Jeff Bezos may have earmarked $1 billion of Amazon stock a year to fund his Blue Origin rocket company, but he says he's spending more of his fortune on addressing climate change.
During an interview at the Ignatius Forum in Washington, D.C.
"They're missing the duality that we need to do both and that the two things are deeply connected," Bezos told Harvard Business Review editor-in-chief Adi Ignatius. "I'm actually spending even more money on the Bezos Earth Fund than I'm spending on space."
Could wormholes be used for future space travel? A new study explains - The Jerusalem Post
Dune 2 Will Explain Space Travel In The Franchise | Screen Rant
Director Denis Villeneuve says that Dune 2 will more fully explore the inner workings of space travel in the franchise.
The film features a number of stunning sequences but ends on something of a cliffhanger. Thankfully for fans, Dune 2 was announced by Legendary on Twitter not long after the release of the first film, meaning the story of Paul Atreides is far from over.
Axiom Space reveals robust microgravity research portfolio for first-ever private mission to
Axiom Space, a leader in human spaceflight and human-rated space infrastructure, announced today the research underpinning its historic Ax-1 mission targeted for launch to the International Space Station in February 2022.
"Humanity has only scratched the surface of low-Earth orbit's potential for breakthrough innovation and Axiom was founded to push that envelope – first with private astronaut missions to ISS, followed by the launch and operation of the world's first commercial space station, and eventually the
Soon, that list will grow much longer, says Musk on space travel, Trending News | wionews.com
Musk's latest tweet on space travel comes as a SpaceX capsule landed at the International Space Station(ISS).
SpaceX chief Elon Musk while mentioning people who have walked on the Moon in a tweet said "soon, that list will grow much longer as humanity reaches new heights."
Israel's next astronaut will lead scientific research on space trip - The Jerusalem Post
Q+A What is space debris and how dangerous is it? | Reuters
The International Space Station (ISS) photographed by Expedition 56 crew members from a Soyuz spacecraft after undocking, October 4, 2018.NASA/Roscosmos/Handout via REUTERS
Space debris, or space junk, consists of discarded launch vehicles or parts of a spacecraft that float around in space hundreds of miles above the Earth, risking collision with a satellites or a space station.
Orbital Launch in January?
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has laid out a scenario for space travel that calls for his company’s Starship launch system to take on its first orbital test flight as soon as January.
Starship could go through “a dozen launches next year, maybe more,” and be ready to send valuable payloads to the moon, Mars and even the solar system’s outer planets by 2023, Musk said during a Nov.
DevOps transformation: Taking edge computing and continuous updates to space – TechCrunch
The past two years have been challenging on many fronts for people and businesses alike. As a global community, we have been unable to travel long distances due to various restrictions, but that doesn't mean we stop reaching for the stars.
During this same time frame, monumental advancements and achievements in space exploration were made — from the successful launch of the Inspiration 4 SpaceX , which transported four civilian astronauts to space, to NASA's Lucy mission , launched to study Jupiter’s trojan asteroids
EarthSky | Virtual reality can combat isolation on Earth and in space
It takes seven months to get to Mars in an efficiently engineered spaceship, covering the distance of almost 300 million miles (480 million km). On this journey, a crew would have to survive in a confined space with no opportunity to experience nature or interact with new people.
The challenges long-duration space travellers experience are not foreign to regular folk, although to a lesser degree. Many Canadians experience isolation and loneliness, at least occasionally .
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