Monday, September 23, 2024

This Week In Space podcast: Episode 129 — Back From Mars!

Boeing Space & Defense chief Ted Colbert is leaving: reports | Space Quiz! Why are we unable to view all of the universe with our eyes? | This Week In Space podcast: Episode 129 - Back From Mars!
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September 23, 2024
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The Launchpad
Boeing Space & Defense chief Ted Colbert is leaving: reports
(NASA)
Boeing is getting a new space chief. Ted Colbert will no longer be CEO of Boeing Defense, Space & Security, one of the aerospace giant's subdivisions, according to media reports. Those reports cite a staff memo circulated today (Sept. 20) by Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg, who took the top job in August.
Full Story: Space (9/20) 
Space Quiz! Why are we unable to view all of the universe with our eyes?
Learn the answer here!
VoteIt's too far away
VoteIt's too old
VoteOur eyes can't see parts of the electromagnetic spectrum
VoteEarth is too small
This Week In Space podcast: Episode 129 - Back From Mars!
(TWiS)
On Episode 129 of This Week In Space, Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik talk with Dr. Pascal Lee about his Mars Simulation Base in the Arctic. Devon Island, a polar desert in the High Arctic, is one of the most convincing Mars analogs on Earth. That's why Pascal Lee built his NASA-affiliated research base there. On this episode he returns to discuss his summer field work, Martian volcanoes, and to discuss possible alternatives to NASA's plans for the Artemis lunar base.There's a lot to know, and he brings deep passion--and some controversy--to the conversation!
Full Story: Space (9/20) 
Skywatching
Night sky for tonight: Visible planets, stars and more
(Future/Chris Vaughan/Starry NIght)
A brighter, more obvious crescent moon will tonight be positioned about halfway between Venus, to its lower right, and bright star Spica, to its upper left.
Full Story: Space (8/7) 
Spaceflight
NASA astronaut, 2 cosmonauts return to Earth today (Sep 23)
(NASA)
A NASA astronaut and two record-setting Russian cosmonauts are set to head back to Earth on Monday (Sept. 23), and you can watch their homecoming live. Russia's Soyuz MS-25 spacecraft, with Tracy C. Dyson, Oleg Kononenko and Nikolai Chub aboard, is scheduled to undock from the International Space Station (ISS) on Monday at 4:37 a.m. EDT (0837 GMT) and land on the steppe of Kazakhstan about 3.5 hours later.
Full Story: Space (9/22) 
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Science & Astronomy
Massive radio survey reveals our universe's structure
(MALS Team)
When we look out into the universe with our unaided eyes, we are really only seeing a small chunk of what's actually there. That's because there are parts of the electromagnetic spectrum that our visual faculties are not sensitive to. Radiation is being emitted by all manner of cosmic phenomena across this spectrum, yet we're only able to physically see wavelengths within the visible light range without the help of external tools - but luckily, astronomers have access to telescopes that allow them to observe the universe across this continuum.
Full Story: Space (9/23) 
SpaceX
Meet the SpaceX Crew-9 astronauts launching this week
(NASA)
Two astronauts are scheduled to launch to the International Space Station (ISS) next week, with two empty seats aboard their spacecraft. It's an atypical launch for a crewed SpaceX mission to the ISS, which customarily ferries four astronauts at a time. Originally, Crew-9 was slated to fly the usual four, but NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Stephanie Wilson were removed from the flight when NASA made the decision to return Boeing's Starliner spacecraft without its crew, leaving astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams aboard the ISS in need of a ride home.
Full Story: Space (9/20) 
Technology
How Canada is preserving its supersonic Avro Arrow jet
(Ingenium Canada)
Canada's Avro Arrow supersonic jet was suddenly canceled in 1959, a controversial decision that benefited NASA. How is Canada preserving the few pieces of the aircraft that remain?
Full Story: Space (9/22) 
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Search for Life
What did China's Chang'e 6 lunar far side samples reveal?
(CCTV)
We finally have a glimpse of the first-ever samples collected from the far side of the moon. The first paper on the samples collected from China's Chang'e 6 lunar probe reveals that the specimens differ in some ways from those collected from the moon's near side. Thus, they could provide fresh insights and lead to new theories about the moon and its evolution.
Full Story: Space (9/21) 
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