Thursday, November 29, 2012

United States Wanted To Blow Up the Moon "TOP SECRET PROJECT DISCOVERED"



In the 1950s the Earth would have witnessed the moon blown up, had the US government completed its secret project intended to intimidate the Soviet Union and display its technological power during the notorious space race.

According to the secret project, called “A Study of Lunar Research Flights”, as well as “Project A119”, a missile with a nuclear bomb on board would have been launched from an unknown location.

Then, the nuclear bomb would have caused an explosion upon its collision with the only natural satellite of the Earth.

By 1959 the United States had deployed intercontinental ballistic missiles and the project looked quite feasible.

But it was given up in the end due to fears about the bomb detonating prematurely and space contamination.

The project was kept secret for nearly 45 years and the US government has never formally confirmed its involvement in the study.

All scientists involved in the project could have been accused of a security breach, had they revealed any detail of the classified project.

The project was officially canceled in January 1959 and the Unites States concentrated its efforts on ‘the first man on the moon’ project.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012


                                      Aid campaign for the victims of Super Storm Sandy
                                            By: PeaceKeeper Space Organization 

                                  







We are raising money to be put toward the repair and rebuilding of the homes that were damaged and in allot of cases destroyed by Super Storm Sandy.

We are working with A&W Home Improvements who have partnered with PeaceKeeper Space Organization to repair the homes that were affected by Sandy.


If we can raise $20,000 we will be able repair 50 homes in areas hit hard by Sandy.
We Need Your Help to give the gift of a safe home to the victims of this devastating storm!

      The whole amount of this campaign will go towards the reconstruction effort.
      
                                   Help Us Help Those in Need Donate today!
                                           Any amount helps the rebuilding!
To help please go to:
                                   http://www.indiegogo.com/AIdforsandy
                   

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Program To Test Space Vehicles On The Big Island



A program to test space vehicles on the Big Island is getting an infusion of millions of new investment dollars.

The state is putting $2.34 million into the Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems to help the program prepare for missions to Mars or the moon.

Rob Kelso, the new director of the program, known as PISCES, said long-term plans call for a high-tech park in Hawaii for research into technologies related to space travel and colonization.

One project for the near term is developing a concretelike building material that can be used in space and on Earth. Kelso said there also will be continued testing and research of robotic systems being designed for use on the moon or Mars.

Some of the equipment on the Mars rover Curiosity was tested on Mauna Kea in 2008 because that terrain is so similar to the basaltic makeup of Mars, said Kelso, who is a former NASA space shuttle flight director at Johnson Space Center.

He joined other researchers and space enthusiasts at the annual PISCES conference in Waikoloa this week for discussions and demonstrations of robotic equipment designed to explore challenging space environments.

Another avenue for research would be to develop new ways to extract resources, including oxygen and water, from the terrain on Mars, which has a chemical composition strikingly similar to portions of the Hawaii island landscape.

The PISCES project was founded in 2007 and this year was shifted from the University of Hawaii at Hilo into the state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism.

Kelso said the state is looking for a site for a new research facility that initially would be home to PISCES and might one day become an "aerospace enterprise zone" based in the Hilo area.

In the meantime, the program plans to rent temporary office space in Hilo, Kelso said.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

China To Launch Manned SPACESHIP In June 2013



BEIJING, Nov. 10 (Xinhua) -- China plans to launch another manned spacecraft Shenzhou-10 in early June 2013, a lead space program official said here Saturday.

Like in the Shenzhou-9 mission, the crew might include two men astronauts and a woman, who are scheduled to enter the Tiangong-1 space lab module, Niu Hongguang, deputy commander-in-chief of China's manned space program, said on the sidelines of the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.

"They will stay in space for 15 days, operating both automated and manual space dockings with the target orbiter Tiangong-1, conducting scientific experiments in the lab module and giving science lectures to spectators on the Earth," he said.

In the coming mission, Shenzhou-10 will offer ferrying services of personnel and supplies for Tiangong-1, further testing the astronauts' abilities of working and living in space, as well as the functions of the lab module, he said.

"The success of this mission might enable China to construct a space lab and a space station," he said.

Tiangong-1 was sent into space in September 2011. It docked with the Shenzhou-8 unmanned spacecraft last November and the manned Shenzhou-9 in June this year, verifying China's space docking capabilities.

Shenzhou-9 carried the first Chinese woman Liu Yang, together with two male crew mates, into outer space.

"After more than a year of operation in space, Tiangong-1 is still in good condition," Niu said.

"Tiangong-1, with a design life of two years, will likely remain in orbit for further operation after the space docking with Shenzhou-10," he said.

The launch rocket and spaceship have been assembled and are being tested, and astronauts are being trained, Niu said.

"The selection for the crew will begin in early 2013," he said.

China initiated the manned space program in 1992. It successfully sent Yang Liwei, the country's first astronaut, into orbit on Shenzhou-5 spacecraft in 2003.

Yang was followed by a two-man mission that carried Fei Junlong and Nie Haisheng in 2005.

The trio of Shenzhou-7 astronauts Zhai Zhigang, Liu Boming and Jing Haipeng orbited the Earth for three days in 2008, and Zhai became the first Chinese to conduct extra-vehicular activities on Sept. 27, 2008.

China plans to build its own space station in around 2020.

"The space station is a state-level space experimental platform. We will make the best use of it to solve some problems concerning the country's scientific, technological development and people's livelihoods," Niu said.

U.K. Says The Space Program Is A Good Investment (PAY ATTENTION AMERICA)




It’s been a really good week for space programs across the world.

We’re hearing rumbling that NASA is plotting a new manned outpost on the moon (as well as launching a new water-seeking rover), and now the U.K. government has decided to increase its funding to the European Space Agency (ESA).

Government officials are currently spending about £170 million (about $270 million) on funding to the agency but will now increase that amount by another £60 million (about $95 million). Officials cite the space program’s impressive financial returns, as well as the program’s potential to boost job growth, as justification for the fresh funding. The funding also comes despite a five percent reduction in overall civil research spending since 2010.

“We have underestimated the strength of our space industry. In fact, we are a global player in satellite and telecommunications technology,” Chancellor George Osborne told BBC News. “This additional investment is a signal to ESA and commercial companies that we are going to continue to support space science and technology.”

Hear that, America? Spending money on the space program is a good investment — and one that world-renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson would most definitely agree with. Tyson made an impassioned speech to Congress earlier this year, urging it to double NASA’s funding from a half-cent on every dollar to a full cent.

As for the British space effort, I think it would (probably) gain another big funding increase if it officially labeled the program the Ministry of Space, as cited in the fictional graphic novel written by Warren Ellis. (It just sounds cooler.)

Thursday, November 8, 2012

We are PeaceKeepers


                                                              We are PeaceKeepers

                              






This world is sick
 We are the doctors
 This world is ravaged by War
 We are the PeaceMakers
 This world has questions  
We are the answer 
        We look towards the future and see a shinning tomorrow! 

We need your support as citizens of this world no matter what nationality, ethnicity or Religion. We all have a responsibility to help those who are in need and we the members of PeaceKeeper Space Organization not only have goals of taking humanity to the stars,  but to bring the light of peace to those in this world who need it most!

So by supporting us you are helping feed and cloth the homeless in America, also build wells and irrigation to the drought stricken parts of Africa, as well as food and medical supplies to the people of Haiti, also Educating the youth in the Middle east and else were.

We can guaranty that 100% of your support and funding will be going towards these goals of Peace right here on this world now and out into space in the near future.

We have a responsibility to help those who can’t help them selves!

         
         Join us Today and Help Bring a Better Tomorrow