Japan to join U.S.-led space telescope project in search for life




Japan’s government has been considering joining a U.S.-led space telescope initiative to search for Earth-like planets and extraterrestrial life, aiming to contribute technology and secure key research opportunities.
The NASA-led „Habitable Worlds Observatory“ project plans to launch a large-scale space telescope in the early 2040s, designed to observe wavelengths like ultraviolet and X-rays that cannot penetrate the Earth’s atmosphere.
Tokyo plans to have a specialized team within the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency assess what potential technological contributions can be made.
Government officials view the space telescope endeavor as a significant international project, comparable to the Artemis lunar exploration program, which has over 50 countries involved. Joining the initiative would bolster Japan’s role in global space science and provide priority access to observation opportunities.

A render of a design for the Habitable Worlds Observatory. (Photo courtesy of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab)(Kyodo
Serving as the successor to the James Webb Space Telescope, launched in 2021, the envisioned telescope will orbit 1.5 million kilometers from Earth. It will utilize infrared, visible and UV light to detect exoplanets with conditions such as liquid water and atmospheres capable of supporting life.
Detecting Earth-like planets involves capturing faint light signals obscured by the brightness of stars. Drawing on expertise gained from developing instruments for the Subaru Telescope in Hawaii, Japan hopes to contribute observation equipment and remote maintenance technologies to the project.
Although Japan did not take part in the development of the James Webb Space Telescope, which has made major discoveries including uncovering the structure of the early universe, experts highlight the importance of contributing to future large-scale space initiatives.
„Discovering life beyond Earth would deepen our understanding of what life is and how it developed on our planet,“ said Satoshi Miyazaki, director of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan’s Hawaii Observatory.
He added that Japan must leverage its unique technologies to maintain a leading role in global space exploration efforts.

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Space Robotics Leader Says Humans Will Soon Join Robots On Moon, Mars

Far Side Of the Moon PIctured Orbiting Earth
Colossal super-rockets being produced by billionaires Elon Musk snd Jeff Bezos are set to carry … [+]

One of the globe’s top designers of space robots says a new “Golden Age of Space Exploration” – spearheaded by the world’s twin Titans of spaceflight – will speed up astronauts joining robotic scouts in trekking around the Moon and Mars.

Gigantic new rockets now being tested by spacecraft makers Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos – the planet’s leading hyper-billionaires – are setting the stage for human explorers to sojourn across an expanding realm of off-world outposts, says Kris Zacny, Director of the Exploration Technology Group at Honeybee Robotics.

During a virtual roundtable with journalists and space aficionados staged by the Mars Society, Dr. Zacny, who holds a doctorate in geotechnical engineering, with a focus on extraterrestrial drilling and mining, from the University of California Berkeley, sketched out his predictions for the new space epoch being opened by the titanic spacecraft now waiting in the wings.
“Folks who love space are the luckiest people on Earth,” Zacny mused during the meetup, hosted by the Mars Society’s Ashton Zeth.

“We have two of the wealthiest guys in the world prepared to spend their own money to go to space and change how we explore space and make space habitable,” Zacny says.
“They have a combined wealth of 500 billion dollars – half a trillion dollars – and this is their vision.”
“This is a golden age of space exploration.”
Transparent Solar System, c 1860.
A new generation of gigantic rockets will power astronaut flights to an expanding ring of celestial … [+]
SSPL via Getty Images
“Jeff [Bezos] and Elon [Musk] are prepared … to change humanity forever.”
By designing colossal boosters that are rapidly reusable, and could power interplanetary flights ahead, these two Promethean rivals of the NewSpace sector, with their contest to dominate the celestial sphere, could collectively propel expanding waves of spacefarers into the heavens.
“Last week a Falcon 9 launched with [the Moon-bound lander] Firefly,” Zacny recounted, “then the next day New Glenn launched for the first time – it was a perfect launch – then Starship launched again.”
“We had three different rockets from private companies launching in three consecutive days, and these rockets will be taking humans to the Moon and Mars – so we are lucky.”
Blue Origin’s first flight test of its massive New Glenn rocket played out almost flawlessly, while the seventh demo of the Starship – which featured a more advanced version of the super-capsule – ended in a pyrotechnic break-up of the second stage, sparked by SpaceX’s super-speed campaign to perfect the most powerful and technologically sophisticated spacecraft ever to take flight from Planet Earth.
Both Blue Origin and SpaceX have been commissioned by NASA to deploy landers to shuttle astronauts from lunar orbit down to the polar region of the Moon in a series of Artemis missions across the second half of the 2020s, and their supercharged rockets will launch those landers.
This unfolding phase of advanced rocketry and robotics will set the stage for human bases to expand outward.
Kris Zacny has produced an array of groundbreaking studies and books on deploying robots to extraterrestrial outposts to build the foundation for later astronaut missions, for example by constructing H2O reservoirs that could in turn provide oxygen for domed oases on the Martian dunes and rocket fuel for Mars-Earth space odysseys.
His team at Honeybee Robotics Exploration Systems has already designed robotic instruments that have sped across the solar system, including on the Mars Phoenix lander, the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity, and the Perseverance rover, which is now exploring the ghosts of lakes and rivers that once animated the orange-red dune-covered planet.
Honeybee’s breakthrough technologies are also set to touch down on the netherworld-like moon Titan, revolving around the fantastical rings of Saturn.
Saturn and its otherworldly moon Titan
One of Honeybee’s future robots will fly across the otherworldly lakes and skies of Saturn’s moon … [+]
Getty Images
Another Honeybee invention, designed to collect samples of moondust on the lunar surface, is now on its way to the silvery orb, and its Trident drill, aimed at potentially excavating water around the lunar South Pole, is still searching for a White Knight rocket to blast it off to the Moon, Zacny told me during the Mars Society’s virtual conference.
When I asked Dr. Zacny about the fate of the Trident, part of the VIPER mission that was once slated to help prospect for ice that survived – potentially for billions of years – hidden away in the Moon’s eternally shadowed craters, he was surprisingly upbeat.
NASA commissioned leading American scientists and roboticists to design and develop a roving science lab, with spectrometers to detect ice and the Trident to drill for it, as part of pivotal plan to begin amassing ice for later astronaut missions and habitats.
Then, when researchers were just about to cross the finish line on perfecting the VIPER lab last summer, NASA’s leaders abruptly cancelled the $433-million project, stating that “cost increases” and “delays to the launch date” impelled the agency to “stand down on the mission,” even though these same negative factors plagued a host of NASA science missions as the COVID pandemic hit the world.
“Moving forward, NASA is planning to disassemble and reuse VIPER’s instruments and components for future Moon missions,” the leadership then in power stated, but the space agency held out a slight chance of a reprieve for the lab if a commercial American or international partner offered to deploy “the existing VIPER rover system at no cost to the government.”
“VIPER is finished in terms of development of the rover,” Zacny told me. “It went through all the environmental testing and it passed with glowing colors. So it’s ready.”
“What we are looking for is a ride to the Moon – the rocket.”
“Once we start flying these big missions – once Blue Origin’s Mark 1 and and Mark 2 [lunar] landers start flying – once the Starship starts flying to the Moon – these have enormous capacity – enormous.”
On a Starship or New Glenn flight, he adds, “VIPER would be just one of the payloads – not the only payload.”
“I’m 100-percent sure we’re going to be flying to the Moon.”
Although Blue Origin acquired Honeybee Robotics three years ago, the robot maker has operated fairly autonomously, and Kris Zacny delves out equal praise to Blue and to SpaceX.
He has even teamed up with two of SpaceX’s top engineers, along with a constellation of vanguard American space scholars, to sketch out how the leading-edge Starship could open an astonishing phase of human settlements across the solar system.
In a joint study titled “Accelerating Martian and Lunar Science through SpaceX Starship Missions,” Zacny and his SpaceX confrères state: “This two-stage vehicle (Super Heavy first stage and Starship as the second stage) is fully reusable and can transport payloads to Earth orbit, the Moon, and Mars, along with being able to support a number of other missions including to Venus, asteroids, or elsewhere in the Solar System. “
“The first set of Starships launched to Mars will be uncrewed and are intended to demonstrate the capability to successfully launch from Earth and land on Mars with human-scale lander systems.”
These autonomously piloted ships will “provide the opportunity to deliver significant quantities of cargo to the surface in advance of human arrival.”
SpaceX Starships at the Starbase launch center
SpaceX founder Elon Musk says he aims to loft a flotilla of unmanned Starships to Mars next year, … [+]
Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
Teams of autonomous robots flown to Mars on this first fleet of Starships could help set up an astronaut base by positioning “equipment for increased power production, water extraction, LOX/methane production [for rocket fuel], pre-prepared landing pads, radiation shielding, dust control equipment [and] exterior shelters for humans.”
Elon Musk told his 200 million followers on X last summer that he aims to launch five unmanned Starships to Mars in late 2026, when the next Earth-Mars orbital transfer window opens, and the first Mars-bound astronauts in 2028 – for a Starship landing in the second half of 2029.
Ever since launching SpaceX, Musk has said its core mission is to create a second foundation for human civilization on Mars, with the near-term goal of fostering the Red Planet’s first cosmopolis, of one million human Martians, within two decades of lofting the initial flotillas of interplanetary Starship capsules.
“An ultimate objective of SpaceX is to develop self-sustaining cities on Mars,” Zacny and his SpaceX co-authors state, “and current SpaceX architecture plans call for multiple Starship flights to be launched to Mars at every launch opportunity (~2 years).”
While Mars is the primary target, they add, “flights to the Moon do provide the opportunity to test and demonstrate Starship systems closer to Earth prior to the longer journey to Mars.”
“More frequent flights to the Moon than to Mars are feasible due to orbital dynamics,” they add, “and thus significant capabilities can be developed and tested at the Moon prior to Mars missions.”
During the Mars Society gathering, Zacny predicted the next stage of human spaceflight missions would target the Earth’s ancient black and silver satellite: “We’re going to the Moon first for many reasons.”
Yet he adds: “I’m really hopeful we’ll go to Mars this decade.”
The venue Zacny chose to outline his predictions on the changing destiny of humans in space – the Mars Society – was created a quarter-century ago by Robert Zubrin, who is likely to be chronicled by historians of the future as the master architect of the campaign to reshape Mars in the Earth’s image.
While NASA and other space agencies have perennially cast Mars as a target destination for human landings in the distant future, Zubrin has scripted a series of books, including The Case for Mars, that outline how this generation can deploy current rockets and robots to touch down on Mars and begin terraforming the now-frozen planet.
Rendering of ESA orbiter flying above Mars
Mars Society founder Robert Zubrin aims to remake the Red Planet in the Earth’s image, as a … [+]
AFP via Getty Images
Zubrin envisions that inside massive geodesic domes – assembled by robots and pressurized with oxygen captured on Mars – the first human colonies and glasshouse gardens will start spreading across the dunes even as geo-engineers begin warming the entire planet, restoring its ocean and atmosphere while building a proto-Eden to host a new branch of civilization.
Kris Zacny paid homage to the founder of the Mars Society during his talk, and said reading one of Zubrin’s books while a graduate student in California changed the trajectory of his life, setting him on track to design robots bound for Mars.

source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/kevinholdenplatt/2025/01/26/space-robotics-leader-says-humans-will-soon-join-robots-on-moon-mars/

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Chang’e-8 moon mission first to get robotic boost from China’s private sector

A Chinese private aerospace company has secured a ticket to the moon as it prepares to launch two AI-controlled lunar exploration robots alongside the Chang’e-8 mission in 2028, with international cooperation.
The robots are being jointly developed by STAR.VISION, a private aerospace company based in Hangzhou, along with a professor from Zhejiang University and another professor from Middle East Technical University in Turkey, according to a statement released on Friday.
“This is the first time a private company in China has been responsible for a sub-project in space exploration. Traditionally, China’s space missions have been conducted primarily by state-owned entities,” Wang Chunhui, the company’s chief technology officer, said in an interview.
Chinese private aerospace company STAR.VISION will collaborate with experts from Zhejiang University and Middle East Technical University in Turkey to develop lunar rovers for Chang’e-8. Photo: Handout
Chinese private aerospace company STAR.VISION will collaborate with experts from Zhejiang University and Middle East Technical University in Turkey to develop lunar rovers for Chang’e-8. Photo: Handout

“Previous missions like this were typically handled by industrial departments, but this time, we’ve incorporated commercial aerospace companies, and we are also exploring international cooperation,” he said, adding that his company intended to make the most of the opportunity.
The China National Space Administration started carrying international payloads with its Chang’e-4 mission, where it worked with various European and Asian partners.
“STAR.VISION’s primary contribution will focus on the AI processor, while we will contribute expertise in navigation, algorithms and the mechanical components for the rovers, including the rollers,” Halil Ersin Soken, a professor of robotics with Middle East Technical University, said in a press release on Friday.
The two lunar exploration robots will also interact autonomously. “Through data sharing and task delegation, the robots will work together like a team, achieving objectives that would be impossible for independent robots to complete,” Wang said.
Sun Shujian, an aerospace and satellite expert with Zhejiang University, said artificial intelligence (AI) would play a key role in China’s future lunar exploration.
Part of the Chang’e-8 mission includes setting up a lunar research station. Photo: Handout
Part of the Chang’e-8 mission includes setting up a lunar research station. Photo: Handout
“The moon is 380,000km (236,000 miles) from Earth, and especially at the lunar south pole, where communication faces significant coverage challenges, communication between the rover and Earth relies on relay satellites, which means delays of up to several minutes. So, the autonomy of the rovers is critical,” Sun said.

Past lunar rovers have been limited by preprogrammed instructions, which sometimes hindered their full capabilities. The Zhurong Mars rover struggled due to a lack of real-time algorithmic control, and ended up stuck in a pit.
In 2019, the Change’-4 mission landed a spacecraft on the far side of the moon in the South Pole-Aitken basin. China is aiming to land astronauts on the moon by 2030 and set up a lunar research station by about 2035.
In addition to remote robotic exploration, the Chang’e-8 mission will carry out tests on the lunar surface for a command and communication hub that will be part of a planned lunar base.
In the run-up to the mission, STAR.VISION will need to address various technical challenges, carry out tests in experimental conditions, procure equipment and obtain the necessary approvals.
“Over the next year, the main focus will be to validate core technologies and build prototypes. The moon’s gravity is just one-sixth of Earth’s, which makes it difficult to control the robots with electric motors,” Sun said.
“Additionally, the lunar south pole faces a continuous night that is 14½ [Earth] days long, with temperatures dropping to as low as minus 197 degrees Celsius (minus 323 degrees Fahrenheit). Ensuring that electronic equipment works properly in such extreme conditions will be a major challenge,” Sun added.
The company did not elaborate on the rovers’ missions due to the classified nature of Chang’e-8’s specific tasks.
Part of the mission would be to set up a lunar research station, Peng Jing, chief designer of the Chang’e-8 probe, previously told state media.
“It will be similar to the Chang’e-7 mission, with the main module being a lander that will carry scientific instruments. There may also be a small probe, resembling a robot sweeper, working in coordination with the lander.”

Last August, STAR.VISION launched a satellite equipped with an AI processor capable of processing data directly in space.

source: https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3296324/change-8-moon-mission-first-get-robotic-boost-chinas-private-sector

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NASA’s Perseverance Rover Investigates Geologically Rich Mars Terrain

NASA’s Perseverance rover is well into its second science campaign, collecting rock-core samples from features within an area long considered by scientists to be a top prospect for finding signs of ancient microbial life on Mars. The rover has collected four samples from an ancient river delta in the Red Planet’s Jezero Crater since July 7, bringing the total count of scientifically compelling rock samples to 12.
“We picked the Jezero Crater for Perseverance to explore because we thought it had the best chance of providing scientifically excellent samples – and now we know we sent the rover to the right location,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s associate administrator for science in Washington. “These first two science campaigns have yielded an amazing diversity of samples to bring back to Earth by the Mars Sample Return campaign.”
Twenty-eight miles (45 kilometers) wide, Jezero Crater hosts a delta – an ancient fan-shaped feature that formed about 3.5 billion years ago at the convergence of a Martian river and a lake. Perseverance is currently investigating the delta’s sedimentary rocks, formed when particles of various sizes settled in the once-watery environment. During its first science campaign, the rover explored the crater’s floor, finding igneous rock, which forms deep underground from magma or during volcanic activity at the surface.  
“The delta, with its diverse sedimentary rocks, contrasts beautifully with the igneous rocks – formed from crystallization of magma – discovered on the crater floor,” said Perseverance project scientist Ken Farley of Caltech in Pasadena, California. “This juxtaposition provides us with a rich understanding of the geologic history after the crater formed and a diverse sample suite. For example, we found a sandstone that carries grains and rock fragments created far from Jezero Crater – and a mudstone that includes intriguing organic compounds.”
“Wildcat Ridge” is the name given to a rock about 3 feet (1 meter) wide that likely formed billions of years ago as mud and fine sand settled in an evaporating saltwater lake. On July 20, the rover abraded some of the surface of Wildcat Ridge so it could analyze the area with the instrument called Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman & Luminescence for Organics & Chemicals, or SHERLOC.  
SHERLOC’s analysis indicates the samples feature a class of organic molecules that are spatially correlated with those of sulfate minerals. Sulfate minerals found in layers of sedimentary rock can yield significant information about the aqueous environments in which they formed.
What Is Organic Matter?
Organic molecules consist of a wide variety of compounds made primarily of carbon and usually include hydrogen and oxygen atoms. They can also contain other elements, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur. While there are chemical processes that produce these molecules that don’t require life, some of these compounds are the chemical building blocks of life. The presence of these specific molecules is considered to be a potential biosignature – a substance or structure that could be evidence of past life but may also have been produced without the presence of life.
In 2013, NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover found evidence of organic matter in rock-powder samples, and Perseverance has detected organics in Jezero Crater before. But unlike that previous discovery, this latest detection was made in an area where, in the distant past, sediment and salts were deposited into a lake under conditions in which life could potentially have existed. In its analysis of Wildcat Ridge, the SHERLOC instrument registered the most abundant organic detections on the mission to date.  
“In the distant past, the sand, mud, and salts that now make up the Wildcat Ridge sample were deposited under conditions where life could potentially have thrived,” said Farley. “The fact the organic matter was found in such a sedimentary rock – known for preserving fossils of ancient life here on Earth – is important. However, as capable as our instruments aboard Perseverance are, further conclusions regarding what is contained in the Wildcat Ridge sample will have to wait until it’s returned to Earth for in-depth study as part of the agency’s Mars Sample Return campaign.”
The first step in the NASA-ESA (European Space Agency) Mars Sample Return campaign began when Perseverance cored its first rock sample in September 2021. Along with its rock-core samples, the rover has collected one atmospheric sample and two witness tubes, all of which are stored in the rover’s belly.
The geologic diversity of the samples already carried in the rover is so good that the rover team is looking into depositing select tubes near the base of the delta in about two months. After depositing the cache, the rover will continue its delta explorations.
“I’ve studied Martian habitability and geology for much of my career and know first-hand the incredible scientific value of returning a carefully collected set of Mars rocks to Earth,” said Laurie Leshin, director of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “That we are weeks from deploying Perseverance’s fascinating samples and mere years from bringing them to Earth so scientists can study them in exquisite detail is truly phenomenal. We will learn so much.”
More About the Mission
A key objective for Perseverance’s mission on Mars is astrobiology, including caching samples that may contain signs of ancient microbial life. The rover will characterize the planet’s geology and past climate, pave the way for human exploration of the Red Planet, and be the first mission to collect and cache Martian rock and regolith.
Subsequent NASA missions, in cooperation with ESA, would send spacecraft to Mars to collect these sealed samples from the surface and return them to Earth for in-depth analysis.
The Mars 2020 Perseverance mission is part of NASA’s Moon to Mars exploration approach, which includes Artemis missions to the Moon that will help prepare for human exploration of the Red Planet.
JPL, which is managed for NASA by Caltech, built and manages operations of the Perseverance rover.
For more about Perseverance:

https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/

source: https://www.nasa.gov/news-release/nasas-perseverance-rover-investigates-geologically-rich-mars-terrain/

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Scientists Believe Aliens Are Sending Interstellar Messages to Each Other—And We Can Eavesdrop on Them

Since the first modern SETI (Search for ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence) studies tried to detect alien transmissions in the early 1960s, scientists on Earth have been on the alert for strange cosmic signals with no reasonable explanation. So far, they haven’t positively identified any signals as evidence of intelligent alien life among the stars, but the search continues.
Most SETI telescope searches aim to observe a vast expanse of sky or zero in on a specific star system or group of stars. They usually try to intercept signals that potential aliens could have aimed at Earth or those that pass close by. But what if aliens are transmitting messages from one exoplanet to another instead? If they exist, we may now have a way to eavesdrop on alien conversations, leveling up humanity’s search for intelligent life far from Earth.
Working with his team at Penn State University, astronomer Nick Tusay, a graduate student working on his Ph.D., came up with a new technique that tests indicate would detect alien radio chatter. From our Earthly point of view, we can observe when one exoplanet—a planet that is not part of our solar system—passes in front of and blocks another. This is called occultation. However, the occulting planet does not always completely cover the planet behind it. So, any message a hypothetical alien transmits from the occulted planet can spill over into space, and our radio telescopes could detect it.
“I want to be able to find or at least look for the kind of signals that we put out all the time, from an alien civilization going about its business doing its thing, not intending to signal anyone,” says Tusay, who led a study published in July 2024 in The Astronomical Journal.
Tusay’s method of listening in on alien conversations during planet-planet occultations (PPOs) is designed to seek out narrowband radio signals. While there are many different types of radio waves that are emitted by objects such as quasars or pulsars, narrowband signals are glaringly artificial and are the type used by transmitters. We only know of one species that has been able to produce these signals, and that’s us. Humans send these signals into space when communicating with spacecraft via NASA’s Deep Space Network. The fact that these signals cannot occur naturally is an advantage for SETI, because if radio telescopes on Earth were to detect one coming from space, it would mean that it is definitely artificial.
Seth Shostak, Ph.D., Senior Astronomer at the SETI Institute and renowned SETI expert, agrees that narrowband signals would be a sure sign that someone out there is communicating, though not necessarily with us. There is always the possibility that extraterrestrials might be using a type of signal we cannot even fathom yet. However, Shostak, who is also an astrophysicist, believes it is likely aliens would use the same methods of communications that humans do.
“Maybe ether aliens have a different signaling system to what we can imagine, but the physics on their world are the same as the physics here,” he says. “Sending radio signals is something that they would probably do too, because it’s congruent with the physics the universe has.”
The more practical reason for relying on narrowband signals transmitted between planets is that we understand them, according to SETI historian Rebecca Charbonneau, Ph.D., author of Mixed Signals: Alien Communication Across the Iron Curtain. During the advent of SETI in the late 1950s and early 1960s, when the Space Race was taking off, humans were sending artificial signals into space. And they were already starting to wonder if there were intelligent beings out there who were doing the same.
“We’re highly influenced by our environment when it comes to thinking of what we might expect to see in other words, because radio is the primary mechanism with which humans have historically communicated,” says Charbonneau.
As our technology has evolved, we have shifted from radio to other modes of communication, such as fiber optics, internet, and cables buried deep beneath the ocean. This shift also means that radio signals from our telescopes may take a backseat to these newer types of signals. If intelligent aliens are looking for other life in the universe, then they may or may not be able to detect our variety of signals.
However, it’s possible that none of these signals may resonate with an advanced civilization, which could be millions—or possibly billions of years—older than ours; its members could be communicating in ways only science fiction could fathom. As a recent study published in The Open Journal of Astrophysics explores, it is possible that alien communications technologies are so advanced, they may be talking to each other using gravitational waves. These are ripples in spacetime, and physicists don’t yet fully understand them.
The problem is that—unlike narrowband radio waves—our science cannot distinguish between gravitational waves that are natural and those that may be artificial. That lack of knowledge still does not discourage Tusay. While he will not be developing the eavesdropping technique further, he plans to leave it in the literature as a proof of concept, so that future scientific progress may make the adjustments needed to pick up unnatural signals. Whether we could actually decode any type of signal from another civilization is an entirely different question, though.

Source: https://www.popularmechanics.com/space/a63022036/alien-radio-signals/

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SpaceX’s Starship Rocket Explodes Within Minutes Of Seventh Test Flight, Elon Musk Suspects Oxygen/Fuel Leak

The Starship rocket from SpaceX suffered an unexpected failure when it exploded merely minutes into its seventh trial flight, marking a surprising reversal of fortunes for the company led by Elon Musk, which had been consistently making headway in enhancing the rocket’s capabilities.
The accident necessitated a change in the flight paths of airlines over the Gulf of Mexico to prevent any encounters with plummeting debris, Hindustan Times reported. Furthermore, it represented a significant hindrance to Elon Musk’s premier rocket initiative.
8 minutes post-launch from its South Texas rocket facilities at 5:38 pm EST (2238 GMT), SpaceX’s mission control lost communication with the recently enhanced Starship. The Starship, which was uncrewed, was on its maiden test flight carrying mock satellites as its payload.
Preliminary findings hint at an oxygen leak as the cause of the Starship rocket’s disintegration, but SpaceX will conduct a thorough investigation to confirm the exact reason for the mishap. Elon Musk, the CEO of the company, disseminated the update via a post on his social media platform X.
“Preliminary indication is that we had an oxygen/fuel leak in the cavity above the ship engine firewall that was large enough to build pressure in excess of the vent capacity,” he wrote in the post.
Even though this represents a clear hindrance to the firm’s space project, Musk continues to be optimistic about an imminent launch. Additionally, he provided information on what SpaceX plans to implement to prevent such failures in the future.
“Apart from obviously double-checking for leaks, we will add fire suppression to that volume and probably increase vent area. Nothing so far suggests pushing next launch past next month,” he added
The previous instance of a Starship upper stage failure occurred in March of the previous year during its reentry into Earth’s atmosphere over the Indian Ocean.
This marked the seventh Starship test by SpaceX since 2023, as part of Musk’s multibillion-dollar project. The goal is to construct a rocket that can transport both humans and cargo to Mars and also deploy significant groups of satellites into Earth’s orbit.
SpaceX’s method of testing until failure has historically involved dramatic failures as the company stretches the engineering boundaries of Starship prototypes. However, the test failure on Thursday occurred during a mission stage that SpaceX has successfully navigated in the past.
The formidable Falcon Super Heavy booster, in the meantime, made its way back to the launchpad approximately seven minutes post-launch, as scheduled. It decelerated its return from space by reactivating its Raptor engines, securing itself onto enormous mechanical arms attached to a launch tower.

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SpaceX loses spacecraft after catching rocket booster at the launch pad in latest Starship test

SpaceX launched its Starship rocket on its latest test flight Thursday, but the spacecraft was destroyed following a thrilling booster catch back at the pad.
Elon Musk’s company said Starship broke apart — what it called a “rapid unscheduled disassembly.” The spacecraft’s six engines appeared to shut down one by one during ascent, with contact lost just 8 1/2 minutes into the flight.
The spacecraft — a new and upgraded model making its debut — was supposed to soar across the Gulf of Mexico from Texas on a near loop around the world similar to previous test flights. SpaceX had packed it with 10 dummy satellites for practice at releasing them.
A minute before the loss, SpaceX used the launch tower’s giant mechanical arms to catch the returning booster, a feat achieved only once before. The descending booster hovered over the launch pad before being gripped by the pair of arms dubbed chopsticks.
The thrill of the catch quickly turned into disappointment for not only the company, but the crowds gathered along the southern tip of Texas.
“It was great to see a booster come down, but we are obviously bummed out about ship,” said SpaceX spokesman Dan Huot. “It’s a flight test. It’s an experimental vehicle,” he stressed.

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Blue Origin successfully launches New Glenn rocket

Jan. 15 (UPI) — Blue Origin successfully launched its two-stage heavy-lift New Glenn rocket on its unmanned maiden voyage into space early Thursday, achieving the mission’s primary goal of reaching orbit. The rocket launched at 2:03 a.m. EST at Launch Complex 36 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. As the rocket ascended, cheers could be […]

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