Monday, July 31, 2017

Footballs Put Through Spacecraft Testing – For Educational Purposes | Video [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Footballs Put Through Spacecraft Testing – For Educational Purposes | Video [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

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The Internet Actually Predicted the Timing of Beyoncé’s Pregnancy Announcement [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

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South Park Won’t Mock President Trump as Much Next Season [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Don’t Expect Lady Gaga’s Super Bowl Halftime Show to Be Political [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

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NASA Spacecraft to Hunt for Earth’s Asteroid ‘Ghosts’ [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA Spacecraft to Hunt for Earth’s Asteroid ‘Ghosts’ [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

A robotic spacecraft launched in September to return samples from an asteroid will spend about 10 days this month on a side job hunting for asteroids that may be accompanying Earth as it orbits the sun.

So far, scientists know of only one so-called Earth Trojan asteroid, which was discovered in 2010 by NASA’s infrared WISE telescope. The 1,000-foot object, known as 2010 TK-7, orbits roughly 60 degrees ahead of Earth.

Osiris-Rex will pick up the hunt on Feb. 9, searching 60 degrees ahead and 60 degrees behind Earth’s present position. These regions, known as Lagrange points, are among several locations where the gravitational tug-of-war between Earth and the sun balances out, making for potentially stable orbits for asteroids or other objects. NASA, for example, plans to position the James Webb Space Telescope, its follow-on to Hubble, at a Lagrange point about 1 million miles from Earth.

Jupiter has a large group of Trojans in tow, bodies that scientists say are key to understanding how the solar system formed.

Could similar primordial asteroids be circling Earth?

RELATED: NASA’s Bold Asteroid Sampling Mission Launches

“That would be the most fascinating thing we could discover,” Osiris-Rex lead scientist Dante Lauretta, with the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory told a NASA science advisory group last month.

Compelling as the science may be, Lauretta authorized the moonlighting job because it provides an excellent dress rehearsal for some key sleuthing Osiris-Rex will do to help ensure its safe arrival at the asteroid Bennu in 2018.

Astronomers don’t know if Bennu has any small moons in orbit. Ground-based telescopes can only spot objects larger than about 65 feet.

“That’s a substantial object and we’d obviously want to know that it’s there and plan our operations accordingly,” Lauretta said.

Osiris-Rex is due to put itself into orbit around Bennu for a two-year study and sampling mission. 

For target practice, as Osiris-Rex hunts for Earth Trojans it will attempt to locate several known objects in the main asteroid belt.

“It’s a great opportunity to exercise the operations system,” Lauretta said.

Osiris-Rex’s detective gig will run from Feb. 9 through Feb. 20, with two days off due to spacecraft thermal issues.

WATCH VIDEO: Does the Earth Have a Second Moon?

Originally published on Seeker.

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New Quantum-Computer Design Could Lead to Practical Hardware [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

New Quantum-Computer Design Could Lead to Practical Hardware [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Winfried Hensinger (right) and Bjoern Lekitsch (left) with a quantum computing blueprint model behind a quantum computer prototype.

Quantum computers promise the ability to tackle complex problems, such as decoding encrypted communications and developing new pharmaceutical drugs, much faster than conventional machines can. But to date, quantum computers have only been used to tackle specific problems, mostly to demonstrate how they work.

Now, scientists have proposed a new way to build a quantum computer using microwaves to control individual atoms, and they say the new method offers a blueprint for a more useful computing machine. 

“We’re using some new concepts that tremendously simplify how to build a quantum computer,” said Winfried Hensinger, director of the Ion Quantum Technology Group at the University of Sussex in the United Kingdom. Hensinger led the new study that outlines the design. [Top 10 Revolutionary Computers]

The quantum computer would be made up of junctions that control the movement of charged atoms, called ions. As many as 1,296 junctions could be fit onto a conventional 3.5-inch (9 centimeters) silicon wafer, and the wafers could be linked, allowing for a computer with as many quantum bits as needed. By contrast, current quantum computers have, at most, a dozen bits.

Quantum computers don’t work the same way ordinary machines do. In a typical computer, the bits are encoded in millions of tiny circuits and have a value of 1 or 0. In a quantum computer, the bits, called qubits, are encoded by the quantum state of excited atoms, and can be 1, 0 or any value in between.

Qubits can do this because quantum mechanics allows superposition of states; a particle is never really in one state or another until it is observed, meaning that it has to interact in a measurable way with the outside world. Superposition does not mean that the state is simply unseen; it really can exist as both at once. Because the qubits are in more than one state at once, a quantum computer could effectively tackle many calculations simultaneously. 

Superposition, though, is also why quantum computers are hard to build. The ions in their superposed states can’t ever touch anything from the outside. Even stray heat can make the ion “collapse” into one state, which takes away the qubits’ ability to do all of those calculations, according to the researchers.

In the new architecture, each junction consists of four electrodes that meet like a crossroads. Underneath the electrodes are wires that carry current and create a magnetic field. The magnetic field controls the movement of the “data” ions, which go from the “loading” zone on one electrode to meet another ion in the “entanglement” zone on the opposite electrode, Hensinger said.

Microwaves are beamed at the two ions as they meet, and they are entangled. That means that whatever happens to one ion will be reflected instantly in the second. This is where the 1 or 0 value is encoded, but the value is unknown. Altering the magnetic fields again moves the data ion back to the “crossroads,” where it turns to go to a third electrode, called the detection zone. At that point, a laser hits the ion and reveals its state — 1 or 0.

With thousands of these junctions attached to one another, scientists could build a true quantum computer, according to the study. Hensinger and his colleagues envision modules of 2.2 million junctions, about 14 feet (4.3 meters) on a side, attached to one another. A thousand such modules would be the size of a football field and have 2 billion ions, representing about as many qubits, the researchers said.

It’s the use of the microwaves and magnetic fields that makes the design easier to scale up, Hensinger told Live Science.

“Traditionally, you use lasers to execute quantum gates,” he said. “But to make a computer with lots of qubits, you need a billion laser beams.” This was not practical, so his team sought another way.

Other quantum-computer designs trap ions at temperatures close to absolute zero, the coldest temperature theoretically possible (minus 459.67 degrees Fahrenheit or minus 273.15 degrees Celsius). Hensinger said the machine can operate at much higher temperatures, about minus 351 degrees F (minus 213 degrees C), using liquid nitrogen as a coolant. 

This type a quantum computer could factor a 617-digit number in 110 days, according to the study. Such large numbers are used in encryption for a lot of communications on the web. (Contrary to popular myth, the quantum computer would not try every single factor; rather, it would find a shortcut that allows an ordinary computer to more easily calculate the factors you want to produce your large number.)

DigiCert, a U.S.-based company that provides digital certificates for common secure communications, says on its website that even 1,000 desktop computers working together would take longer than the age of the universe to match that feat.

Christopher Monroe, a professor of physics at the University of Maryland’s Joint Quantum Institute, who has worked on quantum-computing designs, said he likes the ideas laid out for this quantum computer because the modules don’t rely on exotic technologies — everything in the paper could be built today. On the other hand, actually building the quantum computer would be a real challenge, he added.

One issue is the sheer size of the machine; the study notes that it would measure more than 300 feet (91 m) on a side if it were to have 2 billion bits.

Even so, Monroe said this study takes a stab at addressing problems that earlier research did not. For example, Hensinger and his team studied the problem of keeping the computer cold enough to operate reliably, because heat can spoil the qubits.

“Lasers and wires carrying current to make magnetic fields are real heat hogs,” Monroe said, and incorporating a cooling system was a good idea.

Designs like this one are a move toward real engineering, said Bill Munro, who heads the Theoretical Quantum Physics Research Group at Japanese telecommunications company NTT. Still, some challenges will remain, he said.

“There’s a big difference between theory and design and actually building,” Munro said. Yet, the simplicity of the design makes it plausible, he added. “The key is not doing a billion [qubits]. You produce one, then 10, or 100. It’s kind of something we’ve been missing.”

The new study was published online today (Feb. 1) in the journal Science Advances.

Original article on Live Science.

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http://www.space.com/35566-new-quantum-computer-design.html New Quantum-Computer Design Could Lead to Practical Hardware

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Watch Russell Wilson, Tony Romo and More NFL Stars Read Mean Tweets About Themselves [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA Probe That Buzzed Pluto Fires Engine for 2019 Flyby of Next Target [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA Probe That Buzzed Pluto Fires Engine for 2019 Flyby of Next Target [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Artist’s impression of NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft conducting a flyby study of its next target – 2014 MU69, a Kuiper Belt object orbiting a billion miles beyond Pluto – on Jan. 1, 2019.

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft performed a brief engine burn yesterday (Feb. 1) in preparation for its January 2019 flyby of a small, distant object known as 2014 MU69.

New Horizons fired its thrusters for 44 seconds yesterday morning, changing the probe’s velocity by a little less than 1 mph (1.6 km/h), mission team members said. 

“One mile per hour may not sound like much, but over the next 23 months, as we approach MU69, that maneuver will add up to an aim point refinement of almost 6,000 miles [10,000 kilometers],” mission principal investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, said in a statement. [New Target For New Horizons — Boldly Going (Orbit Animation)]

The New Horizons team conducted yesterday’s burn to adjust for recent observations by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, which helped pin down 2014 MU69’s orbit and the probe’s position in space, mission officials said in the same statement. The maneuver was the first trajectory-altering move for New Horizons since the autumn of 2015, when a series of four firings put the spacecraft on course for its Jan. 1, 2019, encounter with 2014 MU69, they added.

That flyby will be the second for New Horizons, which got the first-ever up-close looks at Pluto and its moons on July 14, 2015. On that day, the spacecraft zoomed within just 7,800 miles (12,550 km) of Pluto’s surface, revealing a world of towering water-ice mountains, vast nitrogen-ice plains and a stunning diversity of other features.

The landscapes of 2014 MU69 cannot possibly be so varied, because the object is much smaller than Pluto; 2014 MU69 is thought to be just 13 miles to 25 miles (21 to 40 km) wide, compared with 1,475 miles (2,375 km) for the dwarf planet.

But New Horizons will get a very good look at the small object, which lies about 1 billion miles (1.6 billion km) beyond Pluto: The Jan. 1, 2019, flyby will take the probe within just 1,860 miles (3,000 km) of 2014 MU69, mission team members have said.

The $700 million New Horizons mission launched in January 2006, with the primary aim of lifting the veil on the Pluto system. The spacecraft is currently operating on an extended mission, which will carry it through the flyby of 2014 MU69. During this extended mission, New Horizons has also been studying, from afar, a number of Pluto’s fellow residents in the Kuiper Belt, the ring of frigid bodies beyond Neptune’s orbit.

The probe is currently 38.47 astronomical units (AU) from Earth, and 4.53 AU beyond Pluto. (One AU is the average Earth-sun distance — about 93 million miles, or 150 million km.) 

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

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Sunday, July 30, 2017

Adam Lambert on Touring With Queen, the Future of Pop Music and Gay Culture [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

14 Movies Getting a New Life as TV Shows [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Jason Manford weight loss: Comedian reveals key to slimming down is cutting out THIS food [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Jason Manford weight loss: Comedian reveals key to slimming down is cutting out THIS food [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Although its not known how much the 35-year-old weighed to begin with, in 2012, Jason posted on Facebook telling fans he’s lost over a stone in just a few months. 

He wrote: “So I’ve been losing weight over the last few months, just over a stone so far. Feeling pretty good. 

“Get into costume for my character in Sweeney Todd and the director says I’m not fat enough and gets the costume lady to add padding!

“If only I’d have known in February I could of been eating Dominoes instead of lettuce!” 

As well as sharing his weight loss successes with fans, Jason also revealed in an interview with Express.co.uk last year, he incorporates this into his comedy shows. 

He said: “There’s nothing worse than seeing yourself in HD. It does nobody any favours. 

“I do jokes about being overweight but I do them because I think, if I do them then hecklers or someone on Twitter can’t then do it. 

“I’d rather not have to write jokes about being overweight but that’s the nature of the beast really. You can take the power away from the bully.”

So how exactly did Jason lose the weight? His secret – cutting out white bread. 

He once joked: “My name’s Jason and I’m a white breadaholic, it’s 12 days since I last had bread.” 

Eating healthily hasn’t always been easy for Jason though, and he’s admitted to the struggles to keeping on top of it. 

Writing for the Mirror online back in 2014, Jason revealed he’d been trying to rid his diet of white bread and “bad carbs”. 

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Saturday, July 29, 2017

Next Drop, Mars: Super Bowl Fans Lift Off to Space on NASA ‘Future Flight’ Ride [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Next Drop, Mars: Super Bowl Fans Lift Off to Space on NASA ‘Future Flight’ Ride [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA’s Future Flight ride at Super Bowl LIVE in Houston launches to Mars before dropping to the 50 yard line.

HOUSTON — As football fans make their way to Houston for the Super Bowl on Sunday (Feb. 5), NASA is offering a quick way to reach the 50 yard line at the Big Game — by “dropping in” from Mars.

The space agency partnered with the Houston Super Bowl Host Committee to present Future Flight, a VR-enhanced amusement park drop tower ride that launches guests on a journey to the Red Planet.

“You’re about to blow past humanity’s boundaries,” a guide says through the VR headsets that riders wear as they are elevated skyward. “Your destination: Mars.” [What Would It Be Like to Live on Mars?]

Riders are lifted up the 64-foot-tall (20 meter) tower as the simulated EM-51 mission begins.

“You are strapped into the Orion spacecraft, atop NASA’s Space Launch System, the most powerful rocket ever built, accelerating to 24,000 mph on a journey that will take you farther than anyone has ever dared from our home world,” says the narrator.

At the top of the tower, which resembles the lattice work of a launch pad gantry and mirrors the colors — orange and white — of the heavy-lift SLS rocket, riders “land” on Mars and, through the VR headset, can look around its surface.

Then, as quickly as they arrived, it is time to go home; free falling back to Earth to a touchdown on the 50 yard line of NRG Stadium.

“Your Mars training mission has been accomplished and it is game time!” a flight controller states. “EM-51, Houston, welcome home!”

Future Flight was developed by the Orlando-based media and experience design company IDEAS, and it is featured at Super Bowl Live, a free fan festival at Discovery Green in Houston. The virtual reality part of the ride can also be experienced separately, on the ground, for those who don’t want to take the plunge.

The tower is the centerpiece of a NASA-themed pavilion, featuring space artifacts and interactive displays, including an Orion ocean recovery test capsule, a real RS-25 rocket engine, a planetary rover prototype and a full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope, which is scheduled to launch in 2018. Aerojet Rocketdyne, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Orbital ATK and Raytheon all provided exhibits, complementing the NASA displays.

“They hope to have one million or so folks come to Super Bowl LIVE over the nine days it’s open,” said Ellen Ochoa, director of Johnson Space Center and a former astronaut. “So we have got not only the ride that everybody is talking about, but lots of hands-on activities.”

“When the Super Bowl comes to a city it’s a big production — and it really gives that city an opportunity to showcase itself,” she said. “Johnson Space Center is a unique part of Houston, so this is our opportunity to showcase what we are doing today in human spaceflight.”

That chance will continue on Sunday, as the New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons take the field.

NASA’s Post-landing Orion Recovery Tests (PORT) capsule is seen on display at the Super Bowl LIVE fan festival.

NASA’s Post-landing Orion Recovery Tests (PORT) capsule is seen on display at the Super Bowl LIVE fan festival.

Credit: collectSPACE.com

“We are expecting to do a downlink from the International Space Station during the pre-game show,” Ochoa revealed in an interview with collectSPACE. “The NFL is working on some sort of NASA content at some point during the game but we don’t have the details of that yet.”

In addition to Future Flight and the surrounding displays at Discovery Green, Space Center Houston, the visitor center for the Johnson Space Center, is also inviting football fans to come see its attractions, including the new Mission Mars and Space For Art exhibits.

Preview the riders’ view on NASA’s Future Flight ride at Super Bowl LIVE at collectSPACE.

Follow collectSPACE.com on Facebook and on Twitter at @collectSPACE. Copyright 2017 collectSPACE.com. All rights reserved.

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[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]Next Drop, Mars: Super Bowl Fans Lift Off to Space on NASA ‘Future Flight’ Ride

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Stephen Colbert Ridicules Trump’s Black History Month Speech [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Friday, July 28, 2017

Rare 1949 Photographs Show the Making of Sunset Boulevard [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

James Blunt Wants You to Know He’s Not Just a ‘Timid, Gentle’ Lyricist [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

11 of the Most Controversial Moments at Super Bowl Halftime Shows [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

What is the HGC diet: Dieters INJECT pregnancy hormone in popular diet plan [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

What is the HGC diet: Dieters INJECT pregnancy hormone in popular diet plan [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

The diet is described as using natural hormones to trigger the system to release stored fat.

The hormone is thought to cause the body to rely on fat already stored in the body for energy instead of storing new fat. The claim is that even those who aren’t pregnant will effectively unlock fat that has been stored for years in the body.

However, experts condemn the diet for being very dangerous.

Zoe Martin nutritionist for Discount Supplements said: “Previously, the HCG Diet was defined by a 500-1,000-calorie diet paired with daily injections of HCG to produce rapid weight loss results. 

“The risk factor associated with the diet far outweighs the positives of the weight loss results, as a caloric intake of under 1,000 calories could lead to serious malnutrition in the average person, especially those with an active lifestyle.” 

The diet has been condemned by both the FDA and the American Medical Association as dangerous and inappropriate.

Most companies selling HCG supplements have confirmed that the majority of their products are hormone free, according to Zoe, showing that the hormone itself isn’t what produces the weight loss results, but the reduced calorie intake. 

Mr Omega 3, Tom Oliver, feels strongly about the diet. Telling the Express.co.uk: “Safe, no! Sustainable, no! Lose weight – absolutely! 

“Anyone under-eating by 75 per cent of RDI will lose weight! Five hundred calories per day is not enough, making this diet not only unsustainable, but also very unsafe and not recommended.”

Followers of the diet are sold drops to use on the tongue, but according to one expert this has no effect on the body what so ever. 

Shona Wilkinson, Nutritionist at Superfood.uk said: “It is worth noting that HCG in injection form is the only way that has been shown to raise blood levels of HCG.  

“Other ways such as drops and pills do not raise blood levels of HCG and would therefore be ineffective. 

“The other reason that this diet may be successful is due to the severe calorie restriction.  This is therefore unsustainable and the weight will just pile on again when you come off the diet – you cannot stay on this diet longterm.”

It has recently been found that almost one in five children thinks that skipping one meal a day is a “healthy thing to do”, according to research published today.

Three quarters of children aged between 11 and 14 said they did not set a limit on the amount of sweets and chocolates they eat each day.

A total of 58 per cent also said they had “no limit” when it came to scoffing fried food – like chips or fried chicken – and ate until it was all gone rather than when they were full up.

The NHS provides a free weight loss guide to those hoping to shed some pounds.

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[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]What is the HGC diet: Dieters INJECT pregnancy hormone in popular diet plan

Matthew McConaughey Says We Need to ‘Embrace’ President Trump [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

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The NFL 2017 Bad Lip Reading Has Arrived and It Does Not Disappoint [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Women Join in Celebration of World Hijab Day: ‘Empathy Is Powerful’ [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Remembering the Apollo 1 Crew: ‘Ad Astra Per Aspera’ Exhibit in Pictures [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Remembering the Apollo 1 Crew: ‘Ad Astra Per Aspera’ Exhibit in Pictures [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

The hatches from NASA’s Apollo 1 command module are revealed in “Ad Astra Per Aspera,” a new exhibit at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida dedicated to the memory of the Apollo 1 crew, Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee. [Read the full story.]

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The Absolute Best Reactions to Beyonce’s Birth Announcement Is Breaking the Internet [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

The Chainsmokers Actually Make a Great Nickelback Cover Band [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Watch Justin Timberlake’s ‘Cry Me a River’ Come to Life in Mesmerizing Dance [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Moonlight Filmmaker Barry Jenkins on the Bittersweet Feeling of Being a First [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

‘Overly Optimistic’? NASA’s 2020 Mars Rover Faces Challenges [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

‘Overly Optimistic’? NASA’s 2020 Mars Rover Faces Challenges [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

An independent review has identified several areas of concern in the development of NASA’s next Mars rover, which the space agency aims to launch in July 2020.

The technologies required for the 2020 Mars rover mission’s sample-collecting system appear to be relatively immature, for example, and five of the robot’s seven science instruments feature a “condensed development schedule,” said a new report by NASA’s Office of Inspector General (OIG).

These and several other issues may affect Mars 2020 project managers’ ability to achieve the mission’s technical objectives, meet project milestones (such as the intended launch date) and control costs, said the OIG report, which was published Monday (Jan. 30). [NASA’s Mars Rover 2020 Mission in Pictures (Gallery)]

NASA's Mars 2020 mission will send a car-size rover to the Red Planet to collect samples. <a href="http://www.space.com/26701-nasa-mars-2020-rover-explained-infographic.html">See how the Mars 2020 rover will work in this Space.com infographic</a>.

Credit: by Karl Tate, Infographics Artist

The OIG conducts objective oversight of NASA programs and operations and independently reports its findings to the space agency’s administrator, Congress and the public. 

As noted in the OIG document, since 1964, NASA has spent more than $21 billion on missions exploring Mars, including four robotic rovers on the Martian surface, five static landers and numerous orbiters.

Mars 2020 is NASA’s next big Red Planet surface mission. The $2.4 billion robot’s body is heavily based on the Curiosity rover, which has been exploring Mars since August 2012. The new mission aims to hunt for signs of past Red Planet life and collect and store samples that will be retrieved by a future mission, among other goals.

Mars 2020 has several schedule-related issues that could indicate the project is “overly optimistic,” the new report said. The largest risk is the rover’s sample and caching subsystem, according to the document.

Three of the sampling system’s critical technologies were below technology-readiness level (TRL) 6 at the mission’s preliminary design review (PDR) in February 2016 — meaning their prototypes “had not yet demonstrated the capability to perform all the functions required,” the report’s authors wrote.

“The immaturity of the critical technologies related to the sampling system is concerning, because, according to Mars 2020 project managers, the sampling system is the rover’s most complex new development component, with delays likely to eat into the project’s schedule reserve, and in the worst-case scenario, [they] could delay launch,” the report added. “As of December 2016, the project was tracking the risk that the sampling system may not be ready for integration and testing — the period when a spacecraft is built, undergoes final testing and is prepared for launch — in May 2019, as planned.”

Several other challenges confront Mars 2020 project managers, the OIG document reported.

Among these are “late delivery of actuators (the components responsible for moving and controlling parts and instruments on the rover); foregoing an engineering model of the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment (MOXIE) designed to assess the feasibility of producing oxygen on Mars as a cost-savings measure; ensuring the rover does not exceed its designed mass limit of 1,050 kilograms [2,315 lbs.]; and addressing foreign-partner funding issues that may affect their ability to timely deliver components to the project.”

Overall, five of the 2020 rover mission’s seven identified “critical technologies” were not at the recommended TRL 6 by the time of PDR in February 2016, according to the OIG report. But the document notes that, by December 2016, Mars 2020 project personnel were showing all seven technologies as having reached TRL 6.

The OIG also noted that the Mars 2020 team is redesigning the new rover’s wheels in an attempt to protect against the wear and tear that Curiosity has experienced during its 4.5 years on the Red Planet.

Mars 2020’s wheels will be twice as thick as Curiosity’s and add 22 lbs. (10 kg) of mass to the new rover. Mars 2020 engineers are also considering making software changes to improve the rover’s ability to match wheel drive with the Red Planet terrain, the new report said.

Although project managers do not foresee further mass growth of the Mars 2020 rover, they are monitoring the mass and volume of the turret at the end of the six-wheeled robot’s arm, the OIG report stated. If necessary, additional steps can be taken to keep the rover’s mass below 2,315 lbs. (1,050 kg). These steps could include removing a proposed helicopter technology demonstration from the mission. (This minicopter would fly ahead of the rover, helping to scout out optimal driving routes and spots of scientific interest on the Martian surface, according to the OIG report.)

NASA is taking measures to address the issues raised by the report, OIG officials said.

“We provided a draft of this report to NASA management, who concurred with our recommendations and described planned actions to address them,” the OIG report stated.

You can read the full OIG report here: https://oig.nasa.gov/audits/reports/FY17/IG-17-009.pdf

Leonard David is author of “Mars: Our Future on the Red Planet,” published by National Geographic. The book is a companion to the National Geographic Channel series “Mars.” A longtime writer for Space.com, David has been reporting on the space industry for more than five decades. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

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A model of ‘folded’ space-time illustrates how a wormhole bridge might form with at least two mouths that are connected to a single throat or tube.

Paul Sutter is an astrophysicist at The Ohio State University and the chief scientist at COSI Science Center. Sutter is also host of Ask a Spaceman, RealSpace and COSI Science Now. 

Ah, wormholes. The intergalactic shortcut. A tunnel through space-time that allows intrepid travelers to hop from star system to star system without ever coming close to the speed of light. 

Wormholes are a workhorse of sci-fi interstellar civilizations in books and on the screen because they solve the annoying problem of “Well, if we stuck to known physics, 99.99999 percent of the story would be as fascinating as watching people sleep.”

But could we do it? Could we actually warp and bend space-time to make a convenient tunnel, making all of our galactic dreams come true? [Weird Science: Wormholes Make the Best Time Machines] 

Short answer: not likely. 

Long answer: Well, keep reading.

The concept of wormholes got its start when physicist Ludwig Flamm, and later Albert Einstein and Nathan Rosen, realized that black holes can be “extended.” When one goes about solving the fantastically complicated equations of general relativity, the machinery that predicts a black hole also predicts a phenomenon called a white hole. A white hole is pretty much what you think: Whereas a black hole’s event horizon marks a region of space that once you enter you can’t leave, it’s impossible to enter a white hole’s horizon, although anything already in there can escape. 

That same mathematical machinery delivers a bonus, too: All black holes would be naturally “connected” to white holes via their singularities, making a tunnel through space. Woohoo, wormholes here we go!

Or not. While we have gobs of evidence for the existence of black holes, white holes appear to be mathematical fiction. There’s no known process in our universe that would actually form them, and even if they did pop into existence, their natural extreme instability would snuff them right out again. [Watch: Wormhole instabilities.]

Oh, yeah, and the mechanism for making black holes — the collapse of massive stars — also automatically prevents the formation of a symbiotic white hole.

And even if they did form (and they don’t), the extreme gravity of the mutual singularities would cause the wormhole tunnel to immediately stretch and snap much more quickly than anything could cross it.

But that doesn’t stop anybody from playing a fun game of “what if.” What if white holes could naturally form, or be constructed? What if we could stabilize them? What if we could attach a white hole’s singularity to a black hole and make a wormhole? What if? What if? What if?

Well, for one thing, traveling down such a wormhole would really, really suck. Literally. The entrance to the wormhole — the “throat” — sits inside the event horizon of the black hole. 

That’s a problem.

The very definition of an event horizon — their very cosmique raison d’etre — is that once you enter them, you don’t get to come out. No way, no how. It doesn’t matter if there’s a wormhole tunnel inside it — you don’t get to leave.

Inside a black hole event horizon, you have only one destination: singularity town, the place of infinite density and soul-crushing gravitational forces. 

So let’s say you enter a wormhole. You can watch light from another patch of the universe filter in from the opposite side. If someone else jumps in, you can meet them and have some tea together. And you can die — miserably — as you careen into the singularity. [Chasing Wormholes: The Hunt for Tunnels in Space-Time]

Is there any way to make a working, even fun, wormhole, instead of a terrifying portal to inevitable destruction? 

Surprisingly, yes. Well, not quite 100 percent absolutely “this is a normal part of our universe” yes. More like “if we play pretend” yes.

To construct a traversable wormhole, you need to overcome two important obstacles. First, the entrance to the wormhole has to actually sit outside the event horizon. That would allow you to enter the wormhole and blast through it to your faraway destination without fearing a “singular” encounter.

Second, the tunnel itself has to be stable and strong. It has to withstand the extreme gravity of the singularities and resist tearing apart when something flies down its length.

There is indeed a material that solves both problems. But that material has a problem all its own: It has negative mass.

That’s right: mass, but negative. A ring of negative-mass material could be used to construct a fully functional and useful wormhole. Since the exotic nature of negative mass warps spacetime in a unique way, it “inflates” the entrance to the wormhole outside the boundary of the event horizon, and stabilizes the throat of the wormhole against instabilities. It’s not an intuitive result but the math checks out.

But could such a substance exist? We’ve mapped out a good chunk of the universe, and we’ve never seen negative mass. If it did exist, it would have some pretty weird properties. For example, following the math of Newton’s Laws with some minus signs tossed in, we find that a negative-mass particle would push on a positive-mass particle, while the positive-mass particle would pull on the negative-mass one. Set two opposite-mass particles next to each other, perfectly still, and the pair would start accelerating, zooming off without any input of force.

That seems like that might violate some sort of rule. [Watch: The problem of negative mass.]

What about the Casimir effect, the odd and fascinating attraction of two metal plates due to vacuum energy? That’s often trotted out as an example of the universe behaving badly, and a possible route to negative mass. But the Casimir force is characterized by local negative pressure (it pulls rather than pushes), not negative mass.Sure, we don’t know everything there is to know about quantum gravity and the nature of space-time at super-duper-teensy scales. Could an advanced civilization discover the path to negative mass and manipulate gravity in just the right way? Would a breakthrough in physics point a way to fashioning wormholes?

Honestly, probably not. There are just too many things working against them. Working wormholes would violate so many aspects about known (and extremely well tested) physics that I think it’s better to just work on other problems.

I know some people might accuse me of not being creative enough, but the universe doesn’t care about our creativity. The tools of science are harsh but fair judges; if an idea doesn’t work, it simply doesn’t work. There are many varied and beautiful mysteries in our universe, and we certainly haven’t unlocked all of the inner workings of the cosmos. But wormholes probably aren’t one of them. 

Learn more by listening to the episode “Wormholes – deal or no deal?” on the Ask A Spaceman podcast, available on iTunes and on the Web at http://www.askaspaceman.com. Thanks to @SkaTaTah and @bretthines61 for the questions that led to this piece! Ask your own question on Twitter using #AskASpaceman or by following Paul @PaulMattSutter and facebook.com/PaulMattSutter. 

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com. 

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Wednesday, July 26, 2017

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