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cobra commando

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NASA, Boeing to develop
most powerful rocket for
Mars


In what could be billed as a step to build the most powerful rocket to take astronauts to Mars, NASA has finalised a $2.8 billion contract with Houston- headquartered Boeing Space Exploration to develop its prestigious Space Launch System (SLS). The six-and-a-half-year SLS contract runs through 2021 and calls for Boeing to deliver two SLS cores - including hydrogen and oxygen tanks - and avionics. "Our teams have dedicated themselves to ensuring that the SLS - the largest ever - will be built safely, affordably and on time," Virginia Barnes, Boeing's Space Launch System vice president and program manager, said in a statement. The rocket will carry the Orion spacecraft that can carry up to four astronauts beyond low-earth orbit on deep-space exploration missions, including the Red planet. The rocket's core stage will get its power from four RS-25 engines - the former space shuttle main engines - built by Aerojet Rocketdyne of Canoga Park. "Besides work on the rocket's core stage, the new SLS contract also authorises Boeing to begin studying a new SLS upper stage - which NASA and Boeing call the Exploration Upper Stage," NASA spokesperson Rachel Kraft said in a statement. The rocket is scheduled for its initial test flight from Cape Canaveral in Florida in 2017. The first mission will launch an empty Orion spacecraft. The second mission in 2021 will launch Orion and a crew of up to four NASA astronauts.
NASA, Boeing to develop most powerful rocket for Mars
 

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India Among Five Nations to Build World's Biggest Telescope

TOKYO: India, along with four other countries, will Tuesday start work to build the world's biggest telescope in Hawaii Island, the media here reported Monday. The 30-metre telescope, also known as TMT, will be constructed near the summit of the Mauna Kea volcano on Hawaii Island. Construction is likely to be completed by 2022, Japan Times reported. Besides India, other nations involved in the project are Japan, the US, China and Canada. The project would cost $1.47 billion with Japan covering about a quarter of the cost, the report said. Around 100 astronomers and officials from these five countries will attend a ceremony in Hawaii Island to mark the beginning of the construction work.
India Among Five Nations to Build World's Biggest Telescope - The New Indian Express
 

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One dead in SpaceShipTwo
test flight crash



SpaceShipTwo, the Virgin Galactic space plane, has crashed east of Mojave, according to the director of the Mojave Air and Space Port Stu Witt. The California Highway Patrol has confirmed the death of one test pilot. A medical helicopter carried one patient with major injuries to a Lancaster hospital for treatment. The names of the victims have not yet been released. Witt said a 2 p.m. news conference has been scheduled. Virgin Galactic previously announced that the rocket plane had "experienced an in-flight anomaly" on its Twitter page. The first reports of a downed aircraft came in at 10:51 a.m. Virgin Galactic has a released a statement to NBC News about the crash: "Virgin Galactic's partner Scaled Composites conducted a powered test flight of SpaceShipTwo earlier today. During the test, the vehicle suffered a serious anomaly resulting in the loss of the vehicle. The WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft landed safely. Our first concern is the status of the pilots, which is unknown at this time. We will work closely with relevant authorities to determine the cause of this accident and provide updates as soon as we are able to do so."

One dead in SpaceShipTwo test flight crash - KernGoldenEmpire
 

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Moon Mission: Giant leap for startup

BENGALURU: The Indian startup attempting to soft-land a craft on the Moon has just won funding from a host of bigwigs in the venture capital, technology and startup ecosystem, and accolades from some of India's leading space scientists. The startup — Team Indus, founded by IIT-Delhi alumnus Rahul Narayan and four others — was earlier this year placed among the top contenders for the Google Lunar XPrize, the grand global competition to land a robotic spacecraft on the Moon by December next year and for which 18 teams are in the race. Team Indus is the only one from India, and is competing against much more established and well-funded teams.

Team Indus is now among the top contenders for the Google Lunar XPrize, a global competition to land a space craft on the Moon by December 2015. (TOI photo)

The new investors in the venture include Subrata Mitra & Shekhar Kirani of Accel Partners (they have invested in their individual capacities), Sharad Sharma, former Yahoo India R&D head, Vivek Raghavan, chief product manager of UIDAI (the Aadhaar project), Pallaw Sharma, director of analytics at Microsoft based in Redmond, Bala Parthasarthy, serial entrepreneur and part of the AngelPrime angel investor group, Sunil Kalra, entrepreneur & investor, Paras Chopra and Pallav Nadhani, both founders of successful startups.
Team Indus, a start-up, is hoping to send a version of this robotic rover to the moon as part of an international contest, with its youngest member Saad Nasser (extreme right) in Mumbai. (TOI photo)


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Moon Mission: Giant leap for startup - The Times of India
 

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