America must protect funding of Huntsville NASA facilities according to lawmakers

Alabama lawmakers express desire to protect funding of Huntsville NASA facilities.

Normally I would call this a typical squeal for funds (and we do see so-called conservative Senator Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama) squealing a bit) , but the article makes it clear that everyone involved (even the journalist!) has real doubts about the wisdom of funding these programs with the present federal debt.

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Some interesting comments about NASA’s future from Clark Lindsey

Clark Lindsey of www.rlvnews.com/ has posted some interesting thoughts in reaction to the successful launch of the Air Force’s second reusable X-37b yesterday and how this relates to NASA’s budget battles in Congress. Key quote for me:

Charles Bolden doesn’t seem prepared to make a forceful case against the clear and obvious dumbness of the HLV/Orion program. Perhaps he in fact wants a make-work project for NASA to sustain the employee base.

As I’ve said before, the program-formerly-called-Constellation is nothing more than pork, and will never get built. Why waste any money on it now?

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Has a NASA scientist discovered alien fossils in several meteorites?

alien fossil?

Very very intriguing: A NASA scientist has claimed in a peer reviewed paper the discovery of alien fossils in several meteorites recovered on Earth. From the paper’s last paragraph:

The absence of nitrogen in the cyanobacterial filaments detected in the CI1 carbonaceous meteorites indicates that the filaments represent the remains of extraterrestrial life forms that grew on the parent bodies of the meteorites when liquid water was present, long before the meteorites entered the Earthโ€™s atmosphere.

The news article describing this discovery is a bit more breathless in style than I would like, and makes me suspicious about these results. Moreover, that NASA held no press release or press conference for a result of this significance gives me pause. (Though NASA might have felt burned from the reactions they got from the arsenic-based-biology press conference and decided therefore to take a low profile here.)
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Two High-priority Climate Missions Dropped from NASAโ€™s Budget Plans

Two high-priority climate missions dropped from NASAโ€™s budget by the White House. And what’s most amazing: No one’s squealing!

โ€œRemoval of these missions was not what we desired and not what the administration desired, but it was a clear recognition and acknowledgement of the budget issues we face as a nation,โ€ [said Steve Volz, associate director for flight programs at NASAโ€™s Earth Science Division]. โ€œItโ€™s cleaner to be allowed to delete the scope that goes along with the dollars than to have to figure out how to do more with less.โ€

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Detector Array Deterioration Poses New Problem for JWST

More problems for the James Webb Space Telescope: The detector arrays for several instruments are deteriorating, even as they sit on the shelf. And remember, the 2014 launch date is probably going to be delayed until 2016. Key quote:

โ€œAs you get further and further out with [the launch date], it really raises questions about how far down the [integration and test] process you go for the instruments โ€ฆ and how long you have to store all that before you actually launch,โ€ [Webb program director Rick Howard] told the NASA Advisory Councilโ€™s astrophysics subcommittee during a Feb. 16 public meeting here. โ€œAnd that just makes everybody even more nervous about this problem than anything else.โ€

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