Archive for nasa spokesman

Cleveland played key roles in space program, NASA spokesman tells Bay …

View full size NASA exhibits specialist John Oldham stands next to an Apollo space suit, a Saturn V model rocket and a moon rock brought back by astronauts from the Apollo 15 mission. They were among the artifacts he brought to the Lake Erie Nature Science Center for a presenation on the history of U.S. manned space flight.  

The NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland and the Plum Brook Station in Sandusky played key roles in the Apollo manned space missions, a NASA spokesman told an audience recently at the Lake Erie Nature Science Center in Bay Village.

NASA exhibits specialist John Oldham brought a slideshow, a space rock and numerous exhibits to the science center for a Feb. 14 presentation about space mission successes and failures. Oldham recounted how the United States raced against the Russians to land a man on the moon, and described how NASA scientists faced and overcame technological challenges.

Much of the work was done in Cleveland, according to Oldham.

“It played a very big role,” he said. “Some of the technology developed at Glenn directly enabled Apollo to be successful.”

He credited Glenn scientists with helping work on hydrogen fuel research and rockets used in the space program.

“We did a lot of the development and research for some of the components, and we do a lot of the materials testing out there, as well,” Oldham said. “The atmospheric chamber at Plum Brook, the vacuum chamber, was vital in testing a lot of hardware in a big space environment.”

In addition, the Glenn Research Center played an integral role in investigating what went wrong with the Apollo 13 space mission, when an explosion onboard nearly led to the crew being stranded in space. Experiments at Glenn helped NASA duplicate the conditions the capsule faced in flight and led investigators to suspect that a short circuit from a malfunctioning component ignited an oxygen tank.

Oldham also discussed the future for the space agency, saying its role is changing, but it will remain an important agency.

“We’ve only quit flying the shuttle,” he said. “We hear that NASA has folded its tent and gone, but it couldn’t be further from the truth. We have a multitude of missions, both manned and unmanned.”

View full size NASA exhibits specialist John Oldham stands behind a table containing several displays relating to the history of the Apollo space program. Pictured from left to right are models of a space capsule, a lunar landing module, a lunar rover and a larger model of a lunar landing module.  

While commercial companies will play a larger role in developing future spacecraft for lower Earth-orbit missions, such as servicing the International Space Station, NASA continues work on longer-range missions.

“That leaves us and our assets free to do the bigger tasks ahead, to develop spacecraft to go out beyond the moon,” Oldham said. “Asteroid missions are on the boards as a possible mission. Of course, the moon is always a possibility, and it probably will play a part in our future explorations.

“Mars certainly is an obvious choice. There are people right now working on the spacesuits, and the hardware and the technology, and certainly the spacecraft to do that mission.”

Oldham displayed for the audience a spacesuit sent up with Apollo 8 astronauts and a moon rock returned to Earth by the Apollo 15 mission.

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Article source: http://www.cleveland.com/bay-village/index.ssf/2013/02/cleveland_played_key_roles_in.html

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Space station may get inflatable module

Bigelow's BEAM module is likely to be an upscale version of the already orbiting Genesis module — two of which have already flown into Earth orbit.NASA and Bigelow Aerospace have reached an agreement that could pave the way for attaching a Bigelow-built inflatable space habitat to the International Space Station, a NASA spokesman said.

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NASA seeks a cheaper road to Mars

Know how to go to Mars cheaply? NASA can use your help.

The space agency on Friday put out a call for ideas for the next Mars mission in 2018. The fine print: The cost can’t be astronomical and the idea has to move the country closer to landing humans on the red planet in the 2030s.

“This is the kickoff,” said NASA sciences chief John Grunsfeld.

The race to redraw a new, cheaper road map comes two months after NASA pulled out of a partnership with the European Space Agency on two missions targeted for 2016 and 2018, a move that angered scientists. The 2018 mission represented the first step toward hauling Martian soil and rocks back to Earth for detailed study – something many researchers say is essential in determining whether microbial life once existed there.

Agency officials said returning samples is still a priority, but a reboot was necessary given the financial reality.

In the past decade, NASA has spent $6.1 billion exploring Earth’s closest planetary neighbor. President Barack Obama’s latest proposed budget slashed spending for solar system exploration by 21 percent, making the collaboration with the Europeans unaffordable.

A newly formed team will cull through the ideas and come up with options by summer around the time when NASA’s latest mission, a $2.5 billion car-sized rover Curiosity, will land near the equator on Mars. NASA headquarters is the ultimate decider of which future projects to fund.

Whatever mission flies in 2018, it will be vastly cheaper than Curiosity and will be capped at $700 million.

NASA is mainly seeking suggestions from scientists and engineers around the world, but you don’t have to have a Ph.D. Anyone can submit a proposal online and go through a lengthy process.

“Check all the boxes and you may be considered,” said NASA spokesman Dwayne Brown.

Scientists welcomed the chance to offer input but worried about the budget uncertainty.

“It will be extremely difficult to plan and implement the next specific steps that will lead to Mars sample return,” Arizona State University scientist Jim Bell said in an email. He is part of the rover Curiosity team.

 

Article source: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/04/13/nasa-announces-cheaper-road-to-mars/

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Budget woes force NASA to redraw plans to Mars

Know how to go to Mars cheaply? NASA can use your help.

The space agency on Friday put out a call for ideas for the next Mars mission in 2018. The fine print: The cost can’t be astronomical and the idea has to move the country closer to landing humans on the red planet in the 2030s.

“This is the kickoff,” said NASA sciences chief John Grunsfeld.

The race to redraw a new, cheaper road map comes two months after NASA pulled out of a partnership with the European Space Agency on two missions targeted for 2016 and 2018, a move that angered scientists. The 2018 mission represented the first step toward hauling Martian soil and rocks back to Earth for detailed study — something many researchers say is essential in determining whether microbial life once existed there.

Agency officials said returning samples is still a priority, but a reboot was necessary given the financial reality.

In the past decade, NASA has spent $6.1 billion exploring Earth’s closest planetary neighbor. President Barack Obama’s latest proposed budget slashed spending for solar system exploration by 21 percent, making the collaboration with the Europeans unaffordable.

A newly formed team will cull through the ideas and come up with options by summer around the time when NASA’s latest mission, a $2.5 billion car-sized rover Curiosity, will land near the equator on Mars. NASA headquarters is the ultimate decider of which future projects to fund.

NASA is mainly seeking suggestions from scientists and engineers around the world, but you don’t have to have a Ph.D. Anyone can submit a proposal online and go through a lengthy process.

“Check all the boxes and you may be considered,” said NASA spokesman Dwayne Brown.

Scientists welcomed the chance to offer input but worried about the budget uncertainty.

“It will be extremely difficult to plan and implement the next specific steps that will lead to Mars sample return,” Arizona State University scientist Jim Bell said in an email. He is part of the rover Curiosity team.

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Online:

http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/marsconcepts2012/

Article source: http://www.sooeveningnews.com/newsnow/x1830133340/Budget-woes-force-NASA-to-redraw-plans-to-Mars

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NASA Mars Plans Uncertain As Budget Woes Grip Space Agency

Celestia_mars

LOS ANGELES — Know how to go to Mars cheaply? NASA can use your help.

The space agency on Friday put out a call for ideas for the next Mars mission in 2018. The fine print: The cost can’t be astronomical and the idea has to move the country closer to landing humans on the red planet in the 2030s.

“This is the kickoff,” said NASA sciences chief John Grunsfeld.

The race to redraw a new, cheaper road map comes two months after NASA pulled out of a partnership with the European Space Agency on two missions targeted for 2016 and 2018, a move that angered scientists. The 2018 mission represented the first step toward hauling Martian soil and rocks back to Earth for detailed study – something many researchers say is essential in determining whether microbial life once existed there.

Agency officials said returning samples is still a priority, but a reboot was necessary given the financial reality.

In the past decade, NASA has spent $6.1 billion exploring Earth’s closest planetary neighbor. President Barack Obama’s latest proposed budget slashed spending for solar system exploration by 21 percent, making the collaboration with the Europeans unaffordable.

A newly formed team will cull through the ideas and come up with options by summer around the time when NASA’s latest mission, a $2.5 billion car-sized rover Curiosity, will land near the equator on Mars. NASA headquarters is the ultimate decider of which future projects to fund.

Whatever mission flies in 2018, it will be vastly cheaper than Curiosity and will be capped at $700 million.

NASA is mainly seeking suggestions from scientists and engineers around the world, but you don’t have to have a Ph.D. Anyone can submit a proposal online and go through a lengthy process.

“Check all the boxes and you may be considered,” said NASA spokesman Dwayne Brown.

Scientists welcomed the chance to offer input but worried about the budget uncertainty.

“It will be extremely difficult to plan and implement the next specific steps that will lead to Mars sample return,” Arizona State University scientist Jim Bell said in an email. He is part of the rover Curiosity team.

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Article source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/13/nasa-mars-plans-budget-woes-space_n_1424751.html?ref=technology&ir=Technology

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NASA says was hacked 13 times last year



NASA said hackers stole employee credentials and gained access to mission-critical projects last year in 13 major network breaches that could compromise US national security.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Inspector General Paul Martin testified before Congress this week on the breaches, which appear to be among the more significant in a string of security problems for federal agencies.

The space agency discovered in November that hackers working through an Internet Protocol address in China broke into the network of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Martin said in testimony released on Wednesday. One of NASA’s key labs, JPL manages 23 spacecraft conducting active space missions, including missions to Jupiter, Mars and Saturn.

He said the hackers gained full system access, which allowed them to modify, copy, or delete sensitive files, create new user accounts and upload hacking tools to steal user credentials and compromise other NASA systems. They were also able to modify system logs to conceal their actions.

“Our review disclosed that the intruders had compromised the accounts of the most privileged JPL users, giving the intruders access to most of JPL’s networks,” he said. (http: bit.ly/yQFSB8)

In another attack last year, intruders stole credentials for accessing NASA systems from more than 150 employees. Martin said that his office identified thousands of computer security lapses at the agency in 2010 and 2011.

He also said NASA has moved too slowly to encrypt or scramble the data on its laptop computers to protect information from falling into the wrong hands.

Unencrypted notebook computers that have been lost or stolen include ones containing codes for controlling the International Space Station, as well as sensitive data on NASA’s Constellation and Orion programs, Martin said.

A NASA spokesman told Reuters on Friday the agency was implementing recommendations made by the Inspector General’s Office.

“NASA takes the issue of IT security very seriously, and at no point in time have operations of the International Space Station been in jeopardy due to a data breach,” said NASA spokesman Michael Cabbagehe.

Air force scraps iPad purchase

In a separate development, the US Air Force said on Friday it had scrapped a plan to outfit thousands of personnel with second-generation iPad tablet computers from Apple Inc, but denied the reversal was because some of the software it wanted on the devices had been written in Russia.

Two days ago, news website Nextgov raised questions about a requirement that the 2,861 iPad 2s come equipped with GoodReader, an electronic document display program written by an independent Russian developer.

The devices were to be used to store and update flight information, regulations and orders, according to procurement documents.

“The cancellation was not the result of any concern about GoodReader,” said Matt Durham, a spokesman at the Air Force Special Operations Command.

He said the cancellation of the six-week-old order followed a decision that the procurement should not have been reserved for small businesses.

The military and other branches of government have been putting an increased emphasis on “supply-chain security” as they try to make sure that hardware, software and other components have not been tampered with by other nations.

This has proved challenging because so many parts come from overseas. Even American companies often contract for programming work abroad.

Mike Jacobs, who headed the National Security Agency’s program for defending US equipment, said in an interview he had killed a major procurement of encryption software within seconds after learning that a US supplier had included a small amount of Russian-made code.

Article source: http://www.asiaone.com/News/Latest%2BNews/Science%2Band%2BTech/Story/A1Story20120308-332220.html

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Hackers break into NASA systems

TAMPA – Federal investigators discovered a series of computer security breaches at NASA. There have been more than 5,400 security incidents in the past two years.

Sensitive data was compromised through a combination of hackers and computer thefts. In fact, thieves now have access to sensitive codes that can be used to control the International Space Station.

“We as a country do not understand how vulnerable we really are,” said Steve Hasselbach, a computer security expert at Peak 10 Data Center Solutions in Tampa. “We haven’t had the catastrophic event yet that makes us wake up and realize we really are at war.”

U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta had previously likened the potential of cyber attacks to the next Pearl Harbor.

Hackers only need one unprotected computer to break into a data system. From there, they can spider out to other machines. And government inspectors discovered only a small percentage of NASA’s portable computer devices are encrypted.

Florida Senator Bill Nelson said he is alarmed, but also stressed he incidents at NASA do not pose a serious threat to national security. A NASA spokesman said the space agency takes computer security very seriously, and is resolved to enhancing its system.
 

Article source: http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/dpp/news/local/hackers-break-into-nasa-systems-03072012

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NASA hacked 13 times in the last year

Reuters

NASA said hackers stole employee credentials and gained access to mission-critical projects last year in 13 major network breaches that could compromise US national security.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration Inspector General Paul Martin testified before Congress this week on the breaches, which appear to be among the more significant in a string of security problems for federal agencies.

The space agency discovered in November that hackers working through an Internet Protocol address in China broke into the -network of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Martin said in testimony released on Wednesday. One of NASA’s key labs, JPL manages 23 spacecraft conducting active space missions, including missions to Jupiter, Mars and Saturn.

He said the hackers gained full system access, which allowed them to modify, copy, or delete sensitive files, create new user accounts and upload hacking tools to steal user credentials and compromise other NASA systems. They were also able to modify system logs to conceal their actions.

“Our review disclosed that the intruders had compromised the accounts of the most privileged JPL users, giving the intruders access to most of JPL’s networks,” he said. (bit.ly/yQFSB8)

In another attack last year, intruders stole credentials for accessing NASA systems from more than 150 employees. Martin said the his office identified thousands of computer security lapses at the agency in 2010 and 2011.

He also said NASA has moved too slowly to encrypt or scramble the data on its laptop computers to protect information from falling into the wrong hands.

Unencrypted notebook computers that have been lost or stolen include ones containing codes for controlling the International Space Station, as well as sensitive data on NASA’s Constellation and Orion programs, Martin said.

A NASA spokesman told Reuters on Friday the agency was implementing recommendations made by the Inspector General’s Office.

“NASA takes the issue of IT security very seriously, and at no point in time have operations of the International Space Station been in jeopardy due to a data breach,” said NASA spokesman Michael Cabbagehe.

Airforce scraps iPad purchases

In a separate development, the US Air Force said on Friday it had scrapped a plan to outfit thousands of personnel with second-generation iPad tablet computers from Apple Inc, but denied the reversal was because some of the software it wanted on the devices had been written in Russia.

Two days ago, news website Nextgov raised questions about a requirement that the 2,861 iPad2s come equipped with GoodReader, an electronic document display program written by an independent Russian developer.

The devices were to be used to store and update flight information, regulations and orders, according to procurement documents.

“The cancellation was not the result of any concern about GoodReader,” said Matt Durham, a spokesman at the Air Force Special Operations Command.

He said the cancellation of the six-week-old order followed a decision that the procurement should not have been reserved for small businesses.

The military and other branches of government have been putting an increased emphasis on “supply-chain security” as they try to make sure that hardware, software and other components have not been tampered with by other nations.

This has proved challenging because so many parts come from overseas. Even American companies often contract for programming work abroad.

Mike Jacobs, who headed the National Security Agency’s program for defending US equipment, said in an interview he had killed a major procurement of encryption software within seconds after learning that a US supplier had included a small amount of Russian-made code.

Article source: http://technologyspectator.com.au/security/data-security/nasa-hacked-13-times-last-year

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Australia’s curious connection to Mars

WHEN a new Mars rover called Curiosity is launched into space next week it will head for a crater on the red planet named after the amateur Sydney astronomer Walter Gale.

But that’s not the only Australian link to this Mars mission. A second curiosity is the very familiar shape of the five-kilometre-high mountain that sits in the middle of Gale crater.

”Its resemblance to a map of Australia is uncanny,” Nick Lomb, a curator of astronomy at Sydney Observatory, said.

Dr Lomb was amazed when he first noticed the similarity in NASA’s most recent images of the crater. ”And the fact it is named after an Australian and looks like Australia seems to be a complete coincidence,” he said.

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A NASA spokesman also noted that the crater was named in 1991, years before the shape of the mountain was likely to have been revealed by high resolution images.

Walter Gale, who died in 1945, was a banker and an avid observer of the heavens from Paddington, discovering seven comets.

Jupiter, Saturn and Mars were also favourite objects of study. ”He examined surface features of Mars, being first to note some, and was an ardent supporter of the suggestion of life on the planet,” according to the Australian Dictionary of Biography.

Gale crater, which is about 150 kilometres across, was chosen in July as Curiosity’s landing site after a five-year process in which more than 100 scientists considered about 30 potential locations.

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”The site offers a visually dramatic landscape and also great potential for significant science findings,” Jim Green, the director of NASA’s planetary science division, said at the time.

Twice as long and five times as heavy as previous Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, Curiosity is the most advanced mobile robotic laboratory NASA has ever sent to another planet.

It has 10 scientific instruments, including a laser to study targets from a distance, and a 2-metre arm to observe close-up.

After it lands in August 2012, it will study the composition of rocks and soil to assess whether the planet could have supported microbial life. Curiosity will also monitor the weather and radiation levels that might effect a future manned mission.

To celebrate the launch, Sydney Observatory will premiere a new 3D movie about Mars on Friday, which uses images from NASA rovers. Bookings are essential.

Article source: http://m.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/australias-curious-connection-to-mars-20111118-1nndo.html

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NASA adds test flight for deep-space capsule


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla |
Tue Nov 8, 2011 11:28pm IST

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) – NASA plans to add a $370 million unmanned test flight of a new deep-space capsule designed to send astronauts to asteroids, the moon, Mars and other destinations in the inner solar system, officials said on Tuesday.

The Orion capsule, which is being developed by Lockheed Martin Corp, would fly aboard a Delta 4 or Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in 2014, said NASA spokesman Josh Byerly.

The test capsule would be launched into an orbit that soars as high as 5,000 miles (8,000 km) above the planet. After circling Earth twice, it would slam back into the atmosphere at more than 20,000 mph (32,000 kph), eclipsing the 17,500 mph (28,000 kph) speed of a returning space shuttle.

The fastest a spaceship has returned to Earth with astronauts aboard was the 24,700 mph (39,700 kph) re-entry of Apollo 10 in 1969, Byerly added.

“We will learn through this test that Orion would survive re-entry, being as fast as it is,” he said.

The unmanned test, which will cost NASA an extra $370 million including the launch vehicle, will bump back a test of Orion’s launch abort system from 2015 to 2016.

Along with developing Orion, a legacy program from NASA’s canceled Constellation moon exploration initiative, the United States is developing a heavy-lift rocket based in part on space shuttle hardware. The goal of the program is to send astronauts to explore an asteroid by 2025.

NASA already has spent about $5 billion on the Orion program.

(Editing by Tom Brown and Eric Beech)

Article source: http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/11/08/idINIndia-60397720111108

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