Constellations, Launch, New Space and more…
ZERO G Disputes Critical Inspector General’s Report

Participants experience microgravity aboard a Zero-G Corporation parabolic flight. (PRNewsFoto/Zero Gravity Corporation, Al Powers)


ZERO-G PRESS RELEASE

On June 18, 2010, the Office of Inspector General released an Audit Report of NASA’s Microgravity Flight Services as provided by Zero Gravity Corporation (ZERO-G). The report’s principal recommendation was that NASA should restructure ZERO-G’s current contract. ZERO-G would welcome the opportunity for the restructure in terms of addressing the appropriate measure of parabola quality and to assure NASA’s continued access to microgravity flight services from ZERO-G.

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  • July 1, 2010
ISRO Chief: Next Flight Test of Cryo Engine Will Occur in a Year

ISRO Chairman K Radhakrishnan says that the next test flight of the agency’s new cryogenic engine should take place in about a year.

“A flight testing of the Indigenous Cryogenic Engine Stage, in April, and as you know we had some snags there. We went through a very detailed analysis as to what happens and why it happens and we have come to a couple of scenarios in which such a snag would have occurred and our immediate task is to confirm that through testing on the ground and then prepare for the next flight testing. This should happen in year from now,” he added.

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  • June 30, 2010
Layoffs Hit Huntsville Workers

102 Huntsville Constellation workers laid off Tuesday; total nears 300
The Huntsville Times

A key NASA contractor laid off 102 aerospace workers in Huntsville Tuesday, sources said, bringing to nearly 300 the number reportedly sent home in the last week as the Constellation rocket program collapses toward a funding deadline today.

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  • June 30, 2010
NASA Future Uncertain After House Vote

Ares I-X lifts off from the Cape.

NASA budget: Lawmakers make no decision on Constellation, space shuttle future
Orlando Sentinel

A key congressional committee sidestepped a potential vote on NASA’s future Tuesday, opting to take no position on White House plans to scrap NASA’s moon-rocket program and replace the space shuttle with commercial rockets.

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  • June 30, 2010
Aerojet, NASA Glenn Complete 30,000 Hours of Testing on Next-Gen Ion Engines

A 40 cm ion thruster in operation at NASA Glenn Research Center. The NEXT program is a joint venture of NASA and Aerojet.

AEROJET PRESS RELEASE

Aerojet, a GenCorp company, announced today that its innovative ion propulsion engine – built in partnership between Aerojet and NASA’s Glenn Research Center – has completed a test series encompassing the requirements of a wide range of ambitious space missions, including the recently announced Flagship Technology Demonstrator first mission (FTD-1).

The thruster was developed under NASA’s Evolutionary Xenon Thruster (NEXT) program as the next generation beyond the ion engines now propelling the Dawn spacecraft to a pair of asteroids. The NEXT engine has been in operation for more than 30,000 hours at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio.

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  • June 30, 2010
Statement By President Obama on the National Space Plan

STATEMENT BY PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA
ON THE NATIONAL SPACE PLAN

Over the past fifty years, America has led the world in space exploration, broadening humanity’s horizons and our understanding of the universe.  And our achievements have in turn led to incredible technological advances that have improved our lives and transformed our economy.  We can point to satellites orbiting hundreds of miles overhead that can identify our location within inches, or communications systems that allow information to flow around the world as never before.  In part, what has made this progress possible was a commitment by our nation to scientific discovery and technological innovation, and an unyielding faith in the future – even during difficult times.

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  • June 30, 2010
Fact Sheet on The National Space Plan

FACT SHEET: THE NATIONAL SPACE PLAN

Today, President Obama announced the administration’s new National Space Policy.  The National Space Policy expresses the President’s direction for the Nation’s space activities.  The policy articulates the President’s commitment to reinvigorating U.S. leadership in space for the purposes of maintaining space as a stable and productive environment for the peaceful use of all nations.

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  • June 30, 2010
NASA Set to Release “Moonbase Alpha” Video Game

Having no money to build a real lunar base, NASA has decided to create one virtually.

NASA PRESS RELEASE

Moonbase Alpha is a game with single and multiplayer options where players step into the role of an exploration team member in a futuristic 3-D lunar settlement. Their mission is to restore critical systems and oxygen flow after a nearby meteor strike cripples a solar array and life support equipment.

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  • June 30, 2010
Video: Stephen Colbert’s Astronaut Training, Part 3

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c Fallback Position – Astronaut Pt. 3 www.colbertnation.com Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor Fox News Stephen Colbert completes his astronaut training at the Johnson Space Center.

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  • June 30, 2010
CSF Hails New National Space Policy

CSF PRESS RELEASE

The Commercial Spaceflight Federation welcomes President Obama’s new National Space Policy, which underscores the importance of commercial spaceflight for American economic growth and leadership in space.

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  • June 30, 2010
NASA Seeks Proposals on Heavy-Lift Vehicle

NASA has issued a Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) seeking proposals and industry input on heavy-lift system concepts and propulsion technology.

NASA is seeking an innovative path for human space exploration that strengthens its capability to extend human and robotic presence throughout the solar system. The information also may help lay the groundwork for humans to safely reach multiple potential destinations, including asteroids, Lagrange points, the moon and Mars.

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  • June 30, 2010