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6 votes
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China have a new sixty-centimeter dome Terahertz telescope in Antarctica, a two week trek from their station
21 votes -
Second Isar Aerospace Spectrum flight set for 21 to 23 January
9 votes -
'Knitted' satellite launching to monitor Earth's surface with radar
10 votes -
NASA’s science budget won’t be a train wreck after all
24 votes -
Request for help: Backing up NASA public databases
TL;DR: NASA's public Planetary Data System is at risk of being shut down. Anyone have any ideas for backing it up? Hi everyone, Bit of a long-shot here, but I wanted to try on high-quality tildes...
TL;DR: NASA's public Planetary Data System is at risk of being shut down. Anyone have any ideas for backing it up?
Hi everyone,
Bit of a long-shot here, but I wanted to try on high-quality tildes before jumping back into the cesspool of reddit. I'm posting it in ~science rather than ~space as I figure interest in backing up public data is broader than just the space community.
I work regularly with NASA's Planetary Data System, or PDS. It's a massive (~3.5petabytes!!) archive of off-world scientific data (largely but not all imaging data). PDS is integral for scientific research - public and private - around the world, and is maintained, for free, by NASA (with support of a number of Academic institutions).
The current state of affairs for NASA is grim:
- NASA Lays Off ISS Workers at Marshall Space Flight Center
- More layoffs at JPL
- NASA is sinking its flagship science center during the government shutdown — and may be breaking the law in the process, critics say
And as a result, I (and many of my industry friends) have become increasingly concerned that PDS will be taken down as NASA is increasingly torn down for spare parts and irreparably damaged. This administration seems bent on destroying all forms of recording-keeping and public science, so who knows how long PDS will be kept up. Once it's down, it'll be a nightmare to try and collect it all again from various sources. I suspect we'll permanently lose decades worth of data - PDS includes information going all the way back to the Apollo missions!
As such, we've been pushing to back-up as much of PDS as we can, but have absolutely no hope of downloading it all within the next year or two, nevermind in a few months if the current cuts impact us soon.
If you or someone you know would be interested in helping figure out how we can back-up PDS before it's too late, please let me know here or in a DM. I've already tried reaching out to the Internet Archive, but did not hear anything back from them.
Edit: to clarify, the larger problem is download speeds - we've topped out at 20mb/s with 8 connections.
61 votes -
Denmark's first mission to the moon – European Space Agency has selected to proceed with a Danish-led satellite mission as one of a number of small, relatively inexpensive missions
9 votes -
Research library at NASA’s Goddard Space and Flight Center to close Friday (gifted link)
16 votes -
Nvidia-backed Starcloud trains first AI model in space
26 votes -
New way you can discover asteroids
13 votes -
NASA will soon find out if the Perseverance rover can really persevere on Mars
13 votes -
A faster-than-light spaceship would actually look a lot like Star Trek's Enterprise
25 votes -
The Eschatian Hypothesis
8 votes -
How to watch one of the year’s best meteor showers, the Geminids
17 votes -
Why humanity needs a Lunar seed vault
27 votes -
European Space Agency has signed a letter of intent with Norway to advance the prospect of a new ESA Arctic Space Centre to be hosted in Tromsø
10 votes -
Baikonur's crewed launch facilities suffer damage, expected to impact ISS operations
20 votes -
Voyager 1 is about to reach one light-day from Earth
41 votes -
Boeing's Starliner to return to ISS in cargo-only capacity for now
13 votes -
NASA re-opens the human lander contract for Artemis 3
17 votes -
Moss survives nine months outside the ISS
24 votes -
Blue Origin reveals a super-heavy variant of its New Glenn rocket that is taller than a Saturn V
20 votes -
Giant mirrors in space to reflect sunlight at night? No thank you, astronomers say.
27 votes -
Blue Origin sticks first New Glenn rocket landing and launches NASA spacecraft
23 votes -
Study suggests that the Universe's expansion 'is now slowing, not speeding up'
51 votes -
Astronauts stranded in space after their return capsule is struck by mystery object in orbit
30 votes -
Shouting at stars: A history of interstellar messages
12 votes -
NYT photo essay: How NASA’s lunar photography brought the heavens down to Earth
8 votes -
Influence of the planets may subdue solar activity
11 votes -
Galactic empires may live at the center of our galaxy, hence why we don't hear from them
22 votes -
Doom in space
15 votes -
Starship was doomed from the beginning
38 votes -
Reusable rockets are here, so why is NASA paying more to launch stuff to space?
20 votes -
Asteroid discovered only two days ago will fly by Earth closer than the moon today
43 votes -
Starship Flight 11 successful
24 votes -
An interstellar comet flew past Mars, and spacecraft took pictures
15 votes -
Prospect of life on Saturn’s moons rises after discovery of organic substances
34 votes -
European Space Agency will pay an Italian company nearly $50 million to design a mini-Starship
12 votes -
Face to face with the scale of the cosmos
25 votes -
Did NASA just find alien life on Mars? Here's what we know.
21 votes -
After ten years of black hole science, Stephen Hawking is proven right
23 votes -
James Webb Telescope detects possible atmosphere around Earth-like exoplanet TRAPPIST-1e, forty light years away from Earth
21 votes -
Could a space traveler accelerate at 1g forever?
I was reading this Reddit post and was curious about whether the passengers of this theoretical spaceship could experience 1g of acceleration forever assuming the ship has an infinite fuel source....
I was reading this Reddit post and was curious about whether the passengers of this theoretical spaceship could experience 1g of acceleration forever assuming the ship has an infinite fuel source.
They shouldn’t be able to pass the speed of light relative to an outside observer, but is there some phenomenon where the passengers can feel like they are accelerating forever?
28 votes -
The day when three NASA astronauts staged a strike in space
20 votes -
Deep in the Swedish forest lies one of Europe's hopes for a spaceport that can ultimately compete with the United States, China and Russia
12 votes -
SpaceX's Starship completes successful test flight after a year of mishaps
25 votes -
Two geologists who found a meteorite that had fallen onto a plot of land outside Enköping are entitled to the stone, the Swedish Supreme Court rules
15 votes -
A Gigantic Jet caught on camera: a spritacular moment for NASA astronaut Nicole Ayers!
33 votes -
Early universe’s ‘little red dots’ may be black hole stars
17 votes -
NASA-ISRO satellite lifts off to track Earth’s changing surfaces
9 votes