logo
Astronauts from India, Poland and Hungary head back to Earth after private space station mission

Astronauts from India, Poland and Hungary head back to Earth after private space station mission

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The International Space Station's first visitors from India, Poland and Hungary headed back to Earth on Monday, wrapping up a private mission and catching a ride home with SpaceX.
Their capsule undocked from the orbiting lab and aimed for a splashdown the next morning in the Pacific off the Southern California coast.
The short, privately financed mission marked the first time in more than 40 years that India, Poland and Hungary saw one of their own rocket into orbit. The three astronauts were accompanied by America's most experienced space flier, Peggy Whitson, who works for Axiom Space, which chartered the flight. They launched from NASA's Kennedy Space Center on June 25.
India's Shubhanshu Shukla, Poland's Slawosz Uznanski-Wisniewski and Hungary's Tibor Kapu conducted dozens of experiments during their stay. They also fielded calls from their countries' prime ministers as well as schoolchildren.
'We will spread the word in our countries that these things are within our reach. These things are possible even for smaller countries like ours,' Kapu said during Sunday's farewell ceremony, which ended in an emotional group hug.
Shukla noted that 'it's truly a miracle' when humanity comes together for a common goal.
'The sky is no longer the limit. We can explore space,' added Uznanski-Wisniewski.
Uznanski-Wisniewski took special pride in the first pierogies in space. He took up the cabbage and mushroom-stuffed dumplings, which were freeze-dried in advance for easy cooking in zero gravity.
Their three countries shared the cost of the mission, paying more than $65 million apiece.
It was Axiom's fourth station trip since 2022. The Houston company's clientele includes the wealthy as well as countries seeking representation in space. NASA embraces commercial spaceflight, helping to set the stage for private space stations in the works by Axiom and others, as well as lunar landers.
The space station's seven full-time residents remain behind in orbit, representing the U.S., Russia and Japan. Four of them will be replaced in a few weeks by a fresh crew launched for NASA by SpaceX.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Astronomers capture the birth of numerous planets outside our solar system
Astronomers capture the birth of numerous planets outside our solar system

Boston Globe

time3 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Astronomers capture the birth of numerous planets outside our solar system

The observations offer a unique glimpse into the inner workings of an emerging planetary system, said the University of Chicago's Fred Ciesla, who was not involved in the study appearing in the journal Nature. Advertisement 'This is one of the things we've been waiting for. Astronomers have been thinking about how planetary systems form for a long period of time,' Ciesla said. 'There's a rich opportunity here.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up NASA's Webb Space Telescope and the European Southern Observatory in Chile teamed up to unveil these early nuggets of planetary formation around the young star known as HOPS-315. It's a yellow dwarf in the making like the sun, yet much younger at 100,000 to 200,000 years old and some 1,370 light-years away. A single light-year is 6 trillion miles. In a cosmic first, McClure and her team stared deep into the gas disk around the baby star and detected solid specks condensing — signs of early planet formation. A gap in the outer part of the disk allowed them to gaze inside, thanks to the way the star tilts toward Earth. Advertisement They detected silicon monoxide gas as well as crystalline silicate minerals, the ingredients for what's believed to be the first solid materials to form in our solar system more than 4.5 billion years ago. The action is unfolding in a location comparable to the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, containing the leftover building blocks of our solar system's planets. The condensing of hot minerals was never detected before around other young stars, 'so we didn't know if it was a universal feature of planet formation or a weird feature of our solar system,' McClure wrote in an email. 'Our study shows that it could be a common process during the earliest stage of planet formation.' While other research has looked at younger gas disks and, more commonly, mature disks with potential planet wannabes, there has been no specific evidence for the start of planet formation until now, McClure said. In a stunning picture taken by the ESO's ALMA telescope network, the emerging planetary system resembles a lightning bug glowing against the black void. It's impossible to know how many planets might form around HOPS-315. With a gas disk as massive as the sun's might have been, it could also wind up with eight planets a million or more years from now, according to McClure. Purdue University's Merel van 't Hoff, a co-author, is eager to find more budding planetary systems. By casting a wider net, astronomers can look for similarities and determine which processes might be crucial to forming Earth-like worlds. 'Are there Earth-like planets out there, or are we ... so special that we might not expect it to occur very often?' Advertisement

7 Weird Sci-Fi Network TV Shows That Aired Just as Streaming Was Taking Over
7 Weird Sci-Fi Network TV Shows That Aired Just as Streaming Was Taking Over

Gizmodo

time3 hours ago

  • Gizmodo

7 Weird Sci-Fi Network TV Shows That Aired Just as Streaming Was Taking Over

Netflix's first original series, House of Cards, launched in 2013, and television was never the same. But even as Netflix and other platforms began to gain popularity, old-school network and basic cable channels continued to create edgy (and sometimes a bit unhinged) genre shows—the sort of programming that just a few years later would come to dominate the streaming landscape. With that in mind, here are seven weird and wonderful sci-fi shows from the last era of TV before streaming well and truly took over. M. Night Shyamalan directed the pilot episode and served as executive producer on this adaptation of author Blake Crouch's sci-fi mystery trilogy. Wayward Pines starts off as a sort of Twin Peaks riff—a federal agent (Matt Dillon) stumbles his way into a small town full of secretive people while looking for his missing partner. Then comes the twist: it's actually the 41st century, and everyone in the town is there because they were placed in cryosleep ahead of the apocalypse. In the intervening thousands of years, mutated humans took over the planet, and the barrier between 21st-century people and far-future 'Abbies' (short for 'aberrations') is weakening by the day. Along the way, the show digs into some classic sci-fi questions, including 'Who are the real monsters?' Wayward Pines—whose cast included Carla Gugino, Toby Jones, Juliette Lewis, Melissa Leo, and Djimon Hounsou—ran for two seasons. Shyamalan's next TV venture was Servant at Apple TV+, the same streamer hosting Crouch's current project, an adaptation of his book Dark Matter. But you can still visit the roaring 4020s: Wayward Pines is streaming on Hulu; it also got a physical release. For three seasons, viewers followed along as a ragtag group of reluctant heroes—a zoologist (James Wolk), a journalist (Kristen Connelly), a safari guide (Nonso Anozie), a French intelligence agent (Nora Arnezeder), and a veterinary pathologist (Billy Burke)—navigated a world where every 'when animals attack' worst-case scenario suddenly happens at once. From the start, there are conspiracies to investigate—a sinister biotech company looks awfully culpable, and you know there are going to be cover-ups galore—and a lot of Zoo, based on the James Patterson best-seller, featured its main characters zipping around from place to place looking for clues, guilty parties, and ways to fight back, including maybe even a cure. Along the way, the show made plenty of room for crazed animals to do their thing (bears, birds, exotic escapees), eventually ushering in hybrid crazed animals, making Zoo even more unhinged than was originally promised. Zoo also incorporated humans among its horrifying mutations, in case you couldn't get enough of that on Wayward Pines. You can buy all three seasons of Zoo through Amazon Prime; the show also got a physical release. The 2011 film starring Bradley Cooper spawned this short-lived but entertaining sci-fi series starring Jake McDornan, who What We Do in the Shadows fans will now recognize as Nadja's hapless fling Gregor (aka Jeff). It ran for just one season, but in old-school network terms, that meant a whopping 22 episodes. McDornan plays an average-dude writer whose life is transformed when he takes a drug that makes him the smartest person in the world—but the genius comes with a time limit as well as dangerous side effects. It also puts him on the FBI's radar, and though he uses his powers for good instead of evil, the wonder pill brings out the worst in an awful lot of people in his orbit. Craig Sweeny, who also worked on Sherlock Holmes riffs Elementary and Watson, was the showrunner, and the supporting cast included Dexter's Jennifer Carpenter and The Abyss' Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, with Cooper stopping by to reprise his character from the film—who's now a senator with a secret. You can stream Limitless on Paramount+; it also got a physical release. io9 became so obsessed with Under the Dome—inspired by the Stephen King novel, and developed by famed comic book writer Brian K. Vaughan (Y: The Last Man, Saga)—that for a time we even featured recaps written by the Dome itself. Whether or not that was a complimentary obsession as time wore on is perhaps debatable, but you can't deny the delights of watching a show that makes you go 'Wait… what?' multiple times over the course of an episode. The premise: a small town suddenly finds itself encased in a dome. Where did it come from? What is its purpose? And how will they be able to survive trapped together under there? Also, aliens. Under the Dome had a huge cast (Rachelle Lefevre, Natalie Martinez, Jeff Fahey, Dean Norris, Britt Robertson), and even if it fell off a little as it got into its third and final season, it still counted both King and Stephen Spielberg among its executive producers, and it managed to find its way to a satisfying ending. Even the cranky Dome can't argue with that. The Event, or THE EVƎNT as it preferred to style itself, starred the always likable Jason Ritter as a guy whose girlfriend goes missing on a Caribbean cruise—leading him into bonkers events that involve an alien conspiracy dating back decades and an assassination plot against the U.S. president (played by Longlegs' Blair Underwood). ER's Laura Innes co-starred as one of the extraterrestrial leaders. With elements of a political thriller enmeshed in all the sci-fi plotting, The Event also leaned into social media in a way was innovative at the time, giving characters Twitter accounts (back when it was still Twitter) and giving one a blog to provide clues to the show's central mystery… which never quite got solved. It was cancelled after just one season, but again—that was 22 episodes, making it beefier than most streaming series today. You can watch The Event free with ads on the Roku Channel; it also got both DVD and Blu-ray physical releases. Before Star Trek: Discovery or The White Lotus, but after Event Horizon and the Harry Potter movies, Jason Isaacs starred in this police procedural that actually streamed its pilot on Hulu ahead of the show's rollout on NBC. In Awake, he plays an LAPD detective whose existence fractures into two realities after a terrible car accident. In one, his wife survived, but his son died; in the other, it's reversed. Which is real? He doesn't know, and neither does the audience, though Awake helpfully kept the two lives straight by filming one in warm tones and the other with a cool hue. Even so, it's not a smooth co-existence for the character as he ping-pongs between realities while still working cases. Though the high-concept series was met with positive reviews, it didn't catch on with viewers and was cancelled before the first season aired its ambiguous final entry. It's available to rent or buy through Prime Video. J.J. Abrams was among the producers of this action-packed series created by J.H. Wyman, who'd worked on cult-beloved Abrams co-creation Fringe. (Abrams also composed Almost Human's theme music). Set in 2048, Almost Human imagined a near future where technology has evolved so rapidly that it's caused crime to spike to dangerous new levels. The only solution for law enforcement, naturally, is to pair human cops with highly advanced androids. There's no choice in this arrangement, which of course infuriates the human officer (Karl Urban) who blames robotkind for the death of a fellow human cop, not to mention his own leg and head injuries. But of course, over time, he develops a rapport with his new partner (Michael Ealy), an older model that's capable of almost human (ahem) emotions, rather than the more calculating, coldly mechanical newer versions. There's a Murderbot element, for sure, but with more running around urban dystopias solving brutal crimes. Despite a cool premise and a cool cast (Lili Taylor played the police captain), not to mention decent ratings, the show's hefty budget appears to have been its undoing. You can see what the future of TV looked like over a decade ago by streaming Almost Human's single season on AMC+; it's also available as a physical release. What sci-fi shows that aired on a major network in ye olde mid-2010s do you think of fondly? Share your favorites in the comments below! Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

If aliens existed on Mars 3.7 billion years ago, they would have needed umbrellas
If aliens existed on Mars 3.7 billion years ago, they would have needed umbrellas

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

If aliens existed on Mars 3.7 billion years ago, they would have needed umbrellas

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Mars was a rainier, wetter place than planetary scientists previously thought, according to a new study of ancient, inverted river channels that span more than 9,000 miles (14,484 kilometers) in the Red Planet's southern Noachis Terra region. "Our work is a new piece of evidence that suggests that Mars was once a much more complex and active planet than it is now, which is such an exciting thing to be involved in," study leader Adam Losekoot of the U.K.'s Open University said in a statement. We've known Mars was once a wet planet ever since the Mariner 9 orbiter mission from the '70s photographed a surface covered in dried-up river channels. These channels were dated back to over 3.5 billion years ago. However, channels cut into the ground are not the only evidence for running water on Mars. When that water ran-off, or evaporated, it left sedimentary deposits. Sometimes we see these in craters that were once lakes filled with water: NASA's Curiosity rover is exploring Gale Crater, which has a central three-mile-tall (five-kilometer-tall) peak covered in sediment. Other times, these sediments were laid down on river beds. Over the eons, the sediments would have hardened, while the river channels and the land around them would have weathered and eroded away. That left the sediments, which are more resistant to erosion, sticking out as tall ridges. Geologists today call them fluvial sinuous ridges, or, more plainly, inverted channels. Now, Losekoot, who is a Ph.D. student, has led the discovery of a vast network of these channels in Noachis Terra based on images and data taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera and the Context Camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) on the defunct Mars Global Surveyor mission. Previously, Noachis Terra had not been given due attention because it lacked the more classical river channels that form more obvious evidence of water. However, by mapping the network of inverted channels, Losekoot realized there was lots of evidence there had once been plentiful water in the region. "Studying Mars, particularly an under-explored region like Noachis Terra, is really exciting because it's an environment which has been largely unchanged for billions of years," said Losekoot. "It's a time capsule that records fundamental geological processes in a way that just isn't possible here on Earth." Some of the inverted channels appear as isolated segments that have survived the elements for billions of years. Others are more intact, forming systems that run for hundreds of miles and stand tens of yards tall. Such a widespread network of inverted channels does not suggest these channels were caused by flash floods, argues Losekoot. Rather, they seem to have formed in stable climatic conditions over a geologically significant period of time during the Noachian–Hesperian transition, which was the shift from one geological era into the next around 3.7 billion years ago. What's particularly intriguing is the most likely source of water to have formed these inverted channels is precipitation — be it rain, hail or snow. Indeed, given the size of the inverted channel network in Noachis Terra, this region of Mars may have experienced lots of rainy days in a warm and wet climate. RELATED STORIES — Carbon dioxide rivers? Ancient Mars liquid may not all have been water — Good news for life: Mars rivers flowed for long stretches long ago — Mars Had Big Rivers for Billions of Years It's more evidence that Mars was once more like Earth than the cold and barren desert it is today. Losekoot presented his findings at the Royal Astronomical Society's National Astronomy Meeting held at the University of Durham in the U.K., which ran between July 7 and July 11. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store