Next Monthly Meeting – May 4, 2019 – 3:00-5:00Pm – Barbara Bush Library

Join NSS North Houston Space Society on May 4, 2019 from 3:00-5:00 PM at the Barbara Bush Library (6817 Cypresswood Drive Spring, TX 77379). Learn about the latest happenings in space exploration and about what is just around the corner. Talk to fellow members. (Our members include people of all walks of life. Some have experience in space exploration, some are engineers in other fields, some are business people, programmers, sci-fi writers, students, and people that are interested.) Discussing space exploration with others that are interested in it too is one of the benefits of coming to a NSS meeting.

The May 4th meeting will also feature Herb Baker, Former Manager at NASA/Johnson Space Center. His office provided contract management support to the Flight Operations Directorate, the Safety & Mission Assurance Office, the Human Resources (HR) office, and the Office of the CFO at the Johnson Space Center and included support to operations at NASA’s aircraft operations at Ellington Field. This support covered activities within Mission Control, the Astronaut Office, the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory, and the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility among others.


Website:  http://NorthHoustonSpace.org
MeetUp: https://www.meetup.com/Future-North-Houston-National-Space-Society-Chapter/
FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/NssNorthHoustonSpaceSociety/

Summary of our April 6, 2019 – meeting – SPACE: Final Investment Frontier featuring Meagan Crawford of the SpaceFund

Nathan Price started by giving an update of recent news and announcements. The first was that future meetings would be held at the Barbara Bush Library (6817 Cypresswood Drive, Spring, TX 77379) and the timing would be changed to 3PM-5PM on the first Saturday of each month.

SpaceX DM-1 had just launched before the last meeting. The Crew Dragon capsule completed all the expected tests and maneuvers. This was a key step towards re-establishing the capability to launch astronauts from the US. This is capability that we have not had since the retirement of the space shuttle in 2011.

March 26, 2019 – Mike Pence directed NASA to land astronauts on the south pole of the moon by 2024.

SpaceIL’s Lunar lander had launched just before the last meeting. It entered lunar orbit on April 4, 2019 and is expected to land on the surface on April 11, 2019. This will be streamed live. (http://www.visit.spaceil.com/ )

SpaceX completed a test fire of its StarShip hopper. The StarShip will transform human space transportation as the 747 did for commercial airline travel. This is a craft that is 100% reusable, will be able to carry 100+ people at a time, can be used for point to point travel on earth as well as travel to orbit, moon, mars and beyond.

This is a big step towards a city on Mars, moonbase, and point to point travel on earth.

And it is a major step towards the
https://dearmoon.earth/ project which aims to send a group of artists around the moon in 2023.

Then we had our main event. Meagan Crawford from the SpaceFund ( https://spacefund.com/ ) talked about the opportunities and challenges with investing in the space industry, how the SpaceFund are addressing these, and how much the space industry has to catch up to the other areas of investment.


As a “Thank You” for presenting, Meagan was presented with a EcoSphere:

Upcoming events:
Falcon Heavy Launch of Arabsat-6A scheduled for April 10, 2019. ( https://www.reddit.com/r/spacex/ )

Jim Bridenstine, NASA Administrator, will be talking at Rice University Friday, April 12, 2019 from 7-8PM at Keck Hall. Reception at 6:30PM. Free to the public. Registration and updates at
http://spacefrontiers.rice.edu/

And our next meeting is Saturday, May 4, 2019 at Barbara Bush Library 3-5PM.

Herb Baker – Former Manager at NASA/Johnson Space Center

His office provided contract management support to the Flight Operations Directorate, the Safety & Mission Assurance Office, the Human Resources (HR) office, and the Office of the CFO at the Johnson Space Center and included support to operations at NASA’s aircraft operations at Ellington Field. This support covered activities within Mission Control, the Astronaut Office, the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory, and the Space Vehicle Mockup Facility among others.

Many good discussions followed the presentations.

Meagan talks to C. Stewart Hardwick (SF Author)