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SLS on pad Aug. 26

NASA started the countdown Aug. 27 for its first attempt to launch its Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft for an uncrewed flight around the moon.

The post Countdown for first Artemis 1 launch attempt begins appeared first on SpaceNews.

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A U.S. appeals court Aug. 26 upheld the Federal Communications Commission’s year-old decision to let SpaceX deploy more satellites at lower altitudes to improve the Starlink broadband constellation’s performance. 

The post US appeals court upholds Starlink deployment change appeared first on SpaceNews.

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UCL team maps moon's surface for NASA missions
Credit: University College London

The first phase of NASA's Artemis mission, an uncrewed test flight around the moon, was scheduled to launch this Monday (29 August 2022). The third phase, scheduled for 2025, will see humans land on the moon for the first time in more than 50 years.

Professor Jan-Peter Muller and Ph.D. student Alfiah Putri (both UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory) were commissioned by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to create a 3D model and image of a possible landing site known as Aristarchus—a crater 40km wide and nearly 2.7km deep that was originally selected as the for the canceled Apollo 18 mission.

The team used a photogrammetry technique they pioneered to derive a detailed 3D model, at a resolution of one meter, from a series of 14 stereo images (where pictures are taken of the same scene at slightly different angles).

Professor Muller says that "better quality maps and models of the 's surface are important to minimize risks and maximize the safety of astronauts. Our techniques, developed over decades, provide the most accurate images and models currently possible.

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NRL fungal experiment launches as Artemis I payload
A U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) experiment prepares to launch as part of NASA's scheduled Artemis I mission to orbit the moon Aug. 29. The NRL experiment will use samples of fungi to investigate effects of the deep space radiation environment outside of Earth's protective magnetosphere. Credit: U.S. Navy illustration by Sarah Peterson

An experiment prepared by the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) will launch as part of NASA's scheduled Artemis I mission to orbit the moon Aug. 29.

The NRL experiment will use samples of fungi to investigate effects of the radiation environment outside of Earth's protective magnetosphere.

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moon
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

On Monday, Aug. 29, NASA plans to launch its Orion spacecraft from the world's most powerful rocket for a trip around the moon. This launch of the uncrewed Artemis 1 mission is a step toward the goal of landing people on the moon in 2025.

"With a successful launch of Artemis 1, NASA and the U.S. will reclaim the capability to launch humans to the ," said Bradley L. Jolliff, the Scott Rudolph Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis and director of the McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences.

"We lost that capability nearly 50 years ago when the last of the Saturn V rockets were retired after the Apollo 17 mission. Artemis 1 will pave the way for the next generation of astronauts to once again explore a world other than our own."

Artemis represents the next great leap in human exploration of space, beginning with a sustainable return to the moon, Jolliff said.

"In this case, 'sustainable' means that the Artemis missions will not be Apollo-like sorties," he said.

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moon
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

How will we grow food in space? That's one question Michigan State University's Federica Brandizzi has been particularly interested in solving.

Brandizzi, an MSU Foundation Professor in the College of Natural Science and the MSU-DOE Plant Research Laboratory, will be sending seeds on the Artemis I mission to better understand how to grow food during space travel.

"This is really about understanding how we can establish and sustain life outside of this planet," Brandizzi said. "We need to have plants that can survive long-term for generations."

But plants grow differently in space than they do on Earth. Over the past few decades, scientists have been working to compensate for those changes by getting a better understanding of plant biology and development away from our home planet.

From previous experiments, scientists have learned that affects organisms' building blocks like that keep seedlings strong on Earth. The same amino acids would also be nutritious for people who eat the plants.

So Brandizzi's lab has selected seeds that are enriched with those amino acids and is sending those into space along with regular seeds.

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rocket
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Fifty years after the last Apollo mission, NASA is again aiming for the moon. The Artemis I mission will blast off Monday morning from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

"Artemis I will be an uncrewed flight test that will provide a foundation for deep-space exploration and demonstrate our commitment to extend human existence to the moon, and on to Mars," Stephanie Schierholz, NASA press secretary, said at a briefing this month.

Monday's launch will be the first in a series of "increasingly complex" missions that will culminate with a manned moon landing planned for 2025. NASA has said the Artemis missions will include the first woman and first person of color to land on the moon.

NASA workers have spent the past several days staging the massive rocket on its pad and preparing it for launch. The mission will take 42 days, three hours and 20 minutes to complete, according to NASA. The Orion spacecraft is set for splashdown near Baja, California, after it returns from orbiting the moon on Oct. 10.

NASA Artemis I launch schedule

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Los Alamos NM (SPX) Aug 26, 2022
Scientists on NASA's Perseverance mission made a surprising discovery about the composition of rock in Jezero Crater, one that will help them get a better idea of when water existed on Mars, and ultimately, help them understand if the red planet was ever habitable to microbial life. "The SuperCam instrument suite of remote chemical and mineralogical tools on the Perseverance rover has made
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Greenbelt MD (SPX) Aug 26, 2022
In NASA's hunt for water and resources beyond Earth, a new technology could coat the "skin" of a satellite, turning its entire surface into a sensor that tallies the chemicals present on distant planets. Solving the mysteries of our home planet, solar system, and beyond is a key priority for NASA, and the new sensor could be a powerful tool in the investigation. Mahmooda Sultana, an instru
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Moscow (AFP) Aug 26, 2022
Russia's only active female cosmonaut, Anna Kikina, said Friday she was ready for her upcoming flight to the International Space Station aboard Space X's Crew Dragon. The flight, scheduled for October 3, is set to go ahead despite soaring tensions between Moscow and Washington over Russia's military intervention in Ukraine. Kikina, a 37-year-old engineer, will be only the fifth professi
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University MS (SPX) Aug 26, 2022
It's been 50 years since humans last visited the Moon, and even robotic missions have been few and far between. But the Earth's only natural satellite is about to get crowded. At least six countries and a flurry of private companies have publicly announced more than 250 missions to the Moon to occur within the next decade. Many of these missions include plans for permanent lunar bases and
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Boulder CO (SPX) Aug 26, 2022
A new study of zircon crystals from two of Earth's oldest continents indicates that the formation of Earth's continental crust goes through cycles, with periods of increased crust production roughly every 200 million years, corresponding to the solar system's transit through the four primary spiral arms of the Milky Way galaxy. According to the study published in the journal Geology yesterday, r
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Los Angeles CA (SPX) Aug 26, 2022
After a tantalizing year-and-a-half wait since the Mars Perseverance Rover touched down on our nearest planetary neighbor, new data is arriving - and bringing with it a few surprises. The rover, which is about the size of car and carries seven scientific instruments, has been probing Mars' 30-mile-wide Jezero crater, once the site of a lake and an ideal spot to search for evidence of ancie
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West Lafayette IN (SPX) Aug 26, 2022
The accepted view of Mars is red rocks and craters as far as the eye can see. That's much what scientists expected when they landed the rover Perseverance in the Jezero Crater, a spot chosen partly for the crater's history as a lake and as part of a rich river system, back when Mars had liquid water, air and a magnetic field. What the rover found once on the ground was startling: Rather th
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