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NASA engineers work secretly on new moon rocket with cheaper safer design: related news
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nasa cheaper design engineers moon new rocket safer secretly work
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) _ By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design. These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.They call their project Jupiter, and like Ares, it's a brainchild of workers at the Marshall Space Flight Center and other NASA facilities. The engineers involved are doing the work on their own time and mostly anonymously, with the help of retirees and other space enthusiasts.
in Space Science
via Los Angeles Times @ 20:34 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Alabama-By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design.
in Space Science
via Macro World Investor @ 23:25 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) - By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design.
in Space Science
via Canadian Business Magazine @ 17:20 14th Jul
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This artist rendering shows NASA's next-generation of moon rockets being developed at the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville, Ala. Ares I, left, is the crew launch vehicle that will carry astronauts to space. Ares V is the cargo launch vehicle that will deliver the lunar lander and other large hardware to space. By day, the engineers in Huntsville, work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover, working on a competing design. These dissenters and their backers say their alternative rocket would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft, which have already cost NASA $7 billion. This artist rendering shows NASA's next-generation of moon rockets being developed at the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville, Ala.
in Space Science
via Boston Globe @ 12:02 15th Jul
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This artist rendering shows NASA's next-generation of moon rockets being developed at the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville, Ala. Ares I, left, is the crew launch vehicle that will carry astronauts to space. Ares V is the cargo launch vehicle that will deliver the lunar lander and other large hardware to space. By day, the engineers in Huntsville, work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover, working on a competing design. These dissenters and their backers say their alternative rocket would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft, which have already cost NASA $7 billion. (AP Photo/NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center)
in Space Science
via Washington Post @ 17:20 14th Jul
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By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design. These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via Yahoo! Canada @ 3:35 15th Jul
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These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via Edmonton Sun @ 11:21 15th Jul
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These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via Edmonton Sun @ 23:23 14th Jul
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By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design. These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via San Francisco Chronicle @ 17:20 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design. These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via Yahoo! @ 20:36 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) — By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design. These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via Space.com @ 18:58 15th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -- By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design. These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via AP via New York Post @ 20:49 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -- By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design. These dissenting scientists and their backers insist they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via Associated Press @ 17:20 14th Jul
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Some of the engineers who are working on the NASA Ares moon rocket leave the office in the evening and work on a new rocket that could be easier and safer to build.
in Space Science
via DailyTech @ 2:23 20th Jul
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Several engineers working on NASA’s new Ares moon rockets believe they have created an alternative rocket that would be safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle.
in Space Science
via Red Orbit @ 23:25 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) - By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design.
in Space Science
via Find Law @ 23:25 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -- By day, the engineers work on NASA's new Ares moon rockets. By night, some go undercover to work on a competing design.
in Space Science
via Yahoo! Canada @ 17:20 14th Jul
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A handful of rogue NASA engineers have gone underground and spent their spare time from the Constellation program working on a rocket dubbed "Jupiter"—an alternative that they believe will be "safer, cheaper and easier to build than the two Ares spacecraft that will replace the space shuttle." Jupiter is being developed with the help of a team that includes retired NASA engineers and enthusiasts who are working (mostly) anonymously.
in Space Science
via Gizmodo @ 23:03 16th Jul
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Gibson writes "A team of 57 engineers at NASA's Marshall Spaceflight center feel that the Ares rocket is not the best solution for launching the new CEV. They are currently working on their own time developing an alternative launch system known as Jupiter. The 131 page proposal, along with other information, is available on the project website. Proponents of the project say that it is 'simpler, safer, and sooner' than the Ares project, predicting the ability for a return to the moon in 2017, two years before the current goal. Ares management has so far dismissed the proposal as a 'napkin drawing.'"
in Space Science
via Slashdot @ 16:28 15th Jul
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This rendering released by Direct Launcher shows a rocket design that advocates say is a better alternative for returning to the moon than the Ares rockets being built by NASA. The Jupiter 232 rocket on the left would be used for cargo launches, while the version of the right could launch both cargo and astronauts. (AP Photo/Direct Launcher, Antonio Maia)
in Space Science
via CNEWS @ 20:54 14th Jul
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HUNTSVILLE, Ala., July 24 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- NASA and industry engineers have successfully completed the first drop test of a drogue parachute for the Ares I rocket. The drogue parachute is designed to slow the rapid descent of the spent first-stage motor, cast off by the Ares I rocket during its climb to space. The successful test is a key early milestone in development and production of the Ares I rocket, the first launch vehicle for NASA's Constellation Program that will send explorers to the International Space Station, the moon and beyond in coming decades. The drogue parachute is a vital element of the Ares I deceleration system and will permit recovery of the reusable first-stage motor for use on future Ares I flights. Engineers from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
in Space Science
via Financials.com @ 20:25 25th Jul
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When we talk of engineers, what immediately come to mind are machines, bridges, buildings, and other structures. Engineers design and assemble structures for a specific purpose. There are now new engineers who also develop structures for a specific purpose, but this time the structures are molecules and other biological entities, and the purpose is biological. They are the protein engineers, the genetic engineers, and other biological engineers. Here are some examples of their work.
in General Science
via Philippine Star @ 18:31 23rd Jul
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This rendering shows a rocket design that advocates say is a better alternative for returning to the moon than NASA's Ares rocket.
in Space Science
via FOXNews.com @ 3:24 15th Jul
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in IP & Patents
via News-Medical.Net @ 21:40 21st Jun
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Add our medical news to digg - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to NewsVine - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to Fark - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to Furl - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to Shadows - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to YahooMyWeb - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to Reddit -Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to StumbleUpon - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis Add our medical news to Facebook - Nanomaterials key to new strategies for blocking metastasis
in Nanotech
via News-Medical.Net @ 22:09 9th Jul
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