Category Archives: Tech

NASA Opens Call for Artemis Lunar Landers

Image by Susan Cipriano from Pixabay

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is seeking proposals for human lunar landing systems designed and developed by US companies for the Artemis program, which intends to send the first woman and next man to the Moon by 2024, the agency said on 30 September.

This final industry call comes after NASA issued two drafts on 19 July and 30 August, encouraging companies to help shape a key component of the mission. NASA is expected to award multiple contracts to develop and demonstrate a human landing system.

Proposals are due on 1 November, a timeline that the agency describes as “ambitious” and “consistent with the sequence of events leading to this point”.

Companies have been preparing for, reviewing, and commenting on several drafts of NASA’s broad agency announcement since mid-July, and the agency believes this means they should be prepared for such a tight timeline.

“In order to best accelerate our return to the Moon and prepare for Mars, we collaborated with industry on ideas to streamline the procurement process,” Marshall Smith, director of the Human Lunar Exploration Program at NASA, said in a statement.

“The private sector was eager to provide us feedback throughout this process, and we received more than 1,150 comments on the draft solicitations issued over the summer,” he added.

According to NASA, is can take six to eight years to develop typical spaceflight hardware, so with less than five years until the agency expects to be landing astronauts on the Moon, every word and requirement counts.

After reviewing companies’ comments, the agency removed requirements that were seen as “potential barriers to speed while preserving all [of NASA’s] human safety measures”, such as high numbers of formal technical reports that would require considerable resources and risk delays.

Taking this into consideration, NASA has designed a less formal oversight process, which can be used to access critical contractor data, while minimizing administrative overheads; as a result, NASA reduced the number of required contract deliverables significantly.

“Reports still are valuable and necessary, but to compromise and ease the bulk of the reporting burden on industry, we are asking for access to the companies’ systems to monitor progress throughout development,” Nantel Suzuki, the Human Landing System program executive at NASA, said.

“To maximize our chances of successfully returning to the Moon by 2024, we also are making NASA’s engineering workforce available to contractors and asking proposers to submit a collaboration plan,” they added.

When called upon to accelerate its return to the Moon, NASA said it would meet this goal by “any means necessary”. Its preferred approach is for the crew in the Orion spacecraft and the un-crewed human landing system to launch separately and meet in lunar orbit at the Gateway.

NASA said it wants to “explore all options” to achieve the 2024 mission and that it “remains open to alternative, innovative approaches”.

Another shift in its approach centred around how best to achieve sustainability on the Moon by 2028. NASA originally wanted the human landing system to be refuellable to ensure a more sustainable exploration architecture.

However, multiple companies were concerned about this requirement, the agency said, so NASA agreed to remove it so that the industry has “greater flexibility to address the more fundamental attribute of sustainability, which is long-term affordability”.

“They were absolutely right,” Lisa Watson-Morgan, the Human Landing System program manager at NASA’s Marshall Spaceflight Centre, said. “We are operating on a timeline that requires us to be flexible to encourage innovation and alternate approaches. We still welcome the option to refuel the landing system, but we removed it as a requirement.”

NASA’s Artemis program intends to send a suite of new science instruments and technology demonstrations to study the Moon, landing the first woman and next man on the lunar surface by 2024, and establishing a sustained presence by 2028. The agency plans to leverage its Artemis experience and technologies to prepare to send astronauts to Mars.

Electricity consumption from China’s internet industry to increase by two thirds by 2023

Image by 756crystal from Pixabay

A new study by non-governmental environmental organization Greenpeace has found that China’s growing data centre industry will increase by 66 percent by the year 2024, the organization said on 9 September.

The report outlines two potential scenarios for future data centre sector emissions in China from 2019 to 2023. If the data centre sector’s renewable energy intake remains steady at 23 percent, CO2 emissions from the industry are projected to reach 163 million tonnes by 2023.

However, if the sector’s renewable energy intake increases to 30 percent, 16 million tonnes of carbon emissions can be avoided by 2023, equal to the emissions from roughly 10 million round-trip transatlantic flights. 

Data centres are networks of computer servers that host emails, photos and videos, online transactions and more. Electricity consumption from China’s data centre industry is predicted to increase by two thirds over the next five years.

By 2023, the sector is projected to consume 267 TWh of electricity, more than Australia’s total 2018 electricity consumption. China’s data centre industry is currently powered 73% by coal.

Researchers identified three ways for data centre companies to increase their renewable energy uptake: by building or investing in renewable projects, procuring clean power directly from renewable energy generators, and purchasing green power certificates.

The spike in electricity usage in the country is mostly likely fuelled largely by data-intensive industries like cloud computing, which is a critical part of the Chinese government’s plan to increase the country’s artificial intelligence capabilities in order to compete with the United States.

Coal accounts for 73 percent of the energy used by data centres and Greenpeace has appealed to China’s technology sector to lead efforts to develop renewable sources of energy as an alternative. As China’s power market reforms deepen, a growing number of procurement mechanisms should become available. 

“Power market reforms and rapid growth in wind and solar power have created unprecedented opportunities for China’s internet giants to procure clean energy,” Greenpeace East Asia climate and energy campaigner Ye Ruiqi, said in a statement.

“The data centre sector can and should play a leading role in China’s energy transition from heavy reliance on coal to renewable energy,” they added. “While China’s data center industry has made significant improvements in terms of energy efficiency, [its] massive carbon footprint is proof that much more action is needed to increase reliance on clean energy sources.”

“There is a clear path toward renewable energy-powered data centers in China and an opportunity for innovative companies to lead the way,” Ye concluded.

Full report available HERE (in Chinese). Abridged English version available HERE

NASA asks students to name Mars 2020 rover

Image by WikiImages from Pixabay

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has launched a competition – in partnership with Future Engineers and Battelle Education – challenging K-12 students in United States public, private and home schools to name its recently completed Mars 2020 rover.

To take part in the Name the Rover contest, students have to write an essay of up to 150 words to explain the reasons for the selected name. Participants have until 1 November to send their essays in and the winner will be announced on 1 February.

The judging criteria will include:

  • Appropriateness and significance of the chosen name.
  • Originality of the chosen name.
  • Originality and quality of the essay​ and/or finalist interview presentation.
  • Bonus points will be available for entries with the highest public poll votes in the final judging round.

Participants in the competition should note that no personal names should be used in submissions in order to adhere to privacy requirements.

Individual K-12 Students in US public, private, and home schools (including US territories and possessions, and schools operated by the US for the children of American personnel overseas) are eligible to compete but team entries are not allowed.

Children and students who live in the same household with NASA, Battelle Education, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory or Caltech employees cannot enter.

According to NASA, the Mars 2020 rover will “seek signs of past microbial life, collect surface samples as the first leg of a potential Mars Sample Return campaign, and test technologies to produce oxygen from the Martian atmosphere to prepare for future human missions”.

The mission is part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program, a long-term effort of robotic exploration of the Red Planet. It will look to addresses “high-priority” questions, such as the potential for life on Mars, seeking signs of habitable conditions on the planet in the ancient past and even past microbial life itself.

The rover has a drill that can collect core sample of the “most promising rocks and soils”, setting them aside in a “cache” on the surface so that a future mission could potentially return them to Earth for scientists to study them in laboratories with room-sized equipment that cannot be transported to Mars.

The mission is expected to provide opportunities to “gather knowledge and demonstrate technologies” that will address the “challenges of future human expeditions to Mars”, including testing a method producing oxygen from the Martian atmosphere and improvements to landing techniques.

The mission is currently timed to launch in July 2020 when Earth and Mars are in “good positions relative to each other” for landing on Mars; it takes less power to travel to Mars at this time, as opposed to other times with the two planets are in different positions in their orbits.

In an effort to keep mission costs and risks as low as possible, the rover design in based on NASA’s previously successful Mars Science Laboratory mission, including its Curiosity rover and landing system.

Leading cloud service providers team up for new security initiative

Image by rawpixel from Pixabay

The Linux Foundation announced on 21 August at its Open Source Summit the intention to form the Confidential Computing Consortium, a community “dedicated to defining and accelerating the adoption of confidential computing”.

Many of the companies involved in the consortium are some of the world’s leading cloud service providers – including Google Cloud, Microsoft, Alibaba Cloud, IBM, Red Hat, Baidu, Intel, Red Hat, Swisscom, Arm and Tencent.

The consortium will bring together hardware vendors, cloud providers, developers, open source experts and academics to accelerate the confidential computing market; influence technical and regulatory standards; and build open source tools that provide the right environment for trusted execution environment (TEE) development.

Participants plan to make several open source project contributions to the Confidential Computing Consortium, including:

The proposed structure for the Consortium includes a Governing Board, a Technical Advisory Council and separate technical oversight for each technical project. It is intended to host a variety of technical open source projects and open specifications to support confidential computing.

Confidential Computing Consortium will be funded through membership dues, and will anchor industry outreach and education initiatives.

“The earliest work on technologies that have the ability to transform an industry is often done in collaboration across the industry and with open source technologies,” Jim Zemlin, executive director at The Linux Foundation, said in a statement.

“The Confidential Computing Consortium is a leading indicator of what’s to come for security in computing and will help define and build open technologies to support this trust infrastructure for data in use,” he added.

“Confidential computing provides new capabilities for cloud customers to reduce trusted computing base in cloud environments and protect their data during runtime,” Xiaoning Li, chief security architect, Alibaba Cloud, said. “We are very excited to join [Confidential Computing Consortium] and work with the community to build a better confidential computing ecosystem.”

“Security is consistently top of mind for our customers, and, really, for all of us, as security incidents and data breaches make the headlines,” Chris Wright, senior vice president and Chief Technology Officer at Red Hat, added. “While hardware support for security continues to advance, creating secure computing environments can still be challenging.”

“We are developing the Enarx project to help developers deploy applications into computing environments which support higher levels of security and confidentiality and intend to bring it to the . . . Consortium,” he said. “We look forward to collaborating . . . to help make confidential computing the norm.”

“Confidential computing offers CPU-based hardware technology to protect cloud users’ data in use, which we believe will become a basic capability for cloud provider in future,” concluded Wei Li, vice president of Tencent Security, the head of Cloud Security.

For more information and to contribute to the project, visit: https://confidentialcomputing.io

NASA greenlights Europa Clipper mission

Image by AzDude from Pixabay

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has given the greenlight to Europa Clipper, a mission that will investigate the possibility that Jupiter’s moon Europa is habitable, the agency said on 19 August.

This decision allows NASA engineers to progress to completion of final design, followed by the construction and testing of the entire spacecraft and science payload.

The mission is intended to conduct an in-depth exploration of Jupiter’s moon Europa and investigate whether the icy moon could harbour conditions suitable for life, improving humankind’s insights into astrobiology.

Under the current projected schedule, the probe will be launched in 2023 and will orbit Europa for around three years, collecting information about the moon’s subsurface ocean. Scientists believe that this ocean may contain microbial life.

The mission will carry a “highly capable, radiation-tolerant” spacecraft that will perform repeated close flybys of the icy moon from a long, looping orbit around Jupiter. The craft’s payload of selected scientific instruments will include cameras and spectrometers to produce high-resolution images of the moon’s surface, and determine its composition.

The Europa Clipper will attempt to determine the thickness of the moon’s icy shell and search for subsurface lakes, like those beneath Antarctica, using an ice penetrating radar. It will also carry a magnetometer to measure the strength and direction of the moon’s magnetic field so scientists can find out how deep and salty its ocean is.

It will use a thermal instrument to “scour” the moon’s surface for recent eruptions of warmer water, while using other instruments to search for evidence of water and tiny particles in the thin atmosphere.

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope observed water vapor above the south polar region of Europa in 2012, providing the first strong evidence of water plumes.  If the existence of the plumes can be confirmed, it will help scientists to investigate the chemical makeup of the moon’s potentially inhabitable environment while minimizing the need to drill through layers of ice.

The agency has plans to also send a lander to Europa in 2025. The United States Congress has mandated the agency to launch the Europa Clipper and the Europa Lander missions on the Space Launch System – a vehicle whose development has reportedly been beset by delays.

“We are all excited about the decision that moves the Europa Clipper mission one key step closer to unlocking the mysteries of this ocean world,” Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington, said in a statement.

“We are building upon the scientific insights received from the flagship Galileo and Cassini spacecraft and working to advance our understanding of our cosmic origin, and even life elsewhere,” he added.

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, is leading the development of the Europa Clipper mission in partnership with the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory for the Science Mission Directorate.

The mission is managed by the Planetary Missions Program Office at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre in Huntsville, Alabama.

NASA selects proposals to further study the “fundamental nature of space”

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced on 13 August that it had selected two proposals for a US$75 million mission to help scientists better understand the “fundamental nature of space and how it changes in response to planetary atmospheres, radiation from the Sun, and interstellar particles”.

Each of the proposals will receive US$400,000 in funding to conduct a nine-month long mission concept study as part of NASA’s heliophysics program aka the Heliophysics Science Mission of Opportunity.

Following the completion of these studies, NASA will choose one of the proposals to launch as a secondary payload on the agency’s Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP). According to NASA, the proposals were selected based on “potential science value and feasibility of development plans” and the whole mission is funded by NASA’s Solar Terrestrial Probes program.

IMAP currently is scheduled to launch in October 2024 to orbit a point between Earth and the Sun known as the first Lagrangian point (L1). From there, researchers expect it will help them to “better understand the interstellar boundary region, where particles from the Sun collide with material from the rest of the galaxy”.

This distant area controls the amount of harmful cosmic radiation entering the heliosphere, the magnetic bubble that shields the solar system from charged particles that surround it. Cosmic rays from the galaxy and beyond affect astronauts and can harm technological systems, and may play a role in the presence of life in the universe.

Under the Spatial/Spectral Imaging of Heliospheric Lyman Alpha (SIHLA) proposal, scientists want to map the entire sky to determine the shape and underlying mechanisms of the boundary between the heliosphere, the area of our Sun’s magnetic influence, and the interstellar medium, a boundary known as the heliopause.

The observations would gather far-ultraviolet light emitted from hydrogen atoms, which is key for examining many astrophysical phenomena, including planetary atmospheres and comets, because a large part of the universe is composed of hydrogen.

SIHLA will focus on mapping the velocity and distribution of the solar wind – the outpouring of particles from the Sun – helping to develop scientists’ understanding of what drives structure in the solar wind and heliopause.

The Global Lyman-alpha Imagers of the Dynamic Exosphere (GLIDE) mission would study variability in Earth’s exosphere – the uppermost region of its atmosphere – by tracking far ultraviolet light emitted from hydrogen.

The proposed mission would fill an existing measurement gap, as only a handful of such images previously have been made from outside the exosphere, NASA said. The mission would “gather observations at a high rate, with a view of the entire exosphere, ensuring a truly global and comprehensive set of data”.

Understanding the ways in which Earth’s exosphere changes in response to influences of the Sun above or the atmosphere below, would give scientists “better ways” to forecast and mitigate the ways in which space weather can interfere with radio communications in space.

“Launching missions together like this is a great way to ensure maximum science return while keeping costs low,” Peg Luce, deputy director of NASA’s Heliophysics Division, said in a statement.

“We carefully select new heliophysics spacecraft to complement the well-placed spacecraft NASA has in orbit to study this vast solar wind system – and our rideshare initiative increases our opportunities to send such key missions into space,” she added.

British Airways to trial VR entertainment first-class perk

Image by pkozmin from Pixabay

UK flag carrier British Airways announced on 14 August plans to offer virtual reality entertainment as a first-class perk on some of its flights in a first for Britain.

From now until the end of 2019, British Airways passengers travelling in the first-class cabin on “selected BA117 flights” from London’s Heathrow Airport to JFK in New York will be provided with AlloSky headsets made by San Francisco-based immersive inflight entertainment company Skylights, an alumni of the airline’s parent company IAG’s Hangar 51 start-up accelerator programme.

This will allow customers to “enjoy a selection of award-winning films, documentaries and travel programmes in 2D, 3D or 360° formats,” British Airways said in a statement.

Earlier this year, British Airways trialed the technology at Heathrow Terminal 5, giving customers a glimpse of the Club World cabin through virtual reality.

British Airways is the first UK airline to trial the technology and said it had “worked with experts” to select a range of therapeutic programmed, including guided meditation and sound therapy, specifically designed for customers who have a fear of flying.

“We are always looking at the latest technology to enhance our customers’ experience on the ground and in the air,” Sajida Ismail, Head of Inflight Product at British Airways, said.  “Virtual reality has the power to revolutionise in-flight entertainment and we’re really excited to trial these new glasses as they should create a unique and memorable journey for our [first-class] customers”.

This is the airline’s centenary year. During August, British Airways’ birthday month, a celebratory exhibition – BA 2119: Flight of the Future – will run at the Saatchi Gallery in London. The exhibition was created in collaboration with the Royal College of Art and is based on global research commissioned by the airline to identify what aviation could look like in the future.

It will also showcase a virtual reality experience called “Fly” that traces humankind’s relationship with flying from the earliest imaginings of Leonardo da Vinci and his “ornithopter” to the Wright Brothers’ success on Kitty Hawk and the first passengers flight to Paris among other things.

The airline plans to invest £6.5 billion in its customers over five years, including better quality Wi-Fi and power in every seat, new interiors for 128 of its long-haul aircraft, and taking delivery of 72 new aircraft.

It has already introduced a new business class seat with direct aisle access – the Club Suite – and will host a range of activities and events through the rest of the year with the aim of exploring “the future of sustainable aviation fuels and the aviation careers of the future”.

NASA engineers successfully test deployment of second James Webb Space Telescope mirror

Image courtesy of NASA.

Engineers at the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) have successfully tested the system that will deploy the secondary mirror of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the agency said on 6 August.

The James Webb Space Telescope is a large, space-based observatory, optimized for infrared wavelengths, which will complement and extend the discoveries of the Hubble Space Telescope. It is expected to launch in 2021.

NASA intends for the telescope to cover longer wavelengths of light than Hubble and to have greatly improved sensitivity. The longer wavelengths should let it “look further back in time to see the first galaxies that formed in the early universe, and to peer inside dust clouds where stars and planetary systems are forming today”.

Before it can do any of these things, the telescope must “perform an extremely choreographed series of deployments, extensions and movements” to “bring the observatory to life” shortly after launch. In its fully deployed form, the telescope is too big to fit in any rocket available so it has been “engineered to intricately fold in on itself to achieve a much smaller size during transport”.

Technicians and engineers recently tested commanding the JWST to deploy the support structure that holds its secondary mirror in place. NASA sees this as is a critical milestone in preparing the observatory for its journey to orbit.

“The proper deployment and positioning of [the JWST’s] secondary mirror is what makes this a telescope – without it, Webb would not be able to perform the revolutionary science we expect it to achieve,” Lee Feinberg, optical telescope element manager for the JWST at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Centre in Maryland, said in a statement that included a time-lapse video of the test.

“This successful deployment test is another significant step towards completing the final observatory,” he added.

It also demonstrated that the electronic connection between the spacecraft and the telescope is working properly, and is capable of delivering commands throughout the observatory as designed.

The secondary mirror is one of the most important pieces of equipment on the telescope, and is essential to the success of the mission. When deployed, this mirror will sit out in front of the JWST’s hexagonal primary mirrors, which form an iconic honeycomb-like shape.

This smaller circular mirror serves an important role in collecting light from the telescope’s 18 primary mirrors into a focused beam. That beam is then sent down into the tertiary and fine steering mirrors, and finally to its four powerful scientific instruments.

The project’s next significant milestone will be the mating of the two halves of the telescope, which are being built separately. The construction of the telescope has been marred by delays and cost overruns that have pushed the launch date from 2018 to 2021.

The JWST is named after James E. Webb, NASA’s second administrator. Webb is best known for leading Apollo, a series of lunar exploration programs that landed the first humans on the Moon. He also initiated a vigorous space science program that was responsible for over 75 launches during his tenure, including America’s first interplanetary explorers.

NASA ‘optometrists’ verify Mars 2020 Rover’s 20/20 vision

Image courtesy of Billy Brown on Flickr, under a Creative Commons 2.0 license

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) said on 5 August that its Mars 2020 rover had undergone an “eye exam” after several new cameras were installed on it.

The rover contains a veritable armada of imaging capabilities, from wide-angle landscape cameras to narrow-angle high-resolution zoom lens cameras. The cameras tested included two Navcams, four Hazcams, a SuperCam and two Mastcam-Z cameras.

Mounted on the rover’s remote sensing mast, the Navcams (navigation cameras) will acquire panoramic 3D image data that will support route planning, robotic-arm operations, drilling and sample acquisition.

The Navcams can work in tandem with the Hazcams (hazard-avoidance cameras) mounted on the lower portion of the rover chassis to provide complementary views of the terrain to safeguard the rover against getting lost or crashing into unexpected obstacles. They’ll be used by software enabling the Mars 2020 rover to perform self-driving over the Martian terrain.

Along with its laser and spectrometers, SuperCam’s imager will examine Martian rocks and soil, seeking organic compounds that could be related to past life on Mars. The rover’s two Mastcam-Z high-resolution cameras will work together as a multispectral, stereoscopic imaging instrument to enhance the Mars 2020 rover’s driving and core-sampling capabilities.

The Mastcam-Z cameras will also enable science team members to observe details in rocks and sediment at any location within the rover’s field of view, helping them piece together the planet’s geologic history.

“We completed the machine-vision calibration of the forward-facing cameras on the rover,” Justin Maki, chief engineer for imaging and the imaging scientist for Mars 2020 at the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a statement. “This measurement is critical for accurate stereo vision, which is an important capability of the vehicle.”

To perform the calibration, the 2020 team imaged target boards that feature grids of dots, placed at distances ranging from one to 44 yards (one to 40 meters) away. The target boards were used to confirm that the cameras meet the project’s requirements for resolution and geometric accuracy.

“We tested every camera on the front of the rover chassis and also those mounted on the mast,” Maki added. “Characterizing the geometric alignment of all these imagers is important for driving the vehicle on Mars, operating the robotic arm and accurately targeting the rover’s laser.”

NASA expects the imagers on the back of the rover body and on the turret at the end of the rover’s arm to undergo similar calibration sometime in the next few weeks.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory is building and will manage operations of the Mars 2020 rover for the NASA Science Mission Directorate at the agency’s headquarters in Washington. NASA plans to use Mars 2020 and other missions, including to the Moon, to prepare for human exploration of the so-called Red Planet.

The agency intends to establish a sustained human presence on and around the Moon by 2028 through NASA’s Artemis lunar exploration plans.

Groupon acquires Presence AI

Image courtesy of GrouponRUS via Wikimedia Commons under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.

Chicago-based worldwide e-commerce marketplace Groupon announced on 8 August that it had acquired Presence AI, an AI-powered text and voice communications tool that is working on a communications platform to automate business-to-customer (B2C) calls and messaging. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

According to a survey conducted by Bizrate Insights, consumers – especially millennials – vastly prefer messaging and chat-based communications over phone calls. Presence AI says it aims to enable merchants to respond to this trend by “offering a 24/7 business assistant that integrates with a merchant’s existing scheduling software”.

It will “accept and manage bookings, provide instant answers to customer questions, remind people when it’s time to re-book and much more”. The company already has some integrations with “popular booking software providers”.

Amazon’s Alexa Fund is one of the investors in Presence AI, which has so far raised US$20,000 in seed funding. The company was founded in 2015 in San Francisco and operates in the health, beauty and wellness space, which is one of Groupon’s largest categories. In 2018, it participated in the Alexa Accelerator, which “supports early-stage start-ups using voice to deliver transformative customer and business experiences”

As Groupon starts trying to move towards “universal bookability” for certain services, it hopes Presence AI’s technology will provide merchants with the capabilities to support this “booking vision”.

“We’re pleased to welcome the Presence AI team and their booking technology to Groupon,” Groupon Chief Product Officer Sarah Butterfass said in a statement. “Booking is a key part of our voucher-less initiative aimed at improving the redemption experience, providing always-on availability . . . opening up our marketplace to a broader range of merchants.”

“Presence AI’s technology is very complementary to what we’ve been building into our existing booking experience and will accelerate our roadmap with its text- and chat-based interface,” she added.

“We’re very excited to join Groupon and continue transforming client conversations through the use of artificial intelligence,” Presence AI co-founder and CEO Michel Meyer said. “With more than 3 million text messages generated last year, Presence AI is saving merchants time and generating additional revenues. We can’t wait to bring our technology to more businesses.”

Knight Foundation pledges US$750,000 to immersive projects

Image by StockSnap from Pixabay

The Knight Foundation said on 27 July that it would award US$750,000 in funding to for “ideas exploring how arts institutions can present immersive experiences to engage audiences”. Recipients will be announced in late fall 2019.

The application window is already open, and US-based cultural organizations, technologists, and others who are working to use immersive technology in the arts are welcome to apply.

Grant recipients will be awarded a share of the funding pool, and receive mixed-reality mentorship and technology support from Microsoft, as well as the opportunity to be featured across the company’s marketing channels.

The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation is a national foundation that invests in journalism, the arts and in the “success of cities where brothers John S. and James L. Knight once published newspapers”. The foundation’s stated goal is to “foster informed and engaged communities, which [it believes] are essential for a healthy democracy”.

The award calls for ideas that demonstrate innovative approaches to this question: In what new ways might arts institutions engage audiences through immersive experiences? The foundation is seeking  ideas from arts institutions — as well as technologists, companies and artists partnering with arts institutions — that demonstrate the ability of immersive technologies to strengthen audience engagement. 

Successful projects will address one of the following areas or related concepts: 

  • Engaging new audiences: How might arts institutions use immersive experiences to better welcome and engage new and diverse audiences?
  • Building new service models: How can institutions design pleasant and efficient audience experiences that avoid clunky interactions with technology?
  • Expanding beyond walls: In what new ways can arts institutions use immersive technology to reach people beyond their physical space?
  • Distribution to multiple institutions: How can immersive experiences become more portable and be presented easily at multiple institutions?

This is part of Knight Foundation’s arts and technology focus, which aims to “help arts institutions better meet changing audience expectations and use digital tools to help people better experience and delight in the arts”.

Last year, Knight made a US$600,000 investment in twelve projects designed to harness the power of technology to engage people with the arts. Most recently, Knight launched the “On View” podcast, which examines how museums and cultural institutions are evolving to keep pace with a changing world.

“We’ve seen how immersive technologies can reach new audiences and engage existing audiences in new ways,” Chris Barr, director for arts and technology innovation at Knight Foundation, said in a statement. “But arts institutions need more knowledge to move beyond just experimenting with these technologies to becoming proficient in leveraging their full potential.”

“When done right, life-changing experiences can happen at the intersection of arts and technology,” Victoria Rogers, Knight Foundation vice president for arts, added. “Our goal through this call is to help cultural institutions develop informed and refined practices for using new technologies, equipping them to better navigate and thrive in the digital age.”

“We’re incredibly excited to support this open call for ways in which technology can help art institutions engage new audiences,” Mira Lane, Partner Director Ethics & Society at Microsoft, said.  “We strongly believe that immersive technology can enhance the ability for richer experiences, deeper storytelling, and broader engagement.”

The opening of the call coincided with the Gray Area Festival in San Francisco, where representatives from Knight and Microsoft shared details with an audience of international thought leaders in the arts and the technology industry. 

NASA’s CubeSat launch initiative opens call for payloads on Artemis 2 mission

Image courtesy of Diophantus654 via Wikipedia under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is seeking proposals from US-based small satellite developers to fly CubeSat missions as secondary payloads aboard the agency’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket on the 2023 Artemis 2 mission under its CubeSat Launch Initiative (CSLI).

CubeSats are a class of research spacecraft called nanosatellites and are, unsurprisingly, cube-shaped. They are spacecraft size in units or U’s, typically up to 12 U  (a unit is defined as a volume of about 10 cm x 10 cm x 10 cm and usually weighs under 1.33 kg).

The CSLI aims to give CubeSat developers a low-cost pathway to conduct research in space that advances NASA’s strategic goals in the areas of science, exploration, technology development, education and operations. It also allows students, teachers and faculty to gain hands-on experience designing, building, and operating these small research satellites.

Proposals must include elements designed to extend human presence beyond low-Earth orbit and reduce risk for future deep space human exploration missions. The proposed missions should address at least one aspect of NASA’s goals outlined in NASA’s 2018 Strategic Plan and address identified strategic knowledge gaps related to the Moon or Mars.

This opportunity will be open to US participants only, including large and small businesses and other federal agencies, as well as NASA centres, and non-profit or accredited education organizations.

They agency is also seeking proposals from CubeSat developers for ride-share launch opportunities on missions other than Artemis 2. These opportunities are open to NASA centres, non-profit or accredited education organizations, and will be for flight as secondary payloads on launches other than SLS, as well as deployments from the International Space Station.  

Mission proposals for all opportunities must be submitted by 4:30 p.m. EST, Nov. 4, 2019. Selections will be made by mid-February 2020, however selection does not guarantee a launch opportunity.

To date, the CubeSat Launch Initiative has selected 175 CubeSat missions from 39 states and 97 unique organizations across the country, has launched 88 missions into space, and has 37 scheduled missions to launch within the next 12 months.

“CubeSats continue to play an increasingly larger role in NASA’s exploration plans,” John Guidi, deputy director for the Advanced Exploration Systems division, said in a statement.

“[They] provide a low-cost platform for a variety of technology demonstrations that may offer solutions for some of the challenges facing long-term human exploration of the Moon and Mars, such as . . . laser communications, energy storage, in-space propulsion, and autonomous movement,” he added.

CubeSats dance: one water-powered NASA spacecraft commands another in orbit

Image courtesy of NASA.

Two of the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) CubeSats have executed a coordinated manoeuvre in space for the first time, demonstrating technology that could one day allow swarms of small satellites to carry out coordinated missions, the agency said on 3 August.

The water-powered spacecraft, which are about the size of a standard tissue box, were approximately 5.5 miles apart when one told the other to activate its thruster and move in closer via radio frequency communications. The fuel tanks on both spacecraft are filled with water, which was converted to steam by the thrusters to move the spacecraft during the manoeuvre.

CubeSats are a class of research spacecraft called nanosatellites and are, unsurprisingly, cube-shaped. They are spacecraft size in units or U’s, typically up to 12 U  (a unit is defined as a volume of about 10 cm x 10 cm x 10 cm and usually weighs under 1.33 kg).

Conducted on 21 June, the demonstration took place in low-Earth orbit as part of NASA’s Optical Communications and Sensor Demonstration (OCSD) mission. It was designed with a series of safeguards to ensure that only a pre-planned and authorized manoeuvre could take place.

While it was choreographed by human operators on the ground, the demonstration shows it is possible for a series of manoeuvres to be planned using onboard processing and executed cooperatively by a group of small spacecraft, NASA said.

Three OCSD spacecraft were developed and are operated for NASA by The Aerospace Corporation. The first OCSD was a risk-reduction mission that launched in 2015 to calibrate and refine tools to support this current flight of the OCSD-B and OCSD-C spacecraft.

OCSD is funded by NASA’s Small Spacecraft Technology program within the agency’s Space Technology Mission Directorate. NASA’s Small Spacecraft Technology program is managed by NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley.

“Demonstrations such as this will help advance technologies that will allow for greater and more extended use of small spacecraft in and beyond Earth-orbit,” Roger Hunter, program manager of the Small Spacecraft Technology program, said in a statement.

“The OCSD team is very pleased to continue demonstrating new technical capabilities as part of this extended mission, over 1.5 years after deployment,” Darren Rowen, director of the Small Satellite Department at The Aerospace Corporation, added.

“It is exciting to think about the possibilities enabled with respect to deep space, autonomously organizing swarms of small spacecraft,” he said.

NASA is developing mirrors that could double the sensitivity of X-ray telescopes

Hubble telescope. Image by Ondřej Šponiar from Pixabay

The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is developing mirrors that could double the sensitivity of X-ray telescopes, the agency said on 29 July.

Imaging systems based on x-rays use mirrors to reflect x-rays off an object at incidental angles, in the same way that more traditional optics or imaging systems reflect light off objects so that they can be viewed with naked eye or photographed. They are typically made of glass, ceramic, or metal foil, coated by a reflective layer – the most commonly used materials are gold and iridium.

Recent testing has shown that super-thin, lightweight X-ray mirrors made of a material commonly used to make computer chips can meet the stringent imaging requirements of next-generation X-ray observatories.

They are fifty times lighter – a two orders-of-magnitude leap in sensitivity – than those currently fitted in NASA’s flagship Chandra X-ray observatory and the European Space Agency’s Advanced Telescope for High-Energy Astrophysics, or Athena.

The mirrors could be fitted into the conceptual Lynx X-ray Observatory which is expected to launch at some point in the 2030s – one of four potential missions that scientists vetted as worthy pursuits under the 2020 Decadal Survey for Astrophysics.

If selected and ultimately launched in the 2030s, Lynx could potentially carry tens of thousands of the mirror segments. Chandra itself offered a significant leap in capability when it launched in 1999. It can observe X-ray sources — exploded stars, clusters of galaxies, and matter around black holes —100 times fainter than those observed by previous X-ray telescopes.

The mirrors in question are being developed by Will Zhang and his team at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Zhang and his team have secured a nearer-term flight opportunity than Lynx, aboard a sounding rocket mission scheduled for 2021, which would represent the new technology’s first demonstration in space.

Seven years in the making

Efforts to develop the new mirrors began seven years ago when Zhang started to experiment with mono-crystalline, a single-crystal silicon that had not previously been used to create x-ray mirrors.

His goal — given the cost of building space observatories, which only increase in price as they get larger and heavier — was to develop easily reproducible, lightweight, super-thin mirrors, without sacrificing quality.

“What we’ve done is shown from a scientific perspective and empirically that these optics can be built using an inexpensive, abundantly available material that is immune from the internal stresses that can change the shape of X-ray mirrors made of glass, the more traditional mirror-making material”, Zhang said in a statement.

According to a NASA-commissioned panel of 40 experts, Zhang’s mirrors made from the brittle, highly stable silicon are capable of producing the same image quality as the four larger – and heavier – pairs currently flying on Chandra. The panel also deemed two other technologies – full-shell mirrors and adjustable optics – as able to fulfil the requirements of the conceptual Lynx Observatory.

Not only could Zhang’s mirrors provide an image resolution comparable to the quality of an ultra-high-definition television screen, they also met his low-mass requirements. But, Zhang said, he and his team are still “far, far away from flying our optics”.

Next steps

Zhang and his team now have to figure out how to bond these fragile mirror segments inside the canister that protects the entire mirror assembly during a rocket launch and maintains their “nested alignment”.

“We have a lot to do, and not a lot of time to do it,” Zhang said. “This is now an engineering challenge.”

He added that “time is of the essence” because in two years, he and his team are expected to deliver a 288-segment mirror assembly to Randall McEntaffer, a professor at Pennsylvania State University in State College who is developing a sounding rocket mission called the Off-plane Grating Rocket Experiment (OGRE), expected to launch from the Wallops Flight Facility in 2021.

In addition to the mirrors, OGRE will carry a “university-developed spectrograph equipped with next-generation X-ray diffraction gratings used to split X-ray light into its component colours or wavelengths to reveal an object’s temperature, chemical makeup, and other physical properties”.

Zhang expects that OGGRE will “do much to advance the mirror assembly” and that the mission will help to determine if its design will be able to protect the delicate mirrors from the extreme launch forces during lift-off and ascent through the Earth’s atmosphere.

Even if Lynx isn’t chosen for development by the 2020 Decadal Survey, Zhang envisions a bright future for the team’s optics. Other proposed missions could benefit, he said, including a couple X-ray observatories now being investigated as potential astrophysics Probe-class missions and another now being considered by the Japanese.

“Five years ago, people said it couldn’t be done, but we proved our ideas,” Zhang said. “My team is grateful to Goddard’s Internal Research and Development program for giving us the seed money. We couldn’t have achieved this without it.

Google’s Code Next students merge computer science and activism

Image by Photo Mix from Pixabay

At this year’s, Google Code Next Hackathon, students used computer science to build applications that they hope will make a difference in the world, including a website to fight the housing crisis in San Francisco’s Bay Area, and projects to inform citizens of their rights when stopped by law enforcement and on the gender pay gap.

Code Next (a Code With Google program) is a free computer science education program for Black and Latinx high school students. The program works in communities to inspire students, and to equip them with the skills and education necessary for careers in computer science.

At the two-day Hackathon, which took place this year in both Oakland and New York City in June, students use the knowledge learned in the classroom to come up with ideas, develop them and pitch prototypes.

This year, students were challenged to develop a mobile or web application that addressed social justice, inequality or the environment. Day one of the Hackathon centred on ideas, while day two focused on coding and preparation for the pitch, which occurred at the end of the day.

Both of this year’s winners addressed the environment. In Oakland, Code Next students Adesina Taylor, Luis Sanchez, Jacob Sonhthila, Xzavier Ceja and David Ung took home the first place prize. The team, who called their project “STEN,” created a web application that allows users to buy and distribute stone paper, an alternative to paper made from wood, as a means to fight deforestation.

In New York, students Mohammad Hasan, Mohammed Ibrahim, Andy Asante, Alexander Leonardi and Rafid Almustaqim won first prize with a mobile application, “NextGen Carbon,” that tracks pollution levels. The app places users in competition with one another by tracking their day-to-day carbon emissions, encouraging them to reduce their numbers.

“We want to emphasize that there are people that know what global warming is,” Asante said in a blog post. “They just don’t know what causes it. Our app informs them.”

“We do discuss what we want to do for the world and how to save it, but we don’t usually pitch like this,” Merelis Peralta, a Code Next student, whose “Police Brutality” app won third place in New York City, said. “Having to pitch about how we want to help our community and make them safer opens our voice.”

“After trying Code Next, I found out that although [computer science] might be hard, it’s fun at the same time,” student Ayan Cooper said. “I want people to see that that it’s meaningful.”

At the conclusion of the two days, the students celebrated their achievements, their hard work and the challenges they overcame as a team in front of their Code Next mentors, coaches, family and friends.

ESA: Earth’s close call with asteroid demonstrates need for more eyes in the sky

Image by Alexander Antropov from Pixabay

The European Space Agency (ESA) said on 2 August that the fly-by of a 100-metre-wide asteroid last month illustrates the need to increase Earth’s asteroid detection capabilities.

Dubbed “2019 OK”, the football field-sized asteroid came within 65 000 km of the Earth’s surface during its closest approach – about one fifth of the distance to the Moon. It was detected just days before it passed Earth, although archival records from sky surveys show it had previously been observed but wasn’t recognised as a near-Earth asteroid.

Asteroids the size of “2019 OK” are relatively common but hit Earth once every 100,000 years. ESA said that its planned network of Flyeye telescopes will allow astronomers to detect risky space rocks in order to provide early warnings.

The ESA observed the asteroid just before its flyby, by requesting two separate telescopes in the International Scientific Optical Network (ISON) take images of the space rock. With these observations, asteroid experts at the ESA were able to extract precise measurements of the position and movement of the rocky body.

“With the ISON observations we were able to determine the distance of the close approach incredibly accurately,” explained Marco Micheli from the ESA’s Near-Earth Object Coordination Centre. “In fact, with a combination of observations from across the globe, the distance is now known to better than one kilometre!”

The asteroid was first discovered by the Southern Observatory for Near-Earth Asteroids Research (SONEAR) just a day before its close approach. Observations of “2019 OK” were independently confirmed by other observatories, including the Arecibo radar in Puerto Rico and a third telescope in the ISON network.

Since the discovery, with knowledge of where the asteroid would have been and by searching for it by eye, existing images were found in the Pan-STARRS and ATLAS sky survey archives. Both surveys had in fact captured the asteroid in the weeks before the flyby, but the slow space rock appeared to move just a tiny amount between images, and was therefore not recognised.

“This ‘un-recognition’ of an asteroid, despite it being photographed will be used to test the software going into ESA’s upcoming asteroid-hunting telescope, the Flyeye,” Rüdiger Jehn, ESA’s Head of Planetary Defence, said.

Eyes on the sky

Scientists know of – and are tracking – thousands of asteroids in the Solar System, so why was this one discovered so late? Unfortunately, there is currently no single obvious reason, apart from its slow motion in the sky before close approach.

“2019 OK” travels in a highly elliptical orbit, taking it from within the orbit of Venus to well beyond that of Mars. This means that the time it spends near Earth, and is detectable with current telescope capabilities, is relatively short.

The ESA, the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and other agencies and organisations around the globe – both professional and amateur – discover new asteroids every day, which constantly increases scientists’ understanding of the number, distribution and movement of orbiting “rocky bodies”.

Asteroids the size of “2019 OK” size are relatively common in our Solar System but hit Earth on average only every 100,000 years. Travelling in a highly elliptical orbit that takes it within the orbit of Venus, this asteroid won’t come close to Earth again for at least another 200 years.

Planetary Defence at the ESA

According to the ESA, it’s planned developments should mean that by 2030, Europe will be able to:

  • provide early warning for dangerous asteroids larger than 40 m in size, about three weeks in advance;
  • deflect asteroids smaller than 1 km if known more than two years in advance.

The ESA’s planned network of Flyeye telescopes is expected to significantly help in the global search for risky space rocks, which is necessary to provide early warnings. The agency’s Hera mission – currently being designed to test asteroid deflection for the first time – will look to develop the ESA’s capacity to knock asteroids off a dangerous path.