Anonymous ID: 1fb087 Feb. 24, 2024, 7:39 a.m. No.20467935   🗄️.is 🔗kun

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

Feb 24, 2024

 

Odysseus to the Moon

 

Intuitive Machines' robotic lander Odysseus has accomplished the first U.S. landing on the Moon since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972. Launched on a SpaceX rocket on February 15, the phone booth sized lander reached lunar orbit on the 21st and touched down on the lunar surface at 6:23 pm ET on February 22nd. Its landing region is about 300 kilometers north of the Moon's south pole, near a crater designated Malapert A. Resting on its side, the lander is presently collecting solar power and transmitting data back to the Intuitive Machines' mission control center in Houston. The mission marks the first commercial uncrewed landing on the Moon. Prior to landing, Odysseus’ camera captured this extreme wide angle image (landing legs visible at right) as it flew over Schomberger crater some 200 kilometers from its landing site. Odysseus was still about 10 kilometers above the lunar surface.

 

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

Anonymous ID: 1fb087 Feb. 24, 2024, 7:58 a.m. No.20468018   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8048 >>8094 >>8175

Energy, Installations, Environment leadership visits Buckley SFB

Feb. 22, 2024

 

The Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Energy, Installations, and Environment Honorable Dr. Ravi I. Chaudhary and Senior Enlisted Leader for the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Energy, Installations, and Environment Chief Master Sgt. Wendell Snider met with Space Base Delta 2 leadership to discuss important infrastructure topics and tour multiple facilities at Buckley Space Force Base, Feb. 14.

 

Chaudhary brings a wealth of experience including a doctorate in liberal studies, executive leadership and innovation. His distinguished career spans military service, aviation leadership and governmental roles. He has demonstrated a commitment to enhancing infrastructure, energy efficiency and environmental stewardship within the Department of Defense. His visit to Buckley SFB signified a commitment to optimizing resources for mission success.

 

“How we collect, manage, and discharge energy will be crucial to ensuring we are decisive in the high-end fight, particularly at installations like Buckley where we fight while employed in place. This is an endeavor in which we dare not come in second place, and we won’t. Nobody knows that better than the Airmen and Guardians here at Buckley Space Force Base,” Chaudhary said.

 

The morning began with a briefing led by Buckley SFB leadership, joined by Chaudhary and senior officials, that provided an opportunity for candid discussions on future strategies.

 

Informed by Buckley SFB leadership, Chaudhary then embarked on a comprehensive tour of Del 4, housing, dormitories and power plant, accompanied by base leadership and personnel. This exploration allowed Chaudhary to witness infrastructure firsthand and gain valuable insights into areas for potential enhancement.

 

Chaudhary's visit to Buckley SFB symbolized a commitment to advancing facilities and ensuring continued mission readiness. With his wealth of experience and expertise, Chaudhary's insights and guidance contribute to enhancing Buckley SFB's capabilities and supporting the Air Force and Space Force's overarching mission objectives.

 

"Buckley Space Force Base stands at the forefront of space operations, and our infrastructure plays a vital role in supporting our mission readiness," said Col. Heidi Dexter, SBD2 commander. "I am committed to working collaboratively with our partners to optimize our infrastructure for mission success."

 

https://www.spaceforce.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/3684095/energy-installations-environment-leadership-visits-buckley-sfb/

Anonymous ID: 1fb087 Feb. 24, 2024, 8:13 a.m. No.20468062   🗄️.is 🔗kun

3 tiny new moons found around Uranus and Neptune — and one is exceptionally tiny

Feb 24, 2024

 

Astronomers have discovered two tiny moons orbiting Neptune and one circling Uranus, bringing the number of their known moons to 16 and 28 respectively.

 

Uranus' new moon, the first detected around the ice giant in over two decades and possibly the smallest of its ilk, is just 5 miles (8 kilometers) wide; it takes 680 days to complete one orbit around Uranus. In comparison, one Mars' moons named Deimos, considered to be among the tiniest known moons in our solar system, is 8 miles (13 km) wide.

 

The new moon of the blue-green planet is currently referred to as "S/2023 U1" while it awaits being named for a Shakespearean character, according to a statement by Carnegie Institution for Science (or Carnegie Science).

 

The brighter of Neptune's two new moons is provisionally named "S/2002 N5." At 14 miles (23 km) wide, this newly discovered satellite seems to be in a 9-year orbit around Neptune. The fainter moon, currently assigned the name "S/2021 N1," is 8.6 miles wide (14 km) and circles Neptune once every 27 years. Both Neptunian moons will be assigned permanent names based on sea gods and nymphs in Greek mythology.

 

The three new moons were announced Friday (Feb. 23) by the International Astronomical Union's Minor Planet Center, a Massachusetts-based scientific body responsible for designating planets, comets and moons in our solar system.

 

The discovery was made using observatories in Hawaii and Chile by Scott Sheppard, a staff scientist at Carnegie Science, in collaboration with Marina Brozovic and Bob Jacobson of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), David Tholen of the University of Hawaii, Chad Trujillo of Northern Arizona University and Patryk Sofia Lykawa of Kindai University.

 

The new moons are "the faintest ever found around these two ice giant planets using ground-based telescopes," Sheppard said in Friday's statement. "It took special image processing to reveal such faint objects."

 

He first detected the new Uranian moon in November of last year while using Chile's Magellan telescopes. A month later, follow up observations combined with JPL scientists' predictions of a possible orbit for the new moon confirmed the find.

 

The two new residents in Neptune's moon system were first seen in September 2021. After the orbit of the brighter of the two natural satellites, S/2002 N5, was confirmed, "it was traced back to an object that was spotted near Neptune in 2003 but lost before it could be confirmed as orbiting the planet," said Sheppard.

 

Determining the orbit of the fainter Neptunian moon "required special observing time under ultra-pristine conditions" with Europe's Very Large Telescope in Chile and Gemini Observatory in Hawaii, according to the statement.

 

Using these telescopes, Sheppard and colleagues clicked a series of five-minute exposures over three-to four-hour periods. These short-burst images were later “layered” such that the three newfound moons came into clearer view.

 

All three moons have egg-shaped orbits highly inclined to the plane of their respective ice giants. This implies they did not birth around their host planet but were instead gravitationally seized later on.

 

https://www.space.com/new-moons-discovered-uranus-neptune

Anonymous ID: 1fb087 Feb. 24, 2024, 8:22 a.m. No.20468096   🗄️.is 🔗kun

February's Full Snow Moon rises tonight, the smallest full moon of 2024

Feb 24, 2024

 

The full moon will appear a bit more petite in the sky tonight as the smallest full moon of 2024 rises.

 

February's Full Snow Moon will occur while the moon approaches its farthest point from Earth in its orbit, known as apogee. That means tonight's full moon will appear up to 10% smaller in the night sky — not enough for most of us to notice, but seasoned moonwatchers might be able to tell the difference.

 

The Full Snow Moon will rise around 6:30 p.m. local time in the east, just as the sun is setting in the west. It will appear between the hind legs of the Leo constellation, the Lion, and reach its highest point in the night sky around midnight. The moon will remain visible for the entirety of the night, setting with the next rising sun.

 

The moon appears to change in size in the night sky throughout the month from our vantage point on Earth's surface due to the fact that the moon's orbit isn't perfectly circular. Instead, it's elliptical, or oval-shaped, meaning its distance to Earth changes throughout its journey.

 

The moon reaches around 226,000 miles (363,300 kilometers) from Earth while at its closest point to our planet (known as perigee), and about 251,000 miles (405,500 km) from our planet while at its farthest point (apogee).

 

When a full moon occurs while the moon is at perigee, we call these "supermoons" due to the fact that they appear up to 14% bigger in the sky. While the size difference can be difficult to discern with the unaided eye, supermoons are noticeably brighter, sometimes appearing up to 30% brighter in the night sky.

 

When full moons occur while the moon is at apogee, these moons are sometimes referred to as "micromoons," although neither micromoon nor supermoon are officially-recognized astronomical terms.

 

This month, the moon will reach the exact point of apogee at 9:58 a.m. EST (1458 GMT) on Sunday (Feb. 25), according to In-the-Sky.org.

 

February's Full Snow Moon gets its name from the fact that it occurs in the midst of winter for the Northern Hemisphere, and February can often be the snowiest month for many parts of North America.

 

In China, February's full moon this year marks the end of Spring Festival, the holiday period that begins with Lunar New Year. In 2024, this full moon falls during a traditional holiday known as the Lantern Festival that marks a high point in Chinese New Year celebrations.

 

Other cultures and locations have their own names for February's full moon, however. The Ojibwe (or Anishinaabe) people of what is now southern Canada and the Midwestern United States have referred to February's full moon as Mikwa Giizis, or the Bear Moon. The Indigenous Cree people of North America have called it the Kisipisim, or the Great Moon, while the Cherokee people of what is now the Southeastern United States know it as the Bone Moon.

 

https://www.space.com/full-moon-rises-tonight-february-2024

Anonymous ID: 1fb087 Feb. 24, 2024, 8:36 a.m. No.20468158   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8175 >>8186

New Discovery Crushes Hopes of Finding Alien Life on Titan

24 February 2024

 

Hopes of discovering some kind of extraterrestrial life within our own Solar System have suffered a blow with a new paper suggesting Saturn's largest moon is likely barren.

 

"Unfortunately, we will now need to be a little less optimistic when searching for extraterrestrial lifeforms within our own Solar System," says University of Western Ontario astrobiologist Catherine Neish.

 

"The scientific community has been very excited about finding life in the icy worlds of the outer Solar System, and this finding suggests that it may be less likely than we previously assumed."

 

As one of the Solar System's few celestial bodies with continuous liquid water – trapped below a crust of ice up to 170 kilometers (105 miles) thick – the massive moon of Titan has been a contender for generating some kind of biochemistry.

 

Life also requires a heck of a lot more than water to exist, and so far only Earth has proved to possess all the necessary ingredients in large enough quantities. But Titan also has organic molecules aplenty in its methane-rich atmosphere. In fact, Titan produces so many bits of these tiny carbon based solids that they form deposits of plains, labyrinths, and dunes beneath the mysterious world's opaque cloudy atmosphere.

 

But for living chemistry to arise in the subterranean oceans, those molecules would need to seep through the ice into that underground layer of liquid.

 

So Neish and team estimated the flow of these molecules through the moon's environments using impact craters as a potential driving force. Within these moon-dents, the carbon based molecules mix with liquid water which then seeps through the thick icy crust into the massive ocean below.

 

They found the rate of comet strikes would only at most transfer an elephant-mass equivalent of organic molecules (around 7,500 kilograms of glycine) a year into the potential sanctuary of the moon's ocean.

 

"One elephant per year of glycine into an ocean 12 times the volume of Earth's oceans is not sufficient to sustain life," says Neish. "In the past, people often assumed that water equals life, but they neglected the fact that life needs other elements, in particular carbon."

 

Sadly the calculations suggest Titan remains barren for want of a free-flowing carbon cycle.

 

"This work shows that it is very hard to transfer the carbon on Titan's surface to its subsurface ocean – basically, it's hard to have both the water and carbon needed for life in the same place," explains Neish.

 

Since we don't know how much carbon can be sourced from a moon's interior, the crucial element's presence in Titan's atmosphere made it a fairer bet for finding life compared to its icy neighbors, like Jupiter's moons Europa and Ganymede.

 

"Unless biologically available compounds can be sourced from Titan's interior, or be delivered from the surface by other mechanisms," the researchers explain, "our calculations suggest that even the most organic-rich ocean world in the Solar System may not be able to support a large biosphere."

 

As disappointing as this may be, it doesn't reduce the value of studying this shrouded, secretive icy moon. Titan's surface composition creates a fascinating laboratory for all sorts of organic chemistry which may be able to teach us so much about the Universe and ourselves.

 

"It is nearly impossible to determine the composition of Titan's organic-rich surface by viewing it with a telescope through its organic-rich atmosphere," says Neish. "We need to land there and sample the surface to determine its composition."

 

Neish is part of NASA's Dragonfly project intending to land a drone on the surface of Titan in 2028.

 

https://www.sciencealert.com/new-discovery-crushes-hopes-of-finding-alien-life-on-titan