Archive for space exploration

NASA’s Sci-Fi Vision: Robots Could Help Humanity Mine Asteroids

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An artist's conception of a spacecraft designed to pick up an asteroid. Credit: NASA/Advanced Concepts Laboratory

An artist’s conception of a spacecraft designed to pick up an asteroid. Credit: NASA/Advanced Concepts Laboratory

In a few generations of robotics, we’ll see mighty machines able to fully construct themselves and operate from the surface of asteroids — providing applications for mining, NASA researchers say in a new study.

The scientists are convinced that this type of research is not only possible, but also able to support itself financially. (Costs overruns are a notorious factor in space exploration as it pushes frontiers both literally and engineering-wise.)

“Advances in robotics and additive manufacturing have become game-changing for the prospects of space industry. It has become feasible to bootstrap a self-sustaining, self-expanding industry at reasonably low cost,” the researchers stated in a new study.

A couple of factors are pointing to this, researchers said: private industry is willing and able to get involved. Advances in technologies such as 3-D printing are making off-world work more feasible. Also, humanity’s surveys of space resources has revealed the elements needed to make rubber, plastic and alloys needed for machinery.

NASA proposes a robotic flotilla could mine nearby space rocks. They caution the technology won’t be ready tomorrow, and more surveys will need to be done of nearby asteroids to figure out where to go next. There is, however, enough progress to see building blocks, the agency stated.

An artist's conception of a space exploration vehicle approaching an asteroid. Credit: NASA

An artist’s conception of a space exploration vehicle approaching an asteroid. Credit: NASA

“Robots and machines would just make the metal and propellants for starters,” stated Phil Metzger, a senior research physicist at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, who led the study.

“The first generation of robots makes the second generation of hardware, except the comparatively lightweight electronics and motors that have to be sent up from Earth. It doesn’t matter how much the large structures weigh because you didn’t have to launch it.”

A computer model in the study showed that in six generations of robotics, these machines will be able to construct themselves and operate without any need of materials from Earth.

Artist impression of the Arkyd Interceptor, a low cost asteroid mission that enables accelerated exploration. Credit: Planetary Resources.

Artist impression of the Arkyd Interceptor, a low cost asteroid mission that enables accelerated exploration. Credit: Planetary Resources.

At least two startups would agree with the optimism: Deep Space Industries and Planetary Resources.

In the past year, members of both firms have proposed asteroid mining ideas, and since then, Planetary Resources has also unveiled other projects such as a public space telescope (perhaps in a bid to diversify revenues and attract more attention.)

In early 2013, when NASA submitted its fiscal budget request for 2014, it also got in on the hubbub: the agency proposed robotically venturing out to an asteroid and bringing it back to Earth.

That’s received many questions from critics (including at least one government space committee), but NASA has argued it is feasible and a way to unite innovation across various sectors.

“Because asteroids are loaded with minerals that are rare on Earth, near-Earth asteroids and the asteroid belt could become the mining centers for remotely-operated excavators and processing machinery,” NASA stated.

Asteroid 951 Gaspra

Asteroid 951 Gaspra. Credit: NASA

“In the future, an industry could develop to send refined materials, rare metals and even free, clean energy to Earth from asteroids and other bodies.”

Check out more details of the new report in the Journal of Aerospace Engineering.

A side note, this isn’t the only NASA-funded group looking at asteroid mining. In September, NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts office offered Phase 1 funding to a Robotic Asteroid Prospector proposal.

Source: NASA




About

Elizabeth Howell (M.Sc. Space Studies ’12) is an award-winning freelance space journalist living in Ottawa, Canada. She reported on three shuttle launches, including the first launch “tweetup” during STS-129. Besides Universe Today, she regularly writes for SPACE.com, the Space Exploration Network and All About Space, among other publications. You can follow her on Twitter @howellspace or contact her at her website.

Article source: http://www.universetoday.com/102930/nasas-sci-fi-vision-robots-could-help-humanity-mine-asteroids/

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WALKER: Only NASA can lead us to Mars

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While the Mars rover Curiosity is discovering the building blocks of life on the red planet, many are equally excited about another development: commercial companies have finally discovered profit in space.

This is no small feat, considering the enormous risk and technical hurdles. With years of experience building government-designed rockets and communications satellites, private companies took the first cautious steps by funding research labs that hitched rides on the NASA Space Shuttle. In fact, I was privileged to be the very first private astronaut working on techniques to manufacture new medicines in space on three shuttle flights in 1984-85. Now, companies such as SpaceX and Virgin Galactic are building their own rockets and making profits by launching satellites and sending supplies to the International Space Station. They’re even selling tickets for joyrides into the cosmos — something we’ve dreamed of since before Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon.

Excited by their progress, many people have suggested that we outsource even bolder space exploration to these companies. Why not entrust the audacious human Mars-landing mission to private companies as well, leaving private industry to fund and build the rockets, capsule and other major systems? SpaceX founder Elon Musk has already boasted of plans to build a new rocket that could send citizen-colonists to Mars several years ahead of NASA’s schedule, and for only $500,000 per ticket. That’s dirt cheap.

The idea is attractive, considering today’s budget crunch, even if commercial plans for a Mars mission are hypothetical at best. As much as I support the private space industry, though, experience and common sense tell me that a commercial landing of humans on Mars won’t ever get off the ground — not unless NASA goes there first.

Businesses are slaves to short-term balance sheets, and private space-industry investors and shareholders are notoriously risk-averse. Even wealthy entrepreneurs won’t throw their money away. They’ll back straightforward missions using well-tested technologies and demand a profit within a reasonable amount of time with acceptable risk. Exploration, however, is by its nature very risky. Only a nation can marshal the long-term funding and pioneering vision needed to “boldly go where no one has gone before.”

In fact, nearly every great exploration in history has been government-funded or guaranteed, from Magellan’s trip around the globe to the Lewis and Clark expedition across the American continent. NASA’s own history reads as an improbable list of “firsts.” When President John F. Kennedy declared in 1961 that the United States would put a man on the moon by the end of that decade, no one had the technologies we would need to get there. NASA scientists and engineers led a government-industry team inventing the rocket boosters, space capsule and computer-guidance systems from scratch in just a few years.

Of course, before it succeeded, NASA failed publicly many times. If we had entrusted the project to private industry, shareholders or investors would have pulled the plug long before the Apollo program. Prototype space capsules would be gathering dust in a museum, labeled as a misstep for private companies instead of a giant leap for mankind.

NASA’s long-term determination led to the success that makes today’s commercial spaceflight possible. NASA is already preparing to take the next giant leaps. The agency just released a plan to corral an asteroid into orbit around the moon. NASA should partner with industry in this pursuit and enable the utilization of the asteroid it explores. NASA engineers are developing new technologies for a manned Mars mission such as new propulsion systems that produce high velocities at low power, efficient wastewater recycling for long missions, deep-space radiation shields, and the most powerful rocket booster in history, known as the Space Launch System. We haven’t produced a rocket this powerful since the Saturn V was retired in 1973. This booster will be nearly 10 times more powerful than the commercial space rockets now used to restock the International Space Station.

This is our era’s Moon shot — the difficult challenge that we choose to accept not because it is easy, as Kennedy said, but because it is hard, because it will drive us to build new technologies, answer the toughest questions, and inspire a new generation of American engineers and scientists to carry the torch for decades to come.

We should continue to support commercial space companies as they make spaceflight cheaper and more accessible. We should not be content, though, to do what we’ve done since the ‘60s, only a little cheaper — or to stake our most important space exploration goal on the whims of the market. We should continue to push the envelope and expand the frontier as a top national priority. That’s a job only NASA can lead.

Charlie Walker, a former Space Shuttle astronaut, is an engineer and expert on space exploration and commercialization.

Article source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/jun/3/only-nasa-can-lead-us-to-mars/

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NASA’s Destination Station Exhibit Lands In Seattle

HOUSTON – Starting Monday, June 10, residents of Seattle and surrounding areas are invited to experience NASA’s Destination Station exhibit, which showcases what it’s like to live aboard the International Space Station. The exhibit will be hosted at the Pacific Science Center, with dozens of activities taking place throughout the city.

Destination Station is an outreach effort by NASA to share, educate and inspire the public about the International Space Station. The space station is a multinational research facility and the largest spacecraft ever built. It is an official U.S. National Laboratory where astronauts and scientists from around the world conduct experiments in fundamental life, physical, Earth and space science, as well as human health, technologies for space exploration and the improvement of life on Earth. The exhibit will remain at the Pacific Science Center until Sept. 2, and will then move to the Museum of Flight on Sept. 6, where it will remain until Dec. 4.

During the opening week, everyone can experience more of the excitement of space exploration as part of the following public events (all times Pacific):

Tuesday, June 11

Sessions with a Scientist: Space Bugs, Seattle Children’s Museum, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m., with Space Station Scientist Dr. Tara Ruttley.

An Evening with NASA: Space Exploration Through the Shutter, Photo Center NW, 6:30-8:30 p.m., with NASA Photographer Mark Sowa.

Wednesday, June 12

Space Beyond: Make Me an ISS Astronaut!, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Seattle Children’s Museum.

Thursday, June 13

Space Station Story Time, Shoreline Public Library, 2-3 p.m., with NASA Public Affairs Officer Josh Byerly.

Saturday, June 15

Afternoon with Astronaut Mike Foreman, Future of Flight: Aviation Center Boeing Tour, 1-2:30 p.m.

Sunday. June 16

Afternoon with Astronaut Mike Foreman, Museum of Flight, 1:30-3 p.m.

Follow the events on Twitter and Facebook using the hashtag #DSSeattle.

For more information and a complete list of Destination Station activities, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/destinationstation

Please follow SpaceRef on Twitter and Like us on Facebook.

Article source: http://spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=40926

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3D printing could help take humans into deep space, NASA says

Computerworld -

NASA scientists plan to take 3D printers into space to enable astronauts to create tools, and even food, onboard the International Space Station and later on the moon or even Mars.

NASA’s chief administrator Charles Bolden talked about 3D printers and what the technology could mean to future space exploration during a tour of the Ames Research Center late last week. Speaking to employees, news media and U.S. Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.), Bolden said the printing technology could be key as humans travel deeper into space.

“As NASA ventures further into space, [whether] redirecting an asteroid or sending humans to Mars, we’ll need transformative technology to reduce cargo weight and volume,” Bolden said. “In the future, perhaps astronauts will be able to print the tools and components they need in space.”

3D printing is a high-tech manufacturing process that creates objects by laying down successive layers. Last week, researchers at Princeton University reported that they used the process to create a functioning ear that that can “hear” radio frequencies beyond the range of normal human capability.

Made in Space, a company based in the Ames Research Park in Moffett Field, Calif., noted in a recent blog post that it is testing 3D printers in zero-gravity environments for NASA. Testing will be focused on the long-term effects of microgravity on the technology.

The company also said it is scheduled to send a 3D printer to be tested on the space station in 2014.

NASA also announced last week that it is exploring the idea of using 3D printers to create food for humans on deep space missions.

NASA awarded a research contract to Systems and Materials Research Consultancy of Austin to study the feasibility of using 3D printing to create human-grade food. The space agency referred to the idea as a “very early stage concept” that may or may not mature into usable technology.

It is several years from being tested in space, according to NASA.

If the technology to “print” food on a spacecraft could be perfected, it would be a huge boon for space travel.

One of the many obstacles to sending humans to Mars or beyond is how the astronauts would be able to carry enough food on the spacecraft for a trip that could last months or years.

This article, NASA: 3D printing could help take humans into deep space, was originally published at Computerworld.com.

covers the Internet and Web 2.0, emerging technologies, and desktop and laptop chips for Computerworld. Follow Sharon on Twitter at Twitter @sgaudin, on or subscribe to Sharon’s RSS feed Gaudin RSS. Her email address is sgaudin@computerworld.com.

See more by Sharon Gaudin on Computerworld.com.

Read more about Emerging Technologies in Computerworld’s Emerging Technologies Topic Center.

Article source: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9239649/3D_printing_could_help_take_humans_into_deep_space_NASA_says_

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Op/Ed – Buzz Aldrin on Why We Should Go to Mars

A member of the Apollo 11 mission in 1969, Buzz Aldrin was the second man to walk on the moon. In the years since, he has become an advocate for space exploration and technology, calling for renewed U.S. investment in the space program. In Mission to Mars: My Vision for Space Exploration, Aldrin lays out a detailed, multi-stage plan for journeying to the red planet that would culminate in the first permanent human settlement beyond the Earth

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‘Star Trek into Darkness’ & NASA Station Crews Join Forces at Live NASA Webcast

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NASA and Star Trek connect on NASA TV on May 16 for the premiere of “Star Trek Into Darkness” on May 17, 2013 to celebrate the wonders of Space Exploration.  Still image of the fictional star ship ‘Enterprise’.  Credit: Star Trek

NASA and Star Trek connect on live NASA TV on May 16 for the premiere of “Star Trek Into Darkness” on May 16, 2013 to celebrate the wonders of Space Exploration. Still image of the fictional star ship ‘Enterprise’. Credit: Star Trek

Science Fact and Science Fiction join forces in space today for a one of a kind meeting turning science fiction into reality – and you can participate courtesy of NASA and Hollywood!

Fictional astronauts and crews from the newest Star Trek incarnation; “Star Trek into Darkness” and real life astronauts taking part from outer space and Earth get connected today (May 16) via a live ‘space bridge’ webcast hosted by NASA. The movies premieres today – May 16.

NASA Television broadcasts the face-to-face meeting as a Google+ Hangout from noon to 12:45 p.m. EDT, May 16. Watch live below!

The webcast includes “Captain Kirk” – played by actor Chris Pine, and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy – fresh off from his real life ‘emergency spacewalk’ this past weekend that saved the critically important cooling system aboard the International Space Station (ISS). “Into Darkness” features dramatic life and death spacewalks.

Astronaut Chris Cassidy during the May 11, 2013 emergency spacewalk at the ISS. Credit: NASA

Astronaut Chris Cassidy during the May 11, 2013 emergency spacewalk at the ISS. Credit: NASA

Also participating in the live NASA webcast are ‘Star Trek’ director J.J. Abrams, screenwriter and producer Damon Lindelof; and actors Alice Eve (Dr. Carol Marcus) and John Cho (Sulu) and astronauts Michael Fincke and Kjell Lindgren at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Fincke flew on the Space Shuttle and the ISS and made a guest appearance on the finale of the TV series – “Star Trek: Enterprise”. See photo below.

‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ movie still image. Credit: Star Trek

‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ movie still image. Credit: Star Trek

The ISS is a sort of early forerunner for the fictional ‘Federation’ in the ‘Star Trek’ Universe – constructed in low Earth orbit by the combined genius and talents of 5 space agencies and 16 nations of Earth to forge a united path forward for the peaceful exploration of Outer Space.

Cassidy will provide insights about everyday life aboard the real space station – like eating, sleeping, exercising and fun ( think Chris Hadfield’s guitar strumming ‘Space Oddity’ -watch the YouTube video below) – as well as the myriad of over 300 biological, chemical and astronomical science experiments performed by himself and the six person station crews during their six-month stints in zero gravity.

Astronaut Terry Virts, left, Actor Scott Bakula and Astronaut Mike Fincke, right, beam on the set of Star Trek's final Enterprise voyage. Credit: NASA

Astronaut Terry Virts, left, Actor Scott Bakula and Astronaut Mike Fincke, right, beam on the set of Star Trek’s final Enterprise voyage. Credit: NASA

The participants will ask questions of each other and take questions from the Intrepid Sea, Air Space Museum in New York City (home of the space shuttle Enterprise), the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, and social media followers, says NASA.

Social media followers were allowed to submit 30 sec video questions until early this morning.

And you can submit questions today and during the live broadcast using the hashtag #askNASA on YouTube, Google+, Twitter and Facebook.

Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock in ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’. Credit: Star Trek

Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock in ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’. Credit: Star Trek

Watch the hangout live on NASA’s Google+ page, the NASA Television YouTube channel, or NASA TV starting at Noon EDT, May 16.

As a long time Star Trek fan (since TOS) I can’t wait to see ‘Into Darkness’

Ken Kremer

…………….
Learn more about NASA missions, Mars, Curiosity and more at Ken’s upcoming lecture presentation:

June 12: “Send your Name to Mars” and “LADEE Lunar Antares ISS Rocket Launches from Virginia”; Franklin Institute and Rittenhouse Astronomical Society, Philadelphia, PA, 8 PM.

NASA’s real life Space Shuttle Enterprise transits the NYC Skyline at Dusk on a barge on June 3, 2012 during a two stage seagoing  journey to her permanent  new home at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum. Enterprise is bracketed by the Empire State Building, The Freedom Tower (still under construction) and the torch lit Statue of Liberty. Credit: Ken Kremer

NASA’s real life Space Shuttle Enterprise transits the NYC Skyline at Dusk on a barge on June 3, 2012 during a two stage seagoing journey to her permanent new home at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum. Enterprise is bracketed by the Empire State Building, The Freedom Tower (still under construction) and the torch lit Statue of Liberty. Credit: Ken Kremer




About

Dr. Ken Kremer is a speaker, scientist, freelance science journalist (Princeton, NJ) and photographer whose articles, space exploration images and Mars mosaics have appeared in magazines, books, websites and calanders including Astronomy Picture of the Day and the covers of Aviation Week Space Technology, Spaceflight and the Explorers Club magazines. Ken has presented at numerous educational institutions, civic religious organizations, museums and astronomy clubs. Ken has reported first hand from the Kennedy Space Center and lectures on both Human and Robotic spaceflight – www.kenkremer.com

Article source: http://www.universetoday.com/102184/star-trek-into-darkness-nasa-station-crews-join-forces-at-live-nasa-webcast/

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Poll: Americans Overwhelmingly Support Doubling NASA’s Budget, Mission To Mars

The American public overwhelmingly support a doubling of NASA’s budget in order to fund a mission to Mars, according to a recent survey. The poll, commissioned by Explore Mars, a nonprofit organization, and aerospace contractor Boeing, also demonstrated a high degree of enthusiasm about human exploration of Mars.
The survey found that 76 percent of Americans agree that NASA’s budget should be increased to 1 percent of the total federal budget to fund initiatives, including a mission to Mars. Currently NASA’s budget represents less than 0.5 percent of overall federal spending.

Poll respondents said they think a manned mission to Mars should be the country’s top priority in space exploration. The poll also showed that, in spite of the current budgetary climate, Americans remain very optimistic about the prospect of putting humans on Mars within the next two decades, with 71 percent saying they expect it will happen by 2033.

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How to Send a Haiku to Mars on NASA Spacecraft




Maven Studies Mars Atmosphere


Maven is shown studying how Mars loses its atmosphere to space in this artist’s illustration.
CREDIT: Corby Waste NASA/JPL


Think you’ve got out-of-this-world poetry skills? Here’s your chance to send a short piece through the cold depths of space, all the way to Mars.

NASA is asking the public to submit haikus — three-line poems with a standard 5-7-5 syllable structure — to ride aboard its Maven Mars orbiter, which is slated to launch toward the Red Planet this coming November.

It won’t be easy; just three haikus will make it onboard the Maven spacecraft. You can submit poems (which must be in English) until July 1, and an online public vote to select the three winners will open on July 15.

You can still be part of the mission even if your masterpiece doesn’t make the cut, however. The DVD containing the haikus will also carry every name submitted via the Maven mission’s “Going to Mars” public-outreach campaign, officials said.

“The Going to Mars campaign offers people worldwide a way to make a personal connection to space, space exploration, and science in general, and share in our excitement about the Maven mission,” Stephanie Renfrow, lead for the Maven education and public outreach program at the University of Colorado’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (CU/LASP), said in a statement.

To participate in the campaign or learn more about it, visit http://lasp.colorado.edu/maven/goingtomars

The $670 million Maven mission — short for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN — is slated to launch on Nov. 18 and arrive in an elliptical orbit around Mars on Sept. 22, 2014.

Mars has lost most of its atmosphere to space over the eons. Scientists hope Maven will help them understand how this happened, and what the consequences have been for the Red Planet’s ability to support life as we know it.

The Maven team sees the “Going to Mars” effort as a chance to get the public excited about space science and exploration.

“This new campaign is a great opportunity to reach the next generation of explorers and excite them about science, technology, engineering and math,” Maven principal investigator Bruce Jakosky, also from CU/LASP, said in a statement. “I look forward to sharing our science with the worldwide community as Maven begins to piece together what happened to the Red Planet’s atmosphere.”

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

Article source: http://www.space.com/21127-mars-haiku-poem-nasa-maven.html

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Is There True Life On Mars?: Visitors To The Red Planet May Be The Next Real …

Last year when Curiosity landed on the Mars, we pushed the boundaries of space exploration. With stunning images, soil samples, and new data pouring in every second from Curiosity, a new door has opened for the age of space exploration. Although some argue others are taking things a little too fast for comfort.

A Dutch organization, Mars One, is offering a one way ticket to the red planet to start a permanent human colony. The project hopes to send 4 lucky applicants to Mars by 2023 to set up the permanent base, while 4 more will be introduced 2 years at a time. With over 30,000 applications from all around the globe already submitted, the project is further along than you might think.

Despite NASA’s estimate of $100 billion for a manned flight to mars, Mars One projected its costs to be around $6 billion, all of which the company plans to fund completely through private investors, donors and TV broadcasting rights, i.e. a reality TV show. Yes, that’s right. They are going to turn the entire mission into one big reality TV show. Paul Romer, co-creator of the reality TV show Big Brother, is already part of the project according to the website.

The mission has begun to show a transition into the early reality TV stage. Applicants, ranging from ages 18-65 were asked to film a short 1-2 minutes video explaining why they want to be a part of the Mars One team, which are already available for view and to rate on their website. You would think you wouldn’t fit the requirements, but the application guidelines do not follow the strict and careful requirements like NASA’s, but rather the “Five Key Characteristics of an Astronaut” list, which kind of looks like a 5th grader’s essay rubric  with age, height, and eye requirements thrown in. The selected “astronauts” will begin training next year for their life long journey.

Norbert Kraft, former Sr. Research Associate at NASA and Chief Medical Director for Mars One states,

“In my former work with NASA we established strict criteria for the selection and training of astronauts on long duration space flights. Gone are the days when bravery and the number of hours flying a supersonic jet were the top criteria. Now, we are more concerned with how well each astronaut works and lives with the others, in the long journey from Earth to Mars and for a lifetime of challenges ahead. Psychological stability, the ability to be at your best when things are at their worst is what Mars One is looking for. If you are the kind of person that everyone chooses to have on their island, then we want you to apply too.”

While many applaud their ambition, skeptics have already begun to tear into the project given its tight schedule and unaccounted for variables. Given the mystery of space exploration, life sustainability on Mars, and the enormous costs, many say it is unlikely the plan will succeed. Wired magazine rated the plausibility of the Mars One mission a 2 out of 10, among other doubtful specialists.

Scientists can throw facts at its implausibility all they want, but everyone seems to forget its potential to spiral into a real life horror movie. Reality TV mixed in with outer space and major problems makes a survival horror scenario inevitable. With cameras everywhere, a reality other than the one intended just might take over. Here are the applications if you still want to apply!

[Image via Igor Zh. / shutterstock.com]

Article source: http://nyulocal.com/national/2013/05/07/is-there-true-life-on-mars-visitors-to-the-red-planet-may-be-the-next-real-house-wives-of-outter-space/

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Win a Copy of Buzz Aldrin’s Book, Mission to Mars

Buzz Aldrin, celebrated Apollo astronaut and an outspoken champion for the pursuit of space exploration, is on a mission. He has written a new book titled “Mission to Mars.” While the title focuses on Mars, the book covers much more. Buzz lays out his goals for the space program and how he believes we can get humans to Mars by the 2030s. He makes the case and argues passionately for pushing our boundaries of knowledge and exploration of our solar system and presents his “unified space vision.” He emphasizes space exploration should not be a competition, but with cooperation a stronger path to a sustainable future in space could be forged.

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