Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 6:13 a.m. No.22321930   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2005 >>2201

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

January 9, 2025

 

Peculiar Galaxies of Arp 273

 

The colorful, spiky stars are in the foreground of this image taken with a small telescope on planet Earth. They lie well within our own Milky Way Galaxy. But the two eye-catching galaxies in the frame lie far beyond the Milky Way, at a distance of over 300 million light-years. The galaxies' twisted and distorted appearance is due to mutual gravitational tides as the pair engage in close encounters. Cataloged as Arp 273 (also as UGC 1810), these galaxies do look peculiar, but interacting galaxies are now understood to be common in the universe. Closer to home, the large spiral Andromeda Galaxy is known to be some 2 million light-years away and inexorably approaching the Milky Way. In fact the far away peculiar galaxies of Arp 273 may offer an analog of the far future encounter of Andromeda and Milky Way. Repeated galaxy encounters on a cosmic timescale ultimately result in a merger into a single galaxy of stars. From our perspective, the bright cores of the Arp 273 galaxies are separated by only a little over 100,000 light-years.

 

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

Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 6:20 a.m. No.22321959   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2005 >>2201

DeSantis proposes NASA headquarters in Florida, lauds new space consortium

Jan. 8, 2025 / 7:19 PM

 

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wants NASA to relocate its headquarters from Washington, D.C., to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida's Brevard County.

"There is an interest in moving the headquarters of NASA right here to Kennedy Space Center," DeSantis told media on Wednesday. "I'm supportive of that."

 

DeSantis said the current NASA headquarters in the nation's capital is located in a large building that he says people seldom visit and a new building is being planned at a cost of about $500 million.

"Hopefully, with the new administration coming in, they'll see a great opportunity to just headquarter NASA here on the Space Coast of Florida," DeSantis said. "That'd be very, very fitting."

 

DeSantis made his comments during an event on Merritt Island that heralded the formation of the Florida University Space Research Consortium.

The consortium combines the talents and resources of the Kennedy Space Center, University of Florida, Central Florida University and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

 

The consortium's aim is to create advantages for NASA and the universities while advancing the nation's and world's space capabilities. Other universities have an open invitation to join the consortium.

DeSantis said the first American satellite in space, astronaut John Glenn's first Earth orbit and the Apollo 11 mission that put the world's first man on the moon all launched from Florida's Cape Canaveral.

 

"This is really special ground when it comes to space," DeSantis told media. "If you look at what we've done in the state of Florida, our ecosystem for space has never been better."

NASA administrator Bill Nelson addressed the event via a video statement and welcomed the new consortium's formation.

 

"This consortium will be an open door to even more possibilities for the researchers, the faculty and the students that have an extraordinary position here in Florida," Nelson said.

The consortium creates "opportunities for research and funding, internships and fellowships … for teaching and learning," Nelson added.

 

Nelson did not address DeSantis' suggestion to move NASA headquarters to Florida.

 

https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2025/01/08/nasa-headquarters-florida-space-consortium/2081736380135/

Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 6:35 a.m. No.22322016   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2064

Nikon unveils space-ready mirrorless camera for NASA Artemis lunar mission

January 8, 2025

 

Nikon Corporation exhibited its cutting-edge technologies at CES 2025, one of the world’s largest digital technology trade shows.

The company’s booth featured interactive content, showcasing its state-of-the-art technologies, from its Z Series mirrorless cameras to its robot vision system.

 

At the event, Nikon highlighted the Z Series mirrorless cameras, offering attendees the opportunity to have their portraits taken by a professional photographer using the Nikon Z50II.

In addition to this, Nikon revealed a groundbreaking partnership with NASA.

Nikon Inc., a subsidiary of Nikon Corporation, entered into a Space Act Agreement with NASA to develop the Handheld Universal Lunar Camera (HULC) for NASA’s Artemis campaign.

This collaboration aims to support NASA’s goal of returning humans to the Moon and preparing for missions to Mars.

 

NASA will utilize the Nikon Z9, which was launched to the International Space Station (ISS) in December 2021, for the Artemis III mission.

This mission will send astronauts to the Moon’s South Pole region, with the Nikon Z9 camera modified for space.

It will be used for lunar exploration, capturing images and video on the Moon’s surface.

To ensure the camera can survive the harsh lunar environment, a thermal insulation blanket will protect the camera and its lens from dust and extreme temperature changes.

 

Geoffrey Coalter, Communications Manager at Nikon, explained, “So what we’re looking at here today is the Nikon Z9 along with the thermal blanket… This is the camera that’s being used by NASA for multiple reasons…

The Artemis mission is mankind’s return to the Moon, and Nikon took part in the Space Act agreement to provide NASA with and work with them to alter the Z9 in order to survive the lunar environment.”

 

The camera will also be adapted to handle the extreme conditions of space, such as cosmic radiation and temperature fluctuations.

Specialized firmware will be developed to optimize performance, and various controls will be customized for astronauts’ use, including a grip and controls that can be easily operated while wearing space suits.

The camera’s circuits will be reinforced to withstand radiation, and modifications will be made to ensure efficient power usage during the mission.

 

Another highlight of Nikon’s CES 2025 exhibit was its advanced robot vision system.

This system enables robots to operate with flexibility, speed, and precision, surpassing human capabilities in image processing and vision.

Demonstrated in a futuristic kitchen setting, the robot vision system can pick up objects with incredible accuracy and speed.

It incorporates Nikon’s C3 eMotion, an intelligent actuator unit for robotic joints, allowing for human-collaborative robots without the need for specialized knowledge.

 

The robot vision system, equipped with high-speed sensing and 2D/3D cameras mounted on the robot’s fingertips, allows for exceptionally fast and flexible movements.

This technology enables the robot to pick up randomly piled objects and perform assembly tasks on moving workpieces.

Nikon’s system drastically reduces the time needed for teaching robots new tasks, boosting efficiency and flexibility in industries such as automotive and manufacturing.

 

Speaking to Interesting Engineering, Coalter explained, “Nikon is creating a robot that seamlessly works with humans.

We’re showing here how the robot vision system uses advanced optical technology for precise movements. This can be applied to industries like automotive or factory work.

The robot demonstrated here in the kitchen is a great example of how Nikon’s imaging and innovations can help with future tasks.”

 

https://interestingengineering.com/ces-2025/nikon-unveils-space-ready-mirrorless-camera

Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 6:41 a.m. No.22322042   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2045 >>2078

Houston, We Have the Holiday Cookies

Jan 08, 2025

 

Supporting the International Space Station is an around-the-clock responsibility for NASA and its international partners.

This means there is always a team of flight operations and payload personnel working with the orbiting laboratory’s crew – including overnight, on weekends, and during the holidays.

 

At Johnson Space Center’s Mission Control Center (MCC) in Houston, flight directors organize fun activities to help these teams build camaraderie and celebrate holidays while they work, no matter the hour.

“Working in mission control is a very rewarding job, but it also demands a lot from flight controllers and leads to time away from family,” said Fiona Antkowiak, a flight director in the MCC.

“We really want to make the holiday shifts in MCC extra special.”

 

Antkowiak recalled working Christmas 2018 as a space station flight controller. That year, teams participated in a friendly cookie-decorating competition, with the three different MCC shifts going head-to-head.

When flight directors started brainstorming festive ideas for the 2024 holiday season, Antkowiak suggested reviving the contest and asked the Expedition 72 crew if they would be willing to judge the entries.

“They agreed, and also told us they would decorate some cookies for us to judge, too!”

 

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station often decorate cookies as part of their holiday celebrations and have become adept at manipulating icing in zero gravity.

NASA astronaut Nick Hague shared on social media, “It opened up a whole new dimension, quite literally, with layer upon layer of icing.”

 

Teams in the MCC in Houston and NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center Payload Operations Integration Center in Huntsville, Alabama, were joined by international partners ESA (European Space Agency) and JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) from their respective control centers.

The decorating began late on Christmas Eve and concluded on Christmas Day, ensuring space station crew members could participate in the fun on their days off.

 

The 36 entries drew inspiration from traditional holiday imagery, human spaceflight, sports teams, and comic books.

Each crew member selected their personal favorite cookie, in addition to choosing an overall winner.

Payload Operations Director Jaclyn Poteraj created the winning cookie, depicting an astronaut riding on a reindeer made of cargo transfer bags, which are used to transport cargo to and store it aboard the International Space Station.

 

“We had a lot of fun figuring out how to mix the colors we wanted for icing, deciding on designs, and ultimately decorating our cookies,” said Antkowiak.

“Our team is lucky to have the responsibility of keeping the space station and her crew safe, and I’m glad we can find ways to still celebrate the holidays while at work.”

 

https://www.nasa.gov/general/houston-we-have-the-holiday-cookies/

Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 6:46 a.m. No.22322068   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2098

NASA's lunar Roomba set to suck up Moon dirt for study

Thu 9 Jan 2025 // 12:16 UTC

 

NASA is sending a "vacuum cleaner" to the Moon as a payload on next week's Blue Ghost 1 mission to land on the lunar surface.

The words "vacuum cleaner" are those of the US space agency. The Lunar PlanetVac (LPV) device is a NASA payload on Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost 1 lunar lander.

It is part of NASA's efforts to find new ways of collecting samples and performing in-situ testing.

 

The LPV was developed by Honeybee Robotics and works by using pressurized gas to stir up the lunar regolith into a "small tornado."

The resulting dust cloud then gets funneled into a transfer tube by pneumatic jets and dumped into a sample container.

 

The device can handle particles of regolith measuring up to 1 cm in size, and the collected Moon dirt is then sieved, photographed in the sample container, and the findings transmitted back to Earth.

The device will also test the regolith dust's adhesion and gas jets' efficiency as a cleaning agent.

 

It's all autonomous, although the kit could also be used with astronaut oversight on future crewed missions to the Moon or Mars.

It's a neat alternative to the mechanical scraping of the surface employed by other missions.

Dennis Harris, who manages the LPV payload for the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, said:

"There's no digging, no mechanical arm to wear out requiring servicing or replacement – it functions like a vacuum cleaner.

 

"The technology on this CLPS payload could benefit the search for water, helium, and other resources and provide a clearer picture of in situ materials available to NASA and its partners for fabricating lunar habitats and launch pads, expanding scientific knowledge and the practical exploration of the solar system every step of the way."

 

First, however, it needs to get to the Moon. Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost 1 mission is set to lift off from Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center in Florida atop a SpaceX Falcon 9.

The mission will take approximately 45 days to reach the Moon, including 25 days in orbit around the Earth, and the landing is scheduled for early March.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/missions/artemis/nasa-lander-to-test-vacuum-cleaner-on-moon-for-sample-collection/

https://www.theregister.com/2025/01/09/nasa_moon_vacuum_cleaner/

Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 6:58 a.m. No.22322118   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The Plantaform smart indoor garden uses NASA tech to grow plants with fog

January 9, 2025

 

The Canadian company Plantaform introduced its eponymous smart indoor garden powered by "fogponics" at CES 2025 in Las Vegas, marking its hard launch in the U.S. CEO Alberto Aguilar plugs it as a "Nespresso for your vegetables" that uses an ultra-fine vapor to hydrate plants, resulting in faster growth and 30 to 50 percent less water usage compared to standard hydroponic systems.

 

The Mashable team caught the Plantaform at CES' Pepcom media showcase Monday night, and it's easily one of the neatest smart home gadgets I've seen here all week.

The Consumer Technology, the trade show's organizer, shares my enthusiasm: It's a 2025 CES Innovation Awards Best of Innovation winner in the Food and AgTech category.

 

Not too shabby for NASA leftovers, mind you. Aguilar told me that the Plantaform's fog-based watering technology was originally developed (then ditched) by the administration as a way to grow plants in space.

 

Design-wise, the Plantaform is a 26-inch-tall egg-shaped vessel (available in midnight black or frost white) with removable windows, full-spectrum LED lights, and a central chamber filled with holes for up to 15 individual soil-free seed pods.

The Plantaform tends to the plants throughout their entire growth cycles using an algorithm-determined combination of water, light, and nutrients, per the company's website.

 

The fog in question hits the plants right at their roots from inside the Plantaform's chamber. Some of it inevitably leaks out and floats among their leaves, humidifiying the system's immediate surroundings while looking cool as hell.

 

https://mashable.com/article/plantaform-smart-indoor-garden-nasa-ces-2025

https://plantaform.com/blogs/home/ces-best-of-innovation-award-2025

Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 7:12 a.m. No.22322188   🗄️.is 🔗kun

A Rover Retrospective: Turning Trials to Triumphs in 2024

Jan 08, 2025

 

A look back at a few Mars 2020 mission highlights of 2024

 

Perseverance’s past year operating on the surface of Mars was filled with some of the mission’s highest highs, but also some of its greatest challenges.

True to its name and its reputation as a mission that overcomes challenges, Perseverance and its team of scientists and engineers turned trials to triumphs in yet another outstanding year for the mission.

There’s a lot to celebrate about Perseverance’s past year on Mars, but here are three of my top mission moments this year, in the order in which they happened.

 

  1. SHERLOC’s cover opens

In early January the SHERLOC instrument’s cover mechanism stopped responding during a routine attempt to acquire data on a rock outcrop in the Margin unit.

After six weeks of team diagnostics, the SHERLOC instrument was declared offline and many of us feared that the instrument had met its end. In early March, the team made significant progress in driving the cover to a more open position.

Then, to everyone’s surprise, the SHERLOC cover moved unexpectedly to a nearly completely open position during a movement of the arm on sol 1077.

 

I remember staring in wonder at the image of the cover (taken on sol 1079), feeling real optimism for the first time that SHERLOC could be recovered.

The team spent the next few months developing a new plan for operating SHERLOC with its cover open, and the instrument was declared back online at the end of June.

 

  1. A potential biosignature at Cheyava Falls

No top list would be complete without Perseverance’s discovery in July 2024 of a potential biosignature in the form of sub-millimeter-scale “leopard spots” at an outcrop called Cheyava Falls.

These features, which formed during chemical reactions within the rock, have dark rims and light cores and occur together with organic carbon. On Earth, these chemical reactions are often driven by or associated with microbes.

 

Although we can’t say for sure that microbes were involved in the formation of the leopard spots at Cheyava Falls, this question can be answered when Perseverance’s samples are returned to Earth.

In the meantime, this rock remains one of the most compelling rocks discovered on Mars.

 

  1. Arrival at Witch Hazel Hill

Closing out 2024 on a high note, in mid-December Perseverance arrived at the top of a sequence of rock exposed on the western edge of the Jezero crater rim called Witch Hazel Hill.

These rocks pre-date the formation of Jezero crater and could be amongst the oldest rocks exposed on the surface of Mars.

These rocks have the potential to tell us about a period of solar system history not well-preserved on our own planet Earth, and they may record important clues about the early history and habitability of Mars.

 

Witch Hazel Hill first caught my attention during landing site selection several years ago, when we were debating the merits of landing Perseverance in Jezero versus sites outside the crater.

At the time, this area seemed just out of reach for a Jezero-focused mission, so I’m thrilled that the rover is now exploring this site!

 

The Mars 2020 mission had its ups and downs and a fair share of surprises during 2024, but we are looking ahead to 2025 with excitement, as Perseverance continues to explore and sample the Jezero crater rim.

 

https://science.nasa.gov/blog/a-rover-retrospective-turning-trials-to-triumphs-in-2024/

Anonymous ID: 5accd0 Jan. 9, 2025, 7:19 a.m. No.22322223   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2238

415 Years Ago: Astronomer Galileo Discovers Jupiter’s Moons

Jan 08, 2025

 

On Jan. 7, 1610, Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei peered through his newly improved 20-power homemade telescope at the planet Jupiter.

He noticed three other points of light near the planet, at first believing them to be distant stars.

Observing them over several nights, he noted that they appeared to move in the wrong direction with regard to the background stars and they remained in Jupiter’s proximity but changed their positions relative to one another.

Four days later, he observed a fourth point of light near the planet with the same unusual behavior.

By Jan. 15, Galileo correctly concluded that he had discovered four moons orbiting around Jupiter, providing strong evidence for the Copernican theory that most celestial objects did not revolve around the Earth.

 

In March 1610, Galileo published his discoveries of Jupiter’s satellites and other celestial observations in a book titled Siderius Nuncius (The Starry Messenger). As their discoverer, Galileo had naming rights to Jupiter’s satellites.

He proposed to name them after his patrons the Medicis and astronomers called them the Medicean Stars through much of the seventeenth century, although in his own notes Galileo referred to them by the Roman numerals I, II, III, and IV, in order of their distance from Jupiter.

Astronomers still refer to the four moons as the Galilean satellites in honor of their discoverer.

 

In 1614, the German astronomer Johannes Kepler suggested naming the satellites after mythological figures associated with Jupiter, namely Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, but his idea didn’t catch on for more than 200 years.

Scientists didn’t discover any more satellites around Jupiter until 1892 when American astronomer E.E. Barnard found Jupiter’s fifth moon Amalthea, much smaller than the Galilean moons and orbiting closer to the planet than Io.

It was the last satellite in the solar system found by visual observation – all subsequent discoveries occurred via photography or digital imaging. As of today, astronomers have identified 95 moons orbiting Jupiter.

 

Although each of the Galilean satellites has unique features, such as the volcanoes of Io, the heavily cratered surface of Callisto, and the magnetic field of Ganymede, scientists have focused more attention on Europa due to the tantalizing possibility that it might be hospitable to life.

In the 1970s, NASA’s Pioneer 10 and 11 and Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft took ever increasingly detailed images of the large satellites including Europa during their flybys of Jupiter.

The photographs revealed Europa to have the smoothest surface of any object in the solar system, indicating a relatively young crust, and also one of the brightest of any satellite indicating a highly reflective surface.

These features led scientists to hypothesize that Europa is covered by an icy crust floating on a subsurface salty ocean. They further postulated that tidal heating caused by Jupiter’s gravity reforms the surface ice layer in cycles of melting and freezing.

 

More detailed observations from NASA’s Galileo spacecraft that orbited Jupiter between 1995 and 2003 and completed 11 close encounters with Europa revealed that long linear features on its surface may indicate tidal or tectonic activity.

Reddish-brown material along the fissures and in splotches elsewhere on the surface may contain salts and sulfur compounds transported from below the crust and modified by radiation.

Observations from the Hubble Space Telescope and re-analysis of images from Galileo revealed possible plumes emanating from beneath Europa’s crust, lending credence to that hypothesis.

While the exact composition of this material is not known, it likely holds clues to whether Europa may be hospitable to life.

 

Future robotic explorers of Europa may answer some of the outstanding questions about this unique satellite of Jupiter. NASA’s Europa Clipper set off in October 2024 on a 5.5-year journey to Jupiter.

After its arrival in 2030, the spacecraft will enter orbit around the giant planet and conduct 49 flybys of Europa during its four-year mission.

Managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and the Applied Physics Laboratory at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, Europa Clipper will carry nine instruments including imaging systems and a radar to better understand the structure of the icy crust.

Data from Europa Clipper will complement information returned by the European Space Agency’s JUICE (Jupiter Icy Moon Explorer) spacecraft.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/general/415-years-ago-astronomer-galileo-discovers-jupiters-moons/