The Musings of a Heartless Bastard

Musings of a Heartless Bastard

2,118 notes

life:

45 years ago today, “2001: A Space Odyssey,” premiered at the Uptown Theater in Washington D.C. See amazing photos from the set of the film here.
(Dmitri Kessel—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)

life:

45 years ago today, “2001: A Space Odyssey,” premiered at the Uptown Theater in Washington D.C. See amazing photos from the set of the film here.

(Dmitri Kessel—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)

(via itsfullofstars)

889 notes

colchrishadfield:

canadian-space-agency:

CSA Presents: The Hadfield Shake

To maintain their bone and muscle mass, astronauts need to work out two hours every day. CSA Astronaut and Commander Chris Hadfield shares his workout routine with us, from cardio on the T2 treadmill, to muscle and bone mass maintenance on the ARED (Advanced Resistive Exercise Device).

Credit: CSA

A tutorial on how to lift weights when you’re in weightlessness.

(via itsfullofstars)

Filed under going to space sounds like a great fitness plan Queue

124 notes

bobbycaputo:

4-Gigapixel Mars Panorama Created Using 407 Photos Taken by Curiosity
By putting together 407 photos taken by both the Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) and Medium Angle Camera (MAC) on Curiosity, Bodrov has created the amazing 4-gigapixel 360-degree panorama you see below. A panorama so vast it’ll make you feel like you’re using street view on Mars (something Google’s probably already working on … ).
The panorama was put together using 295 images from the NAC (100mm focal length) and 112 images from MAC (34mm focal length). The photos — which include a view of Mount Sharp similar to the one we’ve seen before — were taken on Mars solar days 136-149, with the MAC’s entire contribution coming on solar day 137.

These pictures were taken from a rover that’s about 100 million kilometers (~60 million miles) from Earth. It just blows my mind that we’re able to see the surface of this distant planet in such intimate detail.

bobbycaputo:

4-Gigapixel Mars Panorama Created Using 407 Photos Taken by Curiosity

By putting together 407 photos taken by both the Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) and Medium Angle Camera (MAC) on Curiosity, Bodrov has created the amazing 4-gigapixel 360-degree panorama you see below. A panorama so vast it’ll make you feel like you’re using street view on Mars (something Google’s probably already working on … ).

The panorama was put together using 295 images from the NAC (100mm focal length) and 112 images from MAC (34mm focal length). The photos — which include a view of Mount Sharp similar to the one we’ve seen before — were taken on Mars solar days 136-149, with the MAC’s entire contribution coming on solar day 137.

These pictures were taken from a rover that’s about 100 million kilometers (~60 million miles) from Earth. It just blows my mind that we’re able to see the surface of this distant planet in such intimate detail.

(via itsfullofstars)

Filed under Mars Curiosity Queue

949 notes

Awesome Lunar Mining Vehicle Concept Art

by AdamBurn

D.S.I Surveyor Vehicle

The third image in my own series of Lunar mining is this fun looking thing, the Surveyor Vehicle is one of the smallest vehicles used by the mining team and is considered a general purpose vehicle but it also has one very important task, it is tasked with moving ahead of the main mining fleet and surveying the areas to make sure the giant harvester and H3 transports are not met by impassible terrain.

These vehicles also double as general maintenance units outfitted with a robotic arm with multiple attachments and an assortment of tools and replacement equipment they can conduct repairs on drones, communication arrays, and even minor repairs on the larger transports.

With a top speed of 60 mph and advanced multi direction suspension they are often used by the mining staff during down time taking them out for joy rides.

D.S.I Heavy Harvester Platform

Two things inspired this monstrosity, one was the movie Moon where they have set up a mining operation on the moon to harvest Helium 3 (needed for fusion reactors) and the announcement from Deep Space Industries (D.S.I) that they are going to start mining asteroids and the Moon in the near future.

I thought that seeing as it’s on the Moon you wouldn’t really need to worry about things like pollution and noise so you can build them big and loud. So as part of a running series about strip mining the Moon bare I give you the H.H.P (Heavy Harvester Platform) this one is called Leviathan and is number 2 of a fleet of 10 that slowly move over the surface of the Moon at about 3 mph and rip up the surface extracting the Helium 3 in its on board processing plant. Smaller transports take the Helium 3 to nearby depots where it’s fired at the Earth in large containers.

It’s damn dirty as behind each machine is several miles of dust that takes some time to settle and also it leaves behind a trench about 20 metres deep, but damn does it look awesome… Also it has no brakes.

D.S.I Helium 3 Transport Vehicle

Continuing with my Lunar Helium 3 mining project this image shows the Helium 3 Transport Vehicle. Each one of the huge harvesting platforms has a fleet of 6 H3TV’s which can hold a huge amount of refined Helium 3 ferrying it between the constantly moving behemoths to the transport docks dotted around the Lunar surface. Each of these vehicles will make around 6 trips a day and a fully automated but still hold a small crew for safety and maintenance reasons.

Like the giant harvester these vehicles are fitted with polarising plating which prevents the course and dangerous Lunar dust from sticking to the hull and damaging components, despite these methods each vehicle has to undergo a total deep clean once every month to prevent massive systems failure, to make sure the Helium 3 keeps rolling in on time a stand by fleet of H3TV’s are located at each transport dock.

Visit AdamBurn for more awesome space concept art.

With a top speed of 60 mph and advanced multi direction suspension they are often used by the mining staff during down time taking them out for joy rides.” I believe the title of best job ever goes to Lunar Miners.

(Source: kenobi-wan-obi, via itsfullofstars)

Filed under Concept Art Lunar Mining Queue

110 notes

mothernaturenetwork:

Bill Gates wants your help to design the condom of the future
Condoms haven’t changed all that much in 400 years. Bill and Melinda Gates want to change that. Their foundation is offering $100,000 to anyone who can come up with a “next-generation” condom.
The prize comes out of the Gates Foundation’s regular Grand Challenges Explorations, which routinely taps the public to come up with new solutions to issues affecting human health. Past challenges have covered ways to optimize immunization systems, exploring nutrition for infants, protect against infection diseases and eradicate malaria.
In a non-bylined blog post about the condom challenge, the Gates Foundation called condoms “a product that is safe and effective, but underutilized.” They ask two striking questions: “What if we could develop a condom that would provide all the benefit of our current versions, without the drawbacks?  Even better, what if we could develop one that was preferred to no condom?”
Read more.

mothernaturenetwork:

Bill Gates wants your help to design the condom of the future

Condoms haven’t changed all that much in 400 years. Bill and Melinda Gates want to change that. Their foundation is offering $100,000 to anyone who can come up with a “next-generation” condom.

The prize comes out of the Gates Foundation’s regular Grand Challenges Explorations, which routinely taps the public to come up with new solutions to issues affecting human health. Past challenges have covered ways to optimize immunization systems, exploring nutrition for infants, protect against infection diseases and eradicate malaria.

In a non-bylined blog post about the condom challenge, the Gates Foundation called condoms “a product that is safe and effective, but underutilized.” They ask two striking questions: “What if we could develop a condom that would provide all the benefit of our current versions, without the drawbacks?  Even better, what if we could develop one that was preferred to no condom?”

Read more.

(via positive-press-daily)

Filed under Bill Gates