busy with three more launches of Starlink broadband internet satellites from opposite ends of the United States over the space of just two weeks.*The Science ReportThe Amazon Rainforest reaching a point of no return.heterosexual transmission of HIV more deadly than homosexual transmission.Palaeontologists discover a new species of StegosaurAlex on Tech: Apple launches new tech.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://bitesz.com #podcast #spacetime #frbs #astronomy #space #science #news #podcasts

Dementia Researcher
The Effects Of Space Travel On The Brain

Dementia Researcher

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2022 73:43


Today is the UK Space Agency Mars Day, it celebrates the 6th anniversary of the launch of the first ExoMars mission, and a year since NASA's Perseverance rover started exploring Mars. In just three years' time NASA aims to return humans to the Moon as part of the Artemis Mission, and in just a decade it's onward to the surface of Mars – the tech and engineering may be ready, but are we? Being in space has well-documented negative effects on the body. But the effect of being in space on the brain has been studied less. In this podcast Dr Yvonne Couch, ARUK Research Fellow at University of Oxford hosts a discussion with three world leading experts to explore the effects of space travel on the brain. We're joined by Chris Mason, Professor of Genomics, Physiology, and Biophysics at Weill Cornell Medicine, USA. Chris is one of the people behind the landmark Twins Study that followed identical twins Scott and Mark Kelly, while one spent a year on earth and the other spent a year in space – he works with NASA, runs multiple labs, and utilises computational and experimental methodologies to identify and characterise the essential genetic elements that guide the function of the human genome, with a particular emphasis on the elements that orchestrate the development of the human brain. Chris has also written a fantastic book ‘The Next 500 Years' about our future in space. Next we have Dr Iya Whiteley, Space Psychologist and Director of the Centre for Space Medicine at Mullard Space Science Laboratory, at University College London. Dr Whiteley works with the European Space Agency is a trained Astronaut Instructor and has published several papers about fatigue in astronauts. She helps develop tools to support crew autonomous operations in complex human spacecraft and works at the cutting edge of psychological support of astronauts going to the moon and mars. Iya is also the author of a new book titled “Toolkit for a Space Psychologist - to support astronauts in exploration missions to the Moon and Mars” Last by far from least we have the unstoppable Henrik Zetterberg, Professor of Neurochemistry and neurodegenerative disease expert at University College London and the University of Gothenburg. Henrik is a leading expert in fluid based biomarkers in dementia, and in 2020 he discovered a new method to detect the disease about two decades before significant symptoms are present. In this show he does an amazing job of keeping the show on track as we explore radiation, gravity, psychology, food, sleep and everything that makes astronauts ‘Super Human', or are they? The Next 500 Years – https://amzn.to/3t2iCV1 Toolkit for a Space Psychologist – https://amzn.to/3CGmTAE Twins Study - https://www.nasa.gov/twins-study More on Mars Day - https://marsday.org.uk/ -- You can find out more about our guests, and access a full transcript of this podcast on our website at: https://www.dementiaresearcher.nihr.ac.uk/podcast Register on our website to receive your weekly bulletin, and to access more great content – blogs, science, career support + much more https://www.dementiaresearcher.nihr.ac.uk This podcast is brought to you in association with Alzheimer's Research UK and Alzheimer's Society, who we thank for their ongoing support.

New Scientist Weekly
#109: Ukraine war stokes energy crisis; emergency sounded over Amazon rainforest; secular intelligent design; mammalian virgin birth

New Scientist Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 31:40


The war in Ukraine has sparked an energy crisis, as European countries attempt to cut ties with Russia. The team discusses what this means for the future of energy production and how it may speed up our pivot to renewable energy. They also explore the growing concerns at various nuclear sites in Ukraine, as some have been seized by the Russians, while others have been damaged during the conflict.For the first time a virgin birth has taken place in a mammal - a female mouse has given birth without any input from a male. The team explains how CRISPR gene editing has been used to create embryos from unfertilised eggs.As the Amazon rainforest becomes less resilient to drought, there are fears it may be passing a tipping point that could turn the whole system from forest into savannah. Earth system scientist Tim Lenton of the University of Exeter explains the devastating global impact this would have.Taking a much-needed trip off the planet, the team discusses two stories from Mars, one from NASA's Perseverance rover and another from China's Zhurong rover. We also present an audio space-quiz you can take part in! Thanks to NASA/JPL-Caltech/LANL/CNES/CNRS/ISAE-Supaéro for the audio clips. And legendary cosmologist Martin Rees shares his thoughts on the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence in the universe and the fascinating concept of ‘secular' intelligent design.On the pod are Rowan Hooper, Penny Sarchet, Matt Sparkes, Adam Vaughan and Richard Webb. To read about these stories and much more, subscribe at newscientist.com/podcasts.For a 20% discount subscription to New Scientist magazine, go to newscientist.com/pod20.For a 50% discount on New Scientist Academy courses, use the code POD50 at checkout at newscientist.com/courses. Offer ends on March 31st. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

OSOM First Hour
2022/02/19 – EM Imaging Team – “Percy — One Year Later”

OSOM First Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2022 62:18


Guest Page Fast links to Items: Richard  –  Andrew  –  Ron  –  Keith Fast links to Bios:  Andrew  –  Ron  –  Keith Support The Other Side of Midnight! Percy — One Year After  A Few of Its Most AMAZING Martian Confirmations …. NASA'S Perseverance rover landed on Mars exactly one year ago … plus one day … tonight. So tonight, we are presenting “Percy's” best and most fascinating confirmations of our decades-long Enterprise Mission “Extraterrestrial Intelligence Hypothesis– That — a long, long time ago, a series of “ancient human civilizations” once lived and developed — independent of the Earth — on Mars …. Before … in the face of an ultimately dying, war-torn world … and an inhospitable surrounding solar system … the remaining refugees finally migrated from the Red Planet one last time … to the one place in the entire solar system where “naked” humans could survive– To Earth. [...]

Are We There Yet?
A year on Mars & the gift of space

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022


NASA's Perseverance rover is celebrating one year on Mars. The robot explorer arrived last year after a seven month journey from Cape Canaveral in Florida. It's on the hunt for evidence of ancient life on Mars and is tasked with selecting and preparing samples of Martian rocks to send back to Earth.

Are We There Yet?
A year on Mars & the gift of space

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 27:52


NASA's Perseverance rover is celebrating one year on Mars. The robot explorer arrived last year after a seven month journey from Cape Canaveral in Florida. It's on the hunt for evidence of ancient life on Mars and is tasked with selecting and preparing samples of Martian rocks to send back to Earth.

Are We There Yet?
A curious carbon finding on Mars & the long wait for James Webb Space Telescope's first science campaign

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022


This past year, all eyes have been on NASA's Perseverance rover as it explores Mars during its first year on the red planet. But a robotic explorer that landed there nearly a decade ago has made a curious finding -- carbon.

Are We There Yet?
A curious carbon finding on Mars & the long wait for James Webb Space Telescope’s first science campaign

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 28:12


This past year, all eyes have been on NASA's Perseverance rover as it explores Mars during its first year on the red planet. But a robotic explorer that landed there nearly a decade ago has made a curious finding -- carbon.

Science Friday
Vocal Fry, Indigenous Tribes And The Colorado River, Year In Space. December 10, 2021, Part 2

Science Friday

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2021 47:07


The Why Of Vocal Fry For decades, vocal fry lived a relatively quiet existence. A creaky or breathy sound that occurs when your voice drops to its lowest register, this phenomenon was long known to linguists, speech pathologists, and voice coaches—but everyday people didn't pay much attention to it. Then in 2011, people started noticing it everywhere. So, what happened? What's going on in our vocal chords when we fry? And why does it bother so many people so very much? “Science Diction” host Johanna Mayer explains the history of vocal fry, and looks at languages where fry is a feature, not a bug.   Tribal Concerns Grow As Water Levels Drop In The Colorado River Basin Lorenzo Pena pulls off the highway and into a drive-through water distribution center on the Southern Ute Indian Tribe reservation in southwest Colorado. He parks his truck and connects the empty tank it's hauling to a large hose and thousands of gallons of water quickly rush in. Pena, who works for the Southern Ute Indian Tribe's hauled water program, has made this trip countless times to deliver water to tribal members who don't have clean water piped to their homes from the local utility. “It's pretty dry around here,” Pena said. “So if people have wells, they're real slow or the wells aren't really producing much water.” If a family on the reservation doesn't use well water or lives outside of town, they have to haul water to fill their cistern to flow through their home.   The Colorado River is the lifeblood for the Southern Ute and dozens of federally recognized tribes who have relied on it for drinking water, farming, and supporting hunting and fishing habitats for thousands of years. The river also holds spiritual and cultural significance. Today, 15 percent of Southern Utes living on the reservation in southwest Colorado don't have running water in their homes at all. That rate is higher for other tribes that rely on the Colorado River, including 40 percent of the Navajo Nation. Native American households are 19 times more likely to lack piped water services than white households, according to a report from the Water & Tribes Initiative. The data also show Native American households are more likely to lack piped water services than any other racial group. Leaders of tribes who depend on the Colorado River say the century-old agreement on managing a resource vital to 40 million people across the West is a major factor fueling these and other water inequalities. State water managers and the federal government say they will include tribes in upcoming Colorado River policymaking negotiations for the first time. Read more at sciencefriday.com.   Space Tourists, Asteroids, And Anti-Satellite Tests, Oh My! Space has been a busy place this year. In February, NASA's Perseverance rover landed on Mars and embarked on its mission to collect samples, alongside the first ever helicopter to fly on the Red Planet. July and September saw the launches of billionaires, space tourists, and civilian astronauts to various elevations above the Earth. Human beings are arriving to the International Space Station via Cape Canaveral for the first time since the discontinuation of the shuttle program in 2011. In November, NASA launched a mission to test our ability to deflect dangerous asteroids. And China, the United Arab Emirates, and Russia have all continued to make their way through the solar system as well. But what about the continued concerns astronomers have about the steep rise and future plans for fleets of private telecommunications satellites in low Earth orbit, like SpaceX's StarLink? Will the increasing footprint of private industry in space exploration have potential drawbacks for science? And what about that Russian anti-satellite test, which disrupted operations at the International Space Station for several days after? Ira and a trio of star space reporters—WFME's Brendan Byrne, Axios' Miriam Kramer, and The Verge's Loren Grush—round up 2021's out-of-this-world headlines.

Space Connect Podcast
NASA's Perseverance rover calls on public expertise

Space Connect Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021 24:38


NASA is calling for the public to create an artificial intelligence algorithm for the Perseverance to better explore terrain. On this week's episode of the Space Connect Podcast, host Adam Thorne and reporters Bella Richards and Liam Garman discuss what the public can do to help Perseverance, and whether this could be used for future planet explorers. Next, the crew discusses NSW wrapping up a week at a Middle Eastern space conference and how Minister Stuart Ayres believes NSW is the space state, despite common perception that South Australia is pioneering in space innovation. Lastly, the trio discusses an Aussie cyber security firm which trialled its algorithms on the International Space Station.

Are We There Yet?
From Mars to Jupiter, the latest findings from the space probes exploring our solar system

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2021


NASA's Perseverance rover on Mars and Juno spacecraft at Jupiter are helping us better understand our solar system.

City Life Org
NASA's Perseverance Rover Collects First Mars Rock Sample

City Life Org

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2021 6:21


This episode is also available as a blog post: https://thecitylife.org/2021/09/07/nasas-perseverance-rover-collects-first-mars-rock-sample/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/support

City Life Org
NASA's Perseverance Team Assessing First Mars Sampling Attempt

City Life Org

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2021 6:37


This episode is also available as a blog post: https://thecitylife.org/2021/08/08/nasas-perseverance-team-assessing-first-mars-sampling-attempt/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/citylifeorg/support

Star Warsologies: A Podcast About Science and Star Wars

The latest episode of Star Warsologies is up! Electrical engineer Justin Gagne joins us to chat about designing technology to go into space. What starts as a discussion of real-life ion engines also covers radiation exposure, landing telemetry, and even quantum entanglement. Justin worked on the Mars helicopter Ingenuity and does a great job helping all us non-physicists and engineers understand these concepts.   More info about ion engines and small satellites.   More info about how Perseverance landed on Mars.   More info about space radiation.   Check out the YouTube version of this episode for more graphics.   Curiosity Rover, launched in 2011. In contrast to this older technology, only 1/10,000th of the launch weight for Perseverance was science equipment.   The Perseverance Rover landed on Mars using new telemetry technology, as described by Justin Gagne in this episode   In Star Warsologies, hosts James Floyd and Melissa Miller combine their love of Star Wars with their keen interest in all things academic by asking experts about how their field is represented in a galaxy far, far away. It's a monthly podcast about science and Star Wars!    Listen to Star Warsologies 4: Engineering for Space Travel     Or listen on YouTube with relevant screen shots and photos!     Show Links   Follow the NASA's Perseverance rover on Mars, on Twitter at @NASAPerseverance and the helicopter using #MarsHelicopter.   Got follow up questions for Justin or a suggestion for an -ology or expert? Email us at starwarsologies@gmail.com   Subscribe and never miss an episode of Star Warsologies on Apple Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify.   Follow us on Instagram and Twitter.    Did you miss an earlier episode? Catch up here!

Are We There Yet?
Bringing Mars To Earth

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021


NASA's Perseverance rover is sending back some of the clearest and most dramatic images of the Martian surface ever. It landed earlier this year, and since then has been beaming back detailed panoramics, up close images, even sound and video of one of our closest celestial neighbors.

Engadget Morning Edition
NASA's Mars rover turned a tiny bit of Mars air into breathable oxygen

Engadget Morning Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2021 3:02


Today's headlines: PlayStation Plus could soon include a video service, NASA's Perseverance rover turns a tiny bit of Mars air into breathable oxygen and Samsung's gadget Upcycling beta comes to the US. Get in touch: Email us at tma@engadget.com.

Engadget
4/22/21: NASA's Perseverance rover turns a tiny bit of Mars air into breathable oxygen… and more news

Engadget

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2021 3:30


NASA's Perseverance rover turns a tiny bit of Mars air into breathable oxygen; Free-to-play Xbox games no longer require Xbox Live Gold to play online

Are We There Yet?
A Helicopter On Mars, Some Gas On Venus

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2021


NASA's Perseverance rover is hard at work, exploring Jezero crater since landing back in February. But the dune-buggy sized rover is about to get upstaged by a tiny helicopter.

Ask Theory
011: [Spacecraft Engineering] Ano Ba Ang Mapapala Natin Sa Pag-Explore Ng Mars? (with Engr. Gregorio Villar III)

Ask Theory

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2021 34:27


This episode of Ask Theory features Engr. Gregorio Villar III, an Entry, Descent, and Landing (EDL) Systems Engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). He was part of the team that worked on ensuring the successful landing of NASA's Perseverance rover on Mars. We talked about what motivated him to pursue a career at NASA, his role in the Mars 2020 mission, the development of the Sky Crane system that helped Perseverance land safely on the Red Planet, why we spend time studying other planets instead of focusing on Earth, who would win in a fight between cavepeople and astronauts, and more.

CaskandCrow's Podcast
Christ Crusaders

CaskandCrow's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2021 62:42


In this episode the guys discuss some drastic sacrifices for Lent, the success of NASA's "Perseverance" plus some more comic and gaming news.

TBS eFM This Morning
0226 IN FOCUS 2 : Successful landing of NASA's "Perseverance" rover on Mars and

TBS eFM This Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2021 10:14


Featured interview: Successful landing of NASA's "Perseverance" rover on Mars and implications of its search for life on the planet -NASA 화성탐사로봇 퍼시비어런스 (Perseverance) 의 성공적 착륙 Guest: Z Nagin Cox, M2020 Perseverance Rover Engineering Operations Deputy Team Chief, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Are We There Yet?
Welcome To Mars, Percy. It's Time To Do Science.

Are We There Yet?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2021


After a seven month journey hundreds of millions of miles through our solar system, NASA's Perseverance rover safely landed on the surface of Mars. Now, the science campaign begins.

Meditations for New Entrepreneurs by 321 Liftoff
1 Big Mental Shift You Need To Build Your Business

Meditations for New Entrepreneurs by 321 Liftoff

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2021 6:06


Do the ideas swirling around in your head feel tangled and disorganized? Are you thinking and thinking, but it's just not getting any clearer? Do you feel stuck? Well, to build your business, you can't just think your way into clarity – you've got to act.  You need to run the experiment.  NASA's Perseverance rover … Continue reading 1 Big Mental Shift You Need To Build Your Business The post 1 Big Mental Shift You Need To Build Your Business appeared first on 321 Liftoff.

CNN Breaking News Alerts
NASA shares first video and audio, new images from Mars Perseverance rover

CNN Breaking News Alerts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2021 1:09


During its harrowing descent to the surface of Mars last Thursday, NASA's Perseverance rover captured video that the agency is calling "How to Land on Mars." The video, along with other newly released footage, gives earthlings back home a better sense of the sights and sounds on the red planet. Cameras on the rover show for the first time the perspective of a spacecraft landing on Mars. The video begins 230 seconds after the rover entered the Martian atmosphere, with the inflation of the rover's parachute 7 miles above the Martian surface, and ends with the rover touching down on the surface. The first audio of Mars was also picked up briefly by a microphone on the rover, which captured a few seconds of a Martian breeze and sounds of the rover operating once it reached the surface.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

Intelligent Moron with Alex Silva
The Luigi Guy - Intelligent Moron with Alex Silva #3

Intelligent Moron with Alex Silva

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2021 79:58


In this weeks episode, Alex tries to figure out why some people don't like Valentines day. Joe Biden is a Luigi guy. The Texans failed J.J. Watt, and now he is on the move. Thoughts on WandaVision so far. Eating at a restaurant again. NASA's Perseverance rover lands on Mars, and becoming a multi-planetary species. Follow Alex: Twitter: https://twitter.com/adsilva005 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/adsilva005/ Podcast Links: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/intelligent-moron-with-alex-silva/id1552338016 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/21OITz2NaBqXQ2SmKSEStc?si=wikIxgKkQgKMQNKjU8ozng YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnw1rKX6JUSITRFz2DSXEdQ/videos Epidemic Sound has the best selection of copyright free music for you to choose. 30 day free trial. https://www.epidemicsound.com/referra...

CNN Breaking News Alerts
Perseverance rover has successfully landed on Mars

CNN Breaking News Alerts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2021 0:44


NASA's Perseverance rover has safely landed on Mars after its journey from Earth, the agency confirmed.The rover has been on a nearly 300 million-mile journey since it left Earth more than 6 months ago.Perseverance is full of firsts. The search for signs of ancient life on Mars. The first helicopter to fly on another planet. The first recordings of sound on the red planet.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

Hackaday Podcast
Ep 105: 486 Doom on FPGA, How Thick is Your Filament, Raspberry Pi Speaks Android Auto, and We're Headed to Mars

Hackaday Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2021 51:17


Hackaday editors Mike Szczys and Elliot Williams unpack great hacks of the past week. We loves seeing the TIL311 -- a retro display in a DIP package -- exquisitely recreated with SMD electronics and resin casting. You might never need to continuously measure the diameter of your 3D printer filament, but just in case there's a clever hall-effect sensor mechanism for that. Both of us admire the work being done in the FPGA realm and this week we saw a RISC-V core plumbed into quite the FPGA stack to run a version of Doom originally played on 486 computers. And we're getting excited for the three ring circus of engineering acrobatics that will land NASA's Perseverance rover on the surface of Mars next week.

Nerdist News
Why NASA's Perseverance Will Change Everything We Know About Mars! (Nerdist News w/ Dan Casey)

Nerdist News

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2020 3:40


NASA's latest mission to Mars could potentially change everything we know about our little red neighbor. Dan blasts off to break down all the details on this episode of Nerdist News!