Anonymous ID: 5a918c Dec. 26, 2023, 8:47 a.m. No.20133243   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3259 >>3575 >>3699

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

Dec 26, 2023

 

IC 443: The Jellyfish Nebula

 

Why is this jellyfish swimming in a sea of stars? Drifting near bright star Eta Geminorum, seen at the right, the Jellyfish Nebula extends its tentacles from the bright arcing ridge of emission left of center. In fact, the cosmic jellyfish is part of bubble-shaped supernova remnant IC 443, the expanding debris cloud from a massive star that exploded. Light from the explosion first reached planet Earth over 30,000 years ago. Like its cousin in astronomical waters, the Crab Nebula supernova remnant IC 443 is known to harbor a neutron star – the remnant of the collapsed stellar core. The Jellyfish Nebula is about 5,000 light-years away. At that distance, the featured image would span about 140 light-years across.

 

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html?

Anonymous ID: 5a918c Dec. 26, 2023, 9:46 a.m. No.20133499   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3575 >>3699

Japan's SLIM 'moon sniper' lander arrives in lunar orbit for Christmas

Dec 25, 2023

 

A Japanese spacecraft just took a huge step toward pulling off the nation's first-ever moon landing.

 

Japan's robotic SLIM moon lander arrived in lunar orbit on Christmas Day (Dec. 25) as planned, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency announced. The spacecraft entered lunar orbit at 2:51 a.m. EDT (4:51 p.m. Japan Standard Time, 0751 GMT).

 

"The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is pleased to announce that the Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (SLIM) was successfully inserted into lunar orbit at 16:51 (Japan Standard Time, JST) on December 25, 2023," JAXA officials wrote in an update. The spacecraft is in an elliptical orbit that takes 6.4 hours to circle the moon, coming within 373 miles (600 kilometers) of the lunar surface at its closest point and reaching out to 2,485 miles (4,000 km) at its farthest.

 

The milestone keeps SLIM on target to attempt a lunar touchdown on Jan. 19. Success in that endeavor would be historic; to date, only four nations — the Soviet Union, the U.S., China and India — have soft-landed a craft on the moon.

 

The 8.8-foot-long (2.7 meters) SLIM launched on Sept. 6 along with XRISM, a powerful X-ray space telescope.

 

Both Japanese spacecraft deployed into Earth orbit, and XRISM remains there today. But SLIM left our planet's gravity well on Sept. 30, beginning a long, circuitous and energy-efficient route to the moon.

 

That trek came to an end today, when SLIM inserted itself itself into lunar orbit. The probe will now start gearing up for its touchdown attempt, during which it will try to live up to its "Moon Sniper" nickname: SLIM aims to hit its landing-zone target with an accuracy of 330 feet (100 m) or less, paving the way for even more ambitious exploration efforts down the road.

 

SLIM "is a mission for researching the pinpoint landing technology necessary for future lunar probes and verifying this on the surface of the moon with a small-scale probe," JAXA officials wrote in a mission description.

 

"By creating the SLIM lander, humans will make a qualitative shift towards being able to land where we want and not just where it is easy to land, as had been the case before," they added. "By achieving this, it will become possible to land on planets even more resource-scarce than the moon."

 

If all goes according to plan, SLIM will also deploy two miniprobes onto the lunar surface after touching down. These daughter craft will snap photos, help mission team members monitor SLIM's status and provide an "independent communication system for direct communication with Earth," JAXA officials wrote in the SLIM mission's press kit.

 

SLIM isn't the first Japanese spacecraft to reach lunar orbit; the Hiten probe did so in 1990, followed by SELENE ("Selenological and Engineering Explorer"), also known as Kaguya, in 2007.

 

And Hakuto-R, a lander built by Tokyo-based company ispace, arrived in lunar orbit this past March. Hakuto-R tried to touch down on the moon a month later but crashed after its sensors got confused by the rim of a lunar crater.

 

https://www.space.com/japan-slim-moon-lander-arrives-lunar-orbit