Nanoracks small experiment host module for ISS

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Danderman
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« Reply #300 on: 06/08/2012 02:19 PM »

Student Microgravity Experiments Selected to Fly Aboard First Operational Flight of SpaceX Dragon in September 2012

http://ssep.ncesse.org/2012/06/student-microgravity-experiments-selected-to-fly-aboard-first-operational-flight-of-spacex-dragon-in-september-2012/

The National Center for Earth and Space Science Education (NCESSE) in partnership with NanoRacks, LLC, announces the selection of 11 microgravity experiments to fly to the International Space Station (ISS) aboard the first operational flight of the SpaceX Dragon, scheduled for launch in September 2012. The experiments were selected as part of Mission 2 to ISS, the fourth flight opportunity provided by America’s Student Spaceflight Experiments Program (SSEP). The first two flight opportunities were on the final flights of Shuttles Endeavour and Atlantis. The Aquarius payload of student experiments for the third SSEP flight opportunity – Mission 1 to ISS – is currently aboard ISS with 15 experiments.

In response to an announcement of opportunity in November 2011, 11 communities in 9 States are participating in Mission 2 to ISS. The communities provided a combined 15,120 grade 5-12 students in 72 schools the opportunity to design and propose real microgravity experiments. A total of 1,125 student team proposals were received, and a formal 2-step review process in Spring 2012, involving scientists, engineers, and science educators across the U.S., selected 11 flight experiments – one for each participating community. Selected experiments are currently undergoing formal NASA Flight Safety Review.

Link to selected teams:

http://ssep.ncesse.org/communities/experiments-selected-for-flight/selected-experiments-on-ssep-mission-2-to-iss/
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« Reply #301 on: 06/08/2012 07:05 PM »

Looks like NR are making good use of CRS capabilities.

I can feel a big NR article coming along sometime soon...they are awesome. 8)
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« Reply #302 on: 06/09/2012 01:19 PM »

http://schools.shorelineschools.org/highlandterrace/2012/06/08/highland-terrace-student-experiment-to-go-to-space-station-this-fall/

Highland Terrace student experiment to go to Space Station this Fall

A Shoreline student experiment from Highland Terrace Elementary has been selected to participate in Mission Two to the International Space Station this fall through the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program, http://ssep.ncesse.org (SSEP).

Highland Terrace Elementary students Aden Helland, Matthew McMillan, Tuguldur Myagmarsuren, Jack Parkinson and Dylan Probizanski (photo at right) designed an experiment with the help of their teacher, Peggy Nordwall, about crystal growth and impurities in microgravity.

“Our question is if crystals grown in microgravity will pick up impurities. This would be important because of the need to fabricate pure, defect-free single crystals for their use as semi-and superconductors.”

The Student Spaceflight Experiment is a national educational program undertaken by the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education, http://ncesse.org (NCESSE) in partnership with NanoRacks, LLC. Shoreline is one of only 11 districts nationwide to be chosen for this program.

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« Reply #303 on: 06/12/2012 02:01 PM »

http://fspace.edu.vn/?p=598

Latest update on F-1 CubeSat project:

At the moment, the flight safety review is coming to an end, FSpace team together with our partner NanoRacks LLC has responded and satisfied to technical requirements and standards set by the launch vehicle provider. If everything goes according to plan, F-1 CubeSat will be delivered to Japan by the end of this month (June), there together with 4 companion small satellites (RAIKO, FITSAT-1, WE WISH and TechEdSat) they will be loaded onboard HTV-3 “Kounotori” transfer vehicle for integration with the HII-B launch vehicle of JAXA.

Planned launch date: 21/7/2012
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« Reply #304 on: 06/14/2012 05:21 PM »

Greensboro, North Carolina Middle School to fly experiment to ISS

http://ssep.ncesse.org/communities/guilfordcounty/2012/06/13/johnson-street-experiment-selected-for-spaceflight/

 A team of student scientists from Johnson Street Global Studies is interested in finding out how long it would take food to spoil in outer space. If the team finds that mold grows differently in microgravity, its research could help determine what passengers will eat if public space travel ever becomes a reality.

Fourteen students will have the opportunity to study mold growth by placing their experiment on the International Space Station this fall. As a part of the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program, they will be among some of the first researchers to send an experiment to the space station via a commercial spacecraft. Johnson Street is one of 11 student teams from across the country selected to fly an experiment on the first operational flight of the SpaceX Dragon, scheduled for launch in September 2012.

During the spaceflight, the student team will conduct two identical experiments – one on the International Space Station and one in their classroom – to see how gravity effects mold growth. Sixth-graders Evelyn Adriance, Ryan Darden, Zeynab Warrich and seventh-grader Jonathan Mickey, the principal investigators for the experiment, said they expect to find less mold growth in outer space since there is less gravity.

The Student Spaceflight Experiments Program is a national science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) program undertaken by the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education in partnership with NanoRacks LLC, which is working with NASA under a formal Space Act Agreement as part of the utilization of the International Space Station as a National Laboratory.
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« Reply #305 on: 06/19/2012 09:10 PM »

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/news/biology_lab.html

NASA is expanding its existing capabilities for doing plant and animal tissue investigations on the International Space Station with the delivery of a new centrifuge scheduled for this summer. The centrifuge is a NASA and commercial industry collaboration, and will be housed in the NanoRacks facility.

The small Gravitational Biology Lab will allow biological experimentation in artificial gravity -- from zero gravity to twice Earth’s normal gravity -- for prolonged periods of time. The new facility will provide environmental control, lighting, data transfer, commanding, and observation of experiments in Mars and moon gravity conditions, as well as mimicking Earth's gravity. This is useful for biological research, and could lead to advances in medications and vaccines, agricultural controls, and discoveries in genetics -- all beneficial to those of us on Earth.

NanoRacks hardware is available for many different investigation scenarios, including mini-aquariums, seed germination boxes, plant growth chambers, mammal and plant cell culture units, along with multi-generation chambers for fruit flies. There have been several multi-generational investigations involving drosophila -- a type of fruit fly. Drosophila has a similar genetic makeup to humans, and can serve as a genetic model for several human disease studies.

There are already two NanoRacks research platforms in use on the space station, including two microscopes. More than 35 investigations have already used the NanoRacks facilities, which operate under a Space Act Agreement with NASA and the U.S. National Lab. In 2005, Congress designated the space station a national laboratory in an effort to include other government organizations, schools and universities and private companies in the use of the orbiting lab facility, increasing the amount of research being done in microgravity.

The centrifuge is a joint venture between Astrium Space Transportation and NanoRacks LLC, with more joint projects planned. Additional facilities also are planned, with a Plate Reader scheduled for delivery this year to allow on-site microbiological analysis, expanding life science and biological research.

"This is an important step in the expansion of National Lab facilities aboard the space station," said Marybeth Edeen, former U.S. National Lab manager at NASA's Johnson Space Center. "Having companies develop research and facilities for the National Lab with their own funding demonstrates the beginnings of the commercial space marketplace that the National Lab was created to serve."

Centrifuges have been used in space since 1985 to conduct more than 130 experiments on 25 shuttle missions, resulting in the publication of more than 300 scientific papers. This heritage provides a large variety of flight-proven experiment designs now available for use by researchers for all types of molecular and cellular investigations on animal and plant tissues. The new NanoRacks facility design will provide fully automated culturing of cells and tissue, including "plug-and-play" payloads that require only a standard computer USB connection to access needed power and environmental controls.

Station crew members and researchers are looking forward to the addition of this new centrifuge. What they will learn from the research in the new facility can be used to better life on Earth, as well as provide knowledge to help advance future long-duration human spaceflight missions.
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« Reply #306 on: 06/25/2012 08:33 PM »

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/G-0PUBbMdKo&rel=1" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/v/G-0PUBbMdKo&rel=1</a>

NASA Video about the recent Nanoracks/SpaceX mission to ISS.
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« Reply #307 on: 06/27/2012 02:49 AM »

The CubeSATS to be integrated with HTV-3.
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« Reply #308 on: 06/27/2012 02:15 PM »

New NanoRacks’ Software Platform Speeds Space Customer Payloads to International Space Station

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/6/prweb9635975.htm

 A new software platform designed to ease the passage of payloads from earth to space was announced today at the AAS Space Station Research and Development Conference by NanoRacks, LLC, the leading company for space utilization. Payload Tracker™ is the first ever user-friendly tool that is specifically designed to allow customers, government officials, launch providers and others to track individual payloads through the myriad NASA safety and procedural requirements involved in launching customer project to the International Space Station.

“One of the complexities at NanoRacks as well as for everyone involved is tracking a payload once it enters the NASA system,” explained Michael Johnson, NanoRacks’ chief technology officer. “Payload Tracker™ was created to track step by step each of the NASA requirements, allowing all team members to immediately know the status of a given payload, where it is in the system, what modifications are required and the expected time to the next step.”

NanoRacks is proud of the average of nine months to launch for their customers projects and see the Payload Tracker™ as allowing this pace to be maintained and even improved upon as the backlog grows larger and more diverse.
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« Reply #309 on: 06/29/2012 02:34 PM »

A little off-topic here, but .......................



ATK and Astrium Team With NanoRacks on Liberty


http://www.marketwatch.com/story/atk-signs-teaming-agreement-for-liberty-transportation-service-2012-06-28

ARLINGTON, Va., June 28, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- ATK  and Astrium North America have signed a teaming agreement with NanoRacks, LLC, for NanoRacks to market opportunities for both astronaut explorers and the experiments they plan to carry into space on board the Liberty Transportation Service.

"NanoRacks is a world leader in understanding the emerging commercial market for low Earth orbit utilization," said Kent Rominger, ATK's Liberty Program Manager. "Jeff Manber and his NanoRacks team will bring the tremendous capability of the Liberty Transportation Service to this community worldwide. The prospects are very exciting."
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« Reply #310 on: 07/02/2012 03:07 PM »

Soyuz lands--all safe and carrying payloads from two NanoRacks customers.
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« Reply #311 on: 07/10/2012 04:44 PM »

I'm not sure where to put this, but there appears to be a problem with Paul Warren's experiment.

Edit: Link redirect is broken with The Baltimore Sun.
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« Reply #312 on: 07/12/2012 07:26 AM »

I guess I'll post an update from the above post, an investigation is underway.

http://www.aviationweek.com/Article.aspx?id=/article-xml/asd_07_11_2012_p07-02-475481.xml
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« Reply #313 on: 07/12/2012 02:58 PM »

Here's the official release:

NanoRacks Investigates No Activation of Program

Recently the hardware that was launched on SpaceX returned safely on Soyuz. As the schools receive the MixStix and begin to analyze the results, we are learning that many of the projects were not activated while on the International Space Station.

Our CTO Michael Johnson has pulled together a team that will coordinate with NASA to determine whether this was a hardware error or flaw in the program procedure. Per our custom, we are re-flying the research projects at no cost and will let the community know once our investigation is completed.

http://nanoracks.com/nanoracks-investigates-no-activation-of-program/
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« Reply #314 on: 07/18/2012 07:27 PM »

Space station blunder blamed on flawed training

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48214704/ns/technology_and_science-space/#.UAcNnd2ZiSo

NanoRacks LLC said July 13 that an internal investigation determined that some student-designed experiments delivered to the International Space Station (ISS) in May and returned to Earth in early July were never activated on-orbit due to a flaw in NanoRack's astronaut training procedures. Jeffrey Manber, managing director of the Houston-based company, said in an email that NanoRacks will pay to refly the affected experiments.

The student space experiments in question were fluids housed in Teflon vials, known as MixStix, that were among the cargo Space Exploration Technologies' Dragon spacecraft delivered to the ISS in late May.

Once onboard the space station, an astronaut was supposed to start each experiment by flexing the tube to mix the fluids. When the vials were returned to students via the Russian Soyuz that landed July 1, many researchers determined their experiments were never activated.
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