Thursday, 8 November 2012

SPACE TECHNOLOGY NEWS: China plans to send second woman astronaut into space in 2013

China plans to send second woman astronaut into space in 2013
Liu Yang (in Pic) China's first woman astronaut. China is planning to send its second woman astronaut into space in 2013.
BEIJING: China on Sunday said it plans to send its second woman astronaut into space on the country's fifth manned mission in 2013 to fine tune the docking technologies of its space station being built to rival Russia's Mir.
"It is possible that female astronauts will be on board," Yang Liwei, China's first astronaut and deputy director of the country's manned space programme said. The exact date of the launch of next year's mission will be decided after a full assessment of previous missions by spacecrafts Shenzhou-8 and Shenzhou-9 which docked with the module of the space station currently orbiting the earth.
Yang said the Shenzhou-10 manned spacecraft will carry three astronauts into space, and that the crew will include veterans and women. The candidates will be decided early next year. China sent its first woman, an air force pilot Liu Yang to space early this year.
Together with Jing Haipeng and Liu Wang, she went into space aboard Shenzhou-9 on June 16 and conducted a series of scientific tests during the 13-day mission that was hailed as a great success. Next year's space mission mainly aims to consolidate and improve docking techniques, conduct more scientific experiments and solve problems discovered in the previous missions, Yang said.
"One success doesn't mean success every time. We would like to have more practice and improve the quality," Yang added. Yang also said Shenzhou-10 mission will adjust the working schedule and routine of astronauts laying the foundation for building its first space station by 2020. "Once established, the space station will provide a national-level platform for scientific research in outer space. So the next mission will also focus on technical breakthroughs in environmental control and life support systems," he said.
After the Shenzhou-10 space mission, China is scheduled to launch the Tiangong-2 space lab module to research supply transport by cargo spaceships, another milestone for China's space programme.
"Space travel won't be a problem for China in the future," Yang said.

SPACE TECHNOLOGY NEWS: SpaceX Dragon Returns from Space Station with NASA Cargo



SpaceX Dragon Returns from Space Station with NASA Cargo  
HOUSTON -- A Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) Dragon spacecraft splashed down in the Pacific Ocean at 2:22 p.m. CDT Sunday a few hundred miles west of Baja California, Mexico. The splashdown successfully ended the first contracted cargo delivery flight contracted by NASA to resupply the International Space Station.
"With a big splash in the Pacific Ocean today, we are reminded American ingenuity is alive and well and keeping our great nation at the cutting edge of innovation and technology development," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. "Just a little over one year after we retired the Space Shuttle, we have completed the first cargo resupply mission to the International Space Station. Not with a government owned and operated system, but rather with one built by a private firm -- an American company that is creating jobs and helping keep the U.S. the world leader in space as we transition to the next exciting chapter in exploration. Congratulations to SpaceX and the NASA team that supported them and made this historic mission possible."
The Dragon capsule will be taken by boat to a port near Los Angeles, where it will be prepared for a return journey to SpaceX's test facility in McGregor, Texas, for processing. Some cargo will be removed at the port in California and returned to NASA within 48 hours. This includes a GLACIER freezer packed with research samples collected in the orbiting laboratory's unique microgravity environment. These samples will help advance multiple scientific disciplines on Earth and provide critical data on the effects of long-duration spaceflight on the human body. The remainder of the cargo will be returned to Texas with the capsule.
The ability to return frozen samples is a first for this flight and will be tremendously beneficial to the station's research community. Not since the space shuttle have NASA and its international partners been able to return considerable amounts of research and samples for analysis.
The Dragon launched atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, on Oct. 7. It carried 882 pounds of cargo to the complex, including 260 pounds of crew supplies, 390 pounds of scientific research, 225 pounds of hardware and several pounds of other supplies. This included critical materials to support 166 scientific investigations, of which 63 were new. Returning with the Dragon capsule was 1,673 pounds of cargo, including 163 pounds of crew supplies, 866 pounds of scientific research, and 518 pounds of hardware.
The mission was the first of at least 12 cargo resupply missions to the space station planned by SpaceX through 2016 under NASA's Commercial Resupply Services contract. SpaceX is one of two companies that built and tested new cargo spacecraft under NASA's Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program. Orbital Sciences is the other company participating in COTS. A demonstration flight of Orbital's Antares rocket and Cygnus spacecraft to the station is planned in early 2013.
NASA initiatives like COTS and the agency's Commercial Crew Program are helping develop a robust U.S. commercial space transportation industry with the goal of achieving safe, reliable and cost-effective transportation to and from the space station and low-Earth orbit. In addition to cargo flights, NASA's commercial space partners are making progress toward a launch of astronauts from U.S. soil in the next 5 years.
While NASA works with U.S. industry partners to develop and advance these commercial spaceflight capabilities, the agency also is developing the Orion spacecraft and the Space Launch System (SLS), a crew capsule and heavy-lift rocket to provide an entirely new capability for human exploration. Designed to be flexible for launching spacecraft for crew and cargo missions, SLS and Orion will expand human presence beyond low-Earth orbit and enable new missions of exploration in the solar system.

GPS NEWS: Indoor navigation and first aid apps take home prestigious prizes 2012 winners

GPS NEWS:


Indoor navigation and first aid apps take home prestigious prizes 2012 winners
An indoor navigation system for smartphones has won this year’s Galileo Master Prize, while ESA’s Innovation Prize goes to a first aid app that provides emergency support. The international jury choose a novel solution for indoor navigation as the best satnav application at this year’s European Satellite Navigation Competition (ESNC). The competition’s top award, the Galileo Master 2012 prize, went to Fraunhofer Portugal and the University of Porto for proposing the idea.      
ESNC 2012 award ceremony 
Jonathan Durant from France won ESA’s Innovation Prize for his project Citizen First Aid, a mobile app bringing rapid support to those in need in emergency situations. “His innovative project can be of help to us all,” said Frank M. Salzgeber, Head of ESA’s Technology Transfer Programme Office, when he conferred the prize at the awards ceremony on 25 October in Munich, Germany.
“It enables victims to alert people nearby for help until professional assistance arrives. And with most smartphones having geolocation tools, this app can be quickly implemented.” Winners were chosen from a remarkable 406 submitted ideas from more than 40 countries in this year’s competition.     
Dr Heubisch 
Prizes were awarded for the most creative business applications of satellite navigation for public and commercial use. “The strong international response to this year’s ESNC has once more proven its ability to boost innovation on a global scale,” noted Bavarian State Minister Dr Wolfgang Heubisch. “In close cooperation with our European and global partners, an excellent network has been established to create added value for satellite navigation technology.” 
Galileo Master 2012
   Prize for indoor navigation
The 2012 ESNC overall winner is a project offering reliable navigation even indoors by expanding conventional GPS and Galileo navigation with ultra-low-frequency magnetic field communication. It is as easy as using satellite-based navigation today.
The solution for smartphones provides navigation in indoor environments such as department stores and underground parking garages and tunnels, switching seamlessly between satellites and indoor navigation. The three-axis sensors of smartphones – ‘electronic compasses’ – are used to calculate the relative location from the last absolute satnav position. Already tested and with a demo is under development, a patent is pending in Europe and the US.   
ESA Innovation Prize winner   
Prize for smart first aid app
The Citizen First Aid mobile app allows fast reactions in emergencies and helps people in distress, victims of medical problems or aggression, and others requiring urgent help. In an asthma attack, someone close might have a Ventoline, or a diabetic out of insulin could quickly find help. The elderly and people with disabilities could call for assistance. Many would be ready to intervene if alerted.
For his Citizen First Aid, Jonathan Durant takes home the €10 000 Innovation Prize sponsored by ESA.    
ESA's business incubation centres
  “The winner may also be supported to turn the idea into a viable business at one of our seven ESA Business Incubation Centres throughout Europe or at an incubation facility part of ESINET, the European Space Incubators Network,” Mr Salzgeber added.
Now encompasses 24 partner regions on four continents, the competition aims at encouraging new ideas for satnav applications. Earlier winners of the ESA Innovation Prize include an innovative water pollution control system, a realtime centimetre-accurate positioning system, a proximity service to track friends and colleagues, and a museum guidance service.

GIS News : GeoMattix Launches GIS & GPS Training Videos Online

GeoMattix Launches GIS & GPS Training Videos Online
Mobile GIS Videos Provide Immediate Access to Professional Training
Sedona, AZ, October 30, 2012:  GeoMattix is pleased to announce the launch of www.GISTrainingVideos.com. The website offers eight different training courses available to watch anytime and provides immediate access to professional, mobile GIS training.
Courses include Introduction to GPS Technology, GPS Mapping with ArcPad, Integrating GPS Data with GIS, and more. Each includes a series of lessons that present essential concepts and workflows followed by live-action demonstrations. Software and hardware requirements are featured in each course with tips for choosing the best equipment for your needs and budget. The courses vary in duration from one- to over four hours.
“I created the courses to give GIS folks an affordable way to get started using GPS to collect GIS-ready data,” says Michele Mattix, owner of GeoMattix.  “Most of the information out there is either too technical or it focuses on a single product. Our courses are designed specifically for GIS professionals and focus on workflows that show how everything works together – from office to field and back.”
Courses can be purchased individually, in popular bundles, or as an entire library. Students are given a logon and password that allows them to access the videos anytime and as many times as they want. Businesses can partner with GeoMattix to offer the GIS and GPS Training Videos to their own customers via an affiliate program.   
To learn more, visit www.GISTrainingVideos.com or email Contact.
About GeoMattix
GeoMattix is a woman-owned small business providing training and consulting services in GIS and GPS technologies. Taking its name from geographer Michele Mattix, GeoMattix specializes in custom geospatial training. We work with private and public businesses, colleges, and universities, to consult with managers on how best to train their workforce, then we develop and deliver the training to managers, GIS personnel, and field crews.  GeoMattix has a long history of geospatial training.  Michele Mattix was an Esri Authorized ArcGIS Trainer and Trimble Certified Trainer for six years before designing her own custom training courses, training hundreds of people to use GIS and GPS technologies.

GIS NEWS: Spatial Launches Offering to Manage Big Spatial Data

GIS NEWS:

1Spatial Launches Offering to Manage Big Spatial Data
The 1Spatial Management Suite provides organisations with data quality and management tools.  
1Spatial, a geospatial company which manages the world’s largest spatial data, has responded to the big data challenge with an enhanced offering. The new 1Spatial Management Suite includes; Workflow, Plan, Maintain, Publish and 1Spatial Cloud, which will deliver solutions to public and private companies that handle high volumes of business critical spatial data, on-premise and in the cloud. 
 Marcus Hanke, Chief Executive at 1Spatial explains, “The rise and impact of big data in the geospatial sector has created new challenges. Organisations need to be sure that they are basing their decisions on accurate and reliable data, but managing constantly changing, location information has become a huge concern”. He continued, “By moving some of our services into the cloud, our clients can choose whether to validate and maintain their data on site or in our secure cloud. Because we manage the world’s largest spatial big data we can help our clients make smarter use of their data”.
1Spatial’s big data validation and maintenance tools were developed in response to the complexities of working with large amounts of spatial data and improving outcomes. The company already provides the foundations for data management and processing solutions around the world. 1Spatial uses a data-centric approach to provide speedy implementation with broad and easy-to-use access to that data. 
Barry Doyle, GIS Officer, Roscommon County Council explains, "The 1Spatial Cloud platform proved a very useful and time saving tool. We believe that the service can save councils like us many man-months of work. We found the various rule checks identified issues that wouldn't have otherwise been identified, no matter how much time was spent manually checking the data. Additionally, the facility to automatically correct the data, by eliminating geometric and connectivity issues, while also re-aligning the road segments and road nodes with the line work, proved very valuable and ensures we have a database that is now fit-for-purpose."
1Spatial works with national mapping and charting agencies, utilities companies, defence and government departments, where maintaining the quality of data which needs frequently updating is an ongoing issue. Once the data has been captured by field surveyors or in-house editors, 1Spatial validates it by checking against hundreds of pre-established rules. Any failures can be manually or automatically resolved so the quality and integrity of the database is maintained. This data-centric approach provides speedy implementation with broad and easy-to-use access to that data.  With 1Spatial’s approach organisations can be confident in the data quality and therefore able to generate new information or manipulate data for a client’s particular purpose.
For example, organisations can use 1Spatial’s processes to find their missing data. 1Spatial is able to automatically compare intelligent source data with existing assets to predict the location of missing assets.  In practice, this has resulted in a rise in accuracy from 50% to 90%. When utilities engineers arrive to dig up the ground, they are now more likely to be looking in the right place.
“Because we focus very much on the data and its delivery we are in many ways technology neutral,” explained Marcus Hanke, “Clients are not sewn in to a technology path because our development efforts focus on setting out automated validation and maintenance processes, enabling our clients to easily work with the data within their own environments”.
1Spatial Cloud is revolutionising the quality of spatial data, by offering a flexible, low cost, easy to use route to validating, correcting, and managing data via the cloud using a scalable, zero infrastructure environments.

NASA NEWS

NASA NEWS:
Article No.1
Canada, NASA in space rover talks
The Canadian Space Agency says it's in talks with NASA to launch a rover beyond Earth orbit aboard NASA's huge new deep space rocket. Canada recently unveiled seven rover prototypes, some of which have been field-tested and have impressed NASA officials, and impressed officials with the U.S. space agency, Gilles Leclerc of the Canadian Space Agency said.
NASA is considering including a rover on an early mission of its space launch system rocket set to become operational in the early 2020s, Leclerc said, noting the discussions between the two agencies are only preliminary given uncertainty about future NASA funding which could impact mission plans.
"I don't want to speak for NASA -- it is touchy -- but there are opportunities for missions around the moon or on the moon," Leclerc, the CSA's director-general of space exploration, said. "You can certainly envisage automatic robotic missions to the moon."NASA has not discussed any possible SLS missions beyond the first two, a flight in 2017 to send an uncrewed Orion spacecraft into lunar orbit and another potential flight in 2021 to take a crew beyond the moon.
"NASA does not have plans for either [mission] to land on a foreign surface," NASA spokeswoman Rachel Kraft said.
"As we continue to define future mission requirements, NASA anticipates that we will continue to engage in co-operative activities with CSA involving Canadian rovers and associated technologies," Kraft said in a statement.
Article No.2
NASA Television Airs Space Shuttle Atlantis' Final Move 
 CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- NASA Television will provide live coverage of events surrounding space shuttle Atlantis' move to the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida for permanent public display.
At 2 p.m. EDT Thursday, Nov. 1, NASA TV's media channel will air a news briefing about the transformation of Kennedy Space Center to a multiuser spaceport. The briefing participants are:
-- Lisa Colloredo, associate manager, Commercial Crew Program
-- Scott Colloredo, chief architect, Ground Systems Development and Operations Program
-- Bruce Reid, Kennedy Space Center mission manager for Landsat Data Continuity Mission
-- Jody Singer, deputy manager, Space Launch System Program
At 3:30 p.m., NASA TV's media channel will air a briefing about the future of human spaceflight. The participants are:
-- Robert Cabana, director, Kennedy Space Center
-- Bill Hill, assistant deputy associate administrator for Exploration Systems Development
-- Ed Mango, manager, NASA Commercial Crew Program
On Friday, Nov. 2, NASA TV will begin coverage at 7 a.m. as Atlantis departs Kennedy's Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB). The shuttle will make the 10-mile journey from the VAB to the visitor complex atop a 76-wheel flatbed vehicle called the Orbiter Transportation System, stopping along the route for a retirement ceremony at about 10 a.m. Ceremony participants include:
-- NASA Administrator Charles Bolden
-- Robert Cabana, NASA Kennedy Space Center director
-- Current and former astronauts of Atlantis' final mission, STS-135
-- Bill Moore, chief operating officer, Delaware North Companies Parks and Resorts, Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex Following the ceremony, Atlantis will travel to Space Florida's Exploration Park for a presentation and viewing opportunity for visitor complex guests before departing for its new home.
NASA TV coverage of the move will conclude when Atlantis reaches the visitor complex at about 6 p.m. NASA retains the title to Atlantis and is providing it to the visitor complex for the public to view. Engineers have been preparing the shuttle for public display as part of NASA's transition and retirement processing of the shuttle fleet. A grand opening of Atlantis' new home at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex is planned for July 2013.

ISRO NEWS: Looking spaceward, feet firmly on the ground

Article No.1
Looking spaceward, feet firmly on the ground
Dr. K. Radhakrishnan, Chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and Secretary, Department of Space, spoke to Madhumathi D.S. on the national space programme’s present concerns and what is in store for it as it grapples with global competition and rising internal demand.
 Excerpts:
The national space programme faces a double whammy: a transponder deficit on communication satellites and a delay in achieving the capability to launch our own communication satellites. How is ISRO addressing this problem?
First, I would like to stress that applications are our thrust unlike, say, in Russia, the United States or China which are after human space flights, space stations and such activities. We are very clear about being down to earth.
We have a capacity augmentation plan. Increasing capacity, enhancing capability and creating advanced technologies, these are all taking place in parallel. Thanks to the promotion of satellite communication and new services in it, there is a large demand [for transponders]. One objective is to increase capacity in the Ku and C bands. The other is to enhance capability, for example, with digital multimedia broadcasting on GSAT-6.
To remain state-of-the-art in communication satellites, we are going in for high power and higher frequencies like the Ka band. A multi-beam system with 24 footprints and uplink in the high-power Ka band will come with GSAT-11 in two years. Our target is to be contemporary in this area in five or six years.
Then there are the GSAT-6, 7 and 11 series, and GSAT-15 and 16. In remote sensing, the continuity of services is important for institutional and infrastructure planning, water resources, agriculture, afforestation, disaster management and the like. You need to improve spatial resolution from the present 0.8 metre to 0.6 metre and 0.3 metre. In microwave remote sensing we have to get into L, X and S bands.
We have two established application areas in communication and remote sensing. Now navigation satellites will add a new dimension of location-based services. Gagan is our space-based augmentation to GPS mainly for the civil aviation sector. GSAT-10 carries the second of three Gagan payloads. The first satellite of our own regional navigation system, the Indian Regional Navigational Satellite System, will go in 2013.
What is being done to mitigate the transponder shortage on Insat/GSATs for broadcasting and telecommunication purposes? Of the 263 transponders available today, ISRO has leased 95 on foreign satellites.
A [few] weeks ago we released advertisements for leasing transponders because VSAT and direct-to-home (DTH) operators require them. The process may take up to two months. Today we are not talking about replacements of the leased capacity but about how to meet requirements. We have 168 transponders of our own [provided by the domestic Insat/GSAT fleet].
If you look at the upcoming satellites, you get more than 100 [Indian] transponders [in the short term]. GSAT-10 [launched on September 29] is going to immediately give us 30 transponders from November onwards. GSAT-14 will give another 12 if [its launch vehicle] GSLV performs well. GSAT-9 will mean another 12 transponders, GSAT-15 will add 24 in the Ku band and GSAT-16 another 36.
With these 100 transponders being added, will the leases go back?
I don’t think they will go back but the usage will be more. There is nothing wrong in using [them] provided they are available at a reasonable price.
Has the queue for DTH levelled out? There are seven DTH operators now and these and new players want more satellite capacity.
India is a large market. Today you have some 600 TV channels and DTH has revolutionised the services. Every [broadcaster] is looking for enhanced capacity, because high-definition TV is coming in. This is a worldwide phenomenon. There will always be some gap between what they want and what is available. This is dynamic. The positive thing is, the demand is very high today.
Where do we stand in the launch vehicle programme, particularly the delayed GSLV?
If you look at the queue, the GSLV cryogenic stage has to get ready and fly. The GSLV Mark III cryogenic stage has to be developed and then the semi-cryogenic stage which is approved. All are progressing. First we have to prove the GSLV. We had problems due to small issues. There is nothing wrong with the vehicle per se, but the problems were attributable to certain components. Of course, GSLV cryogenics have to be developed and tested. The next thing is to improve the reliability of the vehicle which will take us to [a capability to lift] 2.2-tonne satellites to geostationary transfer orbits.
Cryogenic testing for the next GSLV-D5 vehicle is going on. Two crucial tests have to be completed: testing in vacuum and the endurance of the fuel booster turbo pump. If they are successful we can say it is flying on the ground.
GSLV Mk III is making good progress. It will take us to four tonnes. Its cryogenics are to be developed fully. During the 12th Plan period we want to do two to three flights of Mk III.
What improvements are happening with communication and remote-sensing satellites? Our Insat/GSAT communication satellites, for example, are in the 3,000-kg, 36-transponder class, while the world has moved towards spacecraft double and triple that size and capacity.
We, too, have to [do that]. Not [just] larger, it is in terms of power, bandwidth, mass and features like having 100 transponders in one satellite. Whether it is six or ten tonnes is one aspect, how much power it can carry is another.[Elsewhere] today there are satellites with power levels of 16-17 kilowatts. From the 100-watt Ariane Passenger Payload Experiment (APPLE) experiment [in 1981], we moved on to 5,500 watts of power in GSAT-8 [in 2011].
In 1995 we were the best civilian remote sensing satellite operator with IRS 1C and 1D. TES and the Cartosat-2 series have 0.8 m resolution. We, too, are getting to 0.6 m, 0.5 m and better.
You have spoken of nearly 60 satellites and launch missions in the next five years, planetary exploration and more. What are the plans for infrastructure and manpower to make future programmes possible?
ISRO has to enhance capability for the next five years. We also have to sow the seeds now for what we will do 10 years on; for R&D, for future technologies. We need to identify groups in the country and within the organisation for such activity.
The Space Research Complex [coming up] on 540 acres in the Science City near Challakere in Chitradurga will be ISRO’s resource for the next 25-50 years. What we will do there will evolve in one or two years. It could be planetary explorations, space habitat; astrobiology. The Department of Atomic Energy, the Defence Research & Development Organisation, the Indian Institute of Science, ISRO and the Karnataka government are working together there on a township and common amenities.
Right from the 1980s our manpower has remained around 16,000 while the number of missions has grown because of the industry participation. That number will increase by 2,000-3,000 to both replace and supplement our people.
Because of the actions taken in the 1970s on partnering the industry, today we have almost 500 firms contributing to the space programme. Where things are standardised and operational one can look for a larger role for industry in realising goals or taking responsibility for it. This is a major initiative that we are working on.