space imagery

July 11, 2008

Why Mercury?

208685main_mercury_feature_full This is one of the better images captured by MESSENGER on its recent flyby of Mercury. An October rendezvous will take the craft to within 124 miles of the surface before it eventually settles into orbit.

If you're wondering why anyone would want to explore Mercury, NASA supplies some answers here.

Wayne

July 03, 2008

Video: cubesat solar sail

As promised yesterday, here is a video of the deployment mechanism for the innovative CubeSat NanoSail-D. It's amazing how 10 square meters of sail can be packed into the space the size of three cubes.

[Update:] Dean Alhorn, the engineer in the video, wrote to say that "the actual sail and deployment mechanism is packed in the volume that is less that 2 cubes. The first cube is all electronics and batteries. The next two cubes [house] the sail, boom mechanism and some deployment electronics. There is room for 40 sq. meter of sail, but not enough volume for more boom length."

Thanks for the clarification!

Wayne

June 18, 2008

"Stellar Horizon"

Alphacentauri The nearest stars, other than our sun of course, can be seen in this image from CiCLOPS. Entitled "steller horizon," it depicts Alpha Centauri A and B - but not the red dwarf companion Proxima Centauri - above Saturn's ring plane. Click the image for a larger version.

CICLOPS also added this note about relative distance of the stars compared to the distance of Saturn from Earth:

From the orbit of Saturn, light (as well as Cassini's radio signal) takes little more than an hour travel to Earth. The distance to Alpha Centauri is so great that light from these stars takes more than four years to reach our solar system. Thus, although Saturn seems a distant frontier, the nearest star is almost 29,000 times farther away.

Wayne

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

A trio of Earths

Phot19a08normal_2Here is an artist's impression of the latest in a haul of planets from recent observations at the European Souther Observatory.

The image depicts a system of three "super-Earths" around the star HD 40307 in the constellation Pictor.

As detection techniques improve, the ability to potentially resolve exoplanets as small as Earth is becoming more likely, and, indeed, according to European astronomers about 45 new "Earth-like" planets have been uncovered by Harps, or the High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher at the observatory in Chile. The new discoveries have the mass of three or four Earths.

Astronomers now believe that roughly thirty percent of the stars in the Milky Way may harbor such super-Earths, according to a New York Times article yesterday.

Scientific American has more.

Given the wealth of data being created by terrestrial observatories like Harps, space craft such as Kepler almost undoubtedly will find planets very similar in mass to our own within habitable orbits - orbits permitting the presence of liquid water - of their parent stars.

You and I are living in the Golden Age of planetary discovery.

Wayne

June 10, 2008

Cute 1.7 snaps Earth Portrait

00_03ver5 Courtesy of the Southgate Amateur Radio Club, here is a terrific picture taken of Earth by CubeSat Cute-1.7 + APD II, recently launched from India along with many other cubes.

The image is from an altitude of 620 kilometers. Tyler has said that the KySat cube will fly at roughly 650 kilometers in altitude, so the perspective is about the same.

It's thrilling to think that a satellite built by Kentucky students may join other satellites in orbit!

Wayne

May 29, 2008

Image of the Day: Phoenix settled on Mars

230917main_image_1093_946710

NASA's image of the day is of the Phoenix Mars Lander settled near the northern pole, four days into its mission.

Having discovered in 2002 large amounts of subsurface water ice in this area, the lander will dig beneath the surface to retrieve soil and water ice for on-board analysis.

The disk in the picture contains the names of a quarter million people.

Wayne

May 27, 2008

Saturn goes to Museum of Natural History

2572_7217_1[Cross-posted from the IdeaFestival weblog] Beginning late last month, a collection of truly stunning images from the doughty spacecraft Cassini went on display at the American Museum of Natural History

Saturn and Dione are pictured above. For much different look at the same two bodies, check out this image.

Aside from dropping titan-sized hints about the relative prevalence about organics in our solar system and elsewhere - as well as leaving a treasure trove of images, of course - the mission has been ho-hum.

Wayne

Image credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

May 05, 2008

Where was the water on Mars?

At the Planetary Society, Emily Lakdawalla points to a brand new imaging site, the CRISM Mars imaging site. CRISM - the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars - uses the spectrum of reflected sunlight to determine the mineralogy of the surface, a technique called reflectance spectroscopy.

It's an important technique because some minerals will only form in the presence of water.

The interactive map is here.

Wayne

April 30, 2008

Bronze Titan

4886_10977_0 This picture was posted by CICLOPS, the team responsible for Cassini imaging, on a page describing Cassini's current, and brief, 66th orbit around Saturn. Since I hadn't seen this image of Titan before, I wanted to share.

Wayne

April 25, 2008

Meet Eris

Eris This is an artist's conception of a new member of our solar system, the dwarf planet Eris, which is approximately three times farther from the sun than its dwarf companion, Pluto. At that distance the small body is very, very cold and the sun appears much like other stars in the Milky Way as Eris moves among the "icy wrecks" of the Kuiper Belt.

Wayne

Image source: NASA/JPL-Caltech

April 17, 2008

Carnival of Space No. 50

My name is Wayne Hall and I work with the Kentucky space program. Huh? Kentucky what?!

Suffice it to say that a group of talented people are out to change the perception of what's possible in the commonwealth of Kentucky by doing hands-on space science. The very first project of this ambitious enterprise is a cooperative, student-led effort to design, build and fly a CubeSat that kids from the eastern mountains to the western Mississippi river shore can figuratively reach out and touch from classrooms all over the state. The first of many planned efforts, it will rocket to orbit sometime late this year or early next. And with that,

Welcome to the 50th edition of the Carnival of Space! From rocket racing to astronomy to particle physics to the search for intelligent life, this week features a wide variety of space-related topics. So let's dive right in.

New Frontiers has news about the Rocket Racing League and its announcement about upcoming exhibition race dates. Meanwhile, Space Transport News discusses Red Bull air races and the differences and similarities to rocket racing as well as taking some notes from the news conference.

At Altair VI, David S. F. Portree writes about the old NASA Office of Exploration Mars' and Moon vision for space exploration and has something to say about space tourism.

The Planetary Society's Emily Stewart Lakdawalla notes the stunning images of Phobos available from the Mars Express image catalog. A Babe in the Universe follows suit, pointing out that the crater Stickney is 9 km across on a moon only 22 km long. Speaking as a blogger who makes liberal use of CICLOPS and HiRISE images, the pictures coming from current robotic missions are spectacular. I'm looking forward to what MESSENGER and New Horizons might reveal.

Speaking of the planets, Stuart Atkinson at Cumbrian Sky reports on one suggestion to send monkeys to Mars. You read that right. He also provides some images of Pheonix's landing spot on the planet.

Fraser explains why Pluto is no longer a planet. Let's just say that the region beyond Neptune is awfully interesting.

Of the many satellites that dance around Sun, Neptune's Triton is probably not a world that tickles one's imagination when envisioning space colonization. But while it may be ignored as scientists chase after Mars and Titan, Neptune's Triton may in the distant future become a prime location at the edge of our solar system. Colony Worlds asks: Neptune's Triton: Is It Worth Billions, Or Trillions?

This week's Space Video at Space Feeds is the eighth episode of Firefly, Out of Gas.

At Next Big Future, Brian Wang asks whether a $153 million Thin Film Dome inflated over cities might protect against nuclear weapons or perhaps substitute for communication satellites. Russian inventor and researcher Alexander Bolonkin has developed an interesting technology that suggests all kinds of commercial possibilities.

Can Dark Matter be directly detected? Anticipating such an announcement, astrophysicist Ethan Siegel expresses his doubts at Starts with a Bang! It's a question I've also put to Star Stryder, Pamela Gay.

Astronomer Robert Simpson at Orbiting Frog contributes a post to the 50th carnival on Nebulae in 3D. He nominated another post about the late John Wheeler from Daniel Holz at the wonderful group blog Cosmic Variance. Holz movingly recalls his time with the physicist, who was conversant in biology, history and poetry. Please give it a read.

At Out of the Cradle, Ken Murphy continues his look at growing plants on the Moon with a review of the book "Lunar Base Agriculture" in part II of his article "Of a Garden on the Moon".

At Centauri Dreams, Paul Gilster, who is surely link-weary from the attention this blog has paid to him, posts a story about "Life as Rarity in the Cosmos," which looks at new research suggesting that we are living rather late in the history of Earth's biosphere. If so, it might have implications for the possibility of intelligent life elsewhere. Bottom line: we might find that life itself is rather common, but intelligent life? Not so much.

Do we have anything to worry about from the Large Hadron Collider? Ian O'Neill explains that "an Earth-eating black hole is pretty much impossible."

Ever-prepared, Scouts Canada describes a variety of methods for finding direction without a compass or GPS by using the sun, stars and moon. In practical fashion, Scouts blogger Mang also lends some context to astronomical distances - the discussion includes a scale overlay of the solar system on the City of Toronto using a standard marble for Earth - and writes about modeling a micro-satellite, the Microvariability & Oscillations of STars (MOST) satellite. The MOST team has opened target proposals to the public.

Space Cynics, meanwhile, wonders how prepared Gen-Y is to contribute to the national space program.

Tyler Nordgren is educating visitors about what they learn about the solar system and universe through what they can see for themselves in the dark starry skies above the parks, as well as on the ground around them in the wonderful geological processes and features the parks protect. The most recent entry from this week at Arches National Park is found here.

Finally, at Music of the Spheres, Bruce Irving asks Why Space?, a theme that the Martian Chronicles also picks up on this week, along with providing some great Cape Verde images as seen from everyone's favorite Martian rover.

Why explore indeed! And since it's THAT time again, perhaps it's appropriate that John Benac contribute a post about Political Action for Space, the first space political action committee.

It's been a blast to host the carnival at Kentucky's space program blog this week. KySat hopes to make its own news in the near future. So please come back and please visit all the great blogs and bloggers you see listed here!

Wayne

April 15, 2008

Parachuting to Mars

Mars_science_lab_chute Unlike previous craft to land on Mars, the Mars Science Laboratory is big - very big. The Universe Today describes the challenge of lowering it through the planet's thin atmosphere to the surface of the planet.

MSL will be the first planetary mission to use precision landing techniques, using a rocket-guided entry with a heat shield to steer itself toward the Martian surface similar to the way the space shuttle controls its entry through the Earth's upper atmosphere. In this way, the spacecraft will fly to a desired location above the surface of Mars before deploying its parachute for the final landing. MSL will use a scaled-up version of parachutes used for the Viking and Mars Exploration Rovers mission. Called a Disk-Gap-Band parachute, the name describes the construction of the parachute: a disk forms the canopy, then a small gap, followed by a cylindrical band.

Carrying a science lab on board, the job of robotic craft will be to uncover evidence for whether the Martian environment could once have been favorable for microbial life.

USA Today also carries a story about the difficulties of the Mars Science Laboratory mission.

Wayne

April 10, 2008

Phobos closeup

Phobos The larger of Mars' two moons, Phobos, gets a close up from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. "Larger" in this case means 21 kilometers in diameter.

Wayne

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona

April 09, 2008

Can you suggest a Pluto portrait?

173399main_two_moons_jupiter_lg The Planetary Society provides an update on New Horizons, including a description of some tough choices the mission managers will have to make as the craft heads toward an encounter with Pluto, Charon and the Kuiper Belt.

The mission team is also soliciting ideas from the public, hoping to increase its chances for "Kodak moments" - pictures prized for their artistic merit rather than their scientific value.

As Emily Lakdawalla notes at the Planetary Society, a similar effort lead to a couple of the most spectacular images taken of the Jupiter system as New Horizons passed by last year, one of which is reproduced above. It is among my favorite images from our solar system.

In the image, volcanic Io and more placid Europa can be seen in the same frame but they are in reality separated by a distance of nearly 800,000 kilometers. Easily visible in the picture, the spectacular Tvashtar plume on Io erupts about 300 kilometers into space.

Wayne

Image Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

April 07, 2008

Armadillo engine firings and flight video montage

A nicely edited recap of Armadillo Aerospace's activities in the past year has been uploaded to YouTube.

Armadillo presented the video at the just concluded Space Access Conference.

If not for a bit of bad luck the outfit probably would have won the 2007 Lunar Lander Challenge.

The organization, which is extremely open about its work, will progress to high altitude flights as the year goes on, according to RLV and Space Transport.

Wayne   

April 03, 2008

Titan haze and topology

Pia09869_modest This recently released photo of Titan clearly shows the high altitude haze layer surrounding the Saturn satellite. The atmosphere of the moon moves in superrotation, that is, faster than Titan itself rotates.

More data about the topology of the moon has also been released.

And somewhere on the surface, the Huygens' probe rests.

Wayne

Image: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

March 31, 2008

Mars' "Grand Canyon"

379260208214963d201hebeschasma_h1 Here is a "perspective view" of Hebes Chasma obtained by the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on ESA’s Mars Express spacecraft. According to ESA:

Hebes Chasma is an enclosed trough, almost 8000 m deep, in Valles Marineris, the Grand Canyon of Mars, where water is believed to have flowed.

The Universe Today has more about these images. Photo: ESA

Wayne

March 24, 2008

SwissCube images

A library of pictures related to SwissCube, including some CAD drawings and images taken during assembly and testing, may be found here.

Wayne

March 18, 2008

More on geyser-moon, Enceladus

4856_10685_1 The Planetary Society has posted a cool composite video of Cassini's 32,000 mph dive through ice geysers and past the Saturn moon of Enceladus. From the press release following the flight:

The spacecraft snatched up precious samples that might point to a water ocean or organics inside the little moon.

Scientists believe the geysers could provide evidence that liquid water is trapped under the icy crust of Enceladus. The geysers emanate from fractures running along the moon’s south pole, spewing out water vapor at approximately 400 meters per second (800 mph).

A detailed chronological overview of the flyby may be found at CICLOPS, the team responsible for Cassini imaging.

The image above may be found on this page at CICLOPS, but do check out the video at the Planetary Society.

Wayne

March 17, 2008

Ariel, Miranda, Titania

At the Planetary Society, Ted Stryk has uncovered some additional detail from Voyager's images of the moons of Uranus that were taken over 20 years ago.

Wayne

March 14, 2008

Enceladus closeup

Encledaus_closeup I've been monitoring the NASA feeds for more on Cassini's very close encounter with Enceledus. Here is one image of the northern pole of the moon, which is far different from the geologically active and ice-spewing southern pole. About the image:

Compared to much of the moon's southern hemisphere—the south polar region in particular—the north polar region is much older and covered with craters.  These craters are captured at different stages of disruption and alteration by tectonic activity and probably past heating from below. Many of the craters seen here are sliced by small parallel cracks that seem to be ubiquitous throughout the old cratered terrains on Enceladus. The mosaic also shows a variety of impact crater shapes, some with bowed-up floors and smaller craters within, very likely indicating that the icy crust in this area was at some time warmer than at present. While this conclusion was previously reached from NASA Voyager spacecraft images, these new data provide a much more detailed look at the fractures that modify the surface.  This data will give a significantly improved comparison of the geologic history at the satellite's north pole with that at the south pole.

A news release announcing the successful fly by is here.

Wayne

Image: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Moon 'bot prototype

One of the teams participating in the Google Lunar X Prize challenge has posted this video of a robotic sphere, which as the team's blog entry also points out, has been the subject of a New York Times article.

Wayne

March 12, 2008

Spectacular Enceladus encounter

Enceladus The Cassini team will conduct a spectacular fly-by today of the mysterious Saturn  moon of Enceladus, which sports a long geyser-like tail of ice and surface debris the craft will have to navigate. AndCassini_enceladus_trajectory if that weren't enough, at closest approach Cassini will be a mere 50 kilometers (30 miles) above the surface of the moon, as illustrated by the graphic to the right.

While nosing around the site, I also noticed - as the Planetary Society also points out - that NASA has begun an experiment in live blogging big events. The Enceladus encounter bloggers are here.

Wayne

Image credits: NASA/JPL/Space Sciences Institute

March 11, 2008

Rings for Rhea

Rhea-rings.jpg

Does Rhea have rings? Because of a decrease in the number of electrons detected by the craft on either side of the moon, scientists suggest that rings may be blocking these electrons before they reach Cassini.

Here is one artist's conception of what might ring the moon. Credit: NASA/JPL/JHUAPL

March 10, 2008

Machining SwissCube

This video demonstrating the machining of SwissCube was recently uploaded to YouTube.

Wayne

Study: Mars gullies formed by landslides, not water

Mars_water Gullies found in 2005 images that appeared to show gully formation created by the rapid release of water have on further examination turned out to be created from the flow of granular debris, or landslides, according to Universe Today.

Wayne

March 07, 2008

"Above the ringplane"

4759_10475_1 This just released image from Cassini features a look from above the ringplane of Saturn. Trace the outermost ring all the way around and you will see Prometheus and Pandora on either side. You may need to click the image to enlarge it enough to see these small shepherd moons.

Wayne

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

March 06, 2008

Dawn's camera blinks to life

Fc2_calib_color_300 At the Planetary Society, Project System Engineer for the Dawn mission, Marc Rayman, has posted an update that includes a stunning false color image of the Eta Carina Nebula, also shown here, taken by the Framing Camera on board the spacecraft.

Powered by an Ion propulsion system, Dawn is on its way toward a rendezvous with the asteroid Vesta and dwarf planet, Ceres, where it will orbit these two very different bodies looking for clues into the origins of the solar system. More on the mission may be found here.

Wayne

Credit: NASA/JPL/MPS/DLR/IDA

March 05, 2008

HiRISE snaps Martian avalanche

Psp_007338_2640 HiRISE captured this avalanche on Mars as it happened.

Wayne

Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

March 03, 2008

Rocket hobbyist

In this 3 minute TED video, investor Steve Jurvetson recounts his love of rocketry and concludes with an image taken from the edge of space. Enjoy. Hat tip: Hobbyspace

Wayne

Seeing the universe anew

Introduced in this TED video, Microsoft will soon unveil the WorldWide Telescope, which will weave feeds from satellites and telescopes into a seemless guided tour of the universe.

Wayne

February 20, 2008

Settled in for the Winter

overwinteringonMars.jpg The Planetary Photojournal at NASA has just posted this January 29 image of the over wintering position of Spirit, one of two Mars rovers currently roaming the planet. The image caption reads:

NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit has this view northward from the position at the north edge of the "Home Plate" plateau where the rover will spend its third Martian winter.
Husband Hill is on the horizon. The dark area in the middle distance is "El Dorado" sand dune field.

Wayne

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell University

February 11, 2008

Photos of the rocketeers

The Space Exploration Pool at Flickr has a number of nice photos of rocket launches, space art, images from the Soviet space program and astronomy photos, including at least one ground-based photo of the International Space Station. If you like space imagery, it's well worth a visit. I reference it frequently.

Wayne

February 08, 2008

HiRISE taking Mars public

Psp_003545_2025According to information at HiRISE, students at a New Jersey Charter High School helped it select this image. HiRISE is responsible for the images taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO).

In addition to click workers, who helped it do tasks that required human perception, such as the ability to recognize patterns, but not a lot of scientific background, the HiRISE project has worked to incorporate the public into its efforts. It should be commended.

If you're interested in other human-based computation efforts, see this list. The popular Galaxy Zoo, which asks ordinary individuals to help classify galaxies, is a favorite of mine.

Lastly, the HiRISE blog mentions a way to get MRO data into Google Earth. Google Mars anyone?

Wayne

Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

February 05, 2008

Engineers provide interplantary update to Dawn software

Xenonceres_300 Dawn and its ion propulsion system are in inter-planetary cruise, according to Marc Rayman, project system engineer, who in an update on the mission tells a story about dealing with an electrical issue caused by a stray cosmic particle. The distance between the craft and Earth grows by about 1.1 million kilometers a day - the total distance is about 175 times as far as the moon - as it heads toward a rendezvous with Ceres and Vesta, the two largest protoplanets left intact in our solar system. Image credit: McREL

Wayne

January 29, 2008

NASA to release new science findings, images of Mercury

Never-before-seen images of Mercury and new scientific findings about the planet will be featured at a news conference planned for Wednesday, according to NASA.

Wayne

January 23, 2008

New color image of Mercury

Mercuring_in_color

The color isn't mind blowing, but look closely at the first color image of Mercury released by MESSENGER. It's a terrific picture. 

Wayne

 

January 08, 2008

"Most stunning photo ever taken"

2230_6162_1As noted here earlier, CICLOPS, the organization and people responsible for the breathtaking images taken by Cassini as it moves among Saturn and its moons, held a contest so the public could choose its favorite picture.

The results are in.

The winning color image, which shows an eclipse of the sun as seen from the other side of Saturn, is shown above. Nestled just inside the outermost ring on the left side of the picture (click to enlarge) is our home, Earth.

Cosmic Log's Alan Boyle has much more on the story, including a link to comments from Steven Pinker, who called it "the most stunning photograph ever taken" in this post

An image roughly 2700 x 1300 pixels can be found here. It's currently saved as my Macbook desktop.

Wayne

December 28, 2007

"Alone with the Giant"

I'm posting the latest release from CICLOPS just because it's so beautiful. Can you spot Epimetheus in the  picture?

Teachers, the great thing about the images from CICLOPS and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter imaging team, HiRISE, is that with simple credit - like the line found at the bottom of this image - the pictures may be freely used. I bet like me many years ago, there is a student in your class to whom these kinds of images would really speak.

Wayne

3952_10241_1

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute.

December 19, 2007

Top Ten Astro Pics of 2007

101607 Bad Astronomy posts its top ten astropictures of 2007.

My personal favorite is this image above of Io and Europa taken by New Horizons, which is on its way to Pluto. As Phil Plait points out - his commentary on the photos he selected is also very good - the two moons are in reality very far apart. The blue stream you see on Io is the result of the volcano Tvashtar, spewing debris hundreds of kilometers into surrounding space. The red at the base of the volcano is molten sulfur.

Here's a close up of Io that I like.

Check out all of Phil's choices. There are some truly gorgeous images.

Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

Wayne

November 19, 2007

Titan flyby today

Pia08398br500 Cassini is set to make another flyby of Titan today. Because the moon will be directly between Cassini and the sun, scientists are expecting a very nice look at the density of Titan's atmosphere.

This will also be the highest inclination pass yet. By July, 2008 the craft will be looking down on Saturn from a perch of over 70 degrees, which should provide some spectacular pictures of the planet.

The image of Titan above was released in October.

Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Wayne

November 13, 2007

Spitzer spies stellar bubble blower

Sig07022_medium The Spitzer Space Telescope has spied a stellar bubble blower.

Scientists believe that the jets of gas, moving at 200 to 300 kilometers per second, indicate that the new star has stopped growing. The star is the white object near the center of the image.

According to Dr. Thangasamy Velusamy of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., baby stars and their potential planet-forming disks grow by gravitationally pulling in and absorbing surrounding gas and dust. Scientists suspect that these disks stop growing when the central baby star develops powerful winds and jets that blow away surrounding material (link supplied).

The image thus represents one stage of the life cycle of a star.

Image credit: "Baby Star HH 46/47," NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Velusamy (Jet Propulsion Laboratory)

Wayne

November 12, 2007

Rosetta to touch earliest solar history

01802 Universe Today: Making the third of four scheduled planetary encounters to gain speed, Rosetta will sling past Earth tomorrow on its way to an investigation of the Comet 67/P Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

After entering orbit around the comet in 2014, the spacecraft will release a small lander onto the icy nucleus then spend the next two years orbiting the comet as it heads towards the Sun.

The artist's conception above envisions the craft on the comet.

Because they have changed far less than nearby planets, comets offer material undisturbed since the earliest days of the solar system. In addition to landing on the comet and the studying that material, the mission also will require some very interesting maneuvers, not the least of which is the 10 year trip t