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5 votes
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Chang’e 4 Lunar Orbit: A postmortem
5 votes -
NASA gives go-ahead for SpaceX commercial crew test flight
15 votes -
Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft successfully lands on asteroid Ryugu
16 votes -
After SpaceX launch, Israeli spacecraft begins journey to the moon: The privately built spacecraft will take a long trip to the moon, landing on its surface in April
9 votes -
Mars Weather - Latest Weather at Elysium Planitia
8 votes -
Meet Hippocamp! Neptune's smallest moon has a name (and a violent past)
11 votes -
The double life of black holes: Perfect black holes are versatile mathematical tools. Just don’t mistake them for the real thing
3 votes -
Astrophotography from Tokyo, one of the most light-polluted cities on Earth
11 votes -
NASA’s Mars rover Opportunity concludes a fifteen-year mission
13 votes -
The “Impossible” Tech Behind SpaceX’s New Engine
5 votes -
NASA about to pull plug on Mars rover, silent for eight months
10 votes -
Mars One company goes bankrupt
16 votes -
Is there life on Earth?
11 votes -
Milky Way is 'S-shaped', 3D map reveals, in a new way of looking at our celestial home
4 votes -
The 26,000-year astronomical monument hidden in plain sight
12 votes -
Stuff In Space
17 votes -
SpaceX to lay off over 10% of its workforce
15 votes -
Sean Carroll's Mindscape Podcast #28: Roger Penrose on spacetime, consciousness, and the universe
3 votes -
Nasa's New Horizons: 'Snowman' shape of distant Ultima Thule revealed
12 votes -
New Horizons successfully explores Ultima Thule
6 votes -
When this post is fifteen hours old the spacecraft New Horizons will do a flyby of the Kuiper belt object Ultima Thule
8 votes -
They paid $100,000 to ride on Xcor's space plane. Now the company is bankrupt and they want their money back
5 votes -
New Horizons : Where to Watch
5 votes -
Virgin Galactic achieves space on SpaceShipTwo test flight
10 votes -
NASA's Voyager 2 probe enters interstellar space
30 votes -
SpaceX Falcon 9 first stage booster spins out of control on descent back to Cape Canaveral LZ-1
12 votes -
How Feynman Diagrams almost saved space
6 votes -
International Space Station robot accuses crew of being mean
12 votes -
The great silence
6 votes -
Mars: NASA lands InSight robot to study planet's interior
25 votes -
The Tyranny of the Rocket Equation
9 votes -
Big new Indian rocket launches satellite, setting stage for Moon mission
6 votes -
We are NASA
18 votes -
NASA will retire its new mega-rocket if SpaceX or Blue Origin can safely launch its own powerful rockets
7 votes -
Sure, everyone wants to see Planet Earth in the rear-view mirror. But we can't achieve that until we take care of these things.
9 votes -
Moons around 'rogue planets' could sustain life — no solar system required
15 votes -
China is about to visit uncharted territory on the moon
8 votes -
Incredible 4K video of Earth from the ISS
7 votes -
Fermi Paradox great filter: Rare intelligence
9 votes -
Oumuamua thin films and lightsails
4 votes -
NASA retires Kepler Space Telescope, passes planet-hunting torch
10 votes -
New research shows a pattern of exoplanet sizes and spacing around other stars unlike what we see in our own system
10 votes -
By the light of the Moon: Turing recreates scene of iconic lunar landing
4 votes -
Five in a row - the planets align in the night sky
5 votes -
Astronauts escape malfunctioning Soyuz rocket
15 votes -
Interstellar visitor found to be unlike a comet or an asteroid
12 votes -
Going up? Waiting for the space elevator
5 votes -
Nasa’s Hubble telescope is out of action: It needs three functioning gyroscopes to work but currently only has two.
8 votes -
Shooting Stars as a Service - Japanese space entertainment company ALE will provide on-demand shooting stars for your event
I was watching my favorite weekly space show on YouTube, TMRO, and I learned about Astro Live Experiences (ALE.) They will soon launch two test satellites which will be able to provide a burst of...
I was watching my favorite weekly space show on YouTube, TMRO, and I learned about Astro Live Experiences (ALE.) They will soon launch two test satellites which will be able to provide a burst of 30-40 man made shooting stars at a prearranged time and place, for a fee.
Japanese company ALE is the first "space entertainment" company of which I am aware. The only event in the same ballpark was New Zealand based RocketLab's Humanity Star which caused a large amount of controversy. ALE's initial technology will allow a 200km radius of earth to see their multi-color shooting star show. According to the interview on TMRO, in the long term, they are planning to allow image rendering and even artificial aurora.
This type of business seems inevitable as we advance into space. I can see some benefits and some downsides to this technology. What do you all think of this?
Maybe this topic belongs in ~misc
14 votes