Sunday, June 30, 2024

On This Day in 2004: Cassini Arrives at Saturn...

A mosaic of Saturn that is comprised of images taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft...on October 10, 2013.
NASA / JPL - Caltech / Space Science Institute / G. Ugarkovic

20 years ago today, it was at 9:12 PM, Pacific Daylight Time, that NASA's Cassini spacecraft entered orbit around the planet Saturn...after a 2.1 billion-mile (3.4 billion-kilometer) journey than began on October 15, 1997.

This was actually a significant event for me on a personal level, as not only was my name on a DVD (which carried a total of 616,420 signatures from people around the world) attached to the side of Cassini, but it also showed that my passion for space exploration didn't wane since I first got excited about NASA missions back in 1989—courtesy of Magellan's launch to Venus and Voyager 2's flyby of Neptune that year.

I was at a hamburger joint hanging out with teammates from my yearbook class (I was a high school senior) the day Cassini and the European Space Agency-built Huygens Titan probe launched aboard a Titan IVB-Centaur rocket from Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Station back in 1997.

I was at home on this day in 2004...watching a live webcast of Cassini's Saturn Orbit Insertion maneuver, courtesy of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory near Pasadena, California. I had just graduated from my college, Long Beach State, over a month earlier!

Back when I first heard about Cassini in 1992 (I was in 6th grade at the time), I didn't think that I could sustain my passion for space travel till 1997, let alone 2004—what with me being preoccupied with life in high school and afterwards. I'm glad that I was wrong!

Saturday, June 29, 2024

Photos of the Day: SpaceX Launches a Classified Payload from the California Coastline...

As seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the classified NROL-186 payload heads toward Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

Last night, I drove back to Summitridge Park in the city of Diamond Bar to see another SpaceX launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara County, California. Unlike the five previous Falcon 9 flights that I witnessed this year, yesterday's launch sent a classified payload for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)—and not Starlink satellites—to Earth orbit!

It was at 8:14 PM, PDT, that a Falcon 9 rocket carrying the NROL-186 payload lifted off from Vandenberg's Space Launch Complex 4 East pad on the Central California coastline. While SpaceX's webcast of the launch ended (at the request of NRO) right after the Falcon 9's first stage booster touched down on the Of Course I Still Love You drone ship waiting out in the Pacific Ocean, a couple of other spectators at Summitridge Park and I continued to observe as the second stage engine attached to last night's spacecraft made its way across the SoCal sky.

As shown in the fifth and grainy pic below (captured by my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera), I was able to watch the first stage booster conduct its reentry burn while disappearing in the horizon! Yesterday's photos were taken with both my DSLR camera and Google Pixel 4A phone.

Just like the other launch that I saw from Diamond Bar back in April, the Falcon 9's contrail wasn't as bright as the previous launch six days ago because liftoff occurred only minutes after sunset. It's all good.

I wasn't even expecting to get such a great view of yesterday's launch because I thought that the flight trajectory for the NROL-186 mission was going to be significantly different from those used for the SoCal Starlink launches. Thank God I was wrong!

As usual, I look forward to the next evening launch by SpaceX from Santa Barbara County. Happy Saturday!

As seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the classified NROL-186 payload heads toward Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

As seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the classified NROL-186 payload heads toward Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

As seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the classified NROL-186 payload heads toward Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

As seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the classified NROL-186 payload heads toward Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

As seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, the Falcon 9's first stage booster conducts its reentry burn as it approached the Pacific Ocean to land on SpaceX's 'Of Course I Still Love You' drone ship...on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The contrail created by the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that carried the classified NROL-186 payload to Earth orbit...as seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The contrail created by the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that carried the classified NROL-186 payload to Earth orbit...as seen from Summitridge Park in Diamond Bar, CA, on June 28, 2024.
Richard T. Par

Friday, June 28, 2024

The Latest Update on California's Chief Bullet Train Project...

An artist's concept of California's bullet train.
California High-Speed Rail Authority

California High-Speed Rail Authority Approves Contractor, Moves Design of Track and Overhead Electrical Systems Forward (Press Release - June 26)

BURBANK, Calif. – In yet another significant step toward getting electrified high-speed trains operating in the U.S., the California High-Speed Rail Authority’s (Authority) Board of Directors today approved a contractor to begin designing track and overhead contact systems (OCS) for the initial 171-mile passenger service connecting Merced to Bakersfield.

After an extensive competitive procurement process, joint venture SYSTRA | TYPSA was awarded the contract with today’s board action. SYSTRA | TYPSA has worked together for more than two decades and partnered with California rail and transit agencies for more than 35 years.

With an initial contract value of up to $131.2 million, this contract will allow the Authority to:

- Produce high-level designs for track and OCS for the 171 miles connecting Merced to Bakersfield, including detailed designs for the 119-mile section currently under active construction within that Central Valley stretch.
- Design the track system, including the track structure, OCS, along-track cable containment, across-track ducts, access walkways, fencing and drainage.
- Manage technical and non-technical interfaces with contractors/consultants.

This action comes on the heels of the Authority releasing a shortlist of potential suppliers for electrified high-speed trains in California.

In October 2022, the Authority opted to let a previous Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for procurement of a track and systems contractor expire due to the economic climate, supply-chain challenges and 40-year high inflation.

The Authority has since developed a new procurement strategy, considering extensive industry feedback and adjusting to program needs. The track and OCS design services contract is an important step in the new procurement strategy.

This contractor will collaborate with a future construction manager/general contractor hired to construct the track and OCS based on its designs.

Since the start of construction, the Authority has created more than 13,500 construction jobs, a majority going to residents from the Central Valley.

The Authority has begun work to extend the 119 miles currently under construction to 171 miles of future electrified high-speed rail from Merced to Bakersfield. There are currently more than 25 active construction sites in the Central Valley, with the Authority having now fully environmentally cleared 422 miles of the high-speed rail program from the Bay Area to Los Angeles County.

Source: California High-Speed Rail Authority

Thursday, June 27, 2024

A Major Organic Compound Has Been Found in Rocks from Bennu...

Four close-up images of rock samples collected by NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft from asteroid Bennu back in late 2020.
From Lauretta & Connolly et al. (2024) Meteoritics & Planetary Science, doi:10.1111/maps.14227

Surprising Phosphate Finding in NASA’s OSIRIS-REx Asteroid Sample (News Release - June 26)

Scientists have eagerly awaited the opportunity to dig into the 4.3-ounce (121.6-gram) pristine asteroid Bennu sample collected by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx (Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification and Security – Regolith Explorer) mission since it was delivered to Earth last fall. They hoped the material would hold secrets of the solar system’s past and the prebiotic chemistry that might have led to the origin of life on Earth.

An early analysis of the Bennu sample, published on June 26 in Meteoritics & Planetary Science, demonstrates that this excitement was warranted.

The OSIRIS-REx Sample Analysis Team found that Bennu contains the original ingredients that formed our solar system. The asteroid’s dust is rich in carbon and nitrogen, as well as organic compounds, all of which are essential components for life as we know it.

The sample also contains magnesium-sodium phosphate, which was a surprise to the research team, because it wasn’t seen in the remote sensing data collected by the spacecraft at Bennu. Its presence in the sample hints that the asteroid could have splintered off from a long-gone, tiny, primitive ocean world.

A Phosphate Surprise

Analysis of the Bennu sample unveiled intriguing insights into the asteroid’s composition. Dominated by clay minerals, particularly serpentine, the sample mirrors the type of rock found at mid-ocean ridges on Earth, where material from the mantle, the layer beneath Earth’s crust, encounters water.

This interaction doesn’t just result in clay formation; it also gives rise to a variety of minerals like carbonates, iron oxides and iron sulfides. But the most unexpected discovery is the presence of water-soluble phosphates.

These compounds are components of biochemistry for all known life on Earth today.

While a similar phosphate was found in the asteroid Ryugu sample delivered by JAXA’s (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) Hayabusa2 mission in 2020, the magnesium-sodium phosphate detected in the Bennu sample stands out for its purity — that is, the lack of other materials in the mineral — and the size of its grains, unprecedented in any meteorite sample.

The finding of magnesium-sodium phosphates in the Bennu sample raises questions about the geochemical processes that concentrated these elements and provides valuable clues about Bennu’s historic conditions.

“The presence and state of phosphates, along with other elements and compounds on Bennu, suggest a watery past for the asteroid,” said Dante Lauretta, co-lead author of the paper and principal investigator for OSIRIS-REx at the University of Arizona, Tucson. “Bennu potentially could have once been part of a wetter world. Although, this hypothesis requires further investigation.”

“OSIRIS-REx gave us exactly what we hoped: a large pristine asteroid sample rich in nitrogen and carbon from a formerly wet world,” said Jason Dworkin, a co-author on the paper and the OSIRIS-REx project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

From a Young Solar System

Despite its possible history of interaction with water, Bennu remains a chemically-primitive asteroid, with elemental proportions closely resembling those of the Sun.

“The sample we returned is the largest reservoir of unaltered asteroid material on Earth right now,” said Lauretta.

This composition offers a glimpse into the early days of our solar system, over 4.5 billion years ago. These rocks have retained their original state, having neither melted nor resolidified since their inception, affirming their ancient origins.

Hints at Life’s Building Blocks

The team has confirmed that the asteroid is rich in carbon and nitrogen. These elements are crucial in understanding the environments where Bennu’s materials originated and the chemical processes that transformed simple elements into complex molecules, potentially laying the groundwork for life on Earth.

“These findings underscore the importance of collecting and studying material from asteroids like Bennu — especially low-density material that would typically burn up upon entering Earth’s atmosphere,” said Lauretta. “This material holds the key to unraveling the intricate processes of solar system formation and the prebiotic chemistry that could have contributed to life emerging on Earth.”

What’s Next

Dozens more labs in the United States and around the world will receive portions of the Bennu sample from NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston in the coming months, and many more scientific papers describing analyses of the Bennu sample are expected in the next few years from the OSIRIS-REx Sample Analysis Team.

“The Bennu samples are tantalizingly beautiful extraterrestrial rocks,” said Harold Connolly, co-lead author on the paper and OSIRIS-REx mission sample scientist at Rowan University in Glassboro, New Jersey. “Each week, analysis by the OSIRIS-REx Sample Analysis Team provides new and sometimes surprising findings that are helping place important constraints on the origin and evolution of Earth-like planets.”

Launched on September 8, 2016, the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft traveled to near-Earth asteroid Bennu and collected a sample of rocks and dust from the surface. OSIRIS-REx, the first U.S. mission to collect a sample from an asteroid, delivered the sample to Earth on September 24, 2023.

Source: NASA.Gov

****

An artist's concept of NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft about to collect rock samples from the surface of asteroid Bennu.
NASA / Goddard / University of Arizona

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

About Last Night's Episode of THE ACOLYTE...

The Stranger (Manny Jacinto) impales two unnamed Jedi with his Sith lightsaber in Episode 5 of THE ACOLYTE, titled 'Night.'

I'm just gonna post this screenshot showing Kylo Grin (technically he's only known as the Stranger, a Sith Lord under disguise as a lowly drifter named Qimir...played by Manny Jacinto) being a badass in Episode 5, titled "Night," of The Acolyte!

In the screenshot above, those are two no-name Jedi that the Stranger easily dispatched at the beginning of yesterday's latest installment of Disney+'s newest (and most controversial) Star Wars show. Watch this episode now if you don't wanna be spoiled by all of the shocked responses to Jacinto's ruthless Dark Side and cortosis-welding villain on social media!

I totally can't wait to see what Episode 6 has in store for Star Wars geeks [well, those of us Star Wars geeks who aren't close-minded, anti-woke (and possibly MAGA) trolls who review-bombed The Acolyte on Rotten Tomatoes] next Tuesday...

Seeing as how Jacinto is a fellow Pinoy (who was born in Manila, Philippines), I'll just end this Blog entry by saying: Filipino Sith Lords for the win!

Sunday, June 23, 2024

SpaceX Puts On Another Stunning SoCal Light Show for the 2nd Time in 5 Days...

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 235 miles away...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

A few hours ago, SpaceX launched another Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara County, California.

Unlike the June 18 launch—which I viewed from my neighborhood in Pomona—I drove to West Covina's Shadow Oak Park to witness tonight's flight (which occurred at 8:47 PM, PDT). Needless to say, the view from Shadow Oak Park was just as spectacular as the one offered at Diamond Bar's Summitridge Park...where I went to see the April 6 launch.

Nothing else needs to be said, except that I never get tired of seeing the amazing 'jellyfish' created by the thrust of Falcon 9's second stage engine as it transported the Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit. And of course, let's not forget the awesome view of Falcon 9's twin payload fairings and first stage booster as they fell back to Earth to be recovered by waiting SpaceX vessels stationed out in the Pacific Ocean!

I'm basically repeating myself if you've read my previous Blog entries about the Starlink launches, so here are photos that I took tonight (using my Google Pixel 4A phone). Can't wait till SpaceX conducts another spectacular Falcon 9 flight from the Central California coastline!

I hope y'all had a great weekend.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 235 miles away...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 235 miles away...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 235 miles away...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 235 miles away...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 235 miles away...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 235 miles away...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

Falcon 9's twin payload fairings and first stage booster are visible falling away from the second stage engine during SpaceX's Starlink launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The exhaust plume created by SpaceX's Falcon 9 second stage engine is visible from Shadow Oak Park in West Covina, CA...on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The contrail created by SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket that carried 20 new Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit...as seen from Shadow Oak Park in West Covina, CA, on June 23, 2024.
Richard T. Par

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Europa Clipper's Giant Communication Dish Has Been Reattached for Launch...

Inside Kennedy Space Center's Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility in Florida, technicians prepare to reattach the high-gain antenna to NASA's Europa Clipper spacecraft...on June 17, 2024.
NASA / Kim Shiflett

NASA Installs High-Gain Antenna for Mission to Study Icy Moon of Jupiter (News Release)

When NASA’s Europa Clipper is in orbit around Jupiter, transmitting science data and receiving commands from Earth across hundreds of millions of miles, it will need a powerful antenna. Technicians installed the spacecraft’s high-gain antenna inside the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 17.

Scheduled to launch later this year, Europa Clipper will embark on a 1.8-billion-mile (2.6-billion-kilometer) journey to Jupiter. It is the largest spacecraft that NASA has developed for a planetary mission.

Set to arrive in April 2030, Europa Clipper will study the gas giant’s icy moon, Europa, to determine its potential to support life.

The spacecraft will conduct approximately 50 flybys of Europa, allowing its nine science instruments to gather data on the moon’s atmosphere, its ice crust and the ocean underneath. The nearly 10-feet-wide (3-meter) dish-shaped antenna and several smaller antennas will transmit the data to Earth, a trip that will take about 45 minutes when the spacecraft is in orbit around Jupiter.

To ensure that Europa Clipper has the necessary bandwidth, the antenna will operate on NASA’s deep space X-band radio frequencies of 7.2 and 8.4 (GHz), and Ka-band at 32 (GHz), through the agency’s Deep Space Network - a global array of large radio antennas that communicate with dozens of spacecraft throughout the solar system.

Europa Clipper underscores NASA’s commitment to exploring our solar system for habitable conditions beyond Earth. Although Europa Clipper is not a life-detection mission, understanding Europa’s habitability will help us better understand how life developed on Earth and whether we’re likely to find conditions that might support life beyond our planet.

Technicians at NASA Kennedy will continue to prepare the spacecraft for its mission and perform final checkouts as part of launch preparations. Europa Clipper is scheduled to launch atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket from Kennedy’s Launch Complex 39A, no earlier than October 2024.

Europa Clipper’s high-gain antenna was designed by the Johns Hopkins University APL (Applied Physics Laboratory) in Laurel, Maryland, and aerospace vendor AASC (Applied Aerospace Structures Corporation) in Stockton, California.

Managed by Caltech in Pasadena, California, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory leads the development of the Europa Clipper mission in partnership with APL for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The main spacecraft body was designed by APL in collaboration with JPL and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

The Planetary Missions Program Office at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, executes program management of the Europa Clipper mission. NASA’s Launch Services Program, based at Kennedy, manages the launch service for the Europa Clipper spacecraft.

Source: NASA.Gov

****

Inside Kennedy Space Center's Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility in Florida, technicians reattached the high-gain antenna to NASA's Europa Clipper spacecraft...on June 17, 2024.
NASA / Kim Shiflett

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Another Spectacular SoCal Light Show by SpaceX...

Falcon 9's twin payload fairings and first stage booster are visible falling away from the second stage engine in this Google Pixel 4A photo of SpaceX's Starlink launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California...on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par

A few hours ago, SpaceX launched another Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara County, California. This is the first time since early April, and fifth time overall since 2018, that I watched a Falcon 9 launch dazzle the evening sky from here in Los Angeles County!

Liftoff occurred at 8:40 PM, PDT...which was the ideal time for SpaceX to conduct a launch since the sky was dark enough for the Falcon 9's contrail to glow brilliantly above the landscape. Not only did the contrail shine above Southern California, but so did the Falcon 9's twin payload fairings and first stage booster (shown above) as they were absolutely visible during their return to Earth to be recovered by SpaceX vessels (including the drone ship, Of Course I Still Love You, in the case of the first stage booster) waiting off the SoCal coastline in the Pacific Ocean.

I'll never get tired of seeing these spectacular light shows put on by SpaceX! I've read online that United Launch Alliance will launch its brand-new Vulcan Centaur rocket from Vandenberg sometime next year... What are the chances that Vulcan lifts off at dusk and follows the same flight trajectory as Falcon 9 so that rocket geeks like me can photograph it (using my Google Pixel 4A phone and Nikon D3300 DSLR camera, like I did tonight) in all its liquid methane and liquid oxygen-fueled glory?

We'll see!

As seen with my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera from Pomona, CA, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par

As seen with my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera from Pomona, CA, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par

As seen with my Nikon D3300 DSLR camera from Pomona, CA, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 20 new Starlink satellites heads toward low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base over 200 miles away...on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The contrail created by the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that carried 20 new Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit...as seen with my Google Pixel 4A smartphone from Pomona, CA, on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The contrail created by the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that carried 20 new Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit...as seen with my Google Pixel 4A smartphone from Pomona, CA, on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par

Falcon 9's twin payload fairings and first stage booster are visible falling away from the second stage engine in this Google Pixel 4A photo of SpaceX's Starlink launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California...on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par

The Falcon 9 second stage engine, carrying 20 new Starlink satellites, is about to pass underneath the Moon in this Google Pixel 4A photo that was taken in Pomona, CA...on June 18, 2024.
Richard T. Par


Friday, June 14, 2024

Humanity's Most-Distant Interstellar Probe is Pretty Much Back to Normal...

An artist's concept of a Voyager probe traveling through deep space.
Caltech / NASA - JPL

Voyager 1 Returning Science Data From All Four Instruments (News Release - June 13)

NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft is conducting normal science operations for the first time following a technical issue that arose in November 2023.

The team partially resolved the issue in April when they prompted the spacecraft to begin returning engineering data, which includes information about the health and status of the spacecraft. On May 19, the mission team executed the second step of that repair process and beamed a command to the spacecraft to begin returning science data.

Two of the four science instruments returned to their normal operating modes immediately. Two other instruments required some additional work, but now, all four are returning usable science data.

The four instruments study plasma waves, magnetic fields and particles. Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are the only spacecraft to directly sample interstellar space, which is the region outside the heliosphere — the protective bubble of magnetic fields and solar wind created by the Sun.

While Voyager 1 is back to conducting science, additional minor work is needed to clean up the effects of the issue. Among other tasks, engineers will resynchronize timekeeping software in the spacecraft’s three onboard computers so they can execute commands at the right time.

The team will also perform maintenance on the digital tape recorder, which records some data for the plasma wave instrument that is sent to Earth twice per year. (Most of the Voyagers’ science data is sent directly to Earth and not recorded.)

Voyager 1 is more than 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) from Earth, and Voyager 2 is more than 12 billion miles (20 billion kilometers) from the planet. The probes will mark 47 years of operations later this year.

The Voyagers are NASA’s longest-running and most-distant spacecraft. Both spacecraft flew past Jupiter and Saturn, while Voyager 2 also flew past Uranus and Neptune.

Source: NASA.Gov

Thursday, June 13, 2024

In Memoriam #2...

Posing with Masuimi Max at Hot Import Nights in the Los Angeles Convention Center...on March 5, 2005.

Last night, I found out through Google that Masuimi Max—a model who I met at the 2005 Hot Import Nights in Los Angeles—passed away in her Las Vegas home earlier this year (on January 25)...sadly due to a drug overdose.

Masuimi was 45 years old. May she rest in peace.