69Th International Astronautical Congress

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

69Th International Astronautical Congress 69th International Astronautical Congress (IAC 2018) Involving Everyone Bremen, Germany 1 - 5 October 2018 Volume 1 of 23 ISBN: 978-1-5108-8165-5 Printed from e-media with permission by: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. Copyright© (2018) by International Astronautical Federation All rights reserved. Printed by Curran Associates, Inc. (2019) For permission requests, please contact International Astronautical Federation at the address below. International Astronautical Federation 3 rue Mario Nikis 75015 Paris France Phone: +33 1 45 67 42 60 Fax: +33 1 42 73 21 20 www.iafastro.org Additional copies of this publication are available from: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: 845-758-0400 Fax: 845-758-2633 Email: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME 1 IAC-18.A1.1.1 NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL AND NEUROBIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF CULTURE AND SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR IN HUMAN SPACEFLIGHT ANALOGS............................................................................................................1 Gabriel G. De La Torre IAC-18.A1.1.2 ONE FOR ALL AND ALL FOR ONE: CREW COPING ON THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION ............................................................................................................................................................................................................2 Jelena Brcic IAC-18.A1.1.3 WHAT DO ASTRONAUTS TWEET ABOUT? A LINGUISTIC ANALYSIS. ..............................................................8 Sara Ahmadian IAC-18.A1.1.4 TEAM PERFORMANCE IN SPACE CREWS: HOUSTON, WE HAVE A TEAMWORK PROBLEM........................................................................................................................................................................................................13 Lindsay Larson IAC-18.A1.1.5 MULTICULTURAL PERSPECTIVE OF NEGATIVE MOOD STATES IN LONG-TERM ISOLATION AND CONFINEMENT............................................................................................................................................................22 Qianying Ma IAC-18.A1.1.6 EXERCISE CAN MAINTAIN BRAIN FUNCTION BY FNIRS USING VFT IN CONFINED ENVIRONMENT LIKE ISS IN JAPAN -SINGLE CASE EXPERIMENTAL ABA DESIGN - ...........................................................27 Shin-Ichiro Sasahara IAC-18.A1.1.7 BRAIN PLASTICITY DURING ISOLATION AND CONFINEMENT ........................................................................33 Alexander Christoph Stahn IAC-18.A1.1.8 ELECTROCORTICAL EVIDENCE FOR IMPAIRED AFFECTIVE PICTURE PROCESSING AFTER LONG-TERM IMMOBILIZATION STRESS ..............................................................................................................................34 Katharina Brauns IAC-18.A1.1.9 EVALUATION OF ANXIETY IN SITUATION OF SHORT-TERM MICROGRAVITY (EVA- 0G): SENSITIVITY OF PSYCHOLOGICAL PARAMETERS.................................................................................................................35 Cécile Guillot IAC-18.A1.1.10 NEW METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH TO THE ANALYSIS OF CREW-MCC COMMUNICATION .......................................................................................................................................................................................40 Vadim Gushin IAC-18.A1.1.11 PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF CREW COMMUNICATION CONTENT ANALYSIS IN SIRIUS-17..........................................................................................................................................................................................................47 Anna Yusupova IAC-18.A1.1.12 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EMOTIONAL STABILITY, GROUP STATUS AND COHESION IN THE INTERNATIONAL CREW DURING SIMULATED MARS EXPLORATION MISSION....................................................52 Polina Kuznetsova IAC-18.A1.1.13 ADDRESSING DISABILITY IN SPACE: ICARES-1 MARS ANALOG MISSION .................................................59 Aleksander Wasniowski IAC-18.A1.2.1 MAIN RESULTS OF SPACE EXPERIMENT “CARDIOVECTOR” AND ITS FURTHER DEVELOPMENT.............................................................................................................................................................................................67 Irina Funtova IAC-18.A1.2.2 CENTRAL BLOOD PRESSURE AND PULSE WAVE VELOCITY BEFORE AND AFTER SIX MONTHS IN SPACE.......................................................................................................................................................................................73 Fabian Hoffmann IAC-18.A1.2.3 MIOCARDIUM BIOELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS, AUTONOMIC REGULATION AND CIRCADIAN RHYTHMS IN SPACE ...........................................................................................................................................................75 Vasily Rusanov IAC-18.A1.2.4 RESPIRATORY VARIATION OF THE BALLISTOCARDIOGRAM (BCG) IS REVERSED IN SPACE -RESULTS OF THE EXPERIMENT CARDIOVECTOR ...........................................................................................................79 Elena Luchitskaya IAC-18.A1.2.5 DECREASED INOTROPIC STATE OF THE HEART AFTER ONE-MONTH EXPOSURE TO MICROGRAVITY ASSESSED BY CARDIOVECTOR-1 .........................................................................................................................83 Jeremy Rabineau IAC-18.A1.2.6 SUPPORT REACTION DISTRIBUTION IN THE COURSE OF TREADMILL WALKING IN SPACE ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................85 Elena Tomilovskaya IAC-18.A1.2.7 CARDIOVASCULAR REGULATION IN RESPONSE TO EXERCISE – FIRST RESULTS FROM ISS COSMONAUTS ...........................................................................................................................................................................87 Uwe Hoffmann IAC-18.A1.2.8 CARDIORESPIRATORY REGULATION IN RESPONSE TO EXERCISE – FIRST RESULTS FROM HERA C4 .............................................................................................................................................................................................89 Jessica Koschate IAC-18.A1.2.9 THE CHANGES OF AEROBIC CAPACITY IN COMPARISON WITH THE RESTRUCTURING OF THE LOCOMOTION STRATEGIES AFTER THE LONG-DURATION SPACE FLIGHT.............................................................................................................................................................................................................92 Elena Fomina IAC-18.A1.2.10 CORE BODY TEMPERATURE CHANGES UNDER DIFFERENT PHYSICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS ON EARTH AND IN SPACE.........................................................................................................95 Hanns-Christian Gunga IAC-18.A1.2.11 CORTICAL SOURCES OF RESTING STATE EEG DURING BED REST..............................................................96 Katharina Brauns IAC-18.A1.2.12 PECULIARITIES OF PATHOLOGICAL PROCESSES UNDER SIMULATED MICROGRAVITY (SPACE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY) ...............................................................................................................................97 Victor Baranov IAC-18.A1.2.13 CHANGES OF BDNF IN SPACEFLIGHT ANALOG STUDIES ..............................................................................100 Alexander Christoph Stahn IAC-18.A1.2.14 ALTERED INTRINSIC FUNCTIONAL BRAIN CONNECTIVITY AFTER FIRST-TIME EXPOSURE TO SHORT-TERM GRAVITATIONAL ALTERATIONS INDUCED BY PARABOLIC FLIGHT. .........................101 Angelique Van Ombergen IAC-18.A1.2.15 STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL EFFECTS OF REACTIVE JUMPS ON SKELETAL MUSCLE IN LONG-TERM BED REST (RSL-STUDY,COLOGNE) ....................................................................................................113 Dieter Blottner IAC-18.A1.2.16 BODY FLUID DISTRIBUTION DURING ARTIFICIAL GRAVITY AS A COUNTERMEASURE AGAINST SPACE FLIGHT DECONDITIONING USING A SEGMENTAL BIOELECTRICAL IMPEDANCE ANALYSIS.........................................................................................................................................117 Satoshi Iwase IAC-18.A1.2.17 UTILIZING THREE-DIMENSIONAL MOTION ANALYSIS AND FOOT PRINT DATA TO INVESTIGATE WALKING MOTION OF RATS EXPOSED TO SIMULATED MICROGRAVITY .............................................119 Junichi Tajino IAC-18.A1.2.18 NEW FINDINGS ON SKIN PHYSIOLOGICAL PARAMETERS DURING LONG-TERM SPACEFLIGHT .............................................................................................................................................................................................121 Nicole Braun IAC-18.A1.2.19 WHEELCHAIR HEAD IMMOBILIZATION PARADIGM: A GROUND-BASED ANALOG FOR POST-SPACEFLIGHT ASTRONAUT SENSORIMOTOR IMPAIRMENT...............................................................................122 Jordan Dixon IAC-18.A1.2.20 GRAVITATIONAL STRESS DURING PARABOLIC FLIGHTS INDUCE CHANGES IN HUMAN LEUKOCYTE SUBSETS .............................................................................................................................................................133 Felix S. Seibert IAC-18.A1.2.21 (NON-CONFIRMED) DIRECT NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF GASTRIC DIGESTION OF FOODS IN A STOMACH MODEL UNDER NORMAL AND REDUCED GRAVITY .......................................................................134
Recommended publications
  • Spring 2018 Undergraduate Law Journal
    SPRING 2018 UNDERGRADUATE LAW JOURNAL The Final Frontier: Evolution of Space Law in a Global Society By: Garett Faulkender and Stephan Schneider Introduction “Space: the final frontier!” These are the famous introductory words spoken by William Shatner on every episode of Star Trek. This science-fiction TV show has gained a cult-following with its premise as a futuristic Space odyssey. Originally released in 1966, many saw the portrayed future filled with Space-travel, inter-planetary commerce and politics, and futuristic technology as merely a dream. However, today we are starting to explore this frontier. “We are entering an exciting era in [S]pace where we expect more advances in the next few decades than throughout human history.”1 Bank of America/Merrill Lynch has predicted that the Space industry will grow to over $2.7 trillion over the next three decades. Its report said, “a new raft of drivers is pushing the ‘Space Age 2.0’”.2 Indeed, this market has seen start-up investments in the range of $16 billion,3 helping fund impressive new companies like Virgin Galactic and SpaceX. There is certainly a market as Virgin Galactic says more than 600 customers have registered for a $250,000 suborbital trip, including Leonardo DiCaprio, Katy Perry, Ashton Kutcher, and physicist Stephen Hawking.4 Although Space-tourism is the exciting face of a future in Space, the Space industry has far more to offer. According to the Satellite Industries 1 Michael Sheetz, The Space Industry Will Be Worth Nearly $3 Trillion in 30 Years, Bank of America Predicts, CNBC, (last updated Oct.
    [Show full text]
  • Satellite Constellations - 2021 Industry Survey and Trends
    [SSC21-XII-10] Satellite Constellations - 2021 Industry Survey and Trends Erik Kulu NewSpace Index, Nanosats Database, Kepler Communications [email protected] ABSTRACT Large satellite constellations are becoming reality. Starlink has launched over 1600 spacecraft in 2 years since the launch of the first batch, Planet has launched over 450, OneWeb more than 200, and counting. Every month new constellation projects are announced, some for novel applications. First part of the paper focuses on the industry survey of 251 commercial satellite constellations. Statistical overview of applications, form factors, statuses, manufacturers, founding years is presented including early stage and cancelled projects. Large number of commercial entities have launched at least one demonstrator satellite, but operational constellations have been much slower to follow. One reason could be that funding is commonly raised in stages and the sustainability of most business models remains to be proven. Second half of the paper examines constellations by selected applications and discusses trends in appli- cations, satellite masses, orbits and manufacturers over the past 5 years. Earliest applications challenged by NewSpace were AIS, Earth Observation, Internet of Things (IoT) and Broadband Internet. Recent years have seen diversification into majority of applications that have been planned or performed by governmental or military satellites, and beyond. INTRODUCTION but they are regarded to be fleets not constellations. There were much fewer Earth Observation com- NewSpace Index has tracked commercial satellite panies in 1990s and 2000s when compared to com- constellations since 2016. There are over 251 entries munications and unclear whether any large constel- as of May 2021, which likely makes it the largest lations were planned.
    [Show full text]
  • Matching with IAC $IAC $MTCH
    Matching with IAC $IAC $MTCH IAC Interactive (IAC; disclosure: long) represents the opportunity to invest in a company trading for roughly the same price of its publicly traded equity stakes despite the presence of world class capital allocators with a proven history of realizing shareholder value at the opportune time, hundreds of millions in net cash on their balance sheet, and a grab bag of other (quite valuable) assets. Let me start with a bit of background: IAC is a conglomerate controlled by mogul Barry Diller. The company has a long and storied history which makes for interesting reading (at various points in time, they’ve owned big stakes in everything from a Japanese home shopping network to Ticketmaster and a variety of other big internet companies) but is a bit beyond the scope of this article; however, what is worth noting is that an investment in IAC since its inception in 1995 has destroyed a similar investment in the S&P 500: Anyway, today IAC has five main sources of value. I’ll go over them briefly below, but I’d encourage you to check out their FY16 letter for a bit more depth into their businesses: 1. Match.com (MTCH): IAC owns 80%+ of publicly traded Match.com, which owns Match, Tinder, and several other popular dating sites. 2. ANGI Homeservices (ANGI): IAC owns ~85% of ANGI Homeservices, which was formed by the merger of IAC’s HomeAdvisor with Angie’s List. 3. Video- IAC fully owns this segment, which includes Vimeo, CollegeHumor, Daily Burn, and a few others.
    [Show full text]
  • Second Annual NASA Ames Space Science and Astrobiology Jamboree
    Second Annual NASA Ames Space Science and Astrobiology Jamboree March 4, 2014 Welcome to the Second Annual Ames Space Sciences and Astrobiology Jamboree! The Space Science and Astrobiology Division at NASA Ames Research Center consists of over 50 civil servants and more than 110 contractors, co-ops, post-docs and associates. Researchers in the division are pursuing investigations in a variety of fields including exoplanets, planetary science, astrobiology and astrophysics. In addition, division personnel support a wide variety of NASA missions including (but not limited to) Kepler, SOFIA, LADEE, JWST, and New Horizons. With such a wide variety of interesting research going on, distributed among three branches in at least 5 different buildings, it can be difficult to stay abreast of what one’s fellow researchers are doing. Our goal in organizing this symposium is to facilitate communication and collaboration among the scientists within the division, and to give center management and other ARC researchers and engineers an opportunity to see what scientific research and science mission work is being done in the division. We also wanted to continue a new tradition created last year within the Space Science and Astrobiology Division to honor one senior and one early career scientist with the Pollack Lecture and the Early Career Lecture, respectively. With the Pollack Lecture, our intent is to select a senior researcher who has made significant contributions to any area of research within the space sciences, and we are pleased to honor Dr. Jeff Cuzzi this year. With the Early Career Lecture, our intent is to select a young researcher within the division who, by their published scientific papers, shows great promise for the future in any area of space science research, and we are pleased to honor Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Pocketqube Standard Issue 1 7Th of June, 2018
    The PocketQube Standard Issue 1 7th of June, 2018 The PocketQube Standard June 7, 2018 Contributors: Organization Name Authors Reviewers TU Delft S. Radu S. Radu TU Delft M.S. Uludag M.S. Uludag TU Delft S. Speretta S. Speretta TU Delft J. Bouwmeester J. Bouwmeester TU Delft - A. Menicucci TU Delft - A. Cervone Alba Orbital A. Dunn A. Dunn Alba Orbital T. Walkinshaw T. Walkinshaw Gauss Srl P.L. Kaled Da Cas P.L. Kaled Da Cas Gauss Srl C. Cappelletti C. Cappelletti Gauss Srl - F. Graziani Important Note(s): The latest version of the PocketQube Standard shall be the official version. 2 The PocketQube Standard June 7, 2018 Contents 1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................................................... 4 1.1 Purpose .............................................................................................................................................................. 4 2. PocketQube Specification ......................................................................................................................................... 4 1.2 General requirements ....................................................................................................................................... 5 2.2 Mechanical Requirements ................................................................................................................................. 5 2.2.1 Exterior dimensions ..................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Pro-Islamic State Twitter Users in a Post-Suspension Era
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works School of Arts & Sciences Theses Hunter College Fall 12-21-2016 Pro-Islamic State Twitter Users in a Post-Suspension Era Colby Grace CUNY Hunter College How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/hc_sas_etds/110 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] Pro-Islamic State Twitter Users in a Post-Suspension Era by Colby Grace Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Anthropology, Hunter College The City University of New York Fall December 21st 2016 08 Thesis Sponsor: December 21, 2016 Dr. Christina Zarcadoolas Date Signature December 21, 2016 Dr. Jessie Daniels Date Signature of Second Reader Table of Contents Figure List: .............................................................................................................................. 3 Preface ................................................................................................................................... 4 Abstract.................................................................................................................................. 5 Background- Online Extremists and the Islamic State.............................................................. 6 Twitter’s Counter-Extremists Efforts: ..............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Exploration of the Moon
    Exploration of the Moon The physical exploration of the Moon began when Luna 2, a space probe launched by the Soviet Union, made an impact on the surface of the Moon on September 14, 1959. Prior to that the only available means of exploration had been observation from Earth. The invention of the optical telescope brought about the first leap in the quality of lunar observations. Galileo Galilei is generally credited as the first person to use a telescope for astronomical purposes; having made his own telescope in 1609, the mountains and craters on the lunar surface were among his first observations using it. NASA's Apollo program was the first, and to date only, mission to successfully land humans on the Moon, which it did six times. The first landing took place in 1969, when astronauts placed scientific instruments and returnedlunar samples to Earth. Apollo 12 Lunar Module Intrepid prepares to descend towards the surface of the Moon. NASA photo. Contents Early history Space race Recent exploration Plans Past and future lunar missions See also References External links Early history The ancient Greek philosopher Anaxagoras (d. 428 BC) reasoned that the Sun and Moon were both giant spherical rocks, and that the latter reflected the light of the former. His non-religious view of the heavens was one cause for his imprisonment and eventual exile.[1] In his little book On the Face in the Moon's Orb, Plutarch suggested that the Moon had deep recesses in which the light of the Sun did not reach and that the spots are nothing but the shadows of rivers or deep chasms.
    [Show full text]
  • Spotlight and Hot Topic Sessions Poster Sessions Continuing
    Sessions and Events Day Thursday, January 21 (Sessions 1001 - 1025, 1467) Friday, January 22 (Sessions 1026 - 1049) Monday, January 25 (Sessions 1050 - 1061, 1063 - 1141) Wednesday, January 27 (Sessions 1062, 1171, 1255 - 1339) Tuesday, January 26 (Sessions 1142 - 1170, 1172 - 1254) Thursday, January 28 (Sessions 1340 - 1419) Friday, January 29 (Sessions 1420 - 1466) Spotlight and Hot Topic Sessions More than 50 sessions and workshops will focus on the spotlight theme for the 2019 Annual Meeting: Transportation for a Smart, Sustainable, and Equitable Future . In addition, more than 170 sessions and workshops will look at one or more of the following hot topics identified by the TRB Executive Committee: Transformational Technologies: New technologies that have the potential to transform transportation as we know it. Resilience and Sustainability: How transportation agencies operate and manage systems that are economically stable, equitable to all users, and operated safely and securely during daily and disruptive events. Transportation and Public Health: Effects that transportation can have on public health by reducing transportation related casualties, providing easy access to healthcare services, mitigating environmental impacts, and reducing the transmission of communicable diseases. To find sessions on these topics, look for the Spotlight icon and the Hot Topic icon i n the “Sessions, Events, and Meetings” section beginning on page 37. Poster Sessions Convention Center, Lower Level, Hall A (new location this year) Poster Sessions provide an opportunity to interact with authors in a more personal setting than the conventional lecture. The papers presented in these sessions meet the same review criteria as lectern session presentations. For a complete list of poster sessions, see the “Sessions, Events, and Meetings” section, beginning on page 37.
    [Show full text]
  • E-Sail for Fast Interplanetary Travel. M
    Planetary Science Vision 2050 Workshop 2017 (LPI Contrib. No. 1989) 8056.pdf E-SAIL FOR FAST INTERPLANETARY TRAVEL. M. Aru1, P. Janhunen2, 1University of Tartu, Estonia, 2Finnish Meteorological Institute, Finland Introduction: Propulsion is a significant factor for areas of scientific research and new types of missions our access to the Solar System and the time con- could be imagined and created, improving our unders- sumption of the missions. We propose to use the elect- tanding of the Solar System. ric solar wind sail (E-sail), which can provide remar- Manned presence on Mars. A spacecraft equipped kable low thrust propulsion without needing propellant with a large E-sail, that provides 1 N of thrust at 1 au [1, 2]. from Sun, can travel from Earth to the asteroid belt in a The E-sail is a propellantless propulsion concept year. One such spacecraft can bring back three tonnes that uses centrifugally stretched, charged tethers to of water in three years, and repeat the journey multiple extract momentum from the solar wind to produce times within its estimated lifetime of at least ten years thrust. Over periods of months, this small but conti- [9, 12]. The water can be converted to synthetic cryo- nuous thrust can accelerate the spacecraft to great genic rocket fuel in orbital fuelling stations where speeds of approximately 20 to 30 au/year. For examp- manned vehicles travelling between Earth and Mars le, distances of 100 au could be reached in <10 years, can be fuelled. This dramatically reduces the overall which is groundbreaking [1]. mission fuel ratio at launch, and opens up possibilities The principles of operation: A full-scale E-sail for affordable continuous manned presence on Mars includes up to 100 thin, many kilometers long tethers, [13].
    [Show full text]
  • World Meteorological Organization Global Atmosphere Watch
    WORLD METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION GLOBAL ATMOSPHERE WATCH No. 140 WMO/CEOS REPORT on a STRATEGY for INTEGRATING SATELLITE and GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS of OZONE JANUARY 2001 WORLD METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION GLOBAL ATMOSPHERE WATCH No. 140 WMO/CEOS REPORT on a STRATEGY for INTEGRATING SATELLITE and GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS of OZONE WMO TD No. 1046 List of Contents Foreword ...................................................................................................................................... iii Executive Summary...................................................................................................................... v Milestones in the History of Ozone ............................................................................................ ix 1. Introduction.......................................................................................................................... 1 1.1 The IGOS Strategy ................................................................................................. 1 1.2 The Ozone Project.................................................................................................. 2 1.3 Requirements and Data Sources .......................................................................... 5 1.4 The Objectives of the Report ................................................................................ 9 2. User Requirements............................................................................................................ 11 2.1 Sources of Information and Definitions
    [Show full text]
  • IAF Space Propulsion Symposium 2019
    IAF Space Propulsion Symposium 2019 Held at the 70th International Astronautical Congress (IAC 2019) Washington, DC, USA 21 -25 October 2019 Volume 1 of 2 ISBN: 978-1-7138-1491-7 Printed from e-media with permission by: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. Copyright© (2019) by International Astronautical Federation All rights reserved. Printed with permission by Curran Associates, Inc. (2020) For permission requests, please contact International Astronautical Federation at the address below. International Astronautical Federation 100 Avenue de Suffren 75015 Paris France Phone: +33 1 45 67 42 60 Fax: +33 1 42 73 21 20 www.iafastro.org Additional copies of this publication are available from: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: 845-758-0400 Fax: 845-758-2633 Email: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME 1 PROPULSION SYSTEM (1) BLUE WHALE 1: A NEW DESIGN APPROACH FOR TURBOPUMPS AND FEED SYSTEM ELEMENTS ON SOUTH KOREAN MICRO LAUNCHERS ............................................................................ 1 Dongyoon Shin KEYNOTE: PROMETHEUS: PRECURSOR OF LOW-COST ROCKET ENGINE ......................................... 2 Jérôme Breteau ASSESSMENT OF MON-25/MMH PROPELLANT SYSTEM FOR DEEP-SPACE ENGINES ...................... 3 Huu Trinh 60 YEARS DLR LAMPOLDSHAUSEN – THE EUROPEAN RESEARCH AND TEST SITE FOR CHEMICAL SPACE PROPULSION SYSTEMS ....................................................................................... 9 Anja Frank, Marius Wilhelm, Stefan Schlechtriem FIRING TESTS OF LE-9 DEVELOPMENT ENGINE FOR H3 LAUNCH VEHICLE ................................... 24 Takenori Maeda, Takashi Tamura, Tadaoki Onga, Teiu Kobayashi, Koichi Okita DEVELOPMENT STATUS OF BOOSTER STAGE LIQUID ROCKET ENGINE OF KSLV-II PROGRAM .......................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • For Immediate Release: TWO GOOGLE LUNAR XPRIZE
    Media Contact: Kyoko Yonezawa [email protected] For Immediate Release: TWO GOOGLE LUNAR XPRIZE TEAMS ANNOUNCE RIDESHARE PARTNERSHIP FOR MISSION TO THE MOON IN 2016 Team HAKUTO (Japan) and Team Astrobotic (U.S.) Plan Cooperative Launch in Pursuit of $30 Million Prize to Land a Private Spacecraft on the Lunar Surface TOKYO, Japan (February 24, 2015) – HAKUTO, the only Japanese team competing for the $30 million Google Lunar XPRIZE, has announced a contract with fellow competitor, Astrobotic, based in Pittsburgh, Pa., to carry a pair of rovers to the moon. Astrobotic plans to launch its Google Lunar XPRIZE mission on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla., during the second half of 2016. HAKUTO’s twin rovers, Moonraker and Tetris, will piggyback on Astrobotic's Griffin lander to reach the lunar surface. Upon touchdown, the rovers will be released simultaneously with Astrobotic’s Andy rover, developed by Carnegie Mellon University, travel 500 meters on the moon’s surface and send high-definition images and video back to Earth, all in pursuit of the $20M Google Lunar XPRIZE Grand Prize. Last month, both teams were awarded Google Lunar XPRIZE Milestone Prizes: HAKUTO won $500,000 for technological advancements in the Mobility category, while Astrobotic, in partnership with Carnegie Mellon University, won a total of $1.75M for innovations in all three focus areas—Landing, Mobility and Imaging. Throughout the judging process, all three rovers, Moonraker, Tetris and Andy, demonstrated the ability to move 500 meters across the lunar surface and withstand the high radiation environment and extreme temperatures on the moon.
    [Show full text]