Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta The SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta The SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, 19 de abril de 2015

NASA : SpaceX Launches NASA Cargo and Research To International Space Station.- NASA lanza CargoSpaceX y la investigación para la Estación Espacial Internacional

Hola amigos: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., hemos recibido información de la Agencia Espacial NASA, sobre el envío del SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket , que impulsa a la nave Dragón que lleva abastecimiento para la Estación Espacial Internacional y materiales de investigación para exploraciones robóticas para  las futuras misiones en Marte.
Liftoff of SpaceX rocket with spacecraft
The mission is the company's sixth cargo delivery flight to the station through NASA’s Commercial Resupply Services contract. Dragon's cargo will support approximately 40 of the more than 250 science and research investigations that will be performed during Expeditions 43 and 44, including numerous human research investigations for NASA astronaut Scott Kelly's one-year mission in space.
Image Credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett
Last Updated: April 19, 2015
Editor: Sarah Loff
NASA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
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miércoles, 21 de mayo de 2014

NASA : SpaceX Dragon Spacecraft Returns Critical NASA Science from Space Station



05/19/2014 12:00 PM EDT
SpaceX's Dragon cargo spacecraft splashed down at 3:05 p.m. EDT Sunday, May 18, 2014 in the Pacific Ocean, approximately 300 miles west of Baja California, returning more than 3,500 pounds of NASA cargo and science samples from the International Space Station. Investigations included among the returned cargo could aid in better understanding the decreased effectiveness of antibiotics during spaceflight while also improving antibiotic development on Earth. Others could lead to the development of plants better suited for space and improvements in sustainable agriculture. The T-Cell Activation in Aging experiment, which also launched to space aboard Dragon, seeks the cause of a depression in the human immune system while in microgravity. The research could help researchers develop better protective measures to prevent disease in astronauts. Image Credit: SpaceX

Scientists Seek Answers With Space Station Thyroid Cancer Study

Poorly differentiated follicular thyroid cells shortly before launch. The cells were then exposed to microgravity aboard the International Space Station for the Cellbox-thyroid investigation.
Poorly differentiated follicular thyroid cells shortly before launch. The cells were then exposed to microgravity aboard the International Space Station for the Cellbox-Thyroid investigation.
Image Credit: Daniela Grimm
Nanoracks Frame-3 with the Airbus, Defense and Space Centrifuge for use to culture thyroid cancer cells aboard the International Space Station.
Nanoracks Frame-3 with the Airbus, Defense and Space Centrifuge for use to culture thyroid cancer cells aboard the International Space Station.
Image Credit: Team Daniela Grimm
 
Jessica Pietsch, Ph.D., and Stefan Riwaldt, medical student, work on the hardware assembly for the Cellbox-Thyroid study.
Jessica Pietsch, Ph.D., and Stefan Riwaldt, medical student, work on the hardware assembly for the Cellbox-Thyroid study.
Image Credit: 
Team Daniela Grimm
 
The multi-national efforts that go into research aboard the International Space Station show that working together can yield results with universal benefits. This is especially the case when talking about human health concerns such as cancer. Researchers make use of the microgravity environment aboard the space station to seek answers to questions about the nature of cancer cells. With the Microgravity on Human Thyroid Carcinoma Cells (Cellbox-Thyroid) study, recently conducted in orbit, the hope is to reveal answers that will help in the fight against thyroid cancer.
The American Cancer Society estimates about 62,980 cases of thyroid cancer in the U.S. for 2014. The thyroid is a gland in the neck that secretes hormones that help the body to regulate growth and development, metabolism, and body temperature. The Cellbox-Thyroid study is enabled through a collaborative effort between NanoRacks, Airbus Defense and Space, the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) to facilitate the microgravity investigation aboard the space station.
“NanoRacks is hosting this German research study aboard the U.S. National Laboratory,” said Jeff Manber, CEO of NanoRacks. “It may well make critical advances in understanding and even delaying the onset of cancer in the thyroid.”
The overall aim of the Cellbox-Thyroid study is to identify new biomarkers and target proteins for use in developing new cancer-fighting drugs. The investigation has roots in research performed in SIMBOX aboard the Sino-German Chinese Shenzhou-8 mission. During that 2011 study, Daniela-Gabriele Grimm, M.D., principal investigator and researcher with the Department of Biomedicine, Pharmacology at Aarhus University in Aarhus, Denmark, looked at cancer cells in microgravity and found that tumors behave less aggressively in that environment. Grimm’s published findings appeared earlier this year in the Federation of the American Societies for Experimental Biology Journal.
“A further important finding was that a tumor grows three-dimensionally in space. The mechanism for this finding will also be investigated in this Cellbox-Thyroid experiment,” said Grimm. This result published in Elsevier Biomaterials 2013.
With the Cellbox-Thyroid study, Grimm seeks to build on her earlier conclusions by identifying the proteins that can be targeted to anti-cancer therapies. Insights into what controls how tumors grow may lead to knowledge for enhancing treatments on Earth. The experiments took place aboard the space station soon after berthing of the SpaceX Dragon on April 20. The samples returned to Earth aboard the same vehicle on May 18 for further analysis by researchers on the ground.
Specifically, researchers are looking for the microgravity environment to reveal an altered gene expression pattern—how the gene’s encoded information directs protein molecule assembly. They also seek to learn about the proteins expressed or secreted by the cells, called proteome and secretome. Isolating how the cell processes work could lead to new thyroid cancer drugs and provide a better understanding of the mechanism leading to cancer development for new strategies in thyroid cancer therapy.
“Spaceflight experiments are of great value for cell biology research in general and for cancer research in particular,” said Grimm. “Our experiments indicate that microgravity induce[s] changes in the expression and secretion of genes and proteins involved in cancer cell proliferation, metastasis, and survival, shifting the cells toward a less aggressive phenotype.”
In microgravity, researchers anticipate the cancer cells will form three-dimensional multicellular tumor spheroids. This behavior was identified in the previous study, where cells floated without mixing with each other in the microgravity environment. This finding revealed that biochemical components on the cell surfaces were responsible for the initial cell-to-cell interactions required for spheroid formation.
For the Cellbox-Thyroid study, researchers used six experiment containers that fit into the NanoRacks platform and centrifuge for the test runs. After the experiments completed, the samples were stored for return to Earth. Once back on the ground, researchers will analyze the samples and compare them to data from ground controls using simulated microgravity via a random positioning machine and the results from the SIMBOX study.
The hope is that the continuance of this research from the original SIMBOX mission to the space station study will confirm findings and build the statistical data. Grimm plans an additional follow up study, called Spheroids, for 2015. Spheroids will operate for two weeks while in orbit, providing data that—together with its predecessors—may one day take a chunk out of those annual thyroid cancer statistics. 
Jessica Nimon
International Space Station Program Science Office
NASA’s Johnson Space Center

Archived Launch Blogs

› SpaceX-2 - March 1, 2013
› SpaceX-1 - Oct. 7, 2012
 
SpaceX Dragon Spacecraft Returns Critical NASA Science from Space Station
SpaceX's Dragon cargo spacecraft splashed down at 3:05 p.m. EDT Sunday, in the Pacific Ocean, approximately 300 miles west of Baja California, returning more than 3,500 pounds of NASA cargo and science samples from the International Space Station.
A boat will carry the Dragon spacecraft to a port near Los Angeles, where it will be prepared for a return journey to SpaceX's test facility in McGregor, Texas, for processing. Some cargo, including a freezer packed with research samples collected aboard the space station, will be removed at the port in California and returned to NASA within 48 hours.
"The space station is our springboard to deep space and the science samples returned to Earth are critical to improving our knowledge of how space affects humans who live and work there for long durations," said William Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for human exploration and operations. "Now that Dragon has returned, scientists can complete their analyses, so we can see how results may impact future human space exploration or provide direct benefits to people on Earth."
Investigations included among the returned cargo could aid in better understanding the decreased effectiveness of antibiotics during spaceflight while also improving antibiotic development on Earth. Others could lead to the development of plants better suited for space and improvements in sustainable agriculture.
The T-Cell Activation in Aging experiment, which also launched to space aboard Dragon, seeks the cause of a depression in the human immune system while in microgravity. The research could help researchers develop better protective measures to prevent disease in astronauts.
Dragon is the only space station resupply spacecraft capable of returning large amounts of cargo to Earth. The spacecraft lifted off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida April 18, carrying approximately 5,000 pounds of supplies and science investigations to the space station. The mission was the third of at least 12 cargo resupply trips SpaceX plans to make to the space station through 2016 under NASA's Commercial Resupply Services contract.
For more information about the International Space Station, visit:
For more information about SpaceX's mission, visit:
For more information about the International Space Station, visit:
NASA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui

lunes, 28 de abril de 2014

NASA : NASA Seeks to Evolve Space Station for New Commercial Opportunities

Space Freighter Redocks after Tests, Set for Tuesday Reboost
Steve Swanson
Steve Swanson works outside the space station to replace a failed backup computer during an April 23rd spacewalk.
Dragon spacecraft
The SpaceX Dragon spacecraft was photographed outside the space station during the April 23rd spacewalk.
The ISS Progress 53 space freighter redocked to the Zvezda service module at 8:13 a.m. EDT Friday after two days of tests of its upgraded Kurs automated rendezvous system.The Expedition 39 crew now focuses its attention on a reboost to raise the International Space Station’s orbit.
The hatches to the Russian cargo craft were opened a few hours after the redocking and will remain open until the resupply vehicle is prepared for a final undocking June 9 and its deorbit to burn up in the Earth’s atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean.
Meanwhile, the Progress 53 will fire its thrusters Tuesday for an orbital adjustment that will put the space station at the correct altitude for the May 13 undocking of the Soyuz TMA-11M that will bring back to Earth Soyuz Commander Mikhail Tyurin of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos), Expedition 39 Commander Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and NASA Flight Engineer Rick Mastracchio after almost six months in space.
Waiting to replace the homebound trio and continue six-person station operations are Expedition 40/41 crew members Max Suraev of Roscosmos, Reid Wiseman of NASA and Alexander Gerst of the European Space Agency. They are scheduled to liftoff May 28, U.S. time, inside the Soyuz TMA-13M for a six-hour, four-orbit trip to the International Space Station’s Rassvet module.
Back inside the orbital laboratory, the current crew is wrapping up the week with life science experiments. The station residents also are continuing their daily maintenance tasks and exercise regimen.
Wakata was back at work with Japan’s newest study, the Hybrid Training experiment, an investigation into alternative exercise methods on the space station and future long-term missions beyond low-Earth orbit on smaller spacecraft. The exercise research uses the contraction produced by applying electrical stimulation to the opposite muscle, which will in turn resist the voluntary contraction of the active muscle.
Another life science experiment, the Micro-7 study, studies non-dividing cells that make up the majority of the human body. NASA astronaut Steve Swanson worked Friday in Europe’s Columbus laboratory on the new investigation which observes how microgravity affects the genetic expression and shape of these cells.
Tyurin and cosmonauts Alexander Skvortsov and Oleg Artemyev worked inside the Russian segment of the orbital laboratory Friday. The trio conducted the daily complement of maintenance and science.

NASA Seeks to Evolve Space Station for New Commercial Opportunities
 
As part of NASA's continuing effort to open low-Earth orbit to commercial space opportunities, the agency is seeking feedback on ways it can help create greater access to and use of the International Space Station for research and commercial activities.
Through a Request for Information (RFI), NASA is soliciting ideas from companies interested in using the space station and the low-Earth orbit environment in innovative ways that will develop a strong commercial market and assist the agency in achieving its exploration goals.
The expanding U.S. commercial space industry has been able to create self-sustaining economic opportunities in low-Earth orbit, enabled by NASA's commitment to reducing and removing barriers to a commercially-driven U.S. market. This has allowed the agency to sharpen its focus on deep space exploration.
NASA announced Jan. 9 that it intends to extend the country's commitment to the International Space Station to at least 2024. This extension provides opportunities, some already under implementation, to broaden private market access to the unique microgravity environment aboard the space station.
"Now is an exciting time for space research and developing exploration capabilities," said William Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for Human Exploration and Operations at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "After 10 years of continuous habitation in low-Earth orbit, we know microgravity provides data unattainable on Earth. We are already seeing benefits in pharmaceuticals, medical robotics and materials sciences. This RFI will help identify how to open this one-of-a-kind orbital laboratory to the private sector in better and more practical ways -- ultimately, helping to pave the way for private microgravity research facilities of the future."
Responses to the RFI should detail ideas that could further efforts to:
-- create a private system in low-Earth orbit,
-- develop crew transportation to enable commercial activities aboard the station beyond NASA requirements,
-- break down access-, programmatic- and business-related barriers to realizing these objectives,
-- address NASA capabilities or expertise that would help facilitate transitioning to a more commercially-driven presence, or
-- identify capabilities and resources NASA could purchase from the commercial sector to allow NASA research activities to continue beyond the life of the space station.
Responses also may provide recommendations on how private research, and other activities, could be performed on the space station to foster future commercial value or demand for access to low-Earth orbit and further NASA's exploration mission.
Responses should be no more than 20 pages and are due by June 30. The complete RFI is available at:
The International Space Station is a convergence of science, technology and human innovation that demonstrates new technologies and makes research breakthroughs not possible on Earth. The space station has had crew members continuously on board since November 2000. In that time, more than 200 people and a variety of international and commercial spacecraft have visited it. The space station remains the springboard to NASA's next great leap in human spaceflight exploration, including missions to an asteroid and Mars.
For more information about the International Space Station, visit:
 
NASA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui

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