Student experiments float over New Mexico
Thursday, 07 October 2021 09:49University students from North and South America put their classroom knowledge and technical skills to the test when their experiments flew on a recent NASA scientific balloon flight over New Mexico. Launched Sept. 14 from Fort Sumner, New Mexico, the balloon carried the High-Altitude Student Platform or HASP, with its 11 student experiments and also 23 student experiments through the Rock
China's Mars probes suspend explorations due to Sun outage
Thursday, 07 October 2021 09:49China's Mars rover and orbiter have suspended explorations since mid-September, to wait out a period of sun outage, the China National Space Administration said on Tuesday. A sun outage refers to a phenomenon when Mars and the Earth move to either side of the sun and the three are almost perfectly aligned. During this period, the solar electromagnetic radiation will increase and disrupt th
Rare micrometeorite may have originated from a Ceres-like asteroid
Thursday, 07 October 2021 09:49A micrometeorite, called TAM19B-7, may have originated from a Ceres-like asteroid, according to a recent study conducted by researchers Maitrayee Bose and Victoria Froh of Arizona State University, Martin Suttle of The Open University, U.K., and Luigi Folco, of the University of Pisa, Italy. They will be presenting the results of their study at the 53rd annual American Astronomical Society
First European map of the insulating effect of forests
Thursday, 07 October 2021 09:49To cool off in summer, there's nothing better than a walk in the woods. Trees act as a buffer that cools the air beneath their foliage in summer and warms it in winter. This phenomenon is caused not only by the protection that the forest canopy provides, but also by the transpiration of trees in summer: trees absorb cooler water from the soil, and this water is then transported up to the leaves,
Longtime SpaceX executive joins Mynaric board
Thursday, 07 October 2021 04:41Hans Koenigsmann, one of the first employees of SpaceX and who recently retired from the company, has joined the board of satellite laser communications company Mynaric.
NGA to increase use of commercial analytic services
Thursday, 07 October 2021 01:15David Gauthier said NGA has to transition away from government analysts exploiting raw imagery to commercial analytic services that can quickly provide answers
Hiber abandons plans for IoT satellite constellation
Thursday, 07 October 2021 00:24Dutch company Hiber is dropping plans to deploy an internet-of-things smallsat constellation, electing instead to provide similar services through a third-party system.
Op-ed | Automation a key enabler of the future space economy
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 21:00Robotics and automation are playing a huge role across the rapidly evolving new space economy and value chains adjacent to space
Highly porous rocks are responsible for asteroid Bennu's surprisingly craggy surface
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 20:10Scientists thought asteroid Bennu's surface would be like a sandy beach, abundant in fine sand and pebbles, which would have been perfect for collecting samples. Past telescope observations from Earth's orbit had suggested the presence of large swaths of fine-grain material called fine regolith that's smaller than a few centimeters.
But when the spacecraft of NASA's University of Arizona-led OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample return mission arrived at Bennu in late 2018, the mission team saw a surface covered in boulders.
NASA Sets Coverage, Invites Public to Virtually Join Lucy Launch
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 19:11Finland’s Kuva Space raises funds for hyperspectral constellation
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 18:39Finland’s Kuva Space raised 4.2 million euros ($4.85 million) to fund its campaign to establish a constellation of commercial hyperspectral cubesats.
Where Earth's water comes from, preparing for DART impact and other lessons from space
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 18:02Two NAU astronomers presented groundbreaking research at the annual meeting of the Division for Planetary Sciences, a branch of the American Academy of Sciences.
Where does Earth's water come from?
A Northern Arizona University researcher who studies active asteroids, which are rare asteroids with comet-like tails, presented groundbreaking research today at the annual meeting of the Division for Planetary Sciences, a branch of the American Academy of Sciences.
Colin Chandler, a doctoral student in the Department of Astronomy and Planetary Science at Northern Arizona University and recipient of the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, presented "Recurrent activity from a Main Belt Comet."
Active asteroids hold clues about the origins of water on Earth and where water can be found today in the solar system. Fewer than 30 of these objects have been discovered since 1949. Most recently, asteroid (248370), also known as 2005 QN173, was found to be active on July 7. Chandler began digging into historical astronomical data to learn more about the object's past, and he and co-authors Chad Trujillo of NAU and Henry Hsieh of the Planetary Science Institute discovered an image from July 2016 that showed the object with a long, thin tail.
NGA chief hails agency’s expansion out west, outreach to startups and universities
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 16:52NGA broke ground on the St. Louis campus in November 2019 and expects to open for business in 2025
Is Netflix’s Inspiration4 docuseries a new era in Space Age media relations?
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 15:22While the exclusive footage and the interviews were fascinating, Netflix's "Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space" docuseries lacks drama. By the time the final episode was released, the crew had been safely back for a week and a half.
NASA spacecraft takes a picture of Jupiter … from the Moon
Wednesday, 06 October 2021 14:50You may know the feeling of seeing Jupiter through your own telescope. If it gives you the chills—like it does for me—then you'll know how the team for the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter felt when they turned their spacecraft around—yes, the orbiter that's been faithfully circling and looking down at the Moon since 2008—and saw the giant planet Jupiter with their camera. If you zoom in on the picture, you can even see Jupiter's Galilean moons.
Usually, LRO takes stunning, high-resolution images of the lunar surface, including details of the Apollo landing sites. But recently, the LRO team used some high-powered calculations and precise timing to use its Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) to scan the area of the sky where Jupiter was going to be, about 600 million km away.
They hit the jackpot.
While it's not Hubble Space Telescope quality, the fact this image was taken from a spacecraft orbiting 100 km above the lunar surface is a true feat of engineering.
"We took a pic of Jupiter from the Moon last month," said LRO team member Brett Denevi on Twitter.