Space

Aluminum Machining for Aerospace on the a61nx-5E
Space

G7 5-Axis Grinding Machine for Aerospace Engine Components
Space

Aerospace Aluminum Machining at 400 Cubic Inches Per Minute
Space

Titanium Impeller Machining on a D300 5-Axis VMC
Space

Blade and Vane Cooling Hole EDM Drilling
Space

Small Part Aerospace Manufacturing on the a51nx
Space

Machining a Large Aerospace Part on a Makino MAG 5-axis Horizontal Machining Center
Space

MAG-3 5-Axis Horizontal Machining of a Deep Pocket at 300 cu/in in an Aluminum Aerospace Part
Space

Enhancing Aerospace Manufacturing Productivity and Profitability at UMII
Space

Titanium Milling and Automation Boost Productivity at JWD Machine
Space

Titanium Machining Technologies Create New Opportunities for Patriot Machine
Space

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — NASA’s ongoing studies of a mission to Jupiter’s moon Europa include evaluating the use of the agency’s Space Launch System to showcase the heavy lifter’s utility for the robotic exploration of the outer Solar System, according to James Green, the agency’s director of planetary sciences.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
The third SpaceX commercial cargo mission to the International Space Station has been delayed until no earlier than March 30 because of payload contamination that may require some new parts to be installed. Originally set for March 16, the Falcon 9 launch was delayed on March 14 to “ensure the highest possible level of mission assurance and allow additional time to resolve remaining open items,” according to a NASA update that quoted SpaceX and referred additional questions to the Hawthorne, Calif., commercial-cargo launch service provider.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
ViviSat, a satellite-servicing startup developing life-extension vehicles for end-of-life commercial communications satellites in geostationary orbit, has signed three customers and expects to begin building its specialized spacecraft by the end of 2014.
Space

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — U.S. and Russian flight control teams coordinated the first debris avoidance maneuver for the International Space Station in 16 1/2 months late March 16, to avoid a debris fragment from Meteor 2-5, a weather satellite launched by the former Soviet Union in October 1979. The ISS crew — commander Koichi Wakata, of Japan; NASA’s Rick Mastracchio, and Russia’s Mikhail Tyurin — were asleep and in no danger as the debris of unknown dimensions passed at 12 p.m. (Midnight on Sunday, EDT March 16), NASA spokesman Josh Byerly said.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
A specialized telescope at the South Pole has detected what scientists say is the first direct evidence of the dramatic expansion of the Universe an instant after the Big Bang, according to scientists who spent three years examining their data before making the announcement in Cambridge, Mass., today. Known at BICEP2, the instrument takes advantage of the still, dry environment at the South Pole to avoid interference that might obscure the polarization of the cosmic microwave background, an artifact of the Big Bang that is the oldest light there is.
Space

Amy Svitak
Will test high-speed broadband satellite in the Indian Ocean
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
Once NASA begins delivering its astronauts to the International Space Station with commercial crew vehicles, it may also be possible for industrial or academic researchers to spend time there without being selected as astronauts, according to the top space station manager at agency headquarters.
Space

Mark Carreau
GRoK Technologies LCC, a Houston startup, plans to develop alternatives to the animal-based testing of new human medications, cosmetics and environmental toxins, as well as noninvasive medical therapies, through licensing agreements reached with NASA’s Technology Transfer Program. The accords will be backed by patented technologies in 3-D human tissue growth using rotating wall vessels (RWV), or bioreactors, and time-varying electromagnetic fields.
Space

Mark Carreau
After its most ambitious Florida test flight to date, NASA’s Morpheus prototype planetary lander will undergo a significant guidance system upgrade at Kennedy Space Center for the installation of Autonomous Landing Hazard Avoidance Technology (ALHAT) sensors, to evaluate the unpiloted vehicle’s ability to steer around boulders or steep crater slopes while in flight to achieve a safe touchdown.
Space

Russian officials considered delaying the return of Soyuz TMA-10M from the International Space Station March 11 because of blowing snow and 0F cold at the landing site 230 mi. southwest of the Karaganda staging area, but decided to proceed with a reduced helicopter-recovery force instead. ISS Expedition 38 Commander Oleg Kotov, cosmonaut Sergey Ryazanskiy and NASA astronaut Mike Hopkins later parted ways after 166 days in space, with Hopkins headed straight back to Houston and the cosmonauts returning to their Star City base near Moscow.
Space

Amy Svitak (Washington)
Commercial launchers retool and revise business strategies
Space

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
Communication satellite operators shore up cyber defenses
Space

By Antoine Gelain
Innovation and competitiveness in the space sector
Aerospace

Frank Morring, Jr.
Spectacular new results from NASA's Kepler planet-finding space telescope have raised scientists' hopes that Earth-like planets in the “Goldilocks zone” where conditions are “just right” for life are fairly common in the Universe.