Incoming! Debris enroute to the Moon
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 14:00
The Moon is set to gain one more crater. A leftover SpaceX Falcon 9 upper stage will impact the lunar surface in early March, marking the first time that a human-made debris item unintentionally reaches our natural satellite.
Just add bubbles for cooler future spacecraft
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 14:00
From soft drinks to hot tubs, people add bubbles to liquids for many different reasons. ESA engineers think bubbles produced at the verge of boiling point could help control the temperature of spacecraft in a more efficient and compact way. The main unknown is how bubbles will behave in differing gravities down to weightlessness, so researchers boarded parabolic flight aircraft for testing.
Astronomers lined up under an asteroid's shadow to measure its size precisely
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 12:26
Astronomers will go to great lengths for science. Recently, dozens of astronomers had the misfortune of traveling to one of the most tempting locales in the southwestern U.S.—Las Vegas. But they weren't there for the city's bright lights—they were there to observe the very dim light of a star thousands of light-years away. And what they specifically wanted to see was the light from that star blink out for a few seconds. That lack of light provided the exact data they needed to help them determine the size of Eurybates, one of the Trojan asteroids that will be the focal point of NASA's Lucy mission.
What the scientists were looking for was an occultation. Most people know the most common form of this phenomenon—an eclipse. But occultations can happen with any background star and can be caused by any foreground object. Calculating where these minor occultations of stars by asteroids will occur takes a significant amount of orbital mechanics and processing power. The Earth itself has to be aligned correctly, and the asteroids and stars have to line up just right and be big enough.
A Chinese space tug just grappled a dead satellite
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 11:30
A Chinese satellite pulled a defunct navigation satellite out of the way of other satellites on January 22. The satellite, called SJ-21, appeared to operate as a space tug when it grappled onto the navigation satellite from the Chinese CompassG2 network. The operation details didn't come from Chinese authorities but from a report by ExoAnalytic Solutions, a commercial space monitoring company.
Chinese authorities are tight-lipped about the operation, but what can observations tell us about Chinese capabilities?
Earth's geosynchronous orbit is crowded, so on the face of it, having one less piece of space debris is a good thing for all satellite operators. But people can get suspicious when China does something like this.
GOES-T launch preparations underway
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 11:22
Preparations are underway for the launch of the next in a series of geostationary weather satellites that will also mark the end of a decades-long streak for one company.
The post GOES-T launch preparations underway appeared first on SpaceNews.
Roof of the satnav world
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 07:07
Helicopters Flying at Mars May Glow at Dusk
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
New Earth Trojan asteroid
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
Chinese satellite reportedly grappled and moved spacecraft away from orbit
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
D-Orbit merges with Breeze Holdings Acquisition Corp. to become Publicly Company
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
UCF to lead $10m NASA project to develop zero-carbon jet engines
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
Researchers achieve burning plasma regime for first time in lab
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
China to improve space infrastructure with new satellites, technologies: white paper
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
How big does your quantum computer need to be?
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55
China launches L-SAR 01A satellite for land observing
Wednesday, 02 February 2022 04:55