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Archive for the ‘space travel’ category: Page 135

Aug 4, 2022

Stop Sarmat (Satan II), Hypersonics — All Missiles — the Details

Posted by in categories: drones, military, space travel

The technology, even the interceptor systems already exists; We just need to integrate them. See my survey of the existing interceptors and how we could use them in conjunction with space launch rockets, such as a derivative of the Ares I-X which has already flown! Listen as I explain how many of these various interceptors you can fly in massive drone swarms from Ares I style boosters and larger variants.

Awesome deals for long term food supplies for those long missions to deep space (or prepping in case your spaceship crashes: See the Special Deals at My Patriot Supply: www.PrepWithGreg.com.

Continue reading “Stop Sarmat (Satan II), Hypersonics — All Missiles — the Details” »

Aug 4, 2022

NASA Confirms Launch Date for Its Massive Moon Rocket

Posted by in category: space travel

Artemis I is set to launch August 29 for an uncrewed mission to the Moon. NASA hopes its Artemis program will return humans to the lunar surface.

Aug 4, 2022

NASA’s private spaceflight move paves the way for future space tourism

Posted by in category: space travel

Aug 4, 2022

Researchers achieve world’s first international holographic teleportation

Posted by in categories: holograms, space travel

Holographic teleportation sounds like something out of Star Wars or Star Trek, but instead of the bridge of a flashy interstellar spaceship, a world-first technological achievement took place in a nondescript boardroom on campus at Western recently.

The term holographic teleportation, or holoport, is a combination of hologram and teleport: when a hologram of a person or object is transmitted instantaneously to another location.

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Aug 3, 2022

Space debris Australia: Piece of SpaceX capsule crashes to Earth in field

Posted by in category: space travel

This may become more common as the number of rockets sent to space increases, an expert said.

Aug 2, 2022

The Overview Effect: Why We Should Speed Up Space Exploration

Posted by in category: space travel

The Overview Effect — another Reason to Speed up Space Exploration “…you develop an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world and a compulsion to do something about it…”

Posted on Big Think, direct link at.


Posted on Big Think.

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Aug 2, 2022

NASA Engineer Says Physics-defying Engine Could Go 99% the Speed of Light

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, space travel

Though the EmDrive might be impossible, engineers are still working on it as the payoff would be enormous if it did work.


Imagine an engine that needs no propellant. It sounds impossible, and it most likely is.

That’s not stopping one NASA engineer from testing theories around the EmDrive — a conceptual “helical” engine that could defy the laws of physics and create forward thrust without fuel.

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Aug 2, 2022

Robot realized itself and learned to use its body for the first time | High Tech News

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, information science, media & arts, robotics/AI, space travel

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTMD57bsRj0&feature=share

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You are on the PRO Robots channel and today we present you with some high-tech news. The first robot with self-awareness, a new breakthrough in the creation of general artificial intelligence, evolving robots, a Japanese home for a space colony, an unexpected turn in the fate of XPENG Robotics and other news from the world of high technology in one issue! Let’s roll!

Continue reading “Robot realized itself and learned to use its body for the first time | High Tech News” »

Aug 1, 2022

LK Lunar Lander: The Tiny Tin Can Built to Land Cosmonauts to the Moon

Posted by in category: space travel

It’s said that the metal that made up the outer skin of the Apollo Lunar Excursion Module was no thicker than a couple of soda cans stacked on top of each other. How it never failed even once is beyond us. But if you think the LEM looked like a screaming metal deathtrap, imagine a similar Soviet spacecraft half the size and more claustrophobic.

Aug 1, 2022

Google-backed chip startup Lightmatter just poached a 20-year veteran of Intel to help bring a faster and more energy-efficient computer processor to the mainstream

Posted by in categories: computing, engineering, space travel

The startup is hiring Ritesh Jain, VP of engineering at Intel, to help it move from the prototype phase of its chip development to mass production.


ESA is prepping to send a spacecraft to Venus — a feat which will require state-of-the-art methods to get through the planet’s grueling atmosphere.