Comet Lovejoy Is Visible Near Earth’s Horizon In This Nighttime Image Photographed By NASA Astronaut

Comet Lovejoy Is Visible Near Earth’s Horizon In This Nighttime Image Photographed By NASA Astronaut

Comet Lovejoy is visible near Earth’s horizon in this nighttime image photographed by NASA astronaut Dan Burbank, Expedition 30 commander, onboard the International Space Station on Dec. 21, 2011.

Image credit: NASA

More Posts from Xyhor-astronomy and Others

7 years ago
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera
Dunes, Peaks And Craters On Mars Obtained By HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), A Camera

Dunes, peaks and craters on Mars obtained by HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), a camera on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

Image credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

7 years ago

Reinventing the Wheel

Planning a trip to the Moon? Mars? You’re going to need good tires…

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Exploration requires mobility. And whether you’re on Earth or as far away as the Moon or Mars, you need good tires to get your vehicle from one place to another. Our decades-long work developing tires for space exploration has led to new game-changing designs and materials. Yes, we’re reinventing the wheel—here’s why.

Wheels on the Moon

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Early tire designs were focused on moving hardware and astronauts across the lunar surface. The last NASA vehicle to visit the Moon was the Lunar Roving Vehicle during our Apollo missions. The vehicle used four large flexible wire mesh wheels with stiff inner frames. We used these Apollo era tires as the inspiration for new designs using newer materials and technology to better function on a lunar surface.

Up springs a new idea

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During the mid-2000s, we worked with industry partner Goodyear to develop the Spring Tire, an airless compliant tire that consists of several hundred coiled steel wires woven into a flexible mesh, giving the tires the ability to support high loads while also conforming to the terrain. The Spring Tire has been proven to generate very good traction and durability in soft sand and on rocks.

Spring Tires for Mars

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A little over a year after the Mars Curiosity Rover landed on Mars, engineers began to notice significant wheel damage in 2013 due to the unexpectedly harsh terrain. That’s when engineers began developing new Spring Tire prototypes to determine if they would be a new and better solution for exploration rovers on Mars.

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In order for Spring Tires to go the distance on Martian terrain, new materials were required. Enter nickel titanium, a shape memory alloy with amazing capabilities that allow the tire to deform down to the axle and return to its original shape.

These tires can take a lickin’

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After building the shape memory alloy tire, Glenn engineers sent it to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Mars Life Test Facility. It performed impressively on the punishing track.

Why reinvent the wheel? It’s worth it.

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New, high performing tires would allow lunar and Mars rovers to explore greater regions of the surface than currently possible. They conform to the terrain and do not sink as much as rigid wheels, allowing them to carry heavier payloads for the same given mass and volume. Also, because they absorb energy from impacts at moderate to high speeds, there is potential for use on crewed exploration vehicles which are expected to move at speeds significantly higher than the current Mars rovers.

Airless tires on Earth

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Maybe. Recently, engineers and materials scientists have been testing a spinoff tire version that would work on cars and trucks on Earth. Stay tuned as we continue to push the boundaries on traditional concepts for exploring our world and beyond.  

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.  

7 years ago
Comet Lovejoy Is Visible Near Earth’s Horizon In This Nighttime Image Photographed By NASA Astronaut

Comet Lovejoy is visible near Earth’s horizon in this nighttime image photographed by NASA astronaut Dan Burbank, Expedition 30 commander, onboard the International Space Station on Dec. 21, 2011.

Image credit: NASA

7 years ago
Enceladus, Moon Of Saturn, Observed By The Voyager 2 Space Probe On August 26, 1981, From A Distance

Enceladus, moon of Saturn, observed by the Voyager 2 space probe on August 26, 1981, from a distance of approximately 109,000 kilometers.

(Planetary Society)

7 years ago

When a star more massive than our sun reaches the end of its life cycle, it goes in a spectacular blaze of glory known as a supernova. This explosion indicates that the star is dunzo, dead, or whatever we call it in the parlance of our times. But a new study found that one unusual star zombie-Jon-Snowed itself and as an astronomer tells Inverse, no one knows quite how.


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7 years ago
This Stunning Multi-mission Picture Shows Off The Many Sides Of The Supernova Remnant Cassiopeia A. It

This stunning multi-mission picture shows off the many sides of the supernova remnant Cassiopeia A. It is made up of images taken by three of NASA’s Great Observatories, using three different wavebands of light. Infrared data from the Spitzer Space Telescope are colored red; visible data from the Hubble Space Telescope are yellow; and X-ray data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory are green and blue.

Image credit: NSA/JPL

7 years ago

Space Station flight from a clear North Africa over a story Mediterranean

7 years ago
Planet Jupiter, Observed By The Juno Probe On September 1, 2017.

Planet Jupiter, observed by the Juno probe on September 1, 2017.

7 years ago
(Causus Maculatus) -  Common Names Include forest Rhombic Night Adder, West African Night Adder and spotted
(Causus Maculatus) -  Common Names Include forest Rhombic Night Adder, West African Night Adder and spotted
(Causus Maculatus) -  Common Names Include forest Rhombic Night Adder, West African Night Adder and spotted

(Causus maculatus) -  Common names include forest rhombic night adder, West African night adder and spotted night adder.

7 years ago
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?
Ask Ethan: Why Don’t We Build A Telescope Without Mirrors Or Lenses?

Ask Ethan: Why don’t we build a telescope without mirrors or lenses?

“Why do we need a lens and a mirror to make a telescope now that we have CCD sensors? Instead of having a 10m mirror and lens that focus the light on a small sensor, why not have a 10m sensor instead?”

Every time you shine light through a lens or reflect it off of a mirror, no matter how good it is, a portion of your light gets lost. Today’s largest, most powerful telescopes don’t even simply have a primary mirror, but secondary, tertiary, even quaternary or higher mirrors, and each of those reflections means less light to derive your data from. As CCDs and other digital devices are far more efficient than anything else, why couldn’t we simply replace the primary mirror with a CCD array to collect and measure the light? It seems like a brilliant idea on the surface, and it would, in fact, gather significantly more light over the same collecting area. True, CCDs are more expensive, and there are technical challenges as far as applying filters and aligning the array properly. But there’s a fundamental problem if you don’t use a mirror or lens at all that may turn out to be a dealbreaker: CCDs without lenses or mirrors are incapable of measuring the direction light is coming from. A star or galaxy would appear equally on all portions of your CCD array at once, giving you just a bright, white-light image on every single CCD pixel.

It’s a remarkable idea, but there’s a good physical reason why it won’t pan out. For the foreseeable future, we still need optics to make a telescope! Find out why on this week’s Ask Ethan.

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xyhor-astronomy - Xpand Your Horizons w/ Astronomy & Spacefaring
Xpand Your Horizons w/ Astronomy & Spacefaring

For more content, Click Here and experience this XYHor in its entirety!Space...the Final Frontier. Let's boldly go where few have gone before with XYHor: Space: Astronomy & Spacefaring: the collection of the latest finds and science behind exploring our solar system, how we'll get there and what we need to be prepared for!

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