Thursday, August 29, 2024

NASA's Next Interstellar-bound Probe Has Revealed Just How Bright the Cosmos Really Is...

An artist's concept of NASA's New Horizons spacecraft traveling through the cosmos, with the Milky Way in the backdrop.
NASA / Johns Hopkins APL / Southwest Research Institute / Serge Brunier / Marc Postman / Dan Durda

New Horizons Measurements Shed New Light on the Darkness of the Universe (News Release - August 28)

Just how dark is deep space? Astronomers may have finally answered this long-standing question by tapping into the capabilities and distant position of NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft, by making the most precise, direct measurements ever of the total amount of light the Universe generates.

More than 18 years after launch and nine years after its historic exploration of Pluto, New Horizons is more than 5.4 billion miles (7.3 billion kilometers) from Earth, in a region of the Solar System far enough from the Sun to offer the darkest skies available to any existing telescope – and to provide a unique vantage point from which to measure the overall brightness of the distant Universe.

"If you hold up your hand in deep space, how much light does the Universe shine on it?" asked Marc Postman, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore and lead author of a new paper detailing the research, published today in the Astrophysical Journal. "We now have a good idea of just how dark space really is. The results show that the great majority of visible light we receive from the Universe was generated in galaxies. Importantly, we also found that there is no evidence for significant levels of light produced by sources not presently known to astronomers."

The findings solve a puzzle that has perplexed scientists since the 1960s, when astronomers Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered that space is pervaded by strong microwave radiation, which had been predicted to be left over from the creation of the Universe itself. This result led to their being awarded the Nobel Prize. Subsequently, astronomers also found evidence of backgrounds of X-rays, gamma rays and infrared radiation that also fill the sky.

Detecting the background of "ordinary" (or visible) light – more formally called the cosmic optical background, or COB – provided a way to add up all the light generated by galaxies over the lifetime of the Universe before NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and James Webb Space Telescope could see the faint background galaxies directly.

In the Hubble and James Webb telescope era, astronomers measure the COB to detect light that might come from sources other than these known galaxies. But measuring the total light output of the Universe is extremely difficult from Earth or anywhere in the inner Solar System.

"People have tried over and over to measure it directly, but in our part of the Solar System, there’s just too much sunlight and reflected interplanetary dust that scatters the light around into a hazy fog that obscures the faint light from the distant Universe," said Tod Lauer, a New Horizons co-investigator, astronomer from the National Science Foundation NOIRLab in Tucson, Arizona, and a co-author of the new paper. "All attempts to measure the strength of the COB from the inner Solar System suffer from large uncertainties."

Enter New Horizons, billions of miles along its trek beyond the planets, now deep in the Kuiper Belt and headed towards interstellar space. Late last summer, from a distance 57 times farther from the Sun than Earth, New Horizons scanned the Universe with its Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI), collecting two-dozen separate imaging fields. LORRI itself was intentionally shielded from the Sun by the main body of the spacecraft – keeping even the dimmest sunlight from directly entering the sensitive camera – and the target fields were positioned away from the bright disk and core of the Milky Way and nearby bright stars.

The New Horizons observers used other data, taken in the far-infrared by the European Space Agency’s Planck mission, of fields with a range in dust density to calibrate the level of those far-infrared emissions to the level of ordinary visible light. This allowed them to accurately predict and correct for the presence of dust-scattered Milky Way light in the COB images – a technique that was not available to them during a 2021 test COB observation run with New Horizons in which they underestimated the amount of dust-scattered light and overestimated excess light from the Universe itself. But this time around, after accounting for all known sources of light, such as background stars and light scattered by thin clouds of dust within the Milky Way galaxy, the researchers found that the remaining level of visible light was entirely consistent with the intensity of light generated by all galaxies over the past 12.6 billion years.

"The simplest interpretation is that the COB is completely due to galaxies," Lauer said. "Looking outside the galaxies, we find darkness there and nothing more."

"This newly-published work is an important contribution to fundamental cosmology, and really something that could only be done with a far-away spacecraft like New Horizons," said New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. "And it shows that our current extended mission is making important scientific contributions far beyond the original intent of this planetary mission designed to make the first close spacecraft explorations of Pluto and Kuiper Belt objects."

Launched in January 2006, New Horizons made the historic reconnaissance of Pluto and its moons in July 2015, before giving humankind its first close-up look at a planetary building block and Kuiper Belt object, Arrokoth, in January 2019. New Horizons is now in its second extended mission, imaging distant Kuiper Belt objects, characterizing the outer heliosphere of the Sun, and making important astrophysical observations from its unmatched vantage point in the farthest regions of the Solar System.

The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, built and operates the New Horizons spacecraft and manages the mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. Southwest Research Institute, based in San Antonio and Boulder, Colorado, directs the mission via Principal Investigator Alan Stern and leads the science team, payload operations and encounter science planning. New Horizons is part of NASA’s New Frontiers program, managed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

Source: Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

America's Next Jupiter-bound Orbiter Remains on Track to Launch Less Than Two Months from Now...

An artist's concept of NASA's Europa Clipper spacecraft flying high above Jupiter's icy moon Europa.
NASA

NASA’s Europa Clipper Mission Moving Towards October Launch Date (News Release)

NASA’s Europa Clipper mission remains on track, with a launch period opening on Thursday, October 10. The next major milestone for Clipper is Key Decision Point E on Monday, September 9, in which the agency will decide whether the project is ready to proceed to launch and mission operations.

NASA will provide more information at a mission overview and media briefing targeted for that same week.

The Europa Clipper mission team recently conducted extensive testing and analysis of transistors that help control the flow of electricity on the spacecraft. Analysis of the results suggests that the transistors can support the baseline mission.

Source: NASA.Gov

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Inside the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, technicians deploy the second of two solar array wings now attached to the Europa Clipper orbiter...on August 15, 2024.
NASA / Ben Smegelsky

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Flying at Light Speed for 180 Months Now...

An artist's concept of the Gliese 581 star system.

Fifteen Light-Years... That’s how far the Hello From Earth message has traveled since being transmitted from a giant NASA antenna in Australia to the exoplanet Gliese 581d in the summer of 2009.

As of 7 PM California time tonight (12 PM Sydney time on Wednesday, August 28), the radio signal containing 25,878 goodwill text messages—including one by me—will have ventured across approximately 88 trillion miles (142 trillion kilometers) of deep space...which, as stated at the very start of this Blog entry, equals a distance of fifteen light-years.

The signal, despite traveling 186,000 miles per second (or 671 million miles per hour, or um, 1 billion kilometers per hour), will still take about 5 years to reach the Gliese 581 star system. Carry on!

The message that I sent to interstellar space through the Hello From Earth project...on August 27, 2009.

Monday, August 26, 2024

A Lunar Lander Has Arrived at NASA JPL for Prelaunch Checkouts...

An image of the fully-assembled Blue Ghost lunar lander at Firefly Aerospace's manufacturing facility in Cedar Park, Texas.
Firefly Aerospace

Firefly Aerospace Shipped Blue Ghost for Environmental Testing Ahead of Mission to the Moon (Press Release)

Cedar Park, Texas – Firefly Aerospace, an end-to-end space transportation company, today announced that Firefly’s Blue Ghost lunar lander has arrived at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) for environmental testing before the lander ships to Cape Canaveral for a Q4 2024 launch. As part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative, Firefly’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 lander is integrated with 10 scientific instruments and technology demonstrations that will help pave the way for humanity’s return to the Moon.

“Firefly is proud to follow in the footsteps of the Surveyor landers that were tested in the same JPL facilities,” said Peter Schumacher, Interim CEO at Firefly Aerospace. “The extensive environmental testing we’ll complete at JPL combined with the robust testing we’ve already completed in house will further reduce our risk posture and set us up for a successful, soft landing.”

The environmental testing at JPL includes vibration, acoustic, thermal vacuum, and electromagnetic interference and compatibility testing to ensure that the integrated lander can withstand various flight environments during launch, transit and landing on the Moon. This testing follows Firefly’s robust testing campaign, including extensive qualification testing on the assembled Blue Ghost structure and each component.

Firefly also completed nearly 100 lander leg drop tests on multiple surfaces, including sand, lunar simulant and concrete, to ensure that Blue Ghost’s shock-absorbing footpads can withstand the unpredictable nature of the lunar surface. The team further built a one-acre moonscape at its Rocket Ranch to test the hazard avoidance and terrain-relative navigation system on a heavy-lift drone, ensuring that the system can identify the safest landing site in the final moments of descent.

“This incredible Firefly team implemented innovative testing approaches that are setting a new standard in the industry,” said Jana Spruce, Vice President of Spacecraft at Firefly Aerospace. “After all the hard work, it’s bittersweet to see Blue Ghost leave our Texas-based facility, but we’re more than ready for this final test. We’ll have a dedicated team of Fireflies with the lander every step of the way as Blue Ghost travels from Texas to California to Florida ahead of this historic journey to the Moon.”

Following final testing, Firefly’s Blue Ghost will ship to Cape Canaveral, Florida, ahead of its launch on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket scheduled for Q4 2024. Blue Ghost will then begin its transit to the Moon, including approximately a month in Earth orbit and two weeks in lunar orbit. This approach provides ample time to conduct robust health checks on each subsystem and begin payload operations during transit.

Blue Ghost will then land in Mare Crisium, a basin in the northeast quadrant on the Moon’s near side, before deploying and operating 10 instruments for a lunar day (14 Earth days) and more than 5 hours into the lunar night. For more details on Blue Ghost Mission 1 named Ghost Riders in the Sky, visit https://fireflyspace.com/missions/blue-ghost-mission-1/.

Source: Firefly Aerospace

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Sunday, August 25, 2024

On This Day in 1989: Voyager 2 Visits the Blue Giant in Our Outer Solar System...

A composite image of Neptune and its enigmatic moon Triton...as seen by NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft on August 25, 1989.
NASA / JPL - Caltech

It was 35 years ago today that NASA's Voyager 2 robotic probe—sailing through space since its launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida on August 20, 1977—flew past the ice giant Neptune to complete its Grand Tour of the Outer Planets in our Solar System.

Voyager 2 visited Jupiter on July 9, 1979; Saturn on August 26, 1981; and Uranus on January 24, 1986...just four days before the space shuttle Challenger disaster.

It was the 1989 flyby of Neptune and its enigmatic moon Triton, which may be a captured Kuiper Belt object, that made me the space fanatic I am today! Well this, and the May 4, 1989 launch (which I watched live on TV) of NASA's Magellan probe to Venus aboard space shuttle Atlantis on mission STS-30.

We could've headed back to Neptune and Triton courtesy of the Trident flyby spacecraft, but NASA rejected this proposal back on June 2, 2021...in favor of two missions to Venus instead. Such a huge disappointment.

Schematics for the Trident spacecraft...if it was built.

Another infographic showing the design of the Trident spacecraft and its science instruments.
L.M. Prockter et al. LPI / JPL / SwRI

Thursday, August 22, 2024

Photo of the Day: Kamala Takes One More Step Towards the Presidency...

U.S. presidential nominee Kamala Harris gives her acceptance speech during the Democratic National Convention at the United Center in Chicago, IL...on August 22, 2024.
The New York Times - Todd Heisler

Just thought I'd share this soon-to-be iconic photo of Vice President Kamala Harris giving her acceptance speech as the newly-minted presidential nominee during the Democratic National Convention in Chicago a few hours ago.

With the four-day event to nominate President Joe Biden's running mate as the next leader of the United States now concluded, the onus is on Democrats, left-leaning Independents and Never-Trumper Republicans everywhere to spread the message of freedom, hope, renewal and joy over the next 75 days to help send Harris and vice presidential nominee Tim Walz to the White House. Everything must be legitimately done to prevent Donald Trump and J.D. Vance from attaining power, and stop PROJECT 2025 from being implemented.

The fate of American democracy literally depends on it.

Friday, August 16, 2024

The ESCAPADE Spacecraft Move One Step Closer to Venturing to the Red Planet Later This Year...

An image of Blue and Gold, the two spacecraft that make up the ESCAPADE mission, being prepped for shipment from Rocket Lab's facility in Long Beach, California to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Rocket Lab

Rocket Lab Ships Twin Satellites to Launch Site for NASA Mars Mission (Press Release)

Long Beach, Calif. – Rocket Lab USA, Inc. (Nasdaq: RKLB) (“Rocket Lab” or “the Company”), a global leader in launch services and space systems, has successfully packed and shipped two Mars-bound spacecraft to Cape Canaveral, FL in preparation for launch. These twin spacecraft for the Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers (ESCAPADE) heliophysics mission were designed, built, integrated and tested by Rocket Lab for the University of California Berkeley’s Space Science Laboratory and NASA.

The spacecraft, known as Blue and Gold, recently completed comprehensive assembly, integration and test at Rocket Lab’s Spacecraft Production Complex and headquarters in Long Beach, California. Following this milestone, the Rocket Lab team conducted final closeout activities, including the installation of spacecraft solar arrays and multi-layer insulation (MLI) blankets, before they were packaged and shipped to Florida for launch.

Upon arrival at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (KSC) Launch Complex, Rocket Lab team members will transfer the spacecraft to a cleanroom for post-transport inspections and tests. Following thorough checks, the team will commence preparation for fueling the spacecraft in anticipation of their upcoming launch on Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket.

“We’ve already been to the Moon for NASA, so we’re excited to build on that and send Rocket Lab technology deeper into the solar system, this time to the Red Planet,” said Rocket Lab founder and CEO Sir Peter Beck. “Our Space Systems team has built a beautiful and highly-capable pair of spacecraft to help NASA and the University of California Berkeley further humanity’s understanding of Mars. We couldn’t be prouder to be an ESCAPADE mission partner enabling science and exploration missions beyond our planet. After a meticulous but speedy build and test phase, we’re excited to have Blue and Gold on their way to the Cape and a step closer to Mars.”

"The successful delivery of the spacecraft to Kennedy Space Center marks a significant milestone and the culmination of over three years of dedicated teamwork from individuals across the project, especially our partners at Rocket Lab,” said Rob Lillis, ESCAPADE Principal Investigator and Associate Director for Planetary Science at the UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory. “Interplanetary spacecraft must be much more resilient than earth satellites, and developing not one, but two of these probes almost from scratch was no small feat. Time and again, Rocket Lab’s agility and tireless efforts have impressed me, exemplified by their frequent 'hero mode' (a saying we have on the project) to troubleshoot and keep the project on course. We couldn’t ask for better partners in this endeavor. Now, we’re thrilled to embark on this first step of our journey to Mars!"

Once launched, the ESCAPADE mission will measure plasma and magnetic fields around the Red Planet. These observations will help scientists unravel the processes that strip atoms from Mars’ magnetosphere and upper atmosphere, offering critical insights into Martian climate evolution.

Source: Rocket Lab

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An artist's concept of the Blue and Gold spacecraft flying towards Mars.
Rocket Lab

Thursday, August 15, 2024

America's Next Jupiter-bound Orbiter Has Both Wings Installed...

Inside the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, technicians deploy the second of two solar array wings now attached to the Europa Clipper orbiter...on August 15, 2024.
NASA / Ben Smegelsky

Europa Clipper Solar Array Alignment and Install, Wing Deployment (Photo Release)

Technicians align, install and then extend the second set of solar arrays, measuring 46.5 feet (14.2 meters) long and about 13.5 feet (4.1 meters) high, for NASA’s Europa Clipper spacecraft inside the agency’s Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, August 15, 2024.

The huge arrays – spanning more than 100 feet when fully deployed, or about the length of a basketball court – will collect sunlight to power the spacecraft as it flies multiple times around Jupiter’s icy moon, Europa, conducting science investigations to determine its potential to support life.

Source: NASA.Gov

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Inside the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, technicians deploy the second of two solar array wings now attached to the Europa Clipper orbiter...on August 15, 2024.
NASA / Ben Smegelsky

Inside the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, technicians deploy the second of two solar array wings now attached to the Europa Clipper orbiter...on August 15, 2024.
NASA / Ben Smegelsky

Inside the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, technicians deploy the second of two solar array wings now attached to the Europa Clipper orbiter...on August 15, 2024.
NASA / Ben Smegelsky

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Percy Is Ready for a New Adventure at Jezero Crater...

An image of NASA's Perseverance Mars rover at a Jezero Crater region known as 'Bright Angel'...on July 30, 2024.
NASA / JPL - Caltech

NASA’s Perseverance Rover to Begin Long Climb Up Martian Crater Rim (News Release)

After 3½ years exploring Jezero Crater’s floor and river delta, the rover will ascend to an area where it will search for more discoveries that could rewrite Mars’ history.

NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover will soon begin a months-long ascent up the western rim of Jezero Crater that is likely to include some of the steepest and most challenging terrain the rover has encountered to date. Scheduled to start the week of August 19, the climb will mark the kickoff of the mission’s new science campaign — its fifth since the rover landed in the crater on February 18, 2021.

“Perseverance has completed four science campaigns, collected 22 rock cores, and traveled over 18 unpaved miles,” said Perseverance project manager Art Thompson of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “As we start the Crater Rim Campaign, our rover is in excellent condition, and the team is raring to see what’s on the roof of this place.”

Two of the priority regions the science team wants to study at the top of the crater are nicknamed “Pico Turquino” and “Witch Hazel Hill.” Imagery from NASA’s Mars orbiters indicates that Pico Turquino contains ancient fractures that may have been caused by hydrothermal activity in the distant past.

Orbital views of Witch Hazel show layered materials that likely date from a time when Mars had a very different climate than today. Those views have revealed light-toned bedrock similar to what was found at “Bright Angel,” the area where Perseverance recently discovered and sampled the “Cheyava Falls” rock, which exhibits chemical signatures and structures that could possibly have been formed by life billions of years ago when the area contained running water.

It's Sedimentary

During the river delta exploration phase of the mission, the rover collected the only sedimentary rock ever sampled from a planet other than Earth. Sedimentary rocks are important because they form when particles of various sizes are transported by water and deposited into a standing body of water; on Earth, liquid water is one of the most important requirements for life as we know it.

A study published on Wednesday, August 14, in AGU Advances chronicles the 10 rock cores gathered from sedimentary rocks in an ancient Martian delta, a fan-shaped collection of rocks and sediment that formed billions of years ago at the convergence of a river and a crater lake.

The core samples collected at the fan front are the oldest, whereas the rocks cored at the fan top are likely the youngest, produced when flowing water deposited sediment in the western fan.

“Among these rock cores are likely the oldest materials sampled from any known environment that was potentially habitable,” said Tanja Bosak, a geobiologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge and member of Perseverance’s science team. “When we bring them back to Earth, they can tell us so much about when, why and for how long Mars contained liquid water and whether some organic, prebiotic and potentially even biological evolution may have taken place on that planet.”

Onward to the Crater Rim

As scientifically intriguing as the samples have been so far, the mission expects many more discoveries to come.

“Our samples are already an incredibly scientifically compelling collection, but the crater rim promises to provide even more samples that will have significant implications for our understanding of Martian geologic history,” said Eleni Ravanis, a University of Hawaiì at Mānoa scientist on Perseverance’s Mastcam-Z instrument team and one of the Crater Rim Campaign science leads. “This is because we expect to investigate rocks from the most ancient crust of Mars. These rocks formed from a wealth of different processes, and some represent potentially habitable ancient environments that have never been examined up-close before.”

Reaching the top of the crater won’t be easy. To get there, Perseverance will rely on its auto-navigation capabilities as it follows a route that rover planners designed to minimize hazards while still giving the science team plenty to investigate. Encountering slopes of up to 23 degrees on the journey (rover drivers avoid terrain that would tilt Perseverance more than 30 degrees), the rover will have gained about 1,000 feet (300 meters) in elevation by the time it summits the crater’s rim at a location that the science team has dubbed “Aurora Park.”

Then, perched hundreds of meters above a crater floor stretching 28 miles (45 kilometers) across, Perseverance can begin the next leg of its adventure.

Source: Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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A map showing the path that NASA's Perseverance Mars rover will take as it climbs the western rim of Jezero Crater during the Crater Rim Campaign.
NASA / JPL - Caltech / University of Arizona

Monday, August 12, 2024

Welcome to LAX, Olympic Flag: The LA28 Summer Games Have Moved a Step Closer to Reality...

Holding the Olympic flag and flanked by three Team USA Olympians and LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass is about to step down onto the tarmac at Los Angeles International Airport...on August 12, 2024.
Getty Images

Touching down at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) earlier today, the Olympic flag is now on U.S. soil.

Welcome to the City of Angels, historic Olympic symbol...for the first time in 40 years! Click here for more info about the flag's arrival in Southern California.