Tag: space

  • Inside 'The Martian': Movie's Sleek Spacesuits Explained

    Spacesuit in ‘The Martian’
    Matt Damon outfitted in his Mars surface spacesuit in the sci-fi film ”The Martian,” which hits theaters on Oct. 2, 2015.
    Credit: ™ and © 2015 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation.

    The upcoming sci-fi film “The Martian” features many real-life technologies being developed to help put boots on the Red Planet, but the sleek spacesuits showcased in the movie were pretty much invented out of whole cloth.

    Janty Yates, the costume designer for “The Martian,” originally looked for inspiration to NASA’s prototype Z1 and Z2 spacesuits. She worked with NASA officials and engineers, whom she described as “bend-over-backwards helpful.” But in the end, she and her team came up with something new for the main spacesuit in “The Martian,” which hits theaters Friday (Oct. 2) across the United States.

    “We basically had to start from scratch,” Yates told Space.com. “We would’ve loved to use NASA’s designs, but in the end, we just couldn’t do it.” [“The Martian”: An Epic Space Film in Photos]

    Matt Damon in ‘The Martian’

    “The Martian,” based on the novel by Andy Weir, opens across the United States on Oct. 2, 2015.
    Credit: ™ and © 2015 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation.

    A new Mars spacesuit

    “The Martian” stars Matt Damon as NASA astronaut Mark Watney, who is stranded alone on Mars and presumed dead. Watney must use his ingenuity and engineering smarts to survive and let NASA know he’s alive, so the agency can mount a rescue mission.

    “The Martian” director Ridley Scott needed great visuals of Watney’s face (as well as the faces of his crewmates) from a variety of angles, and the Z1 and Z2 — which both feature helmets that meld into the shoulder region of the suit — could not meet that requirement, Yates said.

    “Ridley needed to see his actors in profile; he needed to see them moving their heads; he needed close-ups on the eyes,” said Yates, who has worked with Scott repeatedly over the years. (She won an Oscar for her work on Scott’s 2000 film “Gladiator.”)

    Aesthetics were also an issue; Scott didn’t find the Z-2 spacesuit visually striking enough, Yates said.

    Yates worked with concept artists to draw up a variety of basic designs for the suit worn by Watney and his crewmates on the Martian surface, then presented them to Scott for approval. The body-hugging, black-white-and-orange suit showcased in the film emerged by process of elimination. (Interestingly, the movie’s suit superficially resembles the Biosuit, a real space garment being developed by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.)

    The costume-design team built the surface suit out of neoprene, the same material wetsuits are made of. The suits weigh a maximum of 15 to 20 lbs. (6.8 to 9.1 kilograms), though the actors wore heavy belts as well, Yates said.

    Damon and the other actors wore “cooling suits” beneath their spacesuits — basically, shirts and pants outfitted with tubes through which cold water can be pumped. Such cooling measures were doubtless appreciated, because the cast often wore their spacesuits for 10 to 12 hours per day during shooting, Yates said.

    The helmet was the most technically advanced part of the suit; it contained systems that pumped air in for the actors to breathe and also featured lighting and communications gear. But the movie suit’s helmets were nowhere near as sophisticated as the equipment that real astronauts use, Yates said. 

    “The helmet was only technical to the point that we needed it to function,” she said. “Keeping people alive is the most technical aspect of our work.”

    Working with NASA

    NASA officials and researchers served as advisers on “The Martian,” which is based on the novel of the same name by Andy Weir. And the space agency has been helping to promote the film, as a way to get the word out about its own plans to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s.

    So, while NASA didn’t come up with the surface suit featured in “The Martian,” agency officials did approve the astronaut apparel.

    “As we went along, we had to submit the designs for their approval,” Yates said. “And they approved along the way, as did the [film’s] art department.”

    “The Martian” features one other spacesuit in addition to the surface suit — a bulky white extravehicular activity (EVA) suit the astronauts wear in space. The film’s EVA suit is modeled closely on the one NASA astronauts wear on spacewalks outside the International Space Station, Yates said.

    “We kept that very much to NASA style, but we made it a lot more streamlined,” she said.

    Yates said she’s very grateful for the help and support NASA has provided, both during the making of the film and its promotion. The collaboration has been exciting for her personally as well.

    “I was very lucky — I was able to go to JPL,” Yates said, referring to the space agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “That was probably the best day of my life.”

    Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • Matt Damon in Space: Actor Hits Sci-Fi Trifecta with 'The Martian'

    Matt Damon has become a Hollywood A-lister by taking on roles in big-budget action films and dramas, but could he become known for his science fiction work instead? This Friday is opening night of “The Martian,” which is the third major science fiction movie starring Damon in the last two years.

    In 2014, Damon played a supporting role in Christopher Nolan’s space epic “Interstellar.” In 2013, he starred in “Elysium,” a story in which extreme class divides have sent wealthy people to live on a Shangri-La-esque space station orbiting Earth.

    It’s awesome to see a major celebrity participate in epic works of science fiction, especially since the genre tends to wax and wane in popularity with the general public. But “The Martian” director Ridley Scott said Damon was concerned about the similarities between his roles in “The Martian” and “Interstellar.” [Video: Making “The Martian” Was Amazing, Matt Damon Says]

    Matt Damon in 3 Science-Fiction Films

    Matt Damon appeared in (L to R): “Elysium,” “Interstellar” and “The Martian.”
    Credit: “Elysium”: Columbia TriStar; “Interstellar”: Paramount Pictures, Warner Brothers; “The Martian”: ™ and © 2015 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation

    In “The Martian,” Damon plays astronaut Mark Watney, who is mistaken for dead and left behind on Mars by his crewmates. He must find a way to survive on the inhospitable planet before a rescue mission can reach him. In “Interstellar,” Damon plays an astronaut who has willingly traveled to an unexplored planet to find out if it could host a colony of humans. 

    Scott mentioned Damon’s concerns about the similarity between the two roles during a panel discussion following an early screening of “The Martian” on Sunday, Sept. 27, in New York City.

    “I think he was concerned that he’d done [“Interstellar”] and that he had been isolated on a planet [in that too]. And he said, ‘You think that matters?’ and I said, ‘I don’t know. I need to see the film [‘Interstellar,’]’” Scott said. “I saw it and thought, ‘Nah, the film’s great, but I don’t think it connects in that way.’”

    Oddly enough, Damon’s co-star in “The Martian,” Jessica Chastain, was also in “Interstellar,” although the two never shared a scene in the latter movie. In “The Martian,” Chastain plays the captain of the Mars crew that accidentally leaves Watney behind. In “Interstellar,” she plays a brilliant physicist working on a problem that may save the human race.

    Damon was attached to “The Martian” from early on, even before Scott was chosen as the film’s director. In an exclusive interview with Space.com, we asked Damon if he was worried that the amount of science in the movie might make it a little too geeky.

    “I think the book does a very good job of, you know, [Weir] doesn’t go too deep into the weeds. At least, he doesn’t lose someone like me, and I’m really a layman,” he said. “So that’s what we really wanted to retain with the movie. We wanted it to feel like the science wasn’t beyond any of our capacity to understand. And hopefully the movie audience will get a kick out of it — you know they’re going to understand the problems that [Watney] has to overcome, and watch him overcome them.”

    Will Damon go for a fourth and fifth science fiction film in the near future? We’ve got our fingers crossed.

    Follow Calla Cofield @callacofield.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • A Fresh Perspective on an Extraordinary Cluster of Galaxies

    A Fresh Perspective on an Extraordinary Cluster of Galaxies

    Galaxy clusters are often described by superlatives. After all, they are huge conglomerations of galaxies, hot gas, and dark matter and represent the largest structures in the Universe held together by gravity.

  • A Fresh Perspective on an Extraordinary Cluster of Galaxies

    Galaxy clusters are often described by superlatives. After all, they are huge conglomerations of galaxies, hot gas, and dark matter and represent the largest structures in the Universe held together by gravity.

  • SMOS meets ocean monsters

    ESA’s SMOS and two other satellites are together providing insight into how surface winds evolve under tropical storm clouds in the Pacific Ocean. This new information could to help predict extreme weather at sea.

  • Space for visitors


    Technology image of the week: Visitor centre Space Expo will be participating in Sunday’s ESTEC Open Day with a bargain admission offer

  • [ISS / Japanese Experiment Module (KIBO)] JAXA Astronaut Activity Report, July 2015

    JAXA Astronaut Activity Report, July, 2015

    Last Updated: September 30, 2015

    This is JAXA’s Japanese astronaut activity report for July, 2015.

    Astronaut Kimiya Yui commences his ISS Expedition mission

    In early July, Astronaut Kimiya Yui and his crewmates Oleg Kononenko of the Russian Space Agency (RSA) and Kjell Lindgren of NASA underwent final training at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center (GCTC).

    On July 8 (local time), the trio was officially certified as the 43S prime crew, and held a press conference on the same day. Afterwards, as part of traditional preflight events, they visited the vicinity that is linked to the history of Russian space development, featuring a museum in Star City and a statue of Yuri Gagarin.

    On July 11 (local time), the crew moved to Baikonur, Kazakhstan, the launch site of the Soyuz spacecraft.

    Click to enlarge

    Yui checking the Soyuz TMA-17M spacecraft (43S) at the Baikonur Cosmodrome (Credit: S.P.Korolev RSC Energia)

    Click to enlarge

    Launch of the Soyuz TMA-17M spacecraft (Credit: JAXA/NASA/Aubrey Gemignani)

    Final preparations in Baikonur covered inspection of the actual Soyuz TMA-17M spacecraft, a dress rehearsal that included checking Yui’s Sokol spacesuit for leaks and fit-checking with the seat liner, training on manual Soyuz operations, a medical checkup, and observing assembly of the Soyuz rocket.

    Finally on July 23, the trio was launched aboard the Soyuz TMA-17M (43S) spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. Approximately six hours later, 43S docked with the International Space Station (ISS) and the trio commenced their long-duration mission.

    For Yui’s launch, Astronaut Koichi Wakata had traveled to Baikonur in support of Yui’s family.

    Yui is now conducting various experiments and performing system maintenance enthusiastically on the ISS.

    Astronaut Norishige Kanai participates in NEEMO 20

    Click to enlarge

    Kanai (rightmost) posing for a photo during NEEMO 20 training (Credit: JAXA/NASA)

    For two weeks from July 20, Astronaut Norishige Kanai underwent the 20th NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO 20).

    NEEMO 20 was conducted in an underwater laboratory with a habitable area called Aquarius, located off the Florida Keys at a depth of about 20 meters. NEEMO aims to foster the behavioral capabilities of participants when working as a team, such as teamworking, leadership, self-management, and cross-cultural understanding in an isolated environment, and prepare for a long-duration stay on the ISS.

    Pre-training was held nearby the site since July 13, a week prior to the start of NEEMO.

    On July 20, Kanai and the participants—Astronauts Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency (ESA) and Serena Aunon of NASA, and NASA EVA Management Office engineer David Coan—commenced their stay in Aquarius. Although fostering teamwork ability had been targeted during NEEMO 20, technical tests and assessments toward future manned space exploration were also conducted. In the submarine outside the laboratory, Extravehicular Activities (EVA) on asteroids and Mars were simulated to verify the usability of sample collection tools and work methods, depending on different surfaces and gravity levels.

    Tests were also conducted to determine whether members could perform work by wearing an eyeglass-type device that displayed the work procedures, as well as whether work could be done well under communication time delays with the controllers. At a press conference held from Aquarius, Kanai explained the content and status of his training to the media.

    Astronaut Takuya Onishi continues training for the ISS long-duration stay

    Continuing from June, Astronaut Takuya Onishi, a crew member for the Expedition 48/49 mission to the International Space Station (ISS), continued training at the NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC).

    At the JSC, Onishi took a simulation exam on responses in the event of emergencies on the ISS. Onishi demonstrated responses to such emergencies as fire, sudden depressurization, and toxic spills in completing the exam. He then completed all other exams as an Operator of the systems in the ISS U.S. segment.

    From July 6, Onishi stayed in Japan for three weeks.

    During his stay, while undergoing training for the Japanese Experiment Module (“Kibo”), Onishi participated in various activities, such as attending meetings for his long-duration mission, making courtesy visits to related parties, and engaging in public relations activities.

    Click to enlarge

    Simulation in concert with the JFCT (Credit: JAXA)

    Training for Kibo started with a review of the knowledge and techniques that he had learned in the previous training series, followed by training on the systems and experiments in Kibo, mainly on Kibo’s Airlock.

    Training on the Airlock was to install the JEM Small Satellite Orbital Deployer (J-SSOD) to Kibo’s Airlock. During the simulation of CubeSat (small satellite) deployment operations alongside the JAXA Flight Control Team (JFCT), Onishi confirmed collaboration with the team in case any irregularities occur.

    Onishi also gained an overview of the Exposed Experiment Handrail Attachment Mechanism (ExHAM), an exposed experiment device attached to Kibo’s Exposed Facility (EF) where experiments have been underway since May.

    Other training included daily operations conducted on Kibo, as well as service and maintenance operations.

    Astronaut Koichi Wakata participates in HTV5 operations simulation as CAPCOM

    From July 9-10 (Japan time), the Flight Control Team (FCT) of the H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV) KOUNOTORI and the NASA ISS flight controllers engaged in joint simulation training.

    Astronaut Koichi Wakata participated in the simulation training as a member of the NASA flight controllers.

    They simulated a series of operations ranging from KOUNOTORI’s rendezvous with the ISS, capture by the Space Station Remote Manipulator System (SSRMS), and berthing with the ISS, to activation.

    Wakata will serve as the lead Capsule Communicator (CAPCOM: ground communicator with the ISS) to support onboard astronauts who maneuver the SSRMS during KOUNOTORI 5 capture operation. While on orbit, Astronaut Yui will maneuver the SSRMS to grapple KOUNOTORI 5, and Astronaut Wakata will support SSRMS operations from the ground.

    Click to enlarge

    Onishi and Matsuura FD explaining the training (Credit: JAXA)

    The simulation held at the TKSC was open to the press. Mayumi Matsuura, lead HTV5 Flight Director (FD), was joined by Onishi to explain the content of the simulation training. Recalling his experience serving as one of the CAPCOMs during the HTV4 mission, Onishi gave the press his personal insights on the training.

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  • Will the 'Super Hubble' Space Telescope Find Alien Life? (Kavli Hangout)

    Image of a galaxy 10 billion light years away
    Simulated images of a galaxy 10 billion light-years from Earth, as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope (left) and the proposed High Definition Space Telescope (right), with 25 times the Hubble telescope’s resolving power.
    Credit: HDST/AURA

    Adam Hadhazy, writer and editor for The Kavli Foundation, contributed this article to Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

    Scientists have just unveiled a bold proposal for a giant, new, space-based telescope that would be far more powerful than today’s observatories. Called the High Definition Space Telescope (HDST), the instrument is essentially a supersize Hubble Space Telescope, with 100 times its ability to detect faint starlight. 

    With an estimated cost of $8 billion to $9 billion, HDST would be a game changer, and if it advances beyond the concept phase, it would launch in the 2030s. With a mirror 25 times the size of Hubble’s, HDST could delve deep into the universe’s past to trace how gasses enriched with the elemental ingredients of life moved in and out of galaxies. 

    HDST also could examine dozens of Earth-like exoplanets that are too tiny for the Hubble telescope and its immediate successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, to see. HDST would scour their atmospheres for signs of alien life, perhaps finally answering whether humanity is alone in the cosmos.

    The vision for the HDST was described in a July report spearheaded by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA), a consortium of global institutions that operate astronomical observatories.

    To learn more about HDST’s promise, join a live Kavli Foundation Google+ Hangout at Oct. 6 at 2 p.m. ET (1800 GMT). The Hangout will be hosted by AURA committee Co-Chairwoman Sara Seager, of the Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research at MIT and Co-Chairwoman Julianne Dalcanton, of the University of Washington, as well as AURA committee member Marc Postman, of the Space Telescope Science Institute. 

    The scientists will answer questions about how HDST will trace cosmic evolution, from the primeval rise of chemical elements necessary for life to the potential for alien life right in Earth’s cosmic backyard, plus how to build such a powerful instrument. 

    Questions can be submitted ahead of and during this webcast by emailing info@kavlifoundation.org or by using the hashtag #KavliLive on Google+ or Twitter. To join the event, visit kavlifoundation.com.

    About the participants:

    If you’re a topical expert — researcher, business leader, author or innovator — and would like to contribute an op-ed piece, email us here.
    Credit: SPACE.com

    Sara Seager — Seager is a professor of physics and planetary science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), an affiliated faculty member at the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, and co-chairwoman of the HDST study. Her research specialty is exoplanet atmospheres and interiors.

    Julianne Dalcanton — Dalcanton is a professor in the Department of Astronomy at the University of Washington and co-chairwoman of the HDST study. Her research focuses on the origin and evolution of galaxies.

    Marc Postman — Postman is an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) and served on the committee for the HDST report. His research interests include galaxy-cluster and large-scale cosmic structure evolution and formation, along with large space telescope design and implementation.

    Adam Hadhazy — The moderator, Hadhazy is a freelance science writer who principally covers astrophysics and astrobiology. He has a master’s degree in science journalism from New York University.

    Follow all of the Expert Voices issues and debates — and become part of the discussion — on FacebookTwitter and Google+. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. This version of the article was originally published on Space.com.

  • NASA Tests Lunar Rover Prototype with Eye Toward Flying Real Thing

    Resource Prospector Rover
    In this concept image, a resource prospector rover searches for water ice on the lunar surface.
    Credit: NASA

    WASHINGTON — The prototype of a rover designed to search for water ice at the poles of the moon passed a series of tests on Earth in August as project officials seek to line up funding and potential partnerships for the mission.

    A NASA team put the prototype version of the Resource Prospector rover, dubbed RP15, through its paces on a test site dubbed the “rock yard” at the Johnson Space Center, testing some of the technologies needed to operate on the lunar surface.

    “We wanted to take what we had learned so far and actually attempt to do an entire terrestrial mission, with as high a fidelity we could afford with the budget we’re given,” Dan Andrews, Resource Prospector project manager at NASA’s Ames Research Center, said in an Aug. 31 presentation at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics’ Space 2015 conference in Pasadena, California. [Photos: Astronaut Drives Rover from Space]

    Andrews said the project came up with the idea of RP15 in the fall of 2014, just before the current fiscal year started, and set a goal of building and testing the rover by the end of this fiscal year. A group at JSC that previously worked on Robonaut, a humanoid robot flown on the International Space Station, built the rover hardware, with software developed at Ames based on that used on the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer mission.

    The tests in the JSC rock yard, he said, successfully demonstrated some of the key technologies of the rover, including its ability to drill into the ground and capture samples. They also tested distributed operations, with teams at Ames controlling the rover at JSC.

    RP15 Rover Prototype

    The RP15 rover prototype at Johnson Space Center.
    Credit: NASA

    Current plans for Resource Prospector call for launching the mission on a medium-class rocket, like SpaceX’s Falcon 9, in 2020. The spacecraft would land on the lunar surface, near one of the poles, using a “crushable pad” landing system that eliminates the need for landing legs and makes it easier for the rover to roll off the lander and onto the lunar surface.

    The rover will carry a neutron spectrometer to probe for water ice deposits into the lunar surface. The solar-powered rover would also make brief excursions into permanently shadowed regions of craters most likely to have near-surface deposits of ice, drilling for samples before retreating back into sunlit regions to analyze them.

    Andrews said Resource Prospector is designed to carry out its complete mission within a two-week lunar day. That eliminates the complexity and accompanying cost of designing the rover to survive the long lunar night.

    Resource Prospector has a planned cost of no more than $250 million, excluding launch. Andrews said the mission would most likely be carried out in cooperation with an international or commercial partner that would provide the lander. “We’ve been told by the [White House] Office of Science and Technology Policy that commercial partnerships, or international partnerships, trump everything,” he said.

    A leading option is to work with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, which is planning a lunar lander mission. NASA and JAXA have discussed potential cooperation on Resource Prospector for a year and a half, including putting together a report on how the NASA rover would be included on the JAXA lander.

    “They are building, as you might imagine, a very impressive lander, more than we need to execute this mission,” Andrews said. A problem with that option, though, is that the lander may not be ready for a 2020 mission, since JAXA is not planning to fly a smaller prototype lander until 2019. A second option, he said, is to partner with Taiwan, which is also studying a lunar lander mission.

    Andrews said he has also visited with the three companies — Astrobotic Technology, Masten Space Systems and Moon Express — that are part of NASA’s Lunar Cargo Transportation and Landing by Soft Touchdown initiative   to support development of commercial lunar landers. Astrobotic and Moon Express are among the teams in the Google Lunar XPrize competition to develop lunar landers by a deadline that has been extended several times, most recently to the end of 2017. A decision on some kind of partnership is needed by June 2016 to support a launch in the fall of 2020, he said.

    Work on Resource Prospector, including the RP15 rover, has been funded by NASA’s Advanced Exploration Systems program office. Future support, though, remains uncertain. One issue, Andrews suggested, was the politics of lunar exploration in the wake of the decision to cancel the Constellation program in 2010. “It got swept up in general with the politics of ‘no’ to the moon,” he said.

    Andrews said Resource Prospector is now ready to go into Phase B, the planning phase of project development, provided the funding is there. “The politics may not be lined up yet,” he said. “Everything’s right but the local U.S. politics.”

    This story was provided by SpaceNews, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

  • ARCA Space Will Launch Test Flights from Spaceport America

    Hass Suborbital Rocket
    ARCA Space Corp. will start testing its Hass suborbital rocket (concept art above) at Space Port America in New Mexico in 2016.
    Credit: ARCA Space Corp

    PASADENA, Calif. — A company that has it roots in a Romanian venture that competed for the Ansari X Prize more than a decade ago plans to carry out tests of high-altitude drones and suborbital rockets at New Mexico’s Spaceport America, spaceport officials announced Sept. 1.

    ARCA Space Corporation, based in Las Cruces, New Mexico, plans to use the spaceport for flight tests of its AirStrato UAS drone starting near the end of this year. That will be followed in 2016 by tests of its Haas suborbital rocket, which the company ultimately intends to use for suborbital space tourism flights, carrying up to five people.

    “Only in New Mexico did we find the perfect combination of aerospace assets, airspace and affordability,” Dumitru Popescu, chief executive of ARCA Space, said in a statement about the company’s plans to operate from Spaceport America. [Spaceport America: A Reporter’s Photo Tour]

    The deal was the consummation of a decade of discussions about operating from New Mexico, said Aaron Prescott, head of business development for Spaceport America, in a Sept. 1 interview. ARCA first visited the state in 2005 when it attended the inaugural X Prize Cup held in Las Cruces. “We’ve stayed in touch ever since, and their technology and business model is now to the point where they’ve decided to make the move,” he said of ARCA.

    AirStrato UAS Drone

    ARCA’s first tests at Spaceport America will involve its high-altitude AirStrato UAS drone.
    Credit: ARCA Space Corp.

    Popescu founded ARCA, derived from the Romanian acronym for the Romanian Cosmonautics and Aeronautics Association, as a non-profit organization in 1999. It competed unsuccessfully in the $10 million Ansari X Prize suborbital spaceflight competition, but continued to develop both suborbital rocket and high-altitude drone technology after the end of the competition. It incorporated in the U.S. as ARCA Space in 2014.

    ARCA Space will initially use existing Spaceport America facilities, including its runway for drone tests and vertical launch site for rocket tests, Prescott said. The company may develop dedicated facilities there if its activities increase in the future, he added.

    The ARCA Space agreement is the latest effort by Spaceport America to diversify its customer base beyond its anchor tenant, Virgin Galactic. In May, the spaceport announced a deal with a California company, X2nSat, to establish a satellite ground station at the spaceport. Both ground stations and drones are part of the spaceport’s long-term business strategy, developed earlier this year, Prescott said.

    Spaceport America is also retaining ties with SpaceX, even as that company delays plans to conduct flight tests there. SpaceX leased property at the spaceport in 2013 for high-altitude flights of its Grasshopper and F9R vehicles , intended to test technologies intended for reusable versions of the Falcon 9. Prescott said that while those flights did not take place, SpaceX is still maintaining its lease and may return for other flight tests.

    Prescott said other companies, in both the aerospace field and other industries, are interested in using the spaceport. “We’ve got a growing pipeline of aerospace users,” he said, as well as some filming and other non-aerospace activities that he expected to be announced in the next few months.

    This story was provided by SpaceNews, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

  • 'The Martian' Movie and NASA: Full Coverage

    Human Mars exploration is getting the Hollywood treatment.

    “The Martian,” which stars Matt Damon as a NASA astronaut stranded on the Red Planet, hit theaters on Oct. 2. Learn about the real science and engineering behind the blockbuster film — and how the exploration depicted in “The Martian” meshes with NASA’s real-life plans to put boots on the Red Planet — in Space.com’s full coverage below.

    Our Review: Does ‘The Martian’ Movie Do the Book Justice? Yes. Yes, It Does  – Ridley Scott’s “The Martian” starring Matt Damon lands in theaters today, but how does it stack up to the hit science fiction novel by Andy Weir? Space.com’s Sarah Lewin explains. Our Latest Story: ‘The Martian’ Locales on Mars Revealed in NASA Spacecraft Photos

    Videos:

    Infographics and Multimedia:

    Story Coverage:

    Tuesday, Oct. 6

    ‘The Martian’ Locales on Mars Revealed in NASA Spacecraft Photos
    NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter now circling Mars has captured amazing images of craters and plains on Mars that are explored in the hit space movie “The Martian.”

    Where ‘The Martian’ Roved: Fly-Over From Orbital Images
    The European Space Agency’s Mars Express spacecraft has helped scientists create a stunning video flyover of the region of Mars that a stranded astronaut on Mars explores in the hit film “The Martian.”

    Monday, Oct. 5

    ‘The Martian’ Misses Out on a Faster Way to Mars: Op-Ed
    In “The Martian,” astronauts on the Hermes spacecraft take advantage of orbital mechanics to attempt a rescue of their crewmate Mark Watney stranded on Mars. But did they take the best possible trajectory? Here’s one expert’s take.

    Friday, Oct. 2

    Does ‘The Martian’ Movie Do the Book Justice? Yes. Yes, It Does
    “The Martian” hits theaters today, and we think it’s going to be a space movie of epic proportions. Here’s how it stacks up against its source material: the book “The Martian” by Andy Weir.

    ‘The Martian’ and Reality: How NASA Will Get Astronauts to Mars
    “The Martian” may be science fiction, but NASA is doing its best to make it a reality. Here’s how NASA plans to get astronauts to Mars in the 2030s.

    Thursday, Oct. 1

    Making ‘The Martian’: Exclusive Interview with Director Sir Ridley Scott
    Space.com’s Dave Brody gets up close and personal with “The Martian” director Sir Ridley Scott. See what Scott thinks about space travel, Mars exploration and Matt Damon.

    Related: ‘The Martian’ Director Ridley Scott Promotes NASA’s Mars Dreams

    ‘The Martian’ Wants to Mail You a Potato: Movie Offers Stamped Spuds
    Potatoes play a surprising role in the new space movie “The Martian.” Here’s how to get your own “The Martian” potato for spud goodness.

    Lush Oasis to Arid Desert: How Our View of Mars Has Changed
    Over the years, Mars has transformed from an imagined world filled with life to an arid desertlike world. See how the evolution happened.

    Wednesday, Sept. 30

    ‘The Martian’ Cast’s Q&A With Space Station Crew
    Real astronauts in space got a call from the cast of “The Martian” today. Watch how it went here.

    Inside ‘The Martian’: Movie’s Sleek Spacesuits Explained
    There’s some real-life science behind the sleek spacesuits worn by astronauts in the space movie “The Martian.” See the spacesuit tech involved here.

    Tuesday, Sept. 29

    The AstroCritic: What ‘The Martian’ Gets Right About Astronauts
    The movie gets a lot about astronauts right, suggests AstroCritic and former International Space Station commander Leroy Chiao.

    ‘The Martian’ Celebrates Discovery of Water on Mars
    Following NASA’s announcement that there is liquid water on the surface of Mars, Mark Watney, the fictional lead character in the upcoming movie “The Martian,” has a very special message for the world.

    ‘The Martian’ (2014): Book Excerpt
    Read chapter one of Andy Weir’s novel “The Martian.”

    Monday, Sept. 28

    ‘The Martian’ Dust Storm Would Actually Be a Breeze
    Mars’ dust storms would be much less damaging than portrayed in “The Martian,” though still dramatic.

    More “The Martian” Coverage

    ‘The Martian’ Lands at NASA: Actors Meet Real-Life Counterparts in Houston
    NASA rolled out the red carpet for two ‘Red Planet’ movie actors, providing a behind-the-scenes look at the agency’s real journey to Mars with the stars from “The Martian.” The cast members visited the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

    Train Like ‘The Martian’: Movie’s Mars Crew Gear for Sale by Sports Outfitter
    There’s a new way to look like an astronaut — or at least a fictional future crew member of a Mars-bound mission — thanks to a joint marketing promotion between the upcoming film “The Martian” and the American sports clothing company Under Armour.

    Making Mars Exploration ‘Smart and Cool’: NASA and ‘The Martian’
    In the history of Hollywood envisioning the future of space exploration, few, if any films have come as close to NASA’s own goals at the time of the movie’s release as Ridley Scott’s “The Martian.”

    Boots on Mars by 2050, ‘The Martian’ Author Says (Video)
    The author of “The Martian” suspects a lack of cooperation from Congress will push NASA’s first manned mission to the Red Planet back to the middle of the century.

    ‘The Martian’ Shows 9 Ways NASA Tech Is Headed to Mars
    How much of the technology in “The Martian” actually exists, or is in the works, today? Read on to find out what NASA’s developing for real-life manned Mars exploration.

    ‘The Martian’ Lands at NASA’s Mars Mission Control (Photos)
    “The Martian” star Matt Damon, director Ridley Scott and Andy Weir, who wrote the book on which the movie is based, visited NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, on Aug. 18.

    Epic Trailer for ‘The Martian’ Questions the Value of a Human Life in Space
    The awesome new trailer for “The Martian” is full of thrilling and stressful moments, and raises important questions about the value of human life in space exploration.

    First Trailer for ‘The Martian’ Puts Matt Damon in Peril
    The first official trailer for Ridley Scott’s “The Martian” is a doozy, packing gorgeous vistas of the Red Planet, intricately rendered spaceships and some laughs into three dramatic minutes.

    ‘The Martian’ Author Andy Weir Takes a Spin on NASA’s Electric Rover
    Andy Weir, author of the acclaimed novel ‘The Martian,’ stopped by NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston recently and took the new Modular Robotic Vehicle for a test ride. See the photos here.

    ‘The Martian’ Author Andy Weir & Steve Jurveston Mind-Meld on Mars Colonies
    The effort to colonize Mars moves forward, pushed by visionaries and pragmatists alike.

    Ridley Scott to Bring Andy Weir’s ‘The Martian’ to Life in 2015
    A movie adaptation of the science fiction thriller “The Martian” written by Andy Weir is set to hit the silver screen in 2015.

    Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • India Launches 1st Astronomy Satellite

    India's Astrosat Launch
    A PSLV lifted off Sept. 28 from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre and placed the 1,500-kilogram Astrosat into low Earth orbit.
    Credit: ISRO video

    PARIS — India’s PSLV rocket on Sept. 28 successfully placed the nation’s first astronomy satellite into a near-equatorial low Earth orbit along with six secondary payloads that included satellites owned by prospective competitors in commercial maritime surveillance.

    The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said the 1,513-kilogram Astrosat spacecraft was healthy in orbit. Operating from an orbit of 650 kilometers in altitude inclined six degrees relative to the equator, Astrosat is expected to deliver optical, ultraviolet and X-ray images of black holes and other phenomena in a five-year mission.

    Launched from the Satish Dhawan Space Center on India’s east coast, the PSLV — which has developed a regular business in carrying foreign satellites into low Earth orbit — placed one Indonesian, one Canadian and four U.S. satellites into orbit. [India’s First Mars Mission in Pictures (Gallery)]

    Indonesia’s LAPAN-A2 satellite was the biggest of the secondary payloads, weighing 76 kilograms and carrying an optical imager with a 4-meter ground resolution. The satellite was built by Indonesia’s National Institute of Aeronautics and Space. It follows the LAPAN-A1 satellite that was built under the leadership of the Technical University Berlin, with Indonesian engineers trained in Berlin in satellite construction.

    LAPAN-A2 also carries an Automatic Identification System (AIS) receiver to capture signals from ships and enable coastal-management agencies to determine ship identity, speed and heading beyond the reach of coastal radars.

    AIS is a capability common to all the secondary payloads on the Sept. 28 launch.

    Spire Global of San Francisco, which is fielding a constellation of cubesats to deliver GPS signal-occultation data for commercial meteorological use, is including AIS payloads on its spacecraft.

    The four 4-kilogram Lemur-2 satellites were successfully orbited, Spire said in a post-launch statement.

    Spire said it is the first U.S. cubesat owner to launch aboard the PSLV. Only recently, and with little fanfare, has the U.S. government relaxed its former policy of forbidding commercial satellites with U.S. parts to launch on India’s rockets because India had not agreed to sign an agreement with the U.S. on commercial-launch pricing.

    Skybox Imaging of Mountain View, California, owned by Google, has also contracted for multiple commercial imaging satellites to launch on the PSLV, and Airbus Defence and Space of Europe has launched the commercial Spot 6 and Spot 7 Earth-observation satellites, both with U.S. components, on PSLV rockets.

    The four AIS-equipped Lemur-2 satellites will make Spire the third commercial entity to field an AIS constellation. Orbcomm of Rochelle Park, New Jersey, has equipped its second-generation machine-to-machine messaging satellite constellation with AIS receivers, and exactEarth of Cambridge, Ontario — majority-owned by Canada’s Com Dev — is developing a dedicated AIS business.

    Satellite Quiz: How Well Do You Know What’s Orbitin…

    The space age dawned with the launch of Sputnik 1, Earth’s first artificial satellite, in 1957. Thousands of additional spacecraft have followed in Sputnik’s footsteps, serving humanity in a variety of ways. How well do you know Earth’s satellites?

    A Soviet technician works on Sputnik 1 before the satellite's Oct. 4, 1957 launch.

    0 of 10 questions complete

    Satellite Quiz: How Well Do You Know What’s Orbitin…

    The space age dawned with the launch of Sputnik 1, Earth’s first artificial satellite, in 1957. Thousands of additional spacecraft have followed in Sputnik’s footsteps, serving humanity in a variety of ways. How well do you know Earth’s satellites?

    Start Quiz
    A Soviet technician works on Sputnik 1 before the satellite's Oct. 4, 1957 launch.

    0 of questions complete

    The 5.5-kilogram exactEarth-9 satellite was aboard the PSLV rocket. Com Dev recently pulled a proposed initial public offer of exactEarth stock, citing overall market conditions, but has told investors that exactEarth will still receive the funds it would have drawn from the stock issue in the form of continued investment from Com Dev and Hisdesat of Spain, which owns a minority stake in exactEarth.

    The exactEarth EV9 satellite was injected into a good orbit, is healthy in orbit and is sending signals, company President Peter Mabson said Sept. 28.

    This story was provided by SpaceNews, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

  • Space.com Presents: The Art of Ed Belbruno (Event)

    'Diophantine Flow' by Belbruno
    The life of artist and scientist Edward Belbruno is profiled in the new documentary film, “Painting the Way to the Moon.” One of Belbruno’s paintings, “Diophantine Flow” (2010), pays homage to his scientific work on spacecraft orbits.
    Credit: Edward Belbruno

    This event is being produced by Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

    On Oct. 22, meet Princeton University artist and mathematician — and Space.com columnist — Ed Belbruno in a public showing of his art at Café Minerva in Manhattan. Join Space.com to celebrate how Belbruno’s art unlocks discoveries in space exploration, and experience the beauty of the universe in a whole new way.

    Inspired by his art, Belbruno charts new paths to travel the solar system and explores the cyclical nature of an expanding, and possibly contracting, universe. Belbruno gained fame at NASA when he successfully plotted a revolutionary route to the moon. Recently, he charted a new course to Mars, modeled how life may spread through the cosmos, and calculated evidence for an ever-expanding and contracting universe — all discoveries unlocked by the swirls, symbols and patterns of his art.

    Now the subject of the award-winning film “Painting the Way to the Moon,” Belbruno has become an advocate for transcending the barriers between the arts and sciences. 

    When: Oct. 22, 2015, from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. ET
    Where: Café Minerva, 302 West 4th Street, New York, NY 10014
    Who: Ed Belbruno of Princeton University

    Joined by special guests:

    • Robert Vanderbei, Princeton University
    • New York-based artist Rob Mars

    Space.com Essays by Ed Belbruno

    About Ed Belbruno

    Galleries

    Follow all of the Expert Voices issues and debates — and become part of the discussion — on Facebook, Twitter and Google+.