Archive for kennedy space center

NASA to Lease Historic Launch Pad for Commercial Rocket Missions




Launch Pad 39A Artist's Conception


Artist’s concept showing a possible layout of a commercial rocket and spacecraft positioned at Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
CREDIT: NASA


The historic NASA launch pad from where astronauts blasted off for the moon and space shuttles departed for Earth orbit is now in need of a new rocket to launch.

This week, NASA is expected to begin soliciting proposals for the commercial use of Launch Pad 39A at the space agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Use of the pad by private industry will keep the historic launch complex active while also encouraging the growth of commercial space activities along Florida’s Space Coast, officials said.

“We remain committed to right-sizing our portfolio by reducing the number of facilities that are underused, duplicative, or not required to support the Space Launch System and Orion,” Kennedy Center Director Bob Cabana said in a statement, referring to NASA’s next-generation heavy-lift booster and its crewed spacecraft. [Photos: NASA's Giant Rocket for Deep Space Flights]

“Launch Complex 39A is not required to support our [planned] asteroid retrieval mission or our eventual missions to Mars,” Cabana added. “It’s in the agency’s and our nation’s best interest in meeting our commitment and direction to enable commercial space operations and allow the aerospace industry to operate and maintain the pad and related facilities.”

Since the end of the space shuttle program in 2011, NASA has turned to commercial space companies to provide launch services. Two companies, SpaceX and Orbital Sciences, were awarded contracts to bring cargo to the International Space Station, while SpaceX, Boeing and Sierra Nevada Corp. are vying for a deal to fly NASA astronauts to the orbiting lab.

SpaceX has said in the past that it has considered using NASA’s launch facilities in place of, or in addition to, its current pad leased from the United States Air Force at Florida’s Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Other companies, such as Alliant Techsystems (ATK), might benefit from the use of the legacy hardware given that its Liberty rocket shares a heritage with the space shuttle’s boosters.

Launch Pad 39A was one of two large launch complexes built in the 1960s to support the Apollo program’s Saturn V rocket launches to the moon and Saturn IB flights to the Skylab space station. Both pads were later modified for the space shuttle launches to deploy and service satellites and build the International Space Station.

Pad 39A’s twin, Pad 39B, was stripped of its iconic launch support towers in 2011 to enable its use for possible future commercial and government launch vehicles. Launch Pad 39A, which supported 92 launches since November 1967 — 12 Saturn V rockets and 80 shuttles — was initially set to support the new Space Launch System.

Aerial View of Launch Pad 39A

Budget constraints however, caused NASA to consolidate its future launch pad needs at Pad 39B, leaving Pad 39A without a purpose. And without the funding to modify or maintain it, Cabana said earlier this year that the agency has no choice but to abandon Pad 39A in place unless a commercial user could be identified.

According to the space agency’s own assessments, Pad 39A could still serve as a platform for a private company’s launch activities. However, this would require the company to take over financial and technical responsibility of the complex’s operations and management.

According to a synopsis released by the space agency on Friday (May 17), NASA is contemplating entering into one or more lease agreements for Pad 39A for a minimum of five years. Other terms, including longer-term agreements and different contractual relationships, can be suggested, the agency’s synopsis states.

To maximize the use of Launch Pad 39A and keep its gantries and other infrastructure from deteriorating due to a lack of regular maintenance, NASA said it will expedite its process, with submissions due within 30 days of the announcement accepting proposals.

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Article source: http://www.space.com/21230-nasa-launch-pad-commercial-rockets.html

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NASA Invites Media to Annual Lunabotics Mining Competition

Ann Marie Trotta
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1601
ann.marie.trotta@nasa.gov

Tracy Young
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468
tracy.g.young@nasa.gov

Andrea Farmer/Catherine Segar
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, Fla.
321-449-4318/321-449-4273
afarmer@dncinc.com/csegar@dncinc.com

MEDIA ADVISORY
:
M13-069

NASA Invites Media to Annual Lunabotics Mining Competition

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Fifty teams of undergraduate and graduate students from around the world will demonstrate their lunar excavator robots May 20 – 24 at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Practice sessions for the fourth annual Lunabotics Mining Competition will take place May 20 – 21, followed by the official competition. Media representatives are invited to cover the event on Wednesday, May 22 from 12 – 4 p.m. EDT, at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex. For access to the facility, journalists should contact Catherine Segar at 321-449-4273 or csegar@dncinc.com. Requests for interviews with NASA representatives must be submitted to Tracy Young at 321-867-2468 or tracy.g.young@nasa.gov.

The teams have designed and built remote controlled or autonomous robots that can excavate simulated lunar dirt. During the competition, the teams’ designs — known as lunabots — will go head-to-head to determine which machine can collect and move the most simulated lunar dirt within a specific amount of time.

The competition is a NASA Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate project designed to engage and retain students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields by expanding opportunities for student research and design. The project provides a competitive environment to foster innovative ideas and solutions that could potentially be applied to future NASA missions.

Although the competition is for college students, the event offers many opportunities for students of all ages. NASA is hosting a college recruitment fair for high school sophomores, juniors and seniors showcasing STEM education opportunities available at top colleges and universities across the nation.

For more information on Lunabotics 2013, associated activities and social media links to participate virtually, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/lunabotics

Video highlights of the practice and competition will air on the NASA Television Video File. For downlink information, schedules and links to streaming video, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

For information about the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, visit:

http://www.kennedyspacecenter.com

– end –



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Article source: http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2013/may/HQ_M13-069_Lunabotics_2013.html

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New NASA exhibit is for the birds – and kids – Philly.com

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Angry Birds have a new space coop.


At NASA’s invitation, the online game birds are roosting at the Kennedy Space Center for the next 11/2 years to lure youngsters to the cosmic wonders of math and science.

The huge interactive exhibit opened in March and immediately packed in the kids, including this reporter’s 7-year-old son, who couldn’t get enough of the mirrored maze and the design-your-own Angry Bird and play-the-game stations.

It’s called Angry Birds Space Encounter and it’s the first of its kind.

Astronaut Donald Pettit, a chemical engineer and father of 12-year-old twin boys, announced the collaboration between NASA and Angry Birds creator Rovio Entertainment a year ago while living aboard the International Space Station. He squeezed in as much physics as he could in the YouTube announcement.

“Wow, this could be a great venue for getting some physics and getting some math and getting some science into something that has the connotation as just an empty brain-draining video game that sucks out the creativity from the minds of young people,” Pettit said at the grand opening.

“And so I thought, well, maybe I could help make a difference on this and bring the idea of a game up to a different level, where, unbeknownst to the kids playing it, they’re learning a little bit of math and physics at the same time.”





Enter the concepts of parabolic trajectories, hyperbolic trajectories, elliptical trajectories, and even Holman transfer orbits, “which is what we do with spacecraft going from Planet A to Planet B.”

“There’s all this stuff latent in this game, particularly if you tend to be a geek, or an uber-geek, or what I’m actually calling now a super-uber-geek,” Pettit said. “All of this stuff can be mined out of this game, and it can be used as an excuse to learn more. If you’re not in any of those categories as a kid, you can still play the game and be entertained.”

Parent Alert: If a Ph.D. astronaut like Pettit endorses Angry Birds Space, it must be worthwhile.

Toss in space shuttle Atlantis, and the educational value goes sky-high. The $100 million Atlantis display, just a few minutes by foot from Angry Birds Space Encounter, is scheduled to open June 29.

Angry Birds is “a nice prelude to Atlantis, and it will be a nice complement as well,” especially for children, said John Stine, Delaware North Co.’s director of sales and events at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.

“They’re going to learn something about Angry Birds, and they’re going to really be inspired when they go to Atlantis.”

Rovio Entertainment, of Finland, plans another Angry Birds Space exhibit at another site in the near future, said Dan Mitchell, the company’s director of location-based entertainment.

“But you can’t get a much more true-to-life space theme than being here at Kennedy Space Center,” Mitchell said as his 6-year-old daughter waited none too patiently at the exhibit entrance.

The 4,485-square-foot exhibit features six interactive stations, including 4-foot-high Eggsteroids Slingshots children can use to launch mini Angry Birds at enemy pigs, and a laser-beam obstacle course set on the Red Planet.

This reporter’s son had to be dragged away after more than an hour in the noisy, darkened chamber – noisy and dark for grown-ups, that is. The Florida sunlight beckoned, with the outdoor play area, rocket garden, and shuttle launch-simulator ride.

“Want to go back to the Angry Birds?” he pleaded a few days later. “Pleeeease.”

 


For More Information

The Kennedy Space Center visitor complex is about an hour’s drive east of Orlando. Hours: Open daily 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

Admission: Adults, $50; children 3-11, $40 (plus tax).

On the Web: kennedyspacecenter.com

 


To comment, e-mail TravelTalk@phillynews.com.

See more Travel news at www.inquirer.com/features/lifestyle/travel.

Article source: http://www.philly.com/philly/travel/20130505_New_NASA_exhibit_is_for_the_birds_-_and_kids.html

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NASA Unwraps Space Shuttle Atlantis Ahead Of Kennedy Space Center Debut …

NASA’s space shuttle Atlantis is being unwrapped during a two-day process before it makes its debut at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.

Atlantis was encased in protective shrink wrap to shield the orbiter before it is unveiled to the public as part of a $100 million attraction that will open June 29.

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The shuttle’s future home at the Kennedy Space Center has been under construction for 15 months, according to the space agency.

Space shuttle Atlantis was moved to the Visitor Complex on Nov. 2, enclosed in 16,000 square feet of plastic shrink wrap.

And the two-day unwrapping process involved the help of experts who methodically cut sections of the plastic wrap before lifting it off the spacecraft.

NASA is positioning Atlantis at a 43.21 angle and 30 feet off the ground to emulate its orbit around the Earth.

Guests will have the opportunity to see the shuttle up-close and be able to have a 360-degree view from multiple angles.

And with 33 missions under its belt, NASA says that visitors will be able to see the wear and tear on the external tiles of the orbiter.

A final inspection will be conducted next week before the shuttle makes its official debut this summer as part of the final phase of the project.

The payload bay doors will be open starting in May, a three-day process, so that visitors can take a peek inside the shuttle—an opportunity that has never been offered to the public before.

For more information regarding the Atlantis exhibit, visit the Kennedy Space Center website.

 

 

 

Article source: http://www.latinospost.com/articles/17694/20130427/nasa-unwraps-space-shuttle-atlantis-ahead-kennedy-center-debut-june.htm

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Senator says NASA to capture asteroid, park near moon

NASA is planning for a robotic spaceship to lasso a small asteroid and park it near the moon for astronauts to explore, a top senator revealed Friday.

WASHINGTON (AP) — NASA is planning for a robotic spaceship to lasso a small asteroid and park it near the moon for astronauts to explore, a top senator revealed Friday.

The robotic ship would capture the 500-ton 25-foot asteroid in 2019. Then using an Orion space capsule, now being developed, a crew of about four astronauts would nuzzle up next to the rock in 2021 for spacewalking exploration, according to a government document obtained by The Associated Press.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., said the plan would speed up by four years the existing mission to land astronauts on an asteroid by bringing the space rock closer to Earth.

Nelson, who is chairman of the Senate science and space subcommittee, said Friday that President Obama is putting $100 million in planning money for the accelerated asteroid mission in the 2014 budget that comes out next week. The money would be used to find the right small asteroid.

“It really is a clever concept,” Nelson said in a press conference in Orlando. “Go find your ideal candidate for an asteroid. Go get it robotically and bring it back.”

While there are thousands of asteroids that size out there, finding the right one that comes by Earth at just the right time to be captured will not be easy, said Donald Yeomans, who heads NASA’s Near Earth Object program that monitors close-by asteroids. He said once a suitable rock is found it would be captured with the space equivalent of “a baggie with a drawstring. You bag it. You attach the solar propulsion module to de-spin it and bring it back to where you want it.”

Yeomans said a 25-foot asteroid is no threat to Earth because it would burn up should it inadvertently enter Earth’s atmosphere. The mission as Nelson described is perfectly safe, he said.

Nelson said this would help NASA develop the capability to nudge away a dangerous asteroid if one headed to Earth in the future. It also would be training for a future mission to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s, he said.

The government document said the mission, with no price tag at the moment, would inspire because it “will send humans farther than they have ever been before.”

Article source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/05/nasa-asteroid-nelson/2057879/

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Wildfire and Smoke Over the Kennedy Space Center

Firefighters Work to Stop the Center Fire

NASA and USFWS firefighters work to protect the laser range located within the Center Fire path. The facility in the foreground is the laser range target, in the background you can see the laser. No NASA facilities were damaged during the fire. The fire occurred just south of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center headquarters on Merritt Island in Audobon, Florida. This image was taken on April 2, 2013.

Article source: http://www.space.com/20516-kennedy-space-center-wildfire-photos.html

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Wildfire Blazes Near NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida

Lightning triggered the blaze on Monday, April 1, according to media reports.

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Wildfire Blazes Near NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (Photos)

See photos of a big wildfire near NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., in April 2013.

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Photos: The Kennedy Space Center, NASA’s Historic Spaceport

See photos of America’s historic spaceport, Kennedy Space Center in Florida

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NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Information




center fire near kennedy space center


Fire behavior during the second day of the Center fire as seen from a helicopter. The fire occurred just south of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center headquarters on Merritt Island in Audobon, Florida. This image was taken on April 2, 2013.
CREDIT: Michael Good – USFWS


Firefighters are working to protect NASA’s gateway to space, the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, from a 2,000-acre wildfire, according to Central Florida’s News 13.

According to the CFNews 13 report, the fire began Monday (April 1) when lightning triggered the blaze at the Merrit Island National Wildlife Refuge in Brevard County. The wildlife preserve is also home to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, which served as the launching site for its space shuttles, Apollo moon missions and other manned spaceflights. [See more wildfire photos from NASA's Kennedy Space Center]

So far no damage from the fire has been reported at NASA’s KSC facilities. See the latest wildfire news from CFNews 13

center fire near kennedy space center

Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalik and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+.

Article source: http://www.space.com/20520-wildfire-nasa-kennedy-space-center.html

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