Soyuz rocket raised on Baikonur launch pad for space station resupply flight – Spaceflight Now

A Russian Soyuz rocket rolled out to a launch pad Monday at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, ready for final inspections, checkouts and fueling before liftoff Thursday with a Progress supply ship bound for the International Space Station.

The Soyuz-2.1a launcher emerged from a hangar at the Baikonur Cosmodrome just after sunrise Monday, riding a mobile railcar across the Kazakh steppe to Launch Pad No. 31. A hydraulic lift raised the launcher vertical on pad 31, and gantry arms rotated into position around the rocket to allow workers access to the vehicle for final pre-launch preparations.

Launch is scheduled for 10:26:22 a.m. EDT (1426:22 GMT; 7:26:22 p.m. Baikonur time) Thursday to kick off a three-hour pursuit of the space station. The launch time is set to occur around the time the research outpost flies over Baikonur.

After shedding its four liquid-fueled first stage boosters about two minutes after liftoff, the Soyuz rocket continue firing its core stage until nearly five minutes into the mission. An upper stage will finish the task of placing the Progress MS-15 cargo carrier into orbit, then deploy the supply ship around nine minutes after launch.

The Progress MS-15 resupply freighter will unfurl its solar panels and navigation antenna, then begin a series of thruster firings to adjust its altitude to match that of the space station. A final radar-guided automated rendezvous sequence will steer the spacecraft on an approach to the Pirs docking compartment on the stations Russian segment.

The automated docking is scheduled for 1:47 p.m. EDT (1747 GMT), delivering some 2.8 tons (2.6 metric tons) of fuel, food, supplies and other equipment to the research outpost and its five-person crew.

Russian ground teams loaded 3,351 pounds (1,520 kilograms) of dry cargo into the cargo freighters pressurized compartment, according to Roscosmos, the Russian space agency. Roscosmos says theres around 1,322 pounds (600 kilograms) of propellant aboard the Progress MS-15 spacecraft for transfer into the space stations tanks, along with 926 pounds (420 kilograms) of water and 101 pounds (46 kilograms) ofcompressed gas to replenish the space stations breathing air.

The Progress MS-13 supply ship, which docked with the space station Dec. 9, departed the Pirs docking port July 8 to clear the way for the arrival of the new cargo freighter. Once it docks Thursday, the Progress MS-15 spacecraft will remain linked with the space station until December, when it will detach and burn up in Earths atmosphere.

Russian cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner will monitor the Progress MS-15 supply ships approach to the space station. They will be ready to intervene and take manual control using a remote command panel inside the station.

Ivanishin and Vagner are joined by Expedition 63 commander Chris Cassidy and NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley aboard the International Space Station.

Cassidy, Ivanishin and Vagner launched in April aboard a Russian Soyuz crew capsule. They are scheduled to return to Earth in October.

Behnken and Hurley launched May 30 from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on the first flight of SpaceXs Crew Dragon spacecraft with astronauts. They reached the station May 31, and are gearing up for undocking as soon as Aug. 1, followed by re-entry and splashdown off the Florida coast Aug. 2.

Photos of the Soyuz-2.1a rockets rollout to the launch pad at Baikonur are posted below.

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

View post:

Soyuz rocket raised on Baikonur launch pad for space station resupply flight - Spaceflight Now

Spaceflight and Tethers Unlimited team up on deorbiting system for satellite carrier – GeekWire

An artists conception shows Spaceflights Sherpa-FX, the first orbital transfer vehicle to debut in the companys Sherpa-NG (next generation) program. The vehicle is capable of executing multiple deployments, as well as providing independent and detailed deployment telemetry. (Spaceflight Inc. Illustration)

Seattle-based Spaceflight Inc. says itll use a notebook-sized deorbiting system developed by another Seattle-area company to deal with the disposal of its Sherpa-FX orbital transfer vehicle.

The NanoSat Terminator Tape Deorbit System, built by Bothell, Wash.-based Tethers Unlimited, is designed to take advantage of orbital drag on a 230-foot-long strip of conductive tape to hasten the fiery descent of a spacecraft through Earths atmosphere. The system has been tested successfully on nanosatellites over the past year, and another experiment is planned for later this year.

Tethers Unlimiteds system provides an affordable path to reducing space debris, which is becoming a problem of greater concern as more small satellites go into orbit. Statistical models suggest that there are nearly a million bits of debris bigger than half an inch (1 centimeter) whizzing in Earth orbit.

WhenTethers was founded in 1994, its main focus was to solve the problem of space debris so that NASA, the DoD [Department of Defense] and commercial space enterprises could continue to safely operate in Earth orbit, Tethers Unlimited CEO Rob Hoyt said today in a news release. We are pleased to see our solutions are now making a significant contribution to ensuring sustainability of the space environment, which will benefit the entire industry.

Spaceflight Inc.s Sherpa-FX is due to have its first in-space use during a dedicated rideshare mission scheduled for no earlier than December. A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket would send the vehicle into orbit, loaded up with smaller spacecraft. After Sherpa-FX separates from the rockets upper stage, it would deploy those spacecraft to independent orbits. The system builds on the legacy of Spaceflight Inc.s first free-flying satellite deployer, which was used for a 64-satellite mission in 2018.

In-space transportation is essential to meeting our customers specific needs to get their spacecraft delivered to orbit exactly when and where they want it, Grant Bonin, Spaceflight Inc.s senior vice president of business development, said in a news release. If you think of typical rideshare as sharing a seat on a train headed to a popular destination, our next-generation Sherpa program enables us to provide a more complete door-to-door transportation service.

Spaceflight Inc.s customers for the rideshare mission include iQPS, Loft Orbital, HawkEye 360, Astrocast and NASAs Small Spacecraft Technology program.

The Terminator Tape module, which weighs less than 2 pounds, will be attached to Sherpa-FXs exterior. When the transfer vehicle has completed its mission, an electrical signal will activate the system to wind out the conductive tape. Interactions with Earths magnetic field and upper atmosphere will increase drag, causing a quicker plunge from orbit.

Were focused on being a good steward of our space resource, and our mission is to conduct frequent small satellite launches, so we have a responsibility for deorbiting what we send up, said Philip Bracken, vice president of engineering at Spaceflight Inc. Tethers solution is affordable, compact and lightweight, and will help us fulfill our responsibilities to clean up space after our mission is complete.

Spaceflight Inc. handles satellite launch logistics in partnership with a variety of launch providers, including SpaceX and Rocket Lab. It was founded as a subsidiary of Seattle-based Spaceflight Industries, but this year ownership was transferred to Mitsui & Co. Ltd.

More:

Spaceflight and Tethers Unlimited team up on deorbiting system for satellite carrier - GeekWire

Hubble Reveals The Beauty And Mystery Of Saturns Rings – Forbes

Saturn and its spectacular rings, as imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope on July 4, 2020. Hubble ... [+] takes an annual image of Saturn as part of the Outer Planets Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL) project.

Right now, in Earths skies, Saturn appears at its biggest and brightest.

A view of tonight's midnight sky from 45 N latitude, which shows the relative positions of bright ... [+] Saturn and even brighter Jupiter in the southern part of the sky. They rise in the southeast just as the Sun sets, then migrate towards the west over the course of the night. They are joined by a variety of meteor showers, including the Delta Aquariids.

Just look to the southeastern skies (from the northern hemisphere), slightly east of bright Jupiter.

Every year, there's one moment where Earth passes directly between the Sun and Saturn, occurring ... [+] recently in the 2nd half of July. As captured by amateur astronomer Christian Gloor in 2019, this shows a view very close to what skywatchers will see through a telescope tonight, although the rings are slightly more edge-on this year than last year.

With Earth between the Sun and Saturn, its poised for spectacular viewing.

The seven extraterrestrial planets of the solar system: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, ... [+] Uranus, Neptune. Photographed in 2019 with a Maksutov telescope from Mannheim and Stockach in Germany. The angular sizes and colors shown are accurate, but the brightnesses are not: Venus is some 63,000 times brighter than Neptune, or 12 astronomical magnitudes; the same difference as between the full Moon and a typical bright star like Vega or Capella. Saturn's rings are incredibly prominent, and the only ringed system visible through a typical telescope.

But the true star of Saturn is its main rings, now tilted for excellent views.

A computer simulated view of what Saturn looks like from Earth during opposition in every year from ... [+] 2001 through 2029. Note the 15 year repeating pattern of where the rings are maximally tilted or edge-on to the Earth. Right now, in 2020, the rings are becoming closer to edge-on, which they will achieve in 2024.

Every 15 years, the rings cycle from edge-on to maximum tilt and back again.

Details of Saturn's main, icy rings are visible in this sweeping view from Cassini of the planet's ... [+] glorious ring system. The total span, from the innermost A ring to the outer F ring shown here, covers approximately 40,800 miles (65,700 km) and was photographed on November 26, 2008. The outermost rings, including the ring created by Enceladus and the Phoebe ring beyond that, are not shown.

Although they reach over 70,000 kilometers in extent, theyre only 30 kilometers thick.

This 1990s-era image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows Saturn in an unusual configuration: ... [+] with its rings edge-on to us from our perspective. This occurs roughly every 15 years on a repeating basis, with the rings tilted at an angle the rest of the time. Saturn's giant moon Titan can be seen at left (with its shadow falling on the planet), while smaller moons appear to the right.

As a result, they briefly seemed to disappear in 1994, 2009, and will again in 2024.

From the vicinity of Saturn itself, NASA's Cassini mission was able to capture the shadows cast by ... [+] various ice crystals from within the rings, showing the incredible relief of the thin rings and their shadows against the main rings themselves. Saturn's rings might extend for tens of thousands of kilometers in the radial dimension, but are only 30 km thick.

NASAs Cassini mission previously captured long shadows cast by nearly edge-on sunlight.

This 2018 image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows Saturn at opposition, with four of its ... [+] moons visible and its rings shining brightly at nearly their maximum tilt with respect to our perspective. The banded structure of Saturn itself can also be seen, as can many of the gaps/divisions in the main ring system.

With no current Saturn orbiters, NASAs Hubble provides our best views from afar.

Taken by the Cassini spacecraft with the Sun hidden behind Saturn, this backlit view of our Solar ... [+] System's great ringed world contains a bonus: a few pixels that reveal the Earth-Moon system. This is one of the most distant photographs of Earth ever taken, but it still reveals our world as larger than a single pixel. The rings themselves appear glorious, and are composed of 99.9% water ice.

The rings are 99.9% water ice, and are comparable in total mass to Saturns 7th largest moon: Mimas.

Saturn's 7th largest moon, Mimas, appears to hover above the colorful rings. This image was taken by ... [+] the Cassini spacecraft and, despite their enormous size differences, show two entities of comparable mass. Mimas is approximately twice the mass of the entirety of the ring system, despite the much larger apparent extent of the rings.

Saturns rings are quickly evaporating; theyll be gone in merely 300 million years.

This image of Saturn's rings, with the planet itself behind them, was taken by Cassini at a distance ... [+] of 725,000 km from the planet. Due to the fact that the ring system is "raining" down material onto Saturn, we can conclude that the rings will be entirely gone, based on the current rate of mass loss, in another 300 million years.

The evidence possibly points to their origin arising from a recently destroyed moon.

Within Saturn's rings, many small moons and moonlets, such as Daphnis, can be found. These objects ... [+] are likely created by accreting particles, then destroyed by collisions and tidal forces. their uniform composition and decaying nature suggests that they were created relatively recently, with one longstanding theory contending that a larger, destroyed moon gave them their origin as little as tens but as many as hundreds of millions of years ago.

Back when trilobites dominated the Earth, Saturn may not have had any rings at all.

The entirety of Saturn's main rings, from the inner D ring to the outer F ring, may be much newer ... [+] than the rest of the Solar System. It's plausible that a few hundred million years ago, before the rise of the dinosaurs, these rings may not have existed at all. In another 300 million years ago, they likely will have disappeared entirely.

Until another Saturn-bound mission launches, telescopes like Hubble will provide our sharpest views.

While the age of Saturn's rings remains controversial, annual portraits from Hubble, such as this ... [+] 2019 image, continue to shed insights on this fascinating giant planet. The changing north pole, in particular, can be seen by comparing the 2018, 2019, and 2020 images illustrated in this article.

Mostly Mute Monday tells an astronomical story in images, visuals, and no more than 200 words. Talk less; smile more.

Read this article:

Hubble Reveals The Beauty And Mystery Of Saturns Rings - Forbes

On first anniversary of Chandrayaan-2, a look at the global space missions that lie ahead – THE WEEK

India's lunar mission Chandrayaan-2 marked the first anniversary of its launch on Wednesday. The payloads are performing well, and the lunar surface is being extensively examined, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said in a statement. "Extensive data has been acquired from Chandrayaan-2 payloads and parameters are being derived for presence of water-ice in the polar regions, X-ray based and infrared spectroscopic mineral information and mid and high latitude presence of Argon-40, a condensable gas on the moon," ISRO stated.The data from Chandrayaan-2 will be publicly released from October, it added.

A GSLV-Mk-III rocket, carrying the orbiter, lander Vikram and rover Pragyaan, took off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on July 22, 2019. The 3,850-kg Chandrayaan-2 aimed at landing the rover on unchartered Lunar South Pole. The spacecraft was inserted into lunar orbit on August 20, 2019. The Chandrayaan-2 mission was India's first attempt to land on the lunar surface.

However, the lander Vikram hard-landed in September.Vikram, with rover Pragyan housed inside it,hit the lunar surface after communication with the ground stations was lost during its final descent, just 2.1km above the surface. The lander was supposed to analyse the unexplored part of the moon's terrain and send back data for 14 days. It was later revealed that a last-minute software glitch led to the failure of the lander mission. It crash-landed on the moon's surface after its guidance software went kaput.

However, the orbiter, which is still in the lunar orbit, has a mission life of seven years.As Chandrayaan-2 makes its polar orbit over the time period, the Imaging IR Spectroscope (IIRS) will take detailed mineralogical and volatile measurements of the moon in the spectral range of 0.8 to 5 micrometres at a resolution of around 20 nanometres. The IIRS also measures water/hydroxyl features at high spatial resolutions like 80 metres as well as spectral resolutions like 20 nanometres for the first time. These measurements are expected to, over time, provide comprehensive maps of water and mineralogical features on the moon. According to ISRO's post on Chandrayaan-2's payloads, the IIRS will enable such measurements to be taken for the 'first time' at such a spectral range and resolution.

Even as Vikram crash-landed, ISROChairman K. Sivan had said the Chandrayaan-2 mission has achieved 98 per cent of its objectives.He had said the orbiter was doing well and performing scheduled science experiments.

A series of space missions

A series of high-profile global space missions are expected in 2020 and the early 2021. In July,UAE became the first Arab country to embark on a Mars mission with its spacecraft 'Al Amal', launched fromJapan's remote Tanegashima spaceport.Al Amal, or 'Hope' probe, weighing 1.3 tonnes was launched via Mitsubishi's H-2A rocket. The probe is transmitting and the signals are being studied, UAE had announced post-launch.A newcomer in space development, the UAE has already put three Earth observation satellites into orbit. Two were developed by South Korea and launched by Russia, and a thirdits ownwas launched by Japan. A successful Hope mission to Mars would be a major step for the oil-dependent economy seeking a future in space, coming less than a year after the launch of the first Emirati astronaut Hazzaa Ali Almansoori.

China is also planning to embark on the first Mars exploration mission Tianwen-1 this year. Aiming to catch up with India, US, Russia and the European Union to reach the red planet, Chinas Mars mission plans to complete orbiting, landing and roving in one go.China, in recent years, has emerged as a major space power with manned space missions, and landing a rover on the dark side of the moon. It is currently building a space station of its own. However, Chinas attempts to send an exploratory probe to Mars called Yinghuo-1, in a Russian spacecraft in 2011, failed shortly after the launch and it was declared lost and later burnt during re-entry into earth.

NASA's Perseverance rover to Mars, expected to touch down on the Jezero crater, will look for signs of past microbial life in river delta deposits formed over billions of years that might have enhanced preservation of evidence of life. The delta, speculated to have formed due to sediment deposits at the mouth of Hypanis Valles, a river system on ancient Mars, separates the southern highlands from the northern lowlands. Scientists believe that Mars once had an ancient ocean and a water cycle similar to Earth's and large seas or an ocean ever existed in the northern lowlands. Findings from Jezero crater could aid our understanding of how life evolved on Earth. If life once existed there, it likely didn't evolve beyond the single-cell stage, scientists say. That's because Jezero crater formed over 3.5 billion years ago, long before organisms on Earth became multicellular. If life once existed at the surface, its evolution was stalled by some unknown event that sterilised the planet. That means the Martian crater could serve as a kind of time capsule preserving signs of life as it might once have existed on Earth.

India's major focus in 2020 will be on its third lunar mission (Chandrayaan-3), andGaganyaan's first unmanned flight.According to the ISRO chairman, the government has approved the Chandrayaan-3 project, which will again attempt a soft landing on the moon, and the whole project will cost around Rs 615 crore. Gaganyaan, the human space mission, envisages to send three Indians to space by 2022. The four test pilots selected for this mission are currently undergoing training in Russia.

However, Sivan had expressed consternation that 10 space missions being prepared for launch this year were disturbed due to the coronavirus-induced lockdown.Because of this [pandemic], everything got disturbed. We have to make an assessment after the COVID-19 issue is resolved, Sivan had said. Gaganyaan will be impacted because of the lockdown all industries have not yet started functioning, Sivan said.

See the original post:

On first anniversary of Chandrayaan-2, a look at the global space missions that lie ahead - THE WEEK

SETI Institute in the News Media Roundup. July 1 July 15, 2020 – SETI Institute

NASA Awards SETI Institute Contract for Planetary Protection

As we continue to venture out and research the possibility of life in outer space, an important consideration is the protection of Earth and other planets in our solar system and beyond, from biological contamination. In early July, NASAs Office of Planetary Protection awarded the SETI Institute with the contract to support all phases of current and future missions to ensure compliance with planetary protection standards.

As we return to the Moon, look for evidence of past or present life on Mars and continue our missions of exploration and discovery in the Solar System, Planetary Protection becomes an increasingly important component of mission planning and execution, said Bill Diamond, President and CEO of the SETI Institute. We are proud to be NASAs partner for this mission-critical function, protecting Earth from backward contamination, and helping ensure that the life we may find on other worlds, didnt come from our own.

Whether through telescopes, binoculars or even with the naked eye, many are observing the July light show put on by C/2020 F3, otherwise known as Comet NEOWISE, named after the space telescope instrumental in finding it, the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) telescope.

Comets are like cats, says Franck Marchis, an astronomer at the SETI Institute. They are unpredictable. If Comet NEOWISEs outgassing exhausts its reserves of icy material, its bright tail could dissipate, effectively removing the object from view. On the other extreme, ongoing heating from the sun could cause the comet to disintegrate in a bright outburst, potentially resulting in a highly visible great comet of historic significance. This possibility would be a spectacular event and a great show for the earthlings, Marchis says. But personally, I recommend walking up early and going to see it now, while we know its here.

Two scientists at Omni Calculator have combined the Drake Equation, created by Frank Drake in 1961, and a new method called the Astrobiological Copernican Limits to create the Alien Civilization Calculator. They use this calculator to estimate the number of technologically advanced civilizations that could potentially exist in our galaxy.

In November 2019, NASA researchers identified a repeating pattern of orbit between two of Neptunes inner moons, Naiad and Thalassa, known as the dance of avoidance. The unusual dance continues and has likely been there a very long time, according to Planetary Astronomer Mark Showalter of the SETI Institute.

"We are always excited to find these co-dependencies between moons," said planetary astronomer Mark Showalter, from the SETI Institute.

"Naiad and Thalassa have probably been locked together in this configuration for a very long time, because it makes their orbits more stable. They maintain the peace by never getting too close."

Check out Weekly Space Hangout with astrophysicist Dr. Andrew Siemion, Director of the Berkeley SETI Research Center and the Bernard M. Oliver Chair for SETI at the SETI Institute.

Big Picture Science

Transmission surprises

Some dogs and cats have become sick with COVID. But its not just domestic critters that are vulnerable: zoo animals have fallen ill too. Theres more strange news about the pandemic, for example scientists who track the coronavirus in our sewage, and computer models that show that flushing the toilet can launch persistent, pathogenic plumes into the room. And scientists have warned the WHO that infectious virus remains airborne. Also, how a shortage of glass vials could delay the deployment of a vaccine.

Join guests Yvette Johnson-Walker, Rolf Halden and Bryan Bzdek as they discuss interesting pandemic phenomena in COVID Curiosities.

Uniquely human

Your cat is smart, but its ability to choreograph a ballet or write computer code isnt great. A lot of animals are industrious and clever, but humans are the only animal that is uniquely ingenious and creative.

Neuroscientist David Eagleman and composer Anthony Brandt discuss how human creativity has reshaped the world. Find out what is going on in your brain when you write a novel, paint a watercolor, or build a whatchamacallit in your garage.

But isHomo sapiensclaim on creativity destined to be short-lived? Why both Eagleman and Brandt are prepared to step aside when artificial intelligence can do their jobs.

Tune in here to this repeat edition of Creative Brains, originally aired February 5, 2018.

For more information and the archive of past shows, visit the Big Picture Science website.

SETI Live

Recent SETI Live episodes include:

Frontier Development Lab Knowledge Discovery Framework - NASA has an exceptionally large archive of Earth Science data. How can machine learning and artificial intelligence unlock new insights and enable new types of scientific research? A prototype of a Knowledge Discovery Framework (KDF) enables users to sift through data and identify patterns. This Frontier Development Lab team is developing tools that allow users to provide an example image so AI can find similar images in the data, addressing a gap in current search tools. An AI-driven KDF will have applications for disaster response, monitoring climate change and more. Team members are: Francesco Civilini (NASA postdoctoral fellow at Marshall Space Flight Center), Megan Seeley (PhD student at Arizona State University), Nishan Srishankar (Worcester Polytech Institute), and Satyarth Praveen (University of Maryland, College Park).

Frontier Development Lab Starspots Team - Starspots are cooler, darker areas on the surface of a star that form when regions of the stars magnetic field block the flow of heat and energy to the stellar surface. Understanding the surface features of stars could provide insights about stellar magnetism and its impact on exoplanet habitability. This FDL team will be using applied AI and machine learning tools and processes to Kepler and TESS data to identify and define the properties of starspots, stellar rotation, and stellar magnetism in tens of thousands of stars, and increase our understanding of our own Sun as a star. Join us for a conversation with team members Daniel Giles (Illinois Institute of Technology and Adler Planetarium), J. Emmanuel Johnson (University of Valencia, Spain), Lisseth Gavilan-Main (NASA Ames Research Center) and Stela Ishitani Silva (Catholic University of American and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) for a discussion about the starspots challenge they are tackling and what they are learning.

As always, videos of all past Facebook Live events can be found on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/SETIInstitute/

Or on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/SETIInstitute

Go here to see the original:

SETI Institute in the News Media Roundup. July 1 July 15, 2020 - SETI Institute

Sunita Williams on her time in space and the Mars mission – Oneindia

India

oi-Oneindia Staff

| Updated: Monday, July 20, 2020, 12:02 [IST]

New Delhi, July 20: Sunita Williams holds the record of the longest space flight for a woman but as a child, the Indian American astronaut had never thought about voyaging into space ever.

Williams, who has made 7 spacewalks and spent more than 321 days in space was addressing a webinar organised by the APJ Abdul Kalam Centre on "Our Place In Space", on Sunday evening.

"I grew up in a family with dad who immigrated from India, and my mother who was an X-ray technician in a hospital, they met each other when he was going through residency. I came from a humble family, me, my brother, we all knew that we should work hard, I never envisioned to be an astronaut. As a child I liked swimming, I was an athlete and I liked animals and wanted to be a veterinary doctor," Williams said.

The daughter of neuroanatomist Dr Deepak Pandya and his wife, Bonnie, of Massachusetts, Williams graduated from the US Naval Academy, became an engineer and a test pilot before being selected by NASA's Astronaut Candidate School in 1998.

Williams is among the four astronauts picked by Nasa on Friday to train for a programme which will one day land an American on Mars. She will be flying to the International Space Station in Boeing's Starliner spacecraft in the next few months.

Nasa's unmanned Mars 2020 Perseverance rover, which is provisionally slated for launch on July 30, could pave the way for a manned mission to the Red Planet subsequently, Indian-American astronaut, Sunita Williams, stated.

"We should go to Mars. It is entirely a different place and it is important we plan how to sustain there. I am sure this will happen in our generation," she said.

Watch the full interview here:

She said that Nasa's Artemis mission, which aims to put a man and the first woman in the south pole region of the moon by 2024, will also help in planning a human mission to the Red Planet.

"Nasa is working with oceanographic institutes, planning a flight to one of Jupiter's moons by sending a submarine to its ocean," she added.

The role of this mission will be in the area of astrobiology. She said that the view of earth from space leaves one awestruck.

"When I had my first glimpse I said vow, how peaceful, beautiful and incredible it is," she said emphasising that it gave sense of oneness.

Williams also shared her experience in space as she enjoyed eating samosas and took with her the Bhagwad Gita and the Upanishad which her father had gifted her.

"Working with our international partners drives cooperation and makes one think of just one world," Williams said.

Rajasthan Political Crisis: Union Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat issued notice | Oneindia News

"Boundaries that divide countries disappear when scientists and astronauts work together to fuel scientific discovery on and off the planet", she added.

For Breaking News and Instant Updates

Allow Notifications

You have already subscribed

See original here:

Sunita Williams on her time in space and the Mars mission - Oneindia

Eyes on the stars: Launches continue as Alaska’s spaceport thinks expansion – Juneau Empire

With a launch coming up in a matter of days the Pacific Spaceport Complex Alaska in Kodiak is looking at ramping up its capabilities and number of vehicles delivered into orbit.

Were licensed for up to 9 launches per year. Were working with the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) to increase it to 36. You have room if a third commercial launch company wants to come on, said Mark Lester, the president and CEO of the Alaska Aerospace Corporation, which administers the spaceport, in a phone interview. I think thats a really good pace to make the spaceport vibrant.

The spaceport, which opened in 1998, had several launches scheduled for 2020 that the coronavirus pandemic has interfered with.

Historically, weve launched one a year, Lester said. This year we expected to launch six, but with COVID, things slowed down.

Working with the community

The spaceport, about 40 miles from the city of Kodiak, is scheduled to launch a commercial rocket, with the launch window beginning on Aug. 2 and closing on Aug. 7.

We can have really nice weather in Kodiak but we can get some storms, Lester said. Its really important for the local community and local aviators as well as trans-Pacific flights.

Launch schedules need to cleared with the FAA, as well as with the local community, to minimize disruption to flights, commercial fishing and people in the park the spaceport itself is sited in.

We have six launch pads. We have pretty robust capability. We have payload processing. Two command and control centers. I feel comfortable that our infrastructure is in a good place, Lester said. Now were using the spaceport as an economic hub to create more aerospace activity.

Unlike the launch pads NASA uses at Cape Canaveral, which loft their payloads in an equatorial orbit, PSCA launches into an orbital track, which is useful for different types of payloads.

[Mine developer sees review as positive for Alaska project]

The polar orbit is why Kodiak is valuable. The only other place you can go into polar orbit from the U.S. is Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, Lester said. Theres a role here for Kodiak to support government missions, military missions and commercial missions.

Rockets and payloads are conveyed up to Kodiak by sea and then truck, Lester said.

Well ship it up in 40-foot containers. We get it at the port, Kodiak has a nice ice-free port, Lester said. Sometimes, theyll fly them in on C-130s if they need to get them up here faster.

The PSCA is also preparing to support human spaceflight, after a fashion, Lester said. Space Perspective, a Florda-based company that offers rides for eight passengers and crew in advanced balloons to the very edge of space.

This will be the first manned space launches from PSCA, Lester said. Space Perspectives is currently working with PSCA and the FAA to make sure operations are safe and efficient for everyone in the airspace.

Space Force and Space Command

With the standing up of the Space Force as the newest armed service, Lester said, theres rich potential for Alaska as an anchor point for U.S. national interests in orbit and on the surface that the spaceport can support.

The Space Force is exciting, said Lester.

While PSCA and the Alaska Aerospace Corporation dont have a contract with the new service yet, they do have work with the Space Development Agency.

Continuing to support national security missions is part of our portfolio, Lester said.

[Recent earthquake adds missing piece to puzzle]

Gov. Mike Dunleavy recently published an opinion piece urging the Department of Defense to base U.S. Space Command in Alaska. Space Command is a combatant command of the Air Force, different from the Space Force, responsible for military operations more than 100 kilometers (about 62 miles) above the surface of the planet.

Alaska has been important to the military for a long time. The Arctic is certainly important, Lester said. Early warning, missile defense, air defense, the University of Alaska, the spaceport. Alaska offers a lot to U.S. Space Command.

For now, Lester said, PSCA will keep doing what it excels at, supporting launches and promoting economic growth in Alaskas aerospace industry.

This is my dream job, to be running a spaceport, to be defining what spaceport is. Spaceports can learn a lot from airports, Lester said. We look forward to seeing Astra launch and continuing to support their launch. Were continuing to try and think through how Alaska Aerospace brings economic value.

Contact reporter Michael S. Lockett at 757-621-1197 or lockett@juneauempire.com.

Go here to see the original:

Eyes on the stars: Launches continue as Alaska's spaceport thinks expansion - Juneau Empire

Apollo-Soyuz Mission: When the Space Race Ended – Discover Magazine

On July 17, 1975, the U.S. and the Soviet Union docked two spacecraft together in orbit as part of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project, humanitys first international space mission. Over the course of two days, NASA astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts performed a series of scientific experiments and technology demonstrations. But the missions main purpose was far more earthly. It was a political demonstration of peace.

For some historians, the Apollo-Soyuz mission marked the formal end of the space race and the beginning of an extended era of international cooperation in space. Today the spaceflight gets credit for helping pave the way for the joint Shuttle-Mir space program, as well as the International Space Station.

I really believe that we were sort of an example to the countries, astronaut Vance Brand said in a NASA oral history interview in 2000. We were a little of a spark or a foot in the door that started better communications."

For decades, the space race had seen the two superpowers race to master and demonstrate many of the technologies needed to destroy each other with nuclear weapons. Yet, instead of ending in nuclear war, the space race concluded with a handshake in microgravity.

When the Soviet's launched humanity's first satellite, Sputnik 1, it caught the rest of the world by surprise. (Credit: NASA)

On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1, humanitys first satellite, stunning the world. America responded months later with its own spacecraft, Explorer 1. This back and forth continued to escalate, and in 1961, the Soviet Union put the first human into Earth orbit, once again demonstrating its technological superiority and forcing America to respond.

Amid the heightening Cold War tensions, U.S. officials went looking for some new goal that could be touted as evidence of America's dominance in space. To president John F. Kennedys administration, the moon seemed like the perfect fit. And most importantly, the timeline was long enough that America finally had a chance to beat the Soviets.

In a defining speech at Rice University in Texas in September of 1962, just one month before the Cuban Missile Crisis, Kennedy made Americas lunar intentions clear.

We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, he said, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win.

The bet paid off. By 1968, NASAs moon program was far ahead of its Soviet rival. As the U.S. wrapped up preparations to send the first Apollo astronauts to the moon, the Soviet Union launched its Zond 5 spacecraft, carrying a pair of tortoises into lunar orbit.

It really was one of those last hurrahs for the Soviet spaceflight program because it was one of the last times they were able to preempt the Americans in any real way, Cathy Lewis, international space program curator for the Smithsonians National Air and Space Museum, told Discover in 2018.

And on July 20, 1969, America achieved a major milestone in the space race as the Apollo 11 crew walked on the moon. Over the course of four years, Apollo astronauts traveled to the lunar surface six times. No Soviet cosmonaut ever made the trip.

But the Soviet Union hadnt set idle during that time. While America was putting boots on the moon, cosmonauts were racking up experience in low-Earth orbit, building humanitys first space stations with the Salyut program. They were practiced in spaceflight. And their biological experiments putting animals in satellites had offered up new insights into how the environment of space can change the body.

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the two nations had repeatedly talked about cooperating in space and sharing scientific insights. But the Cold War tensions stopped any true exchange from taking place.

Then, in the early 1970s, as both countries were pushing new limits in spaceflight, a period of renewed cooperation called Detente developed on the ground. The Vietnam War was winding down, and both superpowers had just spent enormous fortunes expanding their military might. With the two sides eager for peace, the United States and the Soviet Union negotiated nuclear weapons control agreements and generally began easing tensions.

Soyuz commander Alexei Leonov greets NASA astronaut Deke Slayton after the Apollo-Soyuz docking. Both men were already legends in spaceflight at the time, adding drama to the moment. (Credit: NASA)

To some politicians, the ultimate symbol of dtente would be docking a Soviet capsule with an American one in low-Earth orbit for a handshake in space. Scientists and engineers saw benefits to such a joint mission, too. America had talented space pilots and advanced long-distance space technology. Meanwhile, the Soviets had focused on automation and had pioneered long-term spaceflights. Both had something the other was interested in learning about.

An American delegation traveled to Moscow in 1970 to lay the framework for the mission, and within two years, the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project was officially born.

But not everyone liked the idea. Each side worried the other could steal its technology. Some defense hawks, and even a New York Times editorial board opinion, noted that Apollo-Soyuz offered a technical and scientific bonanza for the Soviet Union's lagging astronautical program. Meanwhile, the Soviets continued insulting American spacecraft.

Finally, three years after the final Apollo moon flight, the two superpowers overcame the political and engineering hurdles to make the rendezvous happen, including the design and development of an American-funded docking module that could mate the two crafts.

On July 15, 1975, a Soyuz capsule and an Apollo capsule leftover from a canceled moon flight launched within hours of each other from opposite sides of the planet. Then, two days later, they met up 140 miles over Earths surface.

Soyuz and Apollo are shaking hands now, Soyuz commander Alexei Leonov said as the two spacecraft gently docked. And as the door opened between the ships, the astronauts inside exchanged their own handshakes and posed for pictures.

Over the next two days, the men learned to work together as they toured the other countrys spacecraft and carried out five joint scientific experiments. At first, though, they struggled to even communicate. Each wanted to speak their own language, but they eventually realized that they all understood things better when they attempted to speak the others language.

We [the Americans] thought they [the Soviets] were pretty aggressive people and ... they probably thought we were monsters, Brand said. So we very quickly broke through that, because when you deal with people that are in the same line of work as you are, and you're around them for a short time, why, you discover that, well, they're human beings."

Together, the crew helped their space agencies gather new technical and scientific insights. One experiment tested the effects of low-gravity on the development of fish eggs. Another created an artificial solar eclipse using the Apollo capsule to block the sun while cosmonauts took pictures of the solar corona.

The International Space Station keeps quietly ticking along. (Credit: NASA)

The moment of peace in space was admittedly brief. Just two days after docking, the ships parted ways. And before long, Cold War tensions reemerged.

After Apollo-Soyuz, no American astronaut would venture to space for roughly six years, until the first space shuttle launched in 1981. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union, followed by Russia, kept sending their Soyuz capsules into orbit.

However, the two countries did eventually collaborate in space again first with the Shuttle-Mir program, then with the $150 billion International Space Station, which was largely funded by U.S. taxpayers. And when the Space Shuttle Program came to a close in 2011, NASA was left with no way to keep putting astronauts in orbit themselves. The U.S. had to buy tickets to the International Space Station on Soviet Soyuz capsules.

In fact, Apollo-Soyuz was the last time NASA astronauts rode an American capsule into orbit until May 2020, when SpaceXs Crew Dragon spacecraft delivered astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to the ISS.

So, the space race may have ended in a handshake, but the questions and challenges of Apollo-Soyuz have never gone away. The U.S. continues to partner with Russia in space, and pay for the privilege, even as the two countries continue to challenge each other on terra firma.

Read the original:

Apollo-Soyuz Mission: When the Space Race Ended - Discover Magazine

From the UP to space: Site near Marquette picked as rocket launch site – Detroit Free Press

Site near Marquette picked as rocket launch site. USA TODAY Handout

A rocket blasting toward the heavens over Lake Superior.

What could be more Pure Michigan than that?

The push to turn Michigan into one of a handful of states with active space launch operations has a new milestone.

An undeveloped, 3-mile stretch of land along the lakeabout 16 miles north of Marquette in the Upper Peninsula, has been picked to host a vertical launch site. Picture Cape Canaveral, although not on the same grand scale, according to the man spearheading the effort.

Gavin Brown, executive director of the Michigan Aerospace Manufacturers Association, told the Free Press that the site could be operational in the next five or six years if plans come to fruition. Browns manufacturing associationhas been instrumental in the push to bring a bit of the last frontier to the Great Lakes State.

This is a rendering of an undeveloped, three-mile stretch of land along Lake Superior about 16 miles north of Marquette in the Upper Peninsula, which has been picked to host a vertical launch site for rockets.(Photo: Michigan Aerospace Manufacturers Association)

In February, the Oscoda-WurtsmithAirport, a former Air Force base perhaps best known now because of its connection to PFAS pollution from its military days, was picked to handle what are called horizontal launches,with operations possible as early as 2023, should it be approved by the feds. Basically, it would mean large jets would ferry satellite bundleshigh enough to be launchedinto low Earth orbit. Brown said the intent for both sites is to create environmentally safelaunch operations, with as many as 300 launches in Oscoda and a few dozen near Marquette each year.

The idea that Michigan could become a serious launch location for space flights might sound farfetched, but Brown said Michigan has some clear advantages and there's a key reason that it could come to pass. The auto industry needs access to space to make its self-driving car dream a reality. The continuous communications connections needed for fully autonomous driving require satellites, and Michigan, with its northern location, means satellites couldfind spaces in orbit that are underserved by more southernlaunch sites. Plus, Michigans proximity to large bodies of water provides an essential safety component.

Gavin Brown, executive director of the Michigan Aerospace Manufacturers Association, leads the Michigan Launch Initiative and is photographed at his hotel in Sterling Heights in 2019.(Photo: Kimberly P. Mitchell, Detroit Free Press)

The automotive manufacturers are trying to figure out how to get that connectivity in their cars, Brown said, noting that the effort his group is pushing would allow the Detroit Three to benefit from a network the companieswould not have to build on their own. He noted the advantage Tesla enjoys because of Elon Musks connection as founder of SpaceX, which has become a major player in the commercial space industry.

Im talking about the convergence of automotive and space, and why do it anywhere but here in Michigan? Brown said this week.

The potential for significant employment gains, an estimated high end of 40,000 direct and spin-off jobsin Michigan is one reason the entire project has seen interest from the state, which contributed$2 million for a feasibility study. Its also why the operation could see stimulus money in coming months, although nothing is set, Brown said.

By the end of the year, as much as $1.2 billion should be secured for the project, thanks tointerest from several equity firms, Brown said.But he noted that fundraising would not formally begin until after the feasibility process has finished.

The site of a command and control center, which could be located anywhere in the state, is to be announced in November. Brown used NASAs approach to illustrate why such a facility would not need to be located close to a launch site.

Think of Houston being the command and control center for Cape Canaveral, Brown said.

And the high-paying jobsthatcould be created in connection with the project would likely be spread out across the state.

Kurt Ruppenthal, vice president and general manager of Warren-based Weldaloy, said his business would easily add another 30 or 40 employees to the 100 on staff now should the spaceport effort come to pass. Weldaloy makes specialty forgings for rocket engines, something it has been doing for at least the last decade. Its a prime example of a company that once focused heavily on supplying the auto industry and has since shifted its growth elsewhere, the kind of diversification that could benefit others in Michigan manufacturing.

More: Fiat Chrysler, Waymo to put self-driving tech in Ram vans

More: Is Tesla's Elon Musk wrong about this key self-driving technology?

More: Michigan wants to become next site for space launch facility

Ruppenthal said Weldaloy, which is part of Browns aerospace group, already works with major companies involved in the space business, including SpaceX, Blue Origin, Aerojet Rocketdyne, Virgin Orbit, Lockheed Martin and Boeing.

The potential for job growth with an expanding aerospace industry is easy to envision. Consider the layers of software components, engineering, design, manufacturing and flight planning that would be needed, kind of an aviation-plus situation.

Imagine an airport, but the airports going to space, Ruppenthal said.

In Oscoda, adding aspaceportto the current aviation operationscould mean a considerable boost to the local community, said Airport Manager Gary Kellan.

The communities around the airport have fewer than 10,000 residents, he noted.

"If youcan create 500 jobs, that would be big," Kellan said.

Brown, who touted the existing infrastructure, including the 11,800-foot runway at Oscoda, said a completed launch site in the Lake Huron-area communitycould generate 2,500 to 10,000 jobs.

Contact Eric D. Lawrence: elawrence@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter: @_ericdlawrence.

Read or Share this story: https://www.freep.com/story/money/cars/2020/07/23/michigan-rocket-launch-site-marquette/5493837002/

Read more from the original source:

From the UP to space: Site near Marquette picked as rocket launch site - Detroit Free Press

Lancaster-based company to help with moon mission – ABC27

LANCASTER, Pa. (WHTM) A Lancaster-based company plans to help with a mission to the moon.

Advanced Cooling Technologies located in the Burle Business Park on New Holland Avenue is the business that will be helping a mission thats expected to launch in 2021.

It fills you with a lot of pride in what you do, says Ryan Spangler, lead engineer in Aerospace Product Development.

ACT is working with a company out of Pittsburgh (Astrobiotic Technology Inc.) to perfect the Peregrine lander. NASA plans to use the lander to make deliveries to the moon.

Spangler said that ACT will be responsible for keeping the lander safe from extreme temperatures.

In space, its not just about being too cold, but its also being very hot, he explained. In space, you dont have an atmosphere to shield you from the sun.

Other officials from ACT say they will use liquid nitrogen to help with tests to mimic the temperatures in space. ACT has designed cooling components for space flight before.

Spangler said the work on this project could lead to future space exploration. Its important to view this as not just as an important mission for us, or for NASA, or Astrobotic. Its important for the future of humankind if we anticipate further investigating deep space, or different planetary objects. This is an exciting first step for that.

View post:

Lancaster-based company to help with moon mission - ABC27

Bedrest and bears – clues for spaceflight and ageing – The Irish Times

John, part of your research looks at what happens to our bodies on prolonged bedrest why?

Lying in bed continuously for a prolonged period results in loss of muscle mass, bone mineral density and other changes within the body that mimic what happens in ageing and also throughout spaceflight.

As such the research we do is supported by Enterprise Ireland and the European Space Agency (ESA). The goal is to see what happens at a cellular level during prolonged bedrest, which is key to help find ways to counteract such undesired changes.

What is involved in prolonged bedrest studies?

In the bedrest studies people lie for weeks in a test facility in France, tilted with their heads down and unable to sit up any reason. We analyse samples of their blood and muscle over time.

What kinds of changes do you see?

We look at metabolism, and in particular we measure how bedrest alters our fuel selection for energy, a process highly controlled by organelles within the cell known as mitochondria. Under normal circumstances these dynamic mitochondria fuse and divide consistently, adapting to the energy needs of the body.

We found that prolonged bedrest of 21 days leads to a decrease in their fusion, resulting in smaller, more fragmented mitochondria, something which could help explain the change in the way our body uses energy during prolonged bedrest.

Are you figuring out how to improve matters?

Yes, our lab and our collaborators within the ESA found that if people used resistance vibration exercise to work their muscles as they lay in bed for 21 days, their mitochondrial fusion and ability to process sugars were better than if they didnt do such exercise, improving their overall health.

We have also just completed an experiment where people in bedrest for 60 days took a daily cocktail of anti-oxidants and anti-inflammatory compounds of selenium, polyphenols, Omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin E. We are now looking to see what kind of impact that had.

Whats the most interesting thing you have done in your PhD?

I think it was working on muscle samples from brown bears in the forests in Sweden, to look at metabolic changes between hibernation and non-hibernation.

Thankfully I didnt have to catch the bears though. A team of rangers and vets tranquillised the bears and collected the samples, then they rushed the samples over to us researchers by helicopter and we worked on them in a little lab in a house by the woods. In that study, we noted differences in the bear mitochondria between summer and hibernation, and are now trying to understand such interesting findings.

You recently won the student category of the DCU Presidents Award for Engagement, well done how did that feel?

To be honest it was surreal! I was delighted just to be nominated. In my spare time I like to engage in scientific outreach through talks and presentations on space and ageing and I work closely with the Feed Our Homeless charity in Dublin. Im also a deputy group leader of my local Scout unit.

When Prof Brian MacCraith announced I was the winner in the online ceremony, I had to play it back to make sure it had actually happened.

How was lockdown for you?

I was supposed to finish my PhD in June, but my supervisor, Associate Professor Donal OGorman, arranged for an extension until December because the lab work was significantly disrupted.

Lockdown helped me get a lot of the project written up, and now I am back finishing up the final pieces of lab work. In that respect, lockdown was useful, because it got me out of the lab so I could write a big chunk of my thesis.

View post:

Bedrest and bears - clues for spaceflight and ageing - The Irish Times

SpaceX’s historic 1st crewed mission set to end on Aug. 2 – Space.com

SpaceX's first-ever crewed mission will come to an end in two weeks.

NASA is targeting an Aug. 2 splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean for the Demo-2 test flight, which sent NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to the International Space Station (ISS) aboard a Crew Dragon capsule, agency chief Jim Bridenstine announced today (July 17).

If all goes according to plan, Behnken and Hurley will depart the ISS on Aug. 1 and come back to Earth a day later, Bridenstine said via Twitter today. But those dates aren't set in stone, he stressed: "Weather will drive the actual date. Stay tuned."

Related: SpaceX's historic Demo-2 test flight in photos

Demo-2 launched atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on May 30 and reached the ISS a day later. The mission's duration was uncertain until today; NASA officials had previously said that Demo-2 would last between one and four months, depending on how Crew Dragon performed.

Demo-2 is the first orbital human spaceflight to lift off from the United States since the retirement of NASA's space shuttle fleet in July 2011. Ever since then, NASA had relied on Russian Soyuz spacecraft to get American astronauts to and from orbit, at a cost, most recently, of about $90 million per seat. The U.S. space agency didn't want this dependency to last too long, so, over the last decade, it has been funding the development of private astronaut taxis to fill the shuttle's shoes.

In 2014, SpaceX and Boeing each received multibillion-dollar contracts from NASA's Commercial Crew Program to finish work on their human spaceflight systems and launch at least six operational missions to the ISS.

After Demo-2's successful splashdown, SpaceX will be clear to launch the first of those contracted flights. That mission, known as Crew-1, is scheduled to lift off from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Aug. 30.

Boeing's capsule, called CST-100 Starliner, is not yet ready to carry astronauts to orbit; it must first refly an uncrewed test flight to the ISS later this year. During its first attempt at this mission, which launched in December 2019, Starliner suffered a glitch with its onboard timing system and failed to rendezvous with the orbiting lab. (SpaceX notched this milestone with its uncrewed Demo-1 flight in March 2019.)

Mike Wall is the author of "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.

Read more here:

SpaceX's historic 1st crewed mission set to end on Aug. 2 - Space.com

The UAE’s Hope Mars orbiter: Here’s 6 things to know about the historic mission – Space.com

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is sending a spacecraft called Hope to Mars in what will, if successful, become the first interplanetary mission based out of the Arab region.

The mission focuses on understanding Mars' weather and atmosphere. It's a topic that plenty of missions have touched on before, but the Hope spacecraft will take a new, more comprehensive approach to the question. The UAE hopes the mission will help scientists around the world to understand how weather changes on the Red Planet over the course of a day and between the Martian seasons; the mission could also shed light on how our neighboring world is losing its atmosphere.

Here's your cheat sheet to the mission.

Related: The United Arab Emirates' Hope mission to Mars in photos

The UAE is still pretty new to spaceflight, first participating in a satellite launch in 2009 in partnership with a South Korean company. The country's first domestically built satellite, an Earth-observing mission called KhalifaSat, launched in 2018.

Hope is the country's first-ever foray beyond Earth orbit. As with its early satellites, the UAE recruited partners to help make the mission more feasible and to develop the knowhow necessary for the mission. In this case, the UAE partnered with three U.S. universities who host faculty with experience on Mars spacecraft.

Related: A Mars 'Hope': The UAE's 1st interplanetary spacecraft aims to make history at Red Planet

The Hope mission, also called the Emirates Mars Mission, was first announced in 2014 as a way to spur economic and technological development. The mission came with several stipulations: although the project would be based on partnerships, the team needed to build the spacecraft not just buy it, and the spacecraft needed to arrive at Mars before December 2021, when the UAE will celebrate its 50th anniversary. That deadline required a launch this summer because of the tricky orbital alignments that put Mars launch windows 26 months apart from each other.

And, of course, the mission couldn't be too expensive. All told, the spacecraft and its launch cost $200 million, according to the UAE, although that number doesn't include the costs of operating the mission in space.

Related: The boldest Mars missions in history

Mars is hard. To date, only four entities have successfully visited Mars: NASA, Russia, the European Space Agency and India. If all goes well, the UAE would join that contingent.

But the country may not end up being the fifth Mars visitor because China is also launching its first Mars mission this summer while orbits align. Neither mission has yet announced when specifically it will arrive at the Red Planet, although both will be on track for an early 2021 rendezvous.

(NASA's Mars 2020 mission, starring the massive Perseverance rover, is targeting the same three-week launch window.)

Related: It's the month of Mars! 3 Red Planet missions set to launch in July

Hope, which is about the size of an SUV, carries three instruments. One is an imager, which will capture photographs in optical and ultraviolet light. The other two are spectrometers, which split light into the specific wavelengths present, one working on ultraviolet and one on infrared light.

As a team, the three instruments will allow Hope to study the thin, carbon-dioxide-rich atmosphere of Mars in order to better understand the Red Planet's weather and how it loses its atmosphere out to space.

Related: The UAE wants to rewrite what we know about weather on Mars

While the mission's instruments build on existing technology, the Hope spacecraft will use a unique tactic to gather its science data: traveling in an orbit around Mars no probe has taken before. Every 55 hours, the spacecraft will complete a loop around the planet's equator, flying between 12,000 to 27,000 miles (20,000 to 43,000 kilometers) above the Martian surface.

That path will allow the probe to study changes in weather over the course of the full Martian day, which lasts a bit longer than a terrestrial day, and year, which lasts nearly two Earth years. The primary mission will continue for one Mars year.

Related: A brief history of Mars missions

Choosing to send its first interplanetary robot to Mars fits with other priorities within the UAE's space program. Currently, the nation's main human spaceflight focus is sending astronauts to the International Space Station; the first Emirati astronaut, Hazzaa AlMansoori, launched in September 2019 for a weeklong flight. The UAE is already recruiting its next pair of astronauts and strategizing longer missions to orbit.

But the Red Planet also sits firmly in the UAE's goals. The country is preparing to participate in a Mars analog mission for the first time later this year. If all goes according to plan, the country may soon host such analogue missions, as well as other Mars-focused research, at the Mars Science City facility it is planning to construct in the desert.

Related: Hazzaa AlMansoori: The 1st Emirati Astronaut's Space Station Mission in Photos

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her on Twitter @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Visit link:

The UAE's Hope Mars orbiter: Here's 6 things to know about the historic mission - Space.com

Care home residents blast off to space on simulator in celebration of moon landing anniversary – The Northern Echo

CARE home residents marked the anniversary of the first manned mission to the moon by embarking on their own, virtual space flight.

Using a space flight simulator on their tablet computers, residents at Hazlegrove Court Care Home, Saltburn, glided through space.

The event was organised to mark 51 years since Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took the first steps on the surface of the moon. Many of the residents can still remember watching the historic event on the television in July 1969.

When asked what things they would take to the moon, resident Joyce Tibbett, 84, said: Family photos, sweets, bible, shandy, puzzle books, clock, men.

Asked why she included men on her list, Joyce said: So they can do repairs if needed.

Sharon Lewis, activities coordinator at Hazelgrove Court Care Home, said: The residents really enjoyed the Shuttle flight simulator app. Our journey into space was great fun.

Listening to the residents memories of the moon landing was a lot of fun. They were all different ages but they all remember watching it on TV and knowing it was a moment for the history books.

Continue reading here:

Care home residents blast off to space on simulator in celebration of moon landing anniversary - The Northern Echo

Spacewalkers accomplish another round of space station battery swap outs – Spaceflight Now

STORY WRITTEN FORCBS NEWS& USED WITH PERMISSION

EDITORS NOTE:Updated at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) after end of spacewalk.

Now in the home stretch of a complex, multi-year upgrade, two space station astronauts floated outside the lab complex Thursday and completed the replacement of aging batteries in one of the labs four sets of solar arrays.

With the completion of Thursdays six-hour spacewalk, multiple astronauts participating in 11 extra-vehicular activities, or EVAs, have now replaced 46 of 48 aging nickel-hydrogen batteries with 23 more powerful lithium-ion units.

A replacement for a lithium-ion battery that was damaged in 2019 when a battery charger shorted out has not yet been installed. But a unit flown to the station in January will be installed during a spacewalk later this year, taking the place of the final two nickel-hydrogen units.

That swap out will finally complete an upgrade that began in January 2017. The new batteries, along with additional planned upgrades, are expected to keep the station functioning through the end of the decade if not beyond.

Thursdays spacewalk began at 7:10 a.m. EDT when station commander Chris Cassidy and astronaut Robert Behnken, floating in the labs Quest airlock, switched their spacesuits to battery power, officially kicking off the 230th EVA since ISS assembly began in 1998.

After checking safety tethers and collecting tools, the astronauts headed for the far right end of the labs power truss to continue work started during spacewalks June 26and July 1to replace 12 older nickel-hydrogen batteries at the base of the outboard set of solar arrays with six lithium-ion power packs.

The space station is equipped with four huge solar wings, two at each end of the power truss, that feed electricity into eight power distribution channels. Twelve nickel-hydrogen batteries at the base of each wing, six per power channel, keep the station functioning when its in orbital darkness.

Starting in 2017, astronauts began replacing the old batteries with lithium-ion units. Because they are more efficient, only six lithium-ion batteries are needed at the base of each solar wing, along with circuit completing adapter plates to take the place of batteries that were removed but not replaced.

During spacewalks in 2017 and 2019, spacewalking astronauts replaced all 24 nickel-hydrogen batteries used by the left and right inboard arrays. But one of the replacement batteries blew a fuse when the charger it was connected to shorted out. That lithium-ion battery was removed and two older units were installed in its place pending launch of a replacement.

The left-side outboard solar wing, meanwhile, was upgraded during spacewalks in 2019 and earlier this year, leaving just the right-side outboard set 12 batteries feeding two power channels for Cassidy and Behnken.

They completed the battery work for one power channel during their two earlier spacewalks.

During Thursdays outing, they removed the six remaining nickel-hydrogen batteries and installed all three of the remaining lithium-ion units, along with a final three adapter plates. Cassidy also installed a high-definition camera boom on an inboard power truss.

NASA planners originally thought the battery work would take two spacewalks per power channel, but Cassidy and Behnken ran well ahead of schedule during their first two EVAs and again on Thursday.

They plan to carry out one more spacewalk next Tuesday to make preparations for installation of a commercial research airlock; to install a tool storage box; and to remove two of six no-longer-needed ground-handling fixtures at the base of the solar wings. That will clear the way for future power system upgrades.

Assuming Tuesdays spacewalk runs exactly six-and-a-half-hours as planned, Behnken will move up to third on the list of most experienced spacewalkers with 62 hours and 11 minutes of EVA time over 10 outings. Cassidys 10-spacewalk mark will stand at 55 hours and 52 minutes, moving him up to eighth in the world.

Cosmonaut Anatoly Solovyev holds the all-time spacewalk record with 78 hours and 21 minutes over 16 EVAs. Retired astronaut Michael Lopez-Alegria is second with 67 hours and 40 minutes over 10 excursions.

Excerpt from:

Spacewalkers accomplish another round of space station battery swap outs - Spaceflight Now

Spaceflight and Tethers Unlimited team up on deorbiting system for satellite carrier – Yahoo News

An artists conception shows Spaceflights Sherpa-FX, the first orbital transfer vehicle to debut in the companys Sherpa-NG (next generation) program. The vehicle is capable of executing multiple deployments, as well as providing independent and detailed deployment telemetry. (Spaceflight Inc. Illustration)

Seattle-based Spaceflight Inc. says itll use a notebook-sized deorbiting system developed by another Seattle-area company to deal with the disposal of its Sherpa-FX orbital transfer vehicle.

The NanoSat Terminator Tape Deorbit System, built by Bothell, Wash.-based Tethers Unlimited, is designed to take advantage of orbital drag on a 230-foot-long strip of conductive tape to hasten the fiery descent of a spacecraft through Earths atmosphere. The system has been tested successfully on nanosatellites over the past year, and another experiment is planned for later this year.

Tethers Unlimiteds system provides an affordable path to reducing space debris, which is becoming a problem of greater concern as more small satellites go into orbit. Statistical models suggest that there are nearly a million bits of debris bigger than half an inch (1 centimeter) whizzing in Earth orbit.

WhenTethers was founded in 1994, its main focus was to solve the problem of space debris so that NASA, the DoD [Department of Defense] and commercial space enterprises could continue to safely operate in Earth orbit, Tethers Unlimited CEO Rob Hoyt said today in a news release. We are pleased to see our solutions are now making a significant contribution to ensuring sustainability of the space environment, which will benefit the entire industry.

Spaceflight Inc.s Sherpa-FX is due to have its first in-space use during a dedicated rideshare mission scheduled for no earlier than December. A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket would send the vehicle into orbit, loaded up with smaller spacecraft. After Sherpa-FX separates from the rockets upper stage, it would deploy those spacecraft to independent orbits. The system builds on the legacy of Spaceflight Inc.s first free-flying satellite deployer, which was used for a 64-satellite mission in 2018.

In-space transportation is essential to meeting our customers specific needs to get their spacecraft delivered to orbit exactly when and where they want it, Grant Bonin, Spaceflight Inc.s senior vice president of business development, said in a news release. If you think of typical rideshare as sharing a seat on a train headed to a popular destination, our next-generation Sherpa program enables us to provide a more complete door-to-door transportation service.

Story continues

Spaceflight Inc.s customers for the rideshare mission include iQPS, Loft Orbital, HawkEye 360, Astrocast and NASAs Small Spacecraft Technology program.

The Terminator Tape module, which weighs less than 2 pounds, will be attached to Sherpa-FXs exterior. When the transfer vehicle has completed its mission, an electrical signal will activate the system to wind out the conductive tape. Interactions with Earths magnetic field and upper atmosphere will increase drag, causing a quicker plunge from orbit.

Were focused on being a good steward of our space resource, and our mission is to conduct frequent small satellite launches, so we have a responsibility for deorbiting what we send up, said Philip Bracken, vice president of engineering at Spaceflight Inc. Tethers solution is affordable, compact and lightweight, and will help us fulfill our responsibilities to clean up space after our mission is complete.

Spaceflight Inc. handles satellite launch logistics in partnership with a variety of launch providers, including SpaceX and Rocket Lab. It was founded as a subsidiary of Seattle-based Spaceflight Industries, but this year ownership was transferred to Mitsui & Co. Ltd.

Read more here:

Spaceflight and Tethers Unlimited team up on deorbiting system for satellite carrier - Yahoo News

More evidence of increasing militarization of space as U.S. claims Russia satellite weapon test – TechCrunch

The U.S. Space Command has released details about an alleged anti-satellite weapons test it suspects Russian of conducting using an existing probe already on orbit, The Verge reports. The Russian satellite in question is the same one that made headlines back at the beginning of 2020 when it seemed to be tailing an existing orbital U.S. spy satellite. That same spacecraft appears to have deployed some kind of projectile according to Space Command, which monitors objects currently in orbit around Earth.

General John Raymond of U.S. Space Command told the Verge that this represents further evidence of Russias continuing efforts to develop and test space-based systems, and pursing a strategy that could but U.S. and allied in-space assets at risk.

The militarization of space isnt new, and parties on all sides have been pursuing development of both offensive and defensive in-space weapons technologies. One of the biggest potential risks lies in weapons that, like this one in theory, could be deployed from satellites to destroy others potentially disabling key ground communications, intelligence or observation space-based infrastructure that is used to support command and control operations on terrestrial battlegrounds and in the defense or observation of key military assets.

Russia isnt the only global power unnerving the U.S. when it comes to the militarization of space: An April test by India saw that nation demonstrate a ground-to-orbit anti-satellite missile system, which NASA Administrator denied as being not compatible with human spaceflight. India is hardly the first country to demonstrate this kind of capability, however, as the U.S., China and Russian have all performed similar tests.

The growing risk of orbit-to-orbit offensive weapons has had a dramatic effect on how militaries including that of the U.S. has changed its priorities for in-space assets. For instance, the Department of Defense and other U.S. defense and intelligence agencies appear to be shifting focus away from the large, geosynchronous satellites that were massively costly and relatively unique upon which they used to rely, and towards smaller, more nimble satellites that might operate in low Earth orbit and consist of constellations with built-in redundancy. Theyve also been actively funding the development of commercial small-scale launcher startups, which can offer more response orbital launch services even than SpaceX and other existing providers.

While there are obviously many vocal detractors regarding the militarization of space, the fact remains that its an area where a number of global superpowers have spent billions, since the potential tactical advantage it provides is immense. Based on the increasing frequency and more public nature of tests like this one, its a segment where the U.S. in particular will be only too happy to look for support from the private sector, including technology startups, that can provide creative and advanced solutions.

See the original post here:

More evidence of increasing militarization of space as U.S. claims Russia satellite weapon test - TechCrunch

Comet NEOWISE: 10 big questions (and answers) about the icy wanderer – Space.com

See Comet NEOWISE?

(Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Naval Research Lab/Parker Solar Probe/Brendan Gallagher)

If you spot Comet NEOWISE, let us know! Send images and comments to spacephotos@space.com to share your views.

Comet NEOWISE has is delighting skywatchers around the Northern Hemisphere. But what makes this comet so special?

The comet made its closest approach to the sun on July 3 but, until now, was only visible in the sky before dawn. Now, for keen observers in the Northern Hemisphere, the comet has been getting higher in the evening sky, sparkling northwest below the Big Dipper constellation, according to Joe Masiero, deputy principal investigator of NEOWISE (NASA's Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, the NASA space telescope that first spotted the comet).

One of the most fascinating details about Comet NEOWISE is that it won't return to our skies for another 6,800 years. But that's not the only thing that makes this icy space rock special. So let's take a dive into what makes Comet NEOWISE unique and a little weird.

Related:How to see Comet NEOWISE in the evening sky now

Officially known as C/2020 F3, Comet NEOWISE is a comet that was discovered on March 27, 2020, by NEOWISE, the asteroid-hunting afterlife of the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission.

Comets, often nicknamed "cosmic snowballs," are icy, rocky objects made up of ice, rock and dust. These objects orbit the sun, and as they slip closer to the sun most comets heat up and start streaming two tails, one made of dust and gas and an "ion tail" made of electrically-charged gas molecules, or ions.

Yes! Because it is especially bright, the comet is visible in the night sky with the naked eye. Skywatchers in the Northern Hemisphere can spot the object just after sunset, to the northwest just under the Big Dipper constellation.

In fact, the comet is so bright that scientists are "able to get a lot more and better data than we typically do for most comets," Kramer said. "We're able to study it with a wide variety of different telescopes, and that'll allow us to do really interesting studies."

Related: How to photograph Comet NEOWISE: NASA tips for stargazers

No! Because Comet NEOWISE is an especially bright object, it is relatively easy for astronomy enthusiasts to spot it in the night sky with just the naked eye, although binoculars or a small telescope will give you a better view.

"The fact that we can see it is really what makes it unique," Kramer said. "It's quite rare for a comet to be bright enough that we can see it with a naked eye or even with just binoculars."

More:Best telescopes for the money 2020 reviews and guide

To those spotting the comet with the naked eye, without any tools or instruments like a telescope, it looks like a fuzzy star with a little bit of a tail.You do need to be away from city lights, though.

With binoculars or a small telescope, the comet will be more clear and the tail will be easier to spot.

Related:Amazing photos of Comet NEOWISE from the Earth and space

There is "about 13 million Olympic swimming pools of water," in Comet NEOWISE, Emily Kramer, a science team co-investigator forNASA's NEOWISE at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said during a news conference July 15. "So that's a lot of water."

"Most comets are about half water and half dust," she added.

Comet NEOWISE has two tails that typically accompany every comet.

As a comet nears the sun, it warms up and material pulls away from the surface into a tail. Often, dust is pulled away along with gases from sublimating (going directly from solid to a gas) ice. This dust tail is the sweeping trail seen in most comet images. Comets also have an ion tail made up of ionized gas blown back by the solar wind.

Researchers studying Comet NEOWISE might actually also have a sodium tail. By observing what they believe to be atomic sodium in the comet's tail, researchers can glean keen insight into the object's makeup.

Comet NEOWISE is about 3 miles (5 kilometers) in diameter, "which is a reasonably large but roughly average-size comet," Kramer said.

"It's rare to see something that's this bright," she added. "There are comets that are of this size that we see regularly, but most of them are from Earth that they don't get this bright. They're too far from the sun and the Earth to be able to see them in the way that we're seeing this Comet NEOWISE."

The comet is traveling at about 40 miles per second (that's about 144,000 mph, or 231,000 km/h).

Joe Masiero, deputy principal investigator of the NEOWISE mission, said the the comet is moving about twice as fast as the Earth's speed around the sun. But don't expect that rapid clip to last.

Because of the comet's extremely elliptical orbit, it will slow down as it reaches its farthest point from the sun, then fall back toward the inner solar system and accelerate again when it heads back round the sun. That trip around the sun is over for Comet NEOWISE's current orbit and it's moving back to the outer solar system.

"And so as it goes farther from the sun, [it] will be slowing down as it climbs back up that gravity well," Masiero said.

Have no fear, Comet NEOWISE will not hit Earth.

"This particular comet has no possibility of impacting the Earth. It crosses the plane of Earth orbit well inside of recovery orbit and almost near the orbit of Mercury, so there's absolutely no hazard from this comet," Lindley Johnson, the planetary defense officer and program executive ofNASA'sPlanetary Defense Coordination Office at NASAHeadquarters, said during the news conference.

The comet orbits the sun every 6,800 to 7,000 years, NASA has said. The comet is currently about 70 million miles (111 million kilometers) away from Earth.

No, Comet NEOWISE originates in our own solar system. To date, only two interstellar objects have been discovered: 'Oumuamua and Comet Borisov.

"This one we know it's not Interstellar object. By watching its motion, we can see that it's bound to the sun's gravity," Kramer said. "So it's coming in very rapidly and then it's going to go far back out again and then but then should come back in again in about 6,800 years."

Correction: An earlier version of this story included an incorrect timespan for Comet NEOWISE's orbit. It is about 6,800 to 7,000 years, NASA has said.

Email Chelsea Gohd at cgohd@space.com or follow her on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Originally posted here:

Comet NEOWISE: 10 big questions (and answers) about the icy wanderer - Space.com

China moves massive rocket into place for ambitious Mars shot – Spaceflight Now

Chinas Long March 5 rocket prepares for rollout from an assembly building to its launch pad July 17 at the Wenchang Space Launch Center on Hainan Island. Credit: Xinhua

Chinas heaviest rocket has rolled to its launch pad for liftoff Thursday with the countrys first Mars landing mission, an ambitious attempt to place an orbiter around the Red Planet and a robotic rover on the Martian surface in early 2021.

The Chinese mission, named Tianwen 1, is the second of three probes taking aim on the Red Planet this month, when Mars is properly positioned in its orbit around the sun to allow a direct journey from Earth. Such launch opportunities only come about once every 26 months.

A Mars orbiter named Hope developed by the United Arab Emirates in partnership with U.S. scientists successfully launched Sunday aboard a Japanese H-2A rocket. NASAs Perseverance rover is scheduled for liftoff from Cape Canaveral on an Atlas 5 rocket July 30.

The UAE, Chinese and U.S. missions are all due to arrive at Mars in February 2021.

A Long March 5 rocket is set for liftoff with Chinas Tianwen 1 mission some time between 12 a.m. and 3 a.m. EDT (0400-0700 GMT) Thursday, according to public notices warning ships to steer clear of downrange drop zones along the launchers flight path.

Chinese officials have not officially publicized the launch date. Chinese state media outlets have only reported the launch is scheduled for late July or early August, and officials have not confirmed whether the launch will be broadcast live on state television.

The launch will be the first operational flight of Chinas Long March 5 rocket, the most powerful launch vehicle in the countrys inventory. Ground crews at the Wenchang Space Launch Center on Hainan Island Chinas newest launch site transferred the Long March 5 rocket to its launching stand Friday for final pre-flight checkouts.

China has launched four Long March 5 rockets since the heavy-lift launcher debuted in 2016. Three of the four missions have been successful, including the last two test flights.

The Long March 5 will aim to send the Tianwen 1 spacecraft away from Earth on a seven-month trip to Mars. The ambitious mission is Chinas first probe to another planet, following a series of progressively complex robotic expeditions to the moon.

Most recently, China has landed two rovers on the moon, including the first to explore the surface of the lunar far side. The next Chinese lunar mission, named Change 5, is scheduled for launch late this year on a mission to return samples from the moon.

China kicked off development of the Mars mission in 2016.

It will be the countrys second attempt to reach Mars with a robotic probe, following the Yinghuo 1 orbiter, which was stranded in Earth orbit after launch as a piggyback payload on Russias failed Phobos-Grunt mission.

Benefiting from the engineering heritage of Chinas lunar exploration program,the Chinese national strategy set Mars as the next target for planetary exploration, wrote Wan Weixing, chief scientist of Chinas Mars exploration program, in a paper published this month by the science journal Nature Astronomy. Chinas first Mars mission is named Tianwen 1, and aims to complete orbiting, landing and roving in one mission.

Wan died in May after a long illness.

Chinese officials announced the Tianwen name for the countrys planetary missions in April. The name Tianwen comes from the work of ancient Chinese poet Qu Yuan, meaning quest for heavenly truth, according to the China National Space Administration, or CNSA, the countrys space agency.

The countrys first Martian probe will conduct scientific investigations about the Martian soil, geological structure, environment, atmosphere, as well as water, CNSA said in a statement.

The entire Tianwen 1 spacecraft weighs about 11,000 pounds, or 5 metric tons, fully fueled for launch, according to the mission summary in Nature Astronomy.

Assuming a successful launch this month, the spacecraft will enter orbit around Mars in February 2021, eventually settling in a loop around the Red Planet ranging between 165 miles (265 kilometers) and nearly 7,500 miles (12,000 kilometers) over the Martian poles.

As soon as next April, the lander and rover modules will detach from the orbiter to begin a descent through the Martian atmosphere. The prime candidate for the Tianwen 1 missions landing site is in Utopia Planitia, a broad plain in the northern hemisphere of Mars where radar soundings from orbit have indicated the presence of a reservoir of ice containing as much water as Lake Superior, the largest of the Great Lakes.

The Tianwen 1 rover weighs about 529 pounds, or 240 kilograms, nearly twice the mass of Chinas Yutu rovers on the moon.

The orbiter is designed to operate for at least one Martian year, or about two years on Earth. The solar-powered rover, fitted with six wheels for mobility, has a life expectancy of at least 90 days, Chinese officials said.

Chinese scientists say the Tianwen 1 mission will perform a global survey of Mars, measuring soil and rock composition, searching for signs of buried water ice, and studying the Martian magnetosphere and atmosphere. The orbiter and rover will also observe Martian weather and probe Marss internal structure.

The orbiters seven instruments include a:

The Tianwen 1 rover is cocooned inside a heat shield for a fiery descent to the Martian surface. After releasing from the orbiter mothership, the lander will enter the Red Planets atmosphere, deploy a parachute, then fire a braking rocket to slow down for landing.

Tianwen 1 is going to orbit, land and release a rover all on the very first try, and coordinate observations with an orbiter, Wan, the late chief scientist for Chinas Mars program, wrote in Nature Astronomy. No planetary missions have ever been implemented in this way. If successful, it would signify a major technical breakthrough.

Scientifically, Tianwen 1 is the most comprehensive mission to investigate the Martian morphology, geology, mineralogy, space environment, and soil and water-ice distribution.

The rovers six science payloads include a:

Tianwen 1 is a Chinese-led project, but scientists and support teams from several countries have agreed to provide assistance on the mission.

Scientists from theInstitut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Plantologie in France helped develop a Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy instrument on the Tianwen 1 rover. Scientists from the Space Research Institute at the Austrian Academy of Sciences contributed to the magnetometer on the Tianwen 1 orbiter and helped calibrate the flight instrument.

Argentina is home to a Chinese-owned deep space tracking antenna that will be used to communicate with Tianwen 1 after launch. The European Space Agency has agreed to provide communications time for Tianwen 1 on its own worldwide network of deep space tracking stations.

When it takes off, ten liquid-fueled engines will power the Long March 5 rocket and Tianwen 1 off the launch pad with nearly 2.4 million pounds of thrust.

The Long March 5s flight path will take the rocket east from Hainan Island over the South China Sea, where it will drop its four-strap on boosters each powered by two kerosene-fueled YF-100 engines around three minutes after liftoff. Unlike launches from Chinas inland spaceports, missions originating from Wenchang follow trajectories over the sea, allowing rockets to jettison stages over water rather than over land.

Two YF-77 engines on the Long March 5s core stage will burn super-cold liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellants for nearly eight minutes. During the first stage burn, the Long March 5 will jettison its clamshell-like payload fairing once the launcher climbs above the thick, lower layers of the atmosphere.

Two restartable hydrogen-fueled YF-75D engines drive the Long March 5s second stage. The second stage engines are expected to perform two firings before deploying Tianwen 1 on its trajectory toward Mars.

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

Excerpt from:

China moves massive rocket into place for ambitious Mars shot - Spaceflight Now

Spaceflight Inc. and Tethers Unlimited team up on deorbiting system for satellite carrier – GeekWire

An artists conception shows Spaceflights Sherpa-FX, the first orbital transfer vehicle to debut in the companys Sherpa-NG (next generation) program. The vehicle is capable of executing multiple deployments, as well as providing independent and detailed deployment telemetry. (Spaceflight Inc. Illustration)

Seattle-based Spaceflight Inc. says itll use a notebook-sized deorbiting system developed by another Seattle-area company to deal with the disposal of its Sherpa-FX orbital transfer vehicle.

The NanoSat Terminator Tape Deorbit System, built by Bothell, Wash.-based Tethers Unlimited, is designed to take advantage of orbital drag on a 230-foot-long strip of conductive tape to hasten the fiery descent of a spacecraft through Earths atmosphere. The system has been tested successfully on nanosatellites over the past year, and another experiment is planned for later this year.

Tethers Unlimiteds system provides an affordable path to reducing space debris, which is becoming a problem of greater concern as more small satellites go into orbit. Statistical models suggest that there are nearly a million bits of debris bigger than half an inch (1 centimeter) whizzing in Earth orbit.

WhenTethers was founded in 1994, its main focus was to solve the problem of space debris so that NASA, the DoD [Department of Defense] and commercial space enterprises could continue to safely operate in Earth orbit, Tethers Unlimited CEO Rob Hoyt said today in a news release. We are pleased to see our solutions are now making a significant contribution to ensuring sustainability of the space environment, which will benefit the entire industry.

Spaceflight Inc.s Sherpa-FX is due to have its first in-space use during a dedicated rideshare mission scheduled for no earlier than December. A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket would send the vehicle into orbit, loaded up with smaller spacecraft. After Sherpa-FX separates from the rockets upper stage, it would deploy those spacecraft to independent orbits. The system builds on the legacy of Spaceflight Inc.s first free-flying satellite deployer, which was used for a 64-satellite mission in 2018.

In-space transportation is essential to meeting our customers specific needs to get their spacecraft delivered to orbit exactly when and where they want it, Grant Bonin, Spaceflight Inc.s senior vice president of business development, said in a news release. If you think of typical rideshare as sharing a seat on a train headed to a popular destination, our next-generation Sherpa program enables us to provide a more complete door-to-door transportation service.

Spaceflight Inc.s customers for the rideshare mission include iQPS, Loft Orbital, HawkEye 360, Astrocast and NASAs Small Spacecraft Technology program.

The Terminator Tape module, which weighs less than 2 pounds, will be attached to Sherpa-FXs exterior. When the transfer vehicle has completed its mission, an electrical signal will activate the system to wind out the conductive tape. Interactions with Earths magnetic field and upper atmosphere will increase drag, causing a quicker plunge from orbit.

Were focused on being a good steward of our space resource, and our mission is to conduct frequent small satellite launches, so we have a responsibility for deorbiting what we send up, said Philip Bracken, vice president of engineering at Spaceflight Inc. Tethers solution is affordable, compact and lightweight, and will help us fulfill our responsibilities to clean up space after our mission is complete.

Spaceflight Inc. handles satellite launch logistics in partnership with a variety of launch providers, including SpaceX and Rocket Lab. It was founded as a subsidiary of Seattle-based Spaceflight Industries, but this year ownership was transferred to Mitsui & Co. Ltd.

See the rest here:

Spaceflight Inc. and Tethers Unlimited team up on deorbiting system for satellite carrier - GeekWire