Entrepreneur & Innovator in the Vape/Smoke Industry | Passionate about AI, Space Exploration & American Manufacturing | Exploring the Nexus of 3D Printing, Sci-Fi, and Deeptech | Bitcoin Maxi | e/acc | Absurdist
The technology we get from space exploration is worth the investment.
Every $1 spent on space exploration returns $10 to the economy.
Space exploration is an important part of our continued investment in the future.
Exoplanets! At American Public University System we have a powerful 60cm Planewave telescope.
Tonight, I’m searching for a confirmed #exoplanet, KELT-1b (https://lnkd.in/gYpxdk3z)
KELT is the acronym for The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope. Paper link below.
https://lnkd.in/ggEZjfQK
This giant hot Jupiter, meaning it rapidly orbits it’s host star, and the orbital period is very short at 1.2 days for a complete orbit. The change in magnitude of the host star is very small, so this is a difficult exoplanet to locate and confirm.
Discover how #PNPN is leveraging Fleet Space Technologies’ ExoSphere and transforming the landscape of #nickel exploration. This event will highlight the successful application of Ambient Noise Tomography, and a Q&A will follow.
Register here: https://bit.ly/3T17x3K
Financial planning, like space exploration, needs careful management after success You might think space exploration and financial planning have little in common. Yet, to be successful they both require careful... READ MORE HERE: https://buff.ly/451H4pg
The CanAm SpacePort is our nation's key (Canada also) to Polor Insertions. From instrumentation to exploration, extraterrestrial mining, and recycling space debris, these Polar Orbits are the stepping-off point for missions to the moon, Mars, and beyond.
It is time for the Northstar State to take its place in accessing the stars. With the investment in the CanAm Spaceport, Minnesota can once again contribute to its rich history of innovation and technology leadership. This project will not only reshape and invigorate the economies of Minnesota and central Canada. It will also remediate the environmental scars of the Iron Range and provide a robust future for the families who live there.
#CanAmSpaceport#IRRRB#spaceeconomy#spaceexploration#mnjobs#spaceeducation
#space#aerospace#astronautics#astronautics4xploit
The dream and desire to explore Mars, dated back to the 1950s, was championed by early rocket scientists and space exploration pioneers such as von Braun, Korolev, and many others. According to the research findings, Korolev in 1959 developed a 4-stage Molniya planetary launch vehicle which he derived from the 2-stage R-7 ICBM that launched Sputnik in 1957. In 1960, he built a new planetary spacecraft for Mars and Venus.
The successful launch of Mariner 4 on November 28, 1964, and its successful flyby of Mars on July 15, 1965, heralded the beginning and a new era of Mars exploration. Mariner 4 took 22 pictures of the Martian surface from a distance of over 9677 km (6000 miles).
Viking 1 and 2 launched on August 20, 1975, and September 9, 1975, respectively, monitored weather at their respective Mars landing sites and reported on Martian temperatures, barometric pressure, and wind conditions. Viking data also determined that the planet's north polar ice cap is made of water ice rather than frozen carbon dioxide, as had been previously thought.
Mars Pathfinder, launched on December 4, 1996, and landed on Mars' Ares Vallis on July 4, 1997, determined the elemental composition of Mars rocks and soils provided images of the surrounding terrain for geological studies, and documented the performance and operating environment for Pathfinder mission technologies.
The Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover mission addresses high-priority science goals for Mars exploration, including key questions about the potential for life on Mars. The 2001 Mars Odyssey mission is NASA's longest-lasting spacecraft at Mars making the first global map of the amount and distribution of many chemical elements and minerals that make up the Martian surface.
The ExoMars Program is a pair of missions, led by the European Space Agency (ESA), designed to understand if life ever existed on Mars. The Mars Sample Return Campaign is an effort to bring samples of Martian rocks and soil safely back to Earth, where they can be investigated in unprecedented detail, using all the capabilities of terrestrial laboratories.
In this video, Astronautics4Xploit presents "Mars Exploration: The Past, The Present & The Future". The focus points are Mars Exploration, Mars Exploration: The Past, Mars Exploration: The Present, and Mars Exploration: The Future.
For more information, contact Astronautics4Xploit at:
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There's 2 depressing things about the space industry:
1) The insane expenditure of resources on space exploration & travel is of course actually speculative investment; not scientific research. What ROI are investors seeking? Space mining for rare earth.
2) Space junk. Trashing an otherwise pristine environment, protected from public rubbishing. Instead unfortunately it is being filled with garbage created by governments and billionaire individuals.
Nobody owns space, so nobody actually has the ability to fine businesses or organisations in another country. But it can be done when the nationality of the government and the garbage dumper align. So this is a good step.
#space#spaceexploration#spacejunk
Managing Director at AMCM GmbH
1moCongratulations VAST and The Exploration Company 🚀