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Headlines:
* *SpaceX Falcon Heavy Launches 24 Satellites
*: SpaceX's reusable rocket, the Falcon Heavy, successfully launched 24 small satellites into orbit from Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (Source: CNN) * *India's Chandrayaan-3 Mission to Mars Delayed
*: India's space agency, ISRO, has postponed its Chandrayaan-3 mission to Mars citing technical issues. The mission was initially scheduled to launch in July 2023. (Source: The Hindu) * *NASA's Parker Solar Probe Gets Upgrade
*: NASA has upgraded its Parker Solar Probe mission to gather more data about the sun's corona and the solar wind. The probe is now equipped with a new instrument to study the sun's magnetic field. (Source: Space. com) * *Blue Origin's New Shepard Success
*: Blue Origin's New Shepard spacecraft successfully completed a crewed test flight... carrying seven people to space and back. The mission marks a major milestone for the company's commercial space tourism plans. (Source: CNBC) * *European Space Agency Launches Double Asteroid Redirection Test
*: The European Space Agency has launched the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission to demonstrate a method for deflecting an asteroid that could potentially threaten Earth. (Source: SpaceNews) * *China's Space Station Receives First Spacewalkers
*: China's Tiangong space station has received its first spacewalkers... with astronauts Pei Zhaoyu and Liu Jianhua performing a 6-hour spacewalk to conduct maintenance tasks. (Source: Xinhua News Agency) * *Russia's Soyuz Rocket Launches Test Satellite
*: Russia's Soyuz rocket has successfully launched a test satellite to demonstrate its ability to launch payloads to various orbits. The mission is a crucial step in replacing Russia's aging space launch infrastructure. (Source: TASS)
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For the eighth time, Blue Origin will launch a crew on a suborbital (up and down) spaceflight aboard its New Shepard spacecraft from its West Texas launch base. This mission, titled NS-26, will launch no earlier than 7 a.m. EDT on Thursday from Blue Origin's Launch Site One.
Nashville resident Jahangir, who was born in Tehran, Iran, will be joined by five others on the flight. For Jahangir this is an opportunity of a lifetime . The Tennessee cardiologist has long dreamed of space, and was twice a NASA astronaut finalist. He's associate professor of Medicine and Radiology and director of Cardio-Oncology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
Jahangir did not come by this space opportunity in a traditional way. He won the seat in a contest from MoonDAO, a digital currency organization − becoming their second ambassador astronaut.
In a July post on X (formerly Twitter) MoonDAO wrote: "Eiman's journey from Tehran to Nashville, to becoming a cardiologist, and then winning the Ticket to Space contest a few months ago is nothing short of inspiring."
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Jahangir always wanted to be an astronaut, yet knew the chances were low. Instead, he focused on becoming a cardiologist.
He told FLORIDA TODAY that while finishing medical school, a trip to Kennedy Space Center on the Space Coast stirred something inside him. "What happened to that dream?" said Jahangir. Digging into NASA's astronaut qualifications, he realized his medical background qualified him to apply. He did, and then he got the call.
"I applied on just being like, 'Okay, well, I'm gonna give it a try'. I'll never count myself out. And I didn't think I'd ever get a call back," Jahangir said. "They asked me to come down for an interview. I was on cloud nine."
That was 2009, and it put Jahangir in the same NASA astronaut candidate group as Sian Proctor, who flew to space on SpaceX's Inspiration4, all civilian crew, in 2021 .