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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Blogs in spaaaace!

Posted: Thursday, September 14, 2006 5:15 PM by Alan Boyle

Next week Anousheh Ansari aims to go where no woman has gone before. To the international space station? Well, women have certainly been there before, although the Iranian-American venture capitalist will be the first woman to pay her own way to the orbital outpost. No, we're talking here about the extraterrestrial blogosphere.


Reuters
Anousheh Ansari, space blogger.

With backing from the X Prize Foundation, Ansari has already begun blogging from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan about the buildup to Monday's scheduled Soyuz launch. During her week on the space station, she intends to keep up with the blog entries, and send some podcasts as well.

"She will be e-mailing, and sending a select few digital photos," Peter Diamandis, the foundation's founder and chairman, told me today. He said the foundation is paying out $250,000 for the data/phone link on the station, which is an option offered for Space Adventures' private-passenger trips to orbit.

As Ansari herself told me earlier this week, her plans to conduct scientific experiments in space during her mission were somewhat short-circuited when the Russians named her to replace would-be Japanese space passenger Daisuke Enomoto last month. She didn't have time to do what she wanted to do, so her main mission is to share her experience in orbit with as many people as she can.

Diamandis said the X Prize blog and podcasts will serve as "her mechanism to get that experience out."

Ansari's online efforts are said to represent the "first blog from space," but as with many of the firsts in the history books, that all depends on how you define your terms.

For years, NASA astronauts have sent back dispatches from the station and the shuttle, as well as "letters home" from Russia's Mir space station. South African Internet tycoon Mark Shuttleworth kept up a "Captain's Log" before, during and after his own privately paid-for trip to the space station in 2002. But if you define a blog as more or less daily entries, addressed to an Internet-wide audience and arranged in reverse chronological order with comments from readers, the Anousheh Ansari Space Blog certainly promises to break new ground.

Podcasting is also a relatively new frontier for the final frontier: NASA has started offering podcasts and vodcasts (including an MP4 of the last weekend's shuttle launch), and Ansari's X Prize podcasts could push the envelope.

Diamandis said the podcasts will include recordings of Ansari's communication links with students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the International Space University, as well as the geeks at the Googleplex in Silicon Valley. (Google co-founder Larry Page, like Ansari, is a member of the X Prize Foundation's board of directors.)

In addition to the blog, Ansari has her own Web site with further background on her past accomplishments and future flight.

Ansari is best known as one of the backers of the $10 million Ansari X Prize for private spaceflight, which was won by the SpaceShipOne rocket team on Oct. 4, 2004. Diamandis told me that Ansari will be involved in yet another Oct. 4 X Prize event this year: She's due to be present at the National Academy of Sciences on that date for an announcement relating to the long-simmering $10 million Genomics X Prize.

Ansari's "victory lap" will continue with an appearance at the X Prize Cup festivities in late October, Diamandis said. Among other things, she'll participate in educational activities expected to draw thousands of schoolchildren, he said.

All in all, it promises to be a busy month and a half for Anousheh Ansari, who is also involved in a venture to develop suborbital spaceships for tourist travel. Not bad for a beginning blogger. ...

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Comments

Well, I wonder why all these americans have to go to space through Russian Agency. Why can't NASA can make money from this? Because its like, if you do not do business, some one else will do.
$250,000 for a phone line?  Emailing your blog in?  Most people will not want to go to space until the phone service is cheaper and the internet more up to speed.    We can do without gravity and fresh air, but some things are more precious!  
This morning I read a stroy circulating that NASA and Russian Space Agency officials are stripping Anousheh of her Iranian flag spacesuit patch and want her to cover the Iranian colors on her flight patch!? This diplomatic move seems absurd and bizzare. The  Ansari family has ever constitutional right to free expression of national origin. For goodness sakes, what petty bureaucrats are making such foreign policy decisions pray tell? Let the woman fly in peace. Policymakers are overreaching!
Don't believe all those silly rumors about NASA and Roskosmos -- that patch will fly in space, no worries.  You can print one out from spaceblog.xprize.org and fly your own on Sunday night -- celebrate Anousheh!
January 30, 2007

To whom it may concern:

My name is Nich. I am in 3rd grade at Cedar Wood Elementary.  I am doing a research project on outer space and am looking for some information to use in my project.  I am collecting items such as pamphlets, brochures, articles, artifacts and any other resource that would help me share this topic with others.  I would appreciate any help you can give me.

Sincerely,

Nich
No serious space travel until near light speed travel is solved.
Is it feasible to send "garbage" into the sun for disposal?  I mean high cost (space station waste), long half-life radioactive waste from nuclear power sources, etc. Wouldn't take a sophisticated vehicle, once in orbit, and could be sent for a 100 year flight (minimal power).


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