Anonymous ID: dda9bb Dec. 30, 2023, 9:19 a.m. No.20153446   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3466

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

Dec 30, 2023

 

The Last Full Moon

 

Known to some in the northern hemisphere as December's Cold Moon or the Long Night Moon, the last full moon of 2023 is rising in this surreal mountain and skyscape. The Daliesque scene was captured in a single exposure with a camera and long telephoto lens near Monte Grappa, Italy. The full moon is not melting, though. Its stretched and distorted appearance near the horizon is caused as refraction along the line of sight changes and creates shifting images or mirages of the bright lunar disk. The changes in atmospheric refraction correspond to atmospheric layers with sharply different temperatures and densities. Other effects of atmospheric refraction produced by the long sight-line to this full moon rising include the thin red rim seen faintly on the distorted lower edge of the Moon and a thin green rim along the top.

 

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

Anonymous ID: dda9bb Dec. 30, 2023, 9:35 a.m. No.20153515   🗄️.is 🔗kun

SpaceX launches two rockets—three hours apart—to close out a record year

12/29/2023, 3:10 PM

 

This was the shortest time between orbital launches at Cape Canaveral since 1966.

 

It seems like SpaceX did everything this year but launch 100 times.

 

On Thursday night, the launch company sent two more rockets into orbit from Florida. One was a Falcon Heavy, the world's most powerful rocket in commercial service, carrying the US military's X-37B spaceplane from a launch pad at NASA's Kennedy Space Center at 8:07 pm EST (01:07 UTC). Less than three hours later, at 11:01 pm EST (04:01 UTC), SpaceX's workhorse Falcon 9 launcher took off a few miles to the south with a payload of 23 Starlink Internet satellites.

 

The Falcon Heavy's two side boosters and the Falcon 9's first stage landed back on Earth for reuse.

 

These were SpaceX's final launches of 2023. SpaceX ends the year with 98 flights, including 91 Falcon 9s, five Falcon Heavy rockets, and two test launches of the giant new Super Heavy-Starship rocket. These flights were spread across four launch pads in Florida, California, and Texas.

 

Elon Musk, SpaceX's founder and CEO, set a goal of 100 launches this year, up from the company's previous record of 61 in 2022. For a while, it looked like SpaceX was on track to accomplish the feat, but a spate of bad weather and technical problems with the final Falcon Heavy launch of the year kept the company short of 100 flights.

 

King of 'upmass'

"Congrats to the entire Falcon team at SpaceX on a record breaking 96 launches in 2023!" wrote Jon Edwards, vice president of Falcon launch vehicles at SpaceX, on the social media platform X. "I remember when Elon Musk first threw out a goal of 100 launches as a thought experiment, intended to unlock our thinking as to how we might accelerate Falcon across all levels of production and launch.

 

"Only a few years later and here we are," Edwards wrote. "I’m so incredibly proud to work with the best team on Earth, and so excited to see what we achieve next year."

 

It's important to step back and put these numbers in context. No other family of orbit-class rockets has ever flown more than 63 times in a year. SpaceX's Falcon rockets have now exceeded this number by roughly 50 percent. SpaceX's competitors in the United States, such as United Launch Alliance and Rocket Lab, managed far fewer flights in 2023. ULA had three missions, and Rocket Lab launched its small Electron booster 10 times.

 

Nearly two-thirds of SpaceX's missions this year were dedicated to delivering satellites to orbit for SpaceX's Starlink broadband network, a constellation that now numbers more than 5,000 spacecraft.

 

SpaceX also launched five missions with the Falcon Heavy rocket, created by aggregating three Falcon 9 rocket boosters together. Highlights from SpaceX's 2023 Falcon launch schedule included three crew missions to the International Space Station, and the launch of NASA's Psyche mission to explore a metallic asteroid.

 

In all, SpaceX's Falcon rockets hauled approximately 1,200 metric tons, or more than 2.6 million pounds, of payload mass into orbit this year. This "upmass" is equivalent to nearly three International Space Stations. Most of this was made up of mass-produced Starlink satellites.

 

As if these statistics weren't enough, SpaceX closed out the year by, yes, setting yet another record. The back to back launches Thursday night took off 2 hours and 54 minutes apart, the shortest turnaround between two SpaceX flights in the company's history. It also set a modern era record at Cape Canaveral, Florida, with the shortest span between two orbital-class launches there since 1966. The Florida spaceport was the departure point for 72 orbital-class rockets in 2023, also an unprecedented level of launch activity there.

 

SpaceX looks poised to set more records next year. In 2024, SpaceX aims for an average of a dozen launches per month, for a total of 144 rocket flights. The company will get out of the starting blocks early in the new year, with two Falcon 9 launches slated for January 2 and 3.

 

cont.

 

https://arstechnica.com/space/2023/12/spacex-launches-two-rockets-three-hours-apart-to-close-out-a-record-year/

Anonymous ID: dda9bb Dec. 30, 2023, 9:58 a.m. No.20153601   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3620

2024 in SPACEFLIGHT: The incredible missions set to take off next year, revealed - from NASA's great return to the moon to Blue Origin's all-female trip into orbit

UPDATED: 08:34 EST, 30 December 2023

 

2023 shaped up to be an amazing year for space missions, from NASA's return of fragments of a faraway asteroid to India landing on the moon's south pole.

 

And now it seems the world's space agencies and billion-dollar private firms are already looking forward to an even more prolific year.

 

Among them are NASA, which is finally returning to the moon after 40 years, and Blue Origin which is sending an all-female crew into orbit.

 

There's also the chance of the first ever all-British mission to space and the first phase of SpaceX's ambitious Polaris Dawn programme.

 

Here's a look at the big space launches of 2024 that you won't want to miss.

 

cont. in huge article

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-12842337/2024-SPACEFLIGHT-incredible-missions-set-year-revealed-NASAs-great-return-moon-Blue-Origins-female-trip-orbit.html

Anonymous ID: dda9bb Dec. 30, 2023, 10:44 a.m. No.20153798   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3822 >>3824

Fishers bring UFO ashore at Manmunai

December 30, 2023 1:04 am

 

A mysterious object was seen floating along the Onthachchimadam-Koddaikallar beach in the Manmunai South Eruvil Pattu secretarial Division. This Unidentified Floating Object (UFO) was recovered by fishermen who brought it to the Kaluwanchikudy Police Thursday evening (28).

 

It was a red object with the tire on one side and a chain on the other. It was conically shaped. Although the public were anxious to see the object they were afraid to approach it.

 

The Kaluwanchikudy Police are investigating.

 

https://www.dailynews.lk/2023/12/30/lawnorder/320646/fishers-bring-ufo-ashore-at-manmunai/