Cozy Dark emerging technology began work in 2010 as a skunkworks-style engineering firm and is registered with CCR and NSPIRES.
Our early engineering & design efforts have focused on orbital debris solutions and electrodynamic tether technology.
Zach Urbina founded Cozy Dark with the cooperation of technical, research, and academic colleagues in the Southern California AeroAstro community.
We also have a growing library of space science talks featuring Apollo astronaut Buzz Aldrin, astrophysicist Sean Carroll and more.
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58 posts tagged space
2012 Spacecraft Technology Expo Lands at the LA Convention Center |
In a city where glamour and fame often capture the media spotlight, it can be easy to forget that modern rocketry first took root in a dusty stretch of dry riverbed in Pasadena, and eventually bloomed into the most ambitious efforts of humankind to date. Last week, in Downtown Los Angeles, the industry leaders and feisty upstarts who continue to carry that proverbial torch gathered to show-off the current capabilities and bold plans for the future at the Spacecraft Technology Expo.
From May 9th through May 10th, the Los Angeles Convention Center played host to the best and the brightest in orbital and suborbital technology. Although there were bigger and more moneyed players in the space game who took out space at the expo, it was small, but determined suborbital flight provider XCOR Aerospace who stole the floor of the convention with a full-scale mock-up of their Lynx spacecraft, a rocket-propelled reusable launch vehicle.
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Additional exhibit’s worthy of mention included Sage Cheshire Aerospace’s Red Bull Stratos capsule, built for the upcoming record-breaking skydive of Austrian daredevil Felix Baumgartner. Baumgartner recently completed a test jump from 70,000 feet and is sure to make more headlines for both Red Bull and Sage Cheshire as he scales up to an eventual 120,000 ft. jump sometime later this year. - ZU
The full webcast from the Planetary Resources event that was hosted April 24th 2012. This is nothing short of amazing and must be watched, in its entirety.
240 miles above the southeastern Tasman Sea, this photo is believed to be the one millionth still image recorded by space station crews. The view, from over a point centered at 46.56 degrees south latitude and 164.33 degrees east longitude, focuses on an area just west of the south end of South Island, New Zealand and was taken about 3:19 a.m. New Zealand time, March 7, 2012. Illumination and the relative motion of features in the overall series of photos suggest that the view is towards the south to southeast with the approaching dawn to the left and a strong band of Aurora Australis, from left to right. A Russian Soyuz and a Russian Progress vehicle are seen center and right in the foreground, respectively. source
Nothing if not prolific, multi-hyphenate professor and author Jonathan Vos Post gave several talks at the 3-4 March 2012 BIL Conference. Here is a brief clip of JVP discussing the future of human space exploration and giving tips for science fiction writers.
Outer Space Takes Center Stage At BIL Conference |
The BIL Conference is a fascinating experience. It’s an irreverent riff on TED, and while some people attend both, ALL are truly welcome at BIL. Anyone can walk in and volunteer, or pay the $50 admission, sign up to speak on one of the 5 stages, or just roam around and have fun. It’s like a bunch of the smart folks from Burning Man got together and found a fun way to share knowledge. This is the first year they had a curated Space Stage, where attendees got to hear from people like CEO of Virgin Galactic George Whitesides, Co-founder of SpaceX Tom Mueller, Yuri’s Night co-founder Loretta Whitesides, and many more. Source: Gas 2.0 (http://s.tt/16D3H)
SpaceX’s Elon Musk today released an image of a fully assembled Dragon capsule and Falcon 9 rocket from a launch facility in Cape Canaveral.
The developers behind the Tokyo Sky Tree, Japan’s soon-to-be tallest building, are planning to build a 22,370-mile high space elevator by 2050.
(via architizer)
(via itsfullofstars)
Masten Space Systems’ Xaero 61m Free Flight |
Masten Space Systems: “Upon completion of Xaero’s free flight hover earlier this month, she performed yet another successful free flight to an altitude of 61 meters on February 17th, 2012. The exterior view of the flight reveals a bobble at apogee, as well as a slight rocking motion after touchdown. Despite these imperfections, the flight was a complete success, with all test objectives reached or exceeded.”
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