tv New Space Deutsche Welle June 23, 2023 11:15am-12:01pm CEST
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cdw is benjamin alvarez. good. okay, thank you. it's and with that, now you're up to date on data for you. news coming up is a documentary film on the billionaires setting their sites on outer space to stay with us if you can for that. i'm sure kelly and for less, thank you for watching. the ukraine was like a stepping points to, you know, find what you into that warranty wants to finish your studies. now you have a safe get from the train. you can just go back or somewhere else. currently, more people than ever on the move in such a base in life. yeah. give me something that is come in very, very sense. and yeah,
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can we learn more about or know when a story info, migraines? in generally 2021. amazon found a just basis is aerospace company blue origin launched its 1st trip for space. taurus on board was the controversial entrepreneur himself. this night now stood about 10 minutes. the real kit show top over a 100 kilometer is high enough to pass and just to experience the whiteness next 9 days or the participate in which it brenson handles. so don't just into space with his space like company version galactic. the world's 1st commercial space writes shuttling tourists to the edge of us set masvie at the
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beginning of a new era in space. the imagine for a moment it's the 2028, a european new no land has just reached the moon's south pole where it's deployed. separately, rufus, the, the job is to much see areas and collect tend to analyze some poles my gloves. it's important to this explore tree mission. within just a few months astronauts from nasa, the european space agency and private companies will touch down here.
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technology hasn't come this far yet, but experts believe scenarios like this one could soon be reality. one thing, 2nd, a new space race has begun. my mom's name is i mean a lot, but since i'm from the german aerospace center in the institute of robotics and make a tron excellency. and we're here at the arches demonstration mission sets on this one. in june 2022. i mean, visa and mold and 50 international scientists conducted research on sicily use. mount etna inside, and one of them here view them were demonstrating how we could use robots to support a space. settlement into boss say a permanent, based on the moon, and how we conduct scientific exploratory tasks. all same thing. this is the opposite based group. this is our arches base case with for 22 foot containers gene on i'm trying to control, we have 3 control, right?
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and a living container, you know, for him, these are communications contains on quality. got so that's what the colleagues are still adjusting some settings either by pop our meat, that's a pin. research is from the gym and aerospace center spent 5 years preparing for this mission. for that one down there, you can see the exploration campus where we're carrying out the mission. that's where the land are and we have to walk a 250 meters. every data with a 70 meter change and altitude a game itself. testing is word, an altitude of 2600 meters. additional colleagues are always panting on their way down the gate. volcanic rock is fresh us, untouched by a race of forces. it's the us landscapes that most closely mimics the surface of a far away planet. to. it's not back, i can say she wants to know, as well suited for mars and lunar exploration mission. and because we're running a technical test of our systems of c,
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it's especially important to have this fine granular da signed coming up this abrasive material as eve. that way to our technical systems are truly getting exposed to the limitations us even have to withstand the refusal don't give them all because it's missing deezen of us doing this sonata speeds you're going to see . in this scenario, the lender has touched down on the planet surface as you can understand. so that's why we only really have an observation controls over here once control had sent home. the team arrived 2 weeks ago to test out the re visibility to navigate extremely dusty terrain. the that goes to map and says a at $250000.00 square me to area on aetna surface the
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motive for humans to survive on other planets. one day scientific missions like these need to succeed within 6 decades ago, government space agencies started sending people into space. the fund july, the 16th 1969 apollo 11 launched from nasa's kennedy space center spec titus building ruptured. who would be the 1st to non, to pass, and on the move full days late to some 650000000 people around the world with glue to the televisions. as the news came in, the united states had won the race the
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but just a few years nice. so in 1972 nessa discontinued its crude missions to the moon for reasons of cost. to date only 12 people have set for film and then the major such as 2020 was another day that went down in history. american astronaut spell bank and douglas, honey newest. from cape canaveral, heading for the international space station. the i ss this mission was special for the 1st time in the history of space travel, the capsule transporting the 2 men had not being developed and built by a government space agency. wowza. it came from a private company and marked the spouse of a new era for government agencies like nasa in the united states. the
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the my name is phil mcallister and i am the director of commercial space at nasa headquarters. right now what we're seeing is in space there's just a tremendous amount of opportunity, but nobody's exactly sure. what's going to be the real money maker. obviously we're are seeing transportation. we see people make money at that. but them, when they get into space, what can they do? what are things that are really going to make money? and i don't think anybody knows for certain what that's going to be is just their 1st step to doing more in boulder things. so i think the companies that are offering this capability to de version galactic blue origin space x they, this is just the 1st step to a larger grand or vision of what they want to accomplish. the commercial space companies say making mas, habitable for humans. this one is the ad goals and outspoken champion of this
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concept is space 6. so $911.00 mosque the controversial b and as played and outsized role in triggering the current space. the really to fundamental past history is going to bite the capable in 2 directions. 111 task is we stay on earth forever, and then there will be some eventual extinction event. i'd rather have an immediate doomsday prophecy, but this is eventually history suggest it will be some centers event. the alternative is to become a space, spring civilization, and a multi plan. it's b c's, which i hope you would agree that is the right way to go. according to most saving human and see begins with traveling to models. so space x wants to send crude flights to the red planet before the end of this decade, and even stop building humans settlements that many had from
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a purely as physical perspective. i think he's right. it's only a matter of time before the next major catastrophe will strongly go. yeah, i think that's an important question remains. how will all these ideas work in practice? now my name is christina. hi nika. i'm a reset trip to the center of applied space technology and micro gravity. my research focus invitation to the question of how humans can survive on the moon, most and other celeste deal body wouldn't even kind of stand behind the car has real world experience trying to answer this question. she spent $366.00 days on laws, not the real one, of course, but just close on this with a similar to right, the volcano mount and the on the island of hawaii, the she and 5 of the scientists from different countries lived together as positive, nothing as high seas experiment. communication with the outside world was any
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possible via email. and so it'd be true on the real mosque that the time delay venturing outside was any committed with the space saved. but even a simulation like this one only scratches the surface of the challenges, living on mas would present and do some advertising. this habitat was primarily aimed at psychological studies. it was quite fancy, kind of like what you would imagine, a mazda, a beautiful white dome and, and most like landscape. i mean, but when it comes to the technicalities, it's habitat, wilson is very realistic. and if we actually wanted to fly to model the moon, we need to have a chance that was fully operational, something that would really work for new nevada. that's why christiana hanukkah is collaborating with architects, engineers, and psychologists to build a happy tent for space. the project is cold moon and more space analog. oh man, the official this is what it could look like one day
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the the member of utah just the state is going or 61 to in the month. but happy task is amazing. if that's the 6 modules, they're all upright simon days arranged in 2 rooms, and it's the opposite the station best at the board tree module a more more then to this night we have a workshop. so because the things are shown to branch on done, and here we have a green. how does this connects us then the into and behind that in the 2nd group we have the module for living. ok? or again we have upright filling. does the so it connected to one another and then we have a module for sleeping and then a kitchen module because we have to eat someone who was a guessing then you have and then we have a measured module. and then obviously you and then i have an oaks on each side stores and there are 2 by the simple reason that one frank, the crew can still get out. and the 1st one does conflict,
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and this entire habitat is under a big the made from lucy dawson. and rob was this prophetic to use the numeral to protect the habitat from radiation for that term shuttle the, the design that meant to stand in the early stages. fundamental questions remain on, on such how with the knife support system. look, how would the into face and equipment work so that everyone could operate them, which is the ideal ceiling height. christiana hind to come into team has built a life size wooden model, and if the borrower tree much you to try and work out questions like these numbers, i'm have you talked concept mid themes, mrs. number is a happy time constant designed to make it possible to fly to the moon. and actually this, the member should also be a habitat when people feel comfortable inside with you and using tests i just with
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the only ones investigating the question of how to construct a habitat, is it technically functional and then actually building and testing it or phone test with it could take 20 years before a station like mine, but can be built in space. but these findings from raymond gemini, could be put to immediate use here on this semester. the fall of dom us to run, leaving us and all that we need to survive on. most of the same things we can use here on us. i need a system that cleans the air and recycle that. so i need to system the kings, the waterfront recycle center. this is if we were to learn a thing or 2 from modules and we could live sustainably here on us to. i just need the us journey to most also poses major challenges for such as then the red tenant, something to say i leaves humans expose to deadly cosmic radiation. and the
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problems does get more difficult from that. my name is stan old walt. i'm an astronomer. i work here at nasa goddard space flight center. if we want to go to mars, we have to learn how to work in an environment that is very unfriendly, where we literally have to bring our own atmosphere, our, our, our own resources. and the best way that we, we could actually understand how to work in an environment is to work in a nearby environment. that's not that there's something that happens to be the lunar surface, the so the world's major space agencies tend to look to them in these days. many wish to repeat the success of the apollo landing. the, the reason is simple. proximity. the distance from us to the moon is on average 384000 kilometer has that's about so i see time
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see us diameter the depending on its position. in old bitch malls is between 56 and 400000000 kilometers away. in the best case scenario, the journey to the red ton, it would take 6 months for that reason alone, the moon comes cheap from a purely economical standpoint. the trip takes just 3 days and requires a fraction of the fuel shuttle service between us and the moon might even be feasible. thanks to advances in aerospace technology. the d. o g is mission, caraway doubts on mountain there. in 2022 is one of many that help was such as best to understand the news. here the team is testing move the prototype, allow you to design to explore, unfamiliar and difficult to access,
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to raise the roof, and navigate so to mislead. identifying objects of interest and collecting samples . this task is especially delicate, the allow you to should deploy a laser module to analyze the surface samples that has collected so far, the task has never been carried down successfully. then if it doesn't work and the um, crashes into the cameras and people have to start all of us. well, so you know, for the phone on the good morning this
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is, i'm going to dis on this. i don't or another say, oh yes, that's how it goes in scientific research. some days it works some days, it doesn't. lemme nothing and i get ones, the ones we must end down here all day waiting for something to work on. and then finally, it's just about to work, and then there's some error again. and then it starts all over again and me, well, that can be the motivating team, which when you're always standing here waiting. and now something works and the next. and then the next era pops up again, but yeah, step by step by step by step tests, missions like these costs millions and have no direct financial benefits. a risk most profit driven companies would never take quantities of taking a little game on. it is an eviction without these technologies without this development and that you see here, commercial ventures wouldn't exist at all of these investments. they're based on these advancements and knowledge. and it often happens that people train here that
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then end up working at commercial institute. so in implement feler and split the ranking space x may be sending the rockets, but the technology required for space exploration is developed at the expense of the state 2021 month to record year of government spending on space programs. and that's the investment is um, the growing, the china is pouring money into space exploration and did some of the g as a new big player among the traditional space hours. the chinese ways i was investigating the launch the unexplored fall side of the meeting . i did so ready sent samples back to us, another res i reached mazda and has now transmitted sophie's and sound files. china is also building its own space station view, and with zillow to us. we do not all the reasons for the station. a simple we do
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not all of it will sit down 1st or do manners. technology is already associated with the 2nd load. and so it's a want to be a strong space nationwide. so you want me all to do this. so we need to expand our potential to send people into space. tons, well you also, i'm calling about getting some point of that. we need to venture deeper into space so that we can use space peacefully. what are your folks in new york? counts of the chinese space station number ready in width, and the 1st take you know, what's a time used to the chinese students? they've already visited the in march 2021. china assigned a memorandum of understanding with rushes space agency. russ caused some us to build a joints luminous station. the label race to the moon is in full swing once again. yeah, there might be a little bit of a race, right. who is going to establish the values in the framework of how we're going to operate in space. i think we would like those values to reflect our current values
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here in the united states. and to be able to do that. you need to be able to be out there. there are some states that share knowledge openly. there are other states that are very, very secretive about what they're doing, why they're doing it and their results. so i think there's always going to be a tension between these 2 does not last as all the documents and the uh, so i'm very concerned about this. i don't, i think we use european so absolutely must be prepared to act or elsewhere. missed the boat model and so by or why a human so fascinated by space in the 1st place. to date some 600 men and women have actually traveled to space. we aust, one of them. my name is kayla baron. i'm a active duty naval officer, a summary, more for officer and a nasa astronaut. kayla baron was the 600 and the 1st person in space. she spent $176.00 days on the international space station. it's incredible. it's actually
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pretty hard to describe. there's just so many exciting moments, whether that's launch pre entries, space slash, robotic operations, science campaigns. it's a humbling experience and a huge privilege to be a part of the team. the when i 1st floor to the end of the space station, i think i was just overwhelmed by the visual experience because we use every surface. but the space station is, is just packed with stuff computers, cables. it took a while for my brain to understand, you know, what was useful information that i needed to pay attention to. and what was sort of the background visual clutter. the sense of how big the structure is. these are the models that we actually are living
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in working inside. so when you see video from us inside, we're inside these pressure as models. but then you can also see the and pressure of a section of a space station. this huge trust that primarily supports the solar rays that are radiators. so until we get our get rid of piece. um but it's big and i think you're especially getting an appreciation for that when you go outside to work on it. and it's kind of byron did distance twice. in fact, each time she worked for about 7 hours, just 3 in dimensions of space said separated half from the rest of the universe. when you look out the window, these views are incredible. but you know, you're looking at a window and there's something about being in a space suit. that's really cool because when you look out your advisor, there's nothing in your peripheral vision. and so you really are like, i'm out in the vacuum of space in this tiny space suit on this tiny thing on this
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giant space station, just zooming around the planet. when you look up and taking those incredible views, it just takes your breath away. many asked, who knows, who has seen us from this extraordinary perspective, described the experience as transformative, the seeing the planet from that perspective, changes every body the 1st time i looked at the earth, seeing it as this inner connected organisms with all these different egos, systems, all these different species living all over the planet. i think it really made me as an individual human being. i feel like i was a steward of the planet. you just feel really amazed to that or if even exists and
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that we get to exist on it. the i think going to space really sparks this child like wonder, you discover the world all over again, you know, living in this unique environment floating around, getting to play with water in space. i think we all felt like kids, a lot of the time you get to space, you have to learn how to move around again, how to go to the bathroom, how to eat the how to get water. like all these things that we take for granted in our day to day adult lives down here, you have to re learn up there. so yeah, definitely made me feel like a kid and give them a lot of ways the, the international space station has been moved between some 400 kilometers above the for more than 20 years. it's retirement is planned to the end of 2030. the. the
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exact dates has not yet been determined. the experience of living in space is something private. aerospace companies now want to offer too many more people. for a price a private company in houston, texas is one of them. the mat under i am the chief technology officer for act, same space. extra space is primary business models to build the 1st commercial space station, which is incredibly complicated. the concept is kind of the basic idea is to utilize the infrastructure. if the i ss gradually looking for new modules on. so it is more of its own station, but we're able to leverage certain resources on the i assess, for example, we'll get power from the i assess early so it makes it easier to build
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a space station when you're building it off of the ice. since it's like a going camping, but you got running water and electricity is, this is our entire station. the 1st 2 modules plus the 3rd module, which is dedicated to research manufacturing. and then the power thermal module, the earth observatory, these are the largest space windows ever attempted. there are about 2 meters by one meter. that's where all the is ramping shall be taken, as from the earth reserved are necessary. supposing this project with $140000000.00 us dollars, what that building is essentially a hind, the exclusive space hotel. here's a mock up of our crew quarters. so this is where they are sure i will sleep, get some private time. they have a window that looks like yours should be pretty amazing. and then of course they have a infotainment center where they can monitor the station important to be able to
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kind of get away from the rest of the crew every once in a while. i always say the inside of the international space station looks like a crazy person's garage. there's just stuff everywhere. and some of that is because it's evolved over many years and wasn't always planned to be how it is now. we're a little beyond that where we're leveraging a lot of experience from the i assess so we will be able to build our commercial space station. the $41100.00, the cost of what it took to build the i assess, we're not trying to solve science problems. we're not trying to solve technology problems. it's really an engineering problem. and so when you're solving engineering problems, it's so a lot less costly to do that if you're trying to break through on some fundamental physics axiom space. so ready completed one mission. in april 2020 to 3, investors was sent into space along with foam and nasa astronaut michael lopez alegria . the estimated price for a single tickets. $55000000.00 us dollars the
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well they have the private test or no, it's kind of we down to a set of experiments that might not have otherwise been possible. the most, everything ran seamlessly is complement of the mission business about last time. there were moments that surprised me and i'm sure thousands of people. we said our feedback was for future private mission loads and some things will need to be modified. i'll put it that way it bends or that they could only carry out their experiments without help in mit ones, which meant we sacrifice start working time to help with their experiment. you know the experiment as they have to stand. there was a lot of learning and figuring things out on both sides at all and a long process for seeing a lot more countries interested in flying country astronauts. so i think our station we filled with a mix of country astronauts, there might be astronaut is from particular companies. and then we help to that we're the place where nasa sends it's asked or not to do work to if you look
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historically, since the beginning of the space age, probably about 500 people have phones of space about 95 percent of them have been government employees, i think going forward, it's going to be an order of magnitude more like $5000.00. and the vast majority of them are going to be private citizens as opposed to government employees. and this is the start or of that right now. in 20 years, we're going to look back historically at this time that you and i are living in right now and said, yeah, that was the turning point. that's when things really started to change. if you're a hammer, you tend to see everything as a nail. you know, if you're working in the commercial sector, you, you see everything as a process line. and i think that if that sensibility of space exploration as a business endeavor becomes the dominant, same rather than scientific exploration. then i think we have problems, missions to mars and private space stations receive
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a lot of attention. but the space worlds main activity is not quite so glamorous. placing satellites in space, the biggest undertakings of stone link and one web. those are designed to encircle us and deliver a low cost satellite internet. i know that project is your ups and navigation satellite system got a layer of the satellites, the permanent d o between the us and delivering navigation data. there are about $5700.00 at to south tonight, circling the us right now. twice that number, i'm retired and just become space debris. when it comes to basic bucket propulsion, mitchell has changed since the mid 20th century. there are 2 technologies, solid propellant engines and liquid propellant engines in solid propellant systems. the propellant is
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a solid mass in the engine and liquid propellant systems. the propellant is a liquid outside. the engine once ignited the reaction of a solid rock. it cannot be stopped. similar to fireworks on new year's eve in the liquid propellant engine chemical components, a carried in separate tanks and delivered to the actual and jen, this analysis trust regulation, meaning that the drives can be controlled. steering flights. the best performing propellant is made by combining liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen the legendary space shuttle combined solid and liquid for parents. the 2 white sunday drawer. okay. list is on the rim pilot, most of the stuffing thrust. once apple and they would just to send and continued flight was taken over by liquid propulsion,
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the couches liquid rocket some more expensive, more complex and more prone to failure than solid propellant rockets and so many decades they were only suited for one time. yes. it's like taking an airplane, a 737, and flying it from new york to california one time and then dropping it in the ocean. it makes no economic sense. nobody would be able to afford a plane ticket if you did that every single time. but that's what we're doing in the space industry. we knew it wasn't the best way and we knew eventually were usability was going to make a big impact. private enterprises needed to make liquid propellant rockets, re usable the in 20151 company succeeded. space 6, the
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space x was able to do was get reuse the ability to the point where they could quickly and easily and cost effectively turnaround their hardware and fly it again . and that brought the costs down. dramatic financial reasons, basics and blue origin accounting and reuse the been let's see them looking real kits returned to us afternoons. then stand by so take off on another day, the 2 cheese they say needs to be a pioneer to both rockets. we use the board propulsion technology and the guarantee of a safe landing the, the cost of transporting a kilogram of cargo into low us little bit has been drastically reduced by these innovations. that has been
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a major accomplishment that fits has shown that the private sector is mature enough to take on some of the challenges of going into space working in space and actually turning a profit from it. i think the profit motive is a big incentive for progressing faster, deeper into space. and i'm, i'm glad that that you'll finally take an interest of this spends eps. that item i myself have flown with a private provider in which space x i know recycled rocket and it was a good feeling for me knowing that the rocket flies up. you said like a lands again and we'll be re you is do that instead of becoming space debris. i'm sean. afterwards, my colleagues, samantha christopher, ready, you know, came up to the space station with the exact same rock is that i had gone up into the, i think that's terrific, a feeling that this is the right that instead of the, the most extensive research is still primarily conducted by government agencies like nasa, the european space agency or the gym,
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and aerospace center. like here in mountain, with the day i research drive, the most idea shown. if you look at idea, you can see here that we have a total of 4 cameras each building to stereo has. and with that, it can be saved great depth. it flies with only camera systems and i am you sense is i am you, i am you, is a seller amazes on gyroscopes is it's kind of like the, you know, you and humans. so we thought they are, we can not only conduct the planetary exploration on the surface, but we can also fly into a lot of cases and explore other cases as well. and who am i follow the task successfully in? marcus miller and his team has been working on this technology for mold in a decade. 2 months is the address in mobiles, the environments in real time offering 3 d visibility. so this is essentially the brain of idea that it contains all the computational
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components and the cameras. so it's kind of the eyes of idea. and on the other side here we have the propulsion system. the drive system of idea in front of the roads has a still aren't able to if we were on the new now and we wouldn't have any edit, that means we would need a different propulsion system and we'd use yet. and that's how we fund a system, like our data works, without gps, instead utilizing its own measurements sensors. the goal is to drones, to one day navigate of the planet. so turn in the sea and not the surfaces here on mount aetna. the drone is deployed to study the terrain but initially what well is now acting up. the theme is trying to get the drone to fly again. but so far without any luck to somebody this cop has to be, i'm looking for. the problem is that we flew once and it happens every now and then
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that we see slight anomalies. and that they copy that goes slightly into the pitch . so it makes almost a $45.00 to $50.00 degree pitch tonne and then crashes pitched be a month. and then after the close is simple, the wind is just too strong concerning the wind speed here, as well as a 10 meters per 2nd, on average wind and the gusset. so we'll epa study made is to say inside the about the time the system just isn't designed for that, the phone cannot function. always colleagues producing bins for now the research is have no choice but to take the measurements from the grounds. it's so frustrating compromise. so we can move the scale a long way to go and an extraordinary amount of effort needed before the technology can be deployed in space. consistency of items moving, we're here to explore and advanced technologies to buy some supplies. our vision is that we can achieve more by using heterogeneous robots over time. different types
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of robots mean, then we can with just one system sustain besides few come, we believe that combining robots with different skills. we can solve the tests better. if you know, how do you get like when different people work together, combines engineers, of scientists and technicians. i'm, you know, just technology still being tested for future space missions but some are already thinking beyond that. my numbers, my name is mathias linked to. i'm the director of the luxembourg space agency. let's say it just for me and i've been involved in the development of the space that the human luxembourg for many years. the small country was $11.00 of the world's largest producers of steel. today, election book is a driving play behind a new idea space mining. to get the principal results of the existing stage. everything you find on us, you can also find in space. that means if humans expand out into the solar system,
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allows to the moon light it to mazda and maybe at some point even further, it just makes sense that you use the local resources. what's one possible targets? meteorites containing platinum and gold. the name contains ram and the rules. it also has frozen more to that could be used to produce fuel and breathable. and then there are the so called the m type asteroids. these contain precious room materials that could in turn be used in future space projects. so now the results is in space seem infinite. most of the science fiction stories i read in high school and middle school. we're all about, you know, families that, that bought their own rocket and went up to the asteroid belt and mind. and you know, did stuff like that? i think it's kind of cool. but the, the problem is that, that and it's not like those resources are going to come back to the yours thing. it all sounds like science fiction. at 1st, it's really more of a long term endeavor and will happen on
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a relatively small scale. let's say in the next 10 years, then bit by bit, it will continue. in the coming decades, new markets will emerge in dunlab. i'm not interested in the search for space resources could become a booming business. in 2017 luxembourg adopted a legal framework to mine room materials and space becoming only the 2nd country off to the united states. to do, says, the hope is this will enable exclusive access to this new potential market to an item that kind of force in one. so no one owns out of space, but it gets murky when it comes to the results is out that if you fly to the moon and take a rock and process it, or you drill from water and use it, things start to get complicated. this means we absolutely need an international framework that can effectively sit in these technical advancements and can repeatedly be modified as needed. the light comes on. now, it's quite clear that a single luxemburg law cannot be the solution. and i'm assuming this looks more
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because that's just the loose on the sign come the european space agency has also become involved in the near future. the agency hopes to study and extract to roy luna materials so that's like a joystick. so you click on it with a mouse night. a gold rush could be on the horizon and a new era of commercialism in space. will europe be positive? the race will as and devices, europe is on the one hand for leader and space have to live when it comes to satellites. first, authorization and navigation. we have very strong programs, explode on in the field of exploration. and astronaut x were losing the shadow, wasn't there so not then honest. i think europe has to be braver. hope i'm was we shouldn't let this new space development, which we see in the united states pass us by and with us if we act in europe,
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i guess is the time of these 4 minutes to joseph the island living on conflict in 30 minutes on d. w to the point strong, clear positions. international perspective. china has not changed its position neither on ukraine nor on 5 on and yet china is trying to win friends can mutual trust be established again until the point b, all china global. i'm vision guns with the on t w the the these places in your force stepped into an old adventure. it's the treasure map for modern globetrotters.
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discover some of you record breaking site on google back to and now also in the book form the this is dw news, live from palate, all 5 people on both the missing types and submersible audit. the u. s. navy says the best of appears to have been destroyed in a catastrophic implosion near the wreck of the tide. also coming off the largest air force bill in the history of nato comes to an end.
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