Preparing for Mars ◆ Somewhere between Arizona and Olympus Mons
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Preparing for Mars ◆ Somewhere between Arizona and Olympus Mons
Month in Space Pictures: Cosmic Penguin and Playing Mars
A really big rocket, a sports car circles the Earth and more of the month's best space photos. See them all here.
(Clockwise from top: SpaceX; Menahem Kahana / AFP - Getty Images; NASA/ESA; SpaceX)
HIAD Aeroshell: Engineered for Performance & Reliability
HIAD Aeroshell: Protecting Critical Engines in Harsh Environments The longevity and reliability of engines operating in extreme conditions – such as those found during space exploration – are paramount. Traditional fuel system protection methods often fall short, leaving critical components vulnerable to corrosion and oxidation. This is where the innovative HIAD (Hypersonic Inflatable Aerodynamic…
Curiosity Daily Podcast: International Internet Languages (w/ Gretchen McCulloch), Chances of Rain, and Mars in Spain
Learn about how you can go on a simulated mission to Mars (in Spain); and, what the weather forecast really means when it says there’s a chance of rain. You’ll also learn about how people around the world talk differently online, with internet linguist Gretchen McCulloch.
In this podcast, Cody Gough and Ashley Hamer discuss the following stories from Curiosity.com to help you get smarter and learn something new in just a few minutes:
You Can Go on a Simulated Mission to Mars in Spain — https://curiosity.im/323VOnb
Here's What a Chance of Rain Really Means — https://curiosity.im/2KLZMuS
Additional resources from Gretchen McCullough:
“Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language” — https://amzn.to/31vlUiY
Follow @GretchenAMcC on Twitter — https://twitter.com/GretchenAMcC
Official website — https://gretchenmcculloch.com/
Lingthusiasm, Gretchen’s podcast — https://lingthusiasm.com/
Download the FREE 5-star Curiosity app for Android and iOS at https://curiosity.im/podcast-app. And Amazon smart speaker users: you can listen to our podcast as part of your Amazon Alexa Flash Briefing — just click “enable” here: https://curiosity.im/podcast-flash-briefing.
via https://omny.fm/shows/curiosity-podcast/international-internet-languages-gretchen-mcculloch-chances-of-rain-life-on-mars-experience-spain
From NASA Earth Observatory Image of the Day; August 29, 2018:
Living the Mars Life on Mauna Loa
If you were on Mars—or on a volcano in Hawaii—cooped up in a small geodesic habitat with five coworkers for several months, there is a good chance you would jump at the opportunity to get outside and explore. That is one of the lessons of Hawai’i Space Exploration Analog and Simulation (HI-SEAS), a long-duration mission designed to help mission planners understand what astronauts living for long periods in cramped quarters on Mars would need to thrive.
The habitat sits on the northern slope of Mauna Loa, Hawaii’s largest volcano. Perched about 8,000 feet (2,400 meters) above sea level at an abandoned quarry site, it is located in a barren area with almost no vegetation and spectacular views of overlapping lava flows of various shades of black, brown, red, and orange.
The site was chosen based on its relative remoteness and its similarities to terrain on Mars. The red planet has large, gently sloping shield volcanoes with exposed lava flows that are geologic cousins to Mauna Loa. The image above, captured by the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8, shows the habitat nestled amid fields of contrasting lava flows. The youngest flows are dark black; older, more weathered flows are shades of gray, brown, and red.
Read More about the HI-SEAS mission at earthobservatory.nasa.gov
(via When a Mars Simulation Goes Wrong - The Atlantic)
When a Mars Simulation Goes Wrong | The Atlantic A recent mission atop a Hawaiian volcano shows humans still have much to learn before they set foot on another world. Source: When a Mars Simulation Goes Wrong