A Nuclear Space Battery To Go To Pluto

Space Battery

Atomic enery is the only way to explore the stars. People whine about how nuclear energy is unsafe, how if one of these probes were to crash land on Earth that all of us would be dead from cancer in a year, or that we can’t go poluting space with all this radiation (yes, I have spoken with someone that actualy said that).
That’s a load of crap. Space has quite enough radiation of it’s own that us adding to it won’t matter ar all. No, we can’t use that radiation to power our spaceships (yet) but we can build what is called an RTG to generate power for the space craft quite safely. The RTG program was started in the days before Apollo and has been used on various missions including the both Viking Mars landers.
Sending a probe to Pluto is a once in a lifetime chance – unless there is a major breakthrough in the area of propulsion – the planet is just too far away.
I hope that in the next few years more spacecraft are fitted with nuclear power systems so the space craft are not hobbled by an amazingly small power budget. With enough power a probe around Jupiter could send back a thousand times more information and use envasive sensing like deep radar and laser altimiter measuring. Heck, I would’nt be all that amazed if near live video could be sent back from the surface of a distant moon.

A Nuclear Space Battery To Go To Pluto
space, nuclear, pluto, New Horizons, exploration

What’s Next, Isolinear Chips?

30GB Holocard

Wow! OK, get the price down where I can afford one and everything will be cool. I like the price of the media though, about $35US to back up a TB of data is a great deal. If the writer is fast, the cards are re-writable, and dirable, a robot library of these buggers would quickly put the heat to DLT tape makers. In the nean time, if a sub $100US reader can be made this will be a boon to the video game market in a huge way.

The card capacity is expected to be 30 GB. The company aims to price the product around $1US. Optware also intends to set the price of a reader device lower than $2,000US and a reader/writer device lower than $10,000US.

Optware to Release 30 GB Holographic Card for Less than $1 at the End of 2006

storage, holographic, memory, computers

Lights 1890 Style

Reproduction of an old lightbulb

Have an urge to light your living room in a manner that would be fitting for the 1890’s? The Rejuvenation store offers reproduction lightbulbs and fixtures from pretty much any time in American history – well, as far back as the electric light goes.
I think I’m going to order a free catalog and dream about a time when I can actualy use these in my own home (funny how landlords get upset when you start renovating the place).

40 Watt “1890” Bulb

restoration, light bulb, Edison, eletric

R2, Give Me a Hand With This…

Nanosat bot

As the ISS slowly grows in size the astronauts that crew it are going to have work loads even greater than they have now. Because of budget problems the seven man crew was cut two three men and sometimes only two.
Small semi autonomous devices like this could prove to be a valuable aid in getting tasks done faster and with less stress on the crew while on EVA. So far NASA has concentrated on little robots that are inside the crew space and zip around with little fans. This will be able to be extra ‘eyes’ for the ground controllers so they can get a better view on how things look on the surface of the station or even a docked shuttle. Anything that can keep a manned EVA off the schedule is a good thing, space is a dangerous place!
However, I have seen how a device that is supposed to save you time and make life easier can do just the opposite. My PDA (Viewsonic V36) has cause an untold amount of annoyance and stress when I try to get it to do something that is clearly SHOULD be able to do but can’t. This would be ActiveSync with my XP laptop. But I digress, as long as these are over seen by a ground station and causes no additional work load on the crew, everything should be ok.
The little guys are quite amazing, below is a short list of technology that it will have onboard:

Technology innovations include rechargeable xenon gas propulsion, a rechargeable lithium ion battery, custom avionics based on the PowerPC 740/750 microprocessor, “camera-on-a-chip” imagers with video compression, micro electromechanical system gyroscopes, precise relative GPS navigation, digital radio frequency communications, micro-patch antennas, digital instrumentation networking and compact mechanical packaging.

NASA’s New ‘Nanosatellite’ Systems
(It was also seen on MAKE a little while ago.)

NASA, robotics, ISS, satellite

Great Old One, Sunny Side Up

Old One

It’s not often you see a simulacra of an Old One. Could this be a sign? Forebearing of doom and utter horror at the insanity that will befall anyone that should gaze on an Elders image? A message that they shall return to once again destroy Outer Gods. the Maybe it means he should switch to Shredded Wheat

Why Have a Lesser Eviil For Breakfast?

egg, Cthulhu, simulacra, food

Cosmos 1 Set to Test Solar Sail

Solar Sail

I remember reading about the failure of the first solar sail tests, I hope this one will be better.
I find it amazing that somthing that was a concept only found in science fiction books is now being tested for real.

The keys to Cosmos 1’s innovative propulsion system are its eight triangular sails, made from highly reflective, 50-foot-tall Mylar sheets. Mylar is the material commonly used for novelty helium-filled balloons. Once the sails are unfurled in orbit at an altitude of about 500 miles, photons streaming away from the sun will bounce off them, giving the spacecraft a little push as they go. Though these tiny pushes won’t amount to much at first, they are expected to add up over time, propelling Cosmos 1 faster and faster. With each day that passes, the spacecraft is expected to gain another 100 mph in speed. Eventually, it will be able to fight Earth’s gravitational pull and move into a higher orbit

Cosmos 1 set to test Solar Sail

space, Russia, solar sail, Cosmos