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Quantum fluctuations in science, space and society, from quarks to Hubble and Mars. Served up by Alan Boyle, NBC News Digital science editor. E-mail Alan, or connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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  • 19
    Mar
    2012
    10:42pm, EDT

    App lets you take the planet's pulse

    NASA

    The "Earth Now" app puts the whole world in your hands.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    NASA's "Earth Now" app for the iPhone lets you check the planet's vital signs from the palm of your hand. The app features a spinnable, zoomable, smartphone-sized model of Earth that takes on different types of color coding, depending on which climate data set you're wanting to see.

    The data sets, drawn from NASA satellite observations, document surface air temperature; show you levels of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, ozone and water vapor; and indicate variations in the global gravity field and sea levels.

    "Earth Now is a great resource for students, teachers and anyone interested in Earth's changing climate," Michael Greene, manager for public engagement formulation and strategic alliances at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said today in a news release. "Since its debut last month, it's already been downloaded nearly 170,000 times. Plans are in place for development of an Android version and for the addition of new NASA Earth science data sets over time."

    Earth Now is closely integrated with NASA's Global Climate Change portal page. You can download the iPhone / iPad / iPod Touch app via iTunes, or get the full rundown of programs listed on JPL's mobile app portal, including programs that serve up pictures, video and data from Saturn, Mars, the moon and other NASA missions. Take a look at these other app reports as well:

    Follow @CosmicLog
    • NASA launches comet-hunting iPhone game
    • Put cosmic wonders on your screen
    • Exoplanet app keeps track of alien planets
    • Mars Images app delivers rover pictures

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    2 comments

    Boy have we gone a long way from the year 1900 Kinda spooky 75 years or so from now what it will be like "When I was a kid all we had was the internet to play with, and we had to use cars to get around" lol

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    Explore related topics: space, nasa, earth, featured, iphone
  • 5
    Jul
    2011
    8:05pm, EDT

    App tracks space shuttle and station

    GoSoftWorks via Apple

    The GoAtlantis app for iPhone and iPad tracks Atlantis and the International Space Station during NASA's last shuttle mission.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    This week's final space shuttle mission is carrying the first iPhone to go into orbit, so it's only fitting that there's a free app for iPhones and iPads that will help us earthbound types track the shuttle Atlantis and the International Space Station as they fly.

    The GoAtlantis app is being offered by Canada-based GoSoftWorks, which sells the GoSkyWatch planetarium app and the GoSatWatch satellite-tracking app. GoAtlantis is a free sample of sorts — basically, it's a version of GoSatWatch that's limited to tracking the station and shuttle.

    "The GoAtlantis app features real-time tracking of Atlantis with multiple map and sky views, time-lapse control and easy GPS setup or by using a city list," GoSoftWorks founder Richard Hein is quoted as saying in an iTWire report about the app. "Both visible and 24-hour pass predictions are available with alert notifications."

    Atlantis is scheduled for launch at 11:26 a.m. ET Friday, and the current plan calls for a landing on July 20. But the space station has been in orbit for years, and GoAtlantis should be able to give you a fix on the space station for a long time to come. You don't really need an app for that: Websites maintained by NASA, Heavens-Above and SpaceWeather.com, among others, can tell you where and when to look for the space station. But it's so much easier when you can just point your phone skyward.

    By the way, if you want to look for the space station and other satellites using an Android phone, there are apps for that, too. If you have a favorite mobile-phone app of any flavor, feel free to share it in a comment below.


    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds. 

    9 comments

    Neat! (first post baby)

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  • 10
    Jun
    2011
    2:59pm, EDT

    iPhones head for final frontier

    Odyssey Space Research

    An artist's conception shows one of Odyssey Space Research's iPhones floating in the International Space Station's Tranquility module, with a view of Earth from the Cupola observation deck.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    The last space shuttle mission will be the first mission to send iPhones into orbit — but if this experiment works out the way its developers hope, you could be seeing a lot more such devices on the final frontier in the years to come.

    The two Apple iPhone 4's certified for launch to the International Space Station on the shuttle Atlantis next month won't being used for phone calls. Astronauts on the space station already have a pretty reliable Internet phone link for that, so they don't have to worry whether AT&T or Verizon provides better reception from space. In fact, the phone function on these iPhones has been disabled.

    "My joke is that the roaming charges would be astronomical," Brian Rishikof, the chief executive officer for Houston-based Odyssey Space Research, told me today.


    Odyssey has loaded the phones with an app designed to help spacefliers get oriented in case they ever get lost in space. SpaceLab for iOS will be used for four experiments on the station:

    • Limb Tracker lets astronauts snap pictures of Earth's horizon and analyzes the shape of the planet's arc, or limb, to estimate altitude as well as flight angle.
    • Sensor Cal uses a series of reference photos to calibrate the phone's gyro and accelerometer for subsequent measurements.
    • State Acq enable astronauts to estimate their spacecraft's latitude and longitude by matching up iPhone photos with a wireframe of Earth's coastlines.
    • LFI checks the effects of space radiation on the iPhone by monitoring certain areas of the phone's memory for single-bit upsets —flipped bits that can scramble a spacecraft's brains. Bit flips have been blamed for space glitches affecting NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Voyager 2 probe, as well as the Toyota accelerator glitches on Earth.

    The $100 billion space station is bristling with communication equipment, so it's unlikely that astronauts would ever lose their bearings there. But in the years ahead, NASA will have to rely on commercial space transports, and it's conceivable that mobile devices could serve as backup systems for spacecraft navigation in the event of a catastrophic computer glitch or communication failure. If you've seen the movie "Apollo 13," you might recall that those astronauts had to eyeball Earth through their window to set a course for their return from the moon.

    Beyond the experiments, putting the iPhones on the station will help NASA figure out how best to adapt commercial off-the-shelf devices for use in space, said Jeffrey Manber, managing director of NanoRacks. Manber's company developed the rack-storage system in which the phones and other payloads will be flown.

    Manber told me it was "extremely difficult" to get the phones certified for spaceflight.

    "It was probably one of the hardest payloads we had," he said. "It's not exactly the same iPhone that you or I would buy."

    Rishikof said Odyssey disabled the phone function as well as GPS location capabilities, to streamline the certification process and to avoid running afoul of other space communication channels (including military channels). Even if GPS was enabled, "you're not going to get reception" on the space station, Rishikov said. The iPhones also run off pre-certified external batteries rather than the internal batteries, although that situation may change for future experiments, he said.

    Manber estimated that it took four to five months to get the phones certified — which is significantly quicker than NanoRacks' average of nine months. "NASA's not getting enough credit for making the process more commercial-friendly," Manber said.

    He also said this was only the beginning of a new age for spaceworthy devices, and for NanoRacks. "We've got 60 payloads in the queue," Manber told me. "We have 15 customers already. We're going gangbusters."

    Rishikof, meanwhile, said his company is eyeing potential space applications for other mobile devices. "The iPod and the iPad are natural opportunities, but we haven't done anything explicitly yet," he said.

    The space iPhones are due to be returned to Earth this fall aboard a returning Russian Soyuz craft. "Actual flight data from the experiments are expected to be collected, analyzed and shared so that educators, students, scientists and space enthusiasts can re-create the experiments as if onboard the ISS itself," Odyssey said in a news release.

    But you don't have to wait until then to give SpaceLab a spin. It's already available at the App Store, and you can play around with simulated data that's adjusted for Earth's gravity. Just two days after its release, the app is already heading toward the top of the charts for iPhone educational software.

    Update for 6 p.m. ET: Inquiring minds wanted to know exactly what was done to the phones, and so I followed up with Rishikof on that point. He told me iOS operating system was not modified. "We did not 'jailbreak' the phone," he told me. But it wasn't merely a matter of flipping the phones to "airplane mode," either. Rishikof said minor modifications were made in the interest of getting the phones certified for spaceflight in time for launch — modifications that were analogous to, say, yanking a wire. In the future, Odyssey intends to have the iPhone certified for spaceflight as it is, "out of the box," Rishikof said.

    Rishikof said he's gratified by the interest in the project, particularly because it shows how gadgets that are increasingly familiar to folks on Earth can become part of the technological landscape in space as well. "That sense of connection is really important," he said.

    Meanwhile, NASA spokesman Kelly Humphries told me that if the iPhones work as hoped, that would be of interest to the space agency. He mentioned the Apollo 13 example that I cited above and said, "NASA is always interested in additional layers of redundancy for spacecraft navigation."

    Although several sources have said these are the first iPhones to go into space, Humphries pointed out that the line gets fuzzier when you're talking more broadly about mobile devices. "There are lots of iPods and MP3 players" on the space station, Humphries said. But the astronauts don't use them as navigational aids. They use them pretty much as folks on Earth do: for instance, listening to tunes while they do their workouts.

    More about space gadgetry:

    • iPhone goes to the edge of space
    • Put outer-space imagery on your mobile device
    • Real space station done, now on to LEGO version

    You can connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter. Also, give a look to "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    10 comments

    Tech Section should change it's name to The Daily Apple.

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  • 18
    Oct
    2010
    6:44pm, EDT

    iPhone goes to the edge of space

    Watch on YouTube
    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Tech-savvy amateurs have been capturing video from the edge of space for more than a year, using cameras lofted into the stratosphere by weather balloons. But now it's gotten to the point that a Brooklyn cinematographer and his 7-year-old son can pull off the stunt.

    After eight months' worth of experimentation and low-altitude test runs, Luke Geissbuhler and his son Max sent up an instrument package with an HD video camera and an iPhone from Newburgh, N.Y., to the 100,000-foot level (19 miles high, or 30.5 kilometers). From that height, you can see the curving Earth and the atmosphere's glow beneath the black sky of space.

    What goes up must come down, however: At the end of a 70-minute ascent, the balloon burst - and the parachute-equipped, foam-cushioned craft hurtled back to Earth. That's where the iPhone came in. Thanks to its GPS capability, the Geissbuhlers could track their "Space Balloon" experiment and find it in the dead of night, 30 miles (50 kilometers) from the launch point. The rest is near-space history, as you can see from the video above and from the Geissbuhlers' website. Next up: a how-to book written for kids and parents.


    More near-space adventures:

    • Chair floats to final frontier
    • Biggest airship gets inflated
    • $45 cameras capture stunning images
    • Military testing near-space balloons

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," Alan's book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    14 comments

    This is what a father and son should be doing! Great job!

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Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

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The Case for Pluto
Alan Boyle's first book tells the story of Pluto's ups and downs as well as the discoveries of other dwarf planets in our own solar system and even more alien worlds beyond. Buy "The Case for Pluto" ...

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