Author: Marcia Smith

Learn about Aerospace Medicine Tomorrow

Learn about Aerospace Medicine Tomorrow

Dr. Kris Lehnhardt, Assistant Professor in the School of Medicine and Health Sciences at George Washington University (GWU), will deliver a lecture on “Introduction to Aerospace Medicine” on Wednesday, November 3, 2010, in room 117 Ross Hall on the GWU campus. The lecture is sponsored by the George Washington Space Society and more information is available at its website.

NASA Administrator Bolden's Statement on ISS 10th Anniversary

NASA Administrator Bolden's Statement on ISS 10th Anniversary

NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden issued a statement today commemorating 10 years of permanent occupancy of the International Space Station. He said, in part: “As we enter the station’s second decade, our path forward will take us deeper into space and expand humanity’s potential farther. The lessons we learn on the station will carry us to Mars and beyond. I want to give a heartfelt thank you to the six crew members on orbit and all the teams over the years that have helped us get to this milestone day.”

NASA Analyzes Voltage Irregularities on Discovery

NASA Analyzes Voltage Irregularities on Discovery

NASA space shuttle engineers are analyzing voltage irregularities encountered with the Discovery orbiter during launch preparations. The launch is currently scheduled for tomorrow, Wednesday, at 3:52 pm EDT. Mission managers will meet at 5:00 pm EDT today to discuss the issue.

According to NASA’s space shuttle website:

“During space shuttle main engine checkouts, the backup controller for engine 3 did not turn on as expected. There appeared to be an issue with one of three power phases, which was narrowed down to either a cockpit circuit breaker or switch that provides power. The circuit breaker and switch were turned off and on, restoring power.

“Engineers continue to analyze data that showed voltage irregularities and will meet this afternoon to review their data. The Mission Management Team now will convene at 5 p.m. EDT to assess the issue.”

NASA Comet Missions Pulling Double Duty; EPOXI Encounter on Thursday

NASA Comet Missions Pulling Double Duty; EPOXI Encounter on Thursday

NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft will have a second chance at fame this Thursday, November 4. Rechristened EPOXI, it will give scientists a close-up view of the nucleus of comet Hartley 2. The closest approach will occur at 9:50 am EDT (13:50 UT, 6:50 am PDT). It is the first of two comet encounters by NASA spacecraft in the next three months, both by spacecraft pulling extra duty after completing their original missions.

As Deep Impact, the spacecraft now known as EPOXI successfully encountered – literally – comet Tempel 1 in 2005. One part of the spacecraft separated from the flyby spacecraft and impacted the comet – or to be precise, it was placed in front of the comet so the comet would run into it. Instruments on the flyby spacecraft studied the material ejected into space, imaged the comet’s surface and relayed images transmitted by the impactor. The flyby spacecraft remained in good condition after the encounter and was given new life as EPOXI.

EPOXI is only one of NASA’s comet explorers. On September 10, 2010, NASA celebrated 25 years of comet research with a symposium at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. Scientists talked about EPOXI and two other NASA interplanetary missions that received multiple assignments associated with comet research: ISEE-3 and Stardust.

The sheer number of comets in our solar system may come as a bit of a surprise. Dr. Anita Cochran of the McDonald Observatory revealed not only that there are 1014 (10,000,000,000,000) comets today, but that in the last several years NASA’s STEREO and Europe’s SOHO spacecraft have observed about 1,000 of them making a final death plunge into the Sun. With that many meeting their doom in a short span of time, one can imagine how many existed when the solar system formed 4.5 billion years ago. Dr. Cochran estimates that only about 10 percent of comets remain today.

Dr. James Green, Director of NASA’s Planetary Sciences Division, entertained the gathering with stories of the “bad rap” comets once had as “harbingers of gloom and doom.” Today they are the subject of intense scientific interest because they hold clues to what happened early in the formation of the solar system. “Yes, they are leftovers,” said Dr. Cochran, “but they are fundamental leftovers” that can answer the question of “where did we come from.”

Halley’s Comet holds special fascination with a cycle that brings it close to Earth every 76 years, appearing the year that legendary author Mark Twain was born and again the year that he died. In 1986, the last time it was in our neighborhood, Europe, Russia, and Japan sent probes to study it. Europe’s Giotto mission sent back fascinating images of its nucleus as it made the closest approach of all the spacecraft. (ESA’s Rosetta mission is currently on its way to a long-term rendezvous with another comet and will emplace a lander on its surface.)

NASA could not afford a Halley’s Comet mission. However, Dr. Robert Farquhar, an orbital dynamics wizard, calculated a way to redirect a NASA spacecraft already in space – the International Sun-Earth Explorer-3 (ISEE-3) – to intercept a different comet, Giacobini-Zinner. Dr. Farquhar humorously recounted for the audience the challenges he faced in convincing NASA to reposition ISEE-3, which was part of a three-spacecraft ensemble studying solar-terrestrial physics. Ultimately he succeeded and ISEE-3, renamed the International Cometary Explorer (ICE), flew past comet Giacobini-Zinner on September 11, 1985, months prior to the Halley’s Comet encounters by the other spacecraft. Thus, NASA went into the record books for sending the first spacecraft to a comet.

That was just the first NASA interplanetary spacecraft to get double duty. Deep Impact/EPOXI was the second, and it was a merger of two ideas on how to continue using the Deep Impact flyby spacecraft. As outlined by Dr. Michael A’Hearn of the University of Maryland, EPOXI is the merger of his idea to send it to a second comet – the Deep Impact Extended Investigation (DIXI) proposal, and NASA’s Drake Deming’s proposal to use it to search for extrasolar planets – the Extrasolar Planet Observations and Characterization (EPOCh) concept. The two ideas and their acronyms were combined into the cleverly designated EPOXI. The extrasolar planet detection phase of EPOXI’s mission has been completed.

A third opportunity to reuse a spacecraft already in space came with Stardust, which in January 2006 brought back to Earth a sample of material from the tail of comet Wild 2. The sample canister was recovered on Earth, while the mother spacecraft remained in space and given a new job. Now named Stardust-NExT, it will revisit Tempel 1 – the comet that collided with Deep Impact – to allow scientists to try and locate the crater caused by the collision and study other geological features. Cornell University’s Dr. Joseph Veverka explained that Tempel 1 is a planetary geologist’s dream, with “tremendous geological diversity on its surface.” Deep Impact saw only about one-third of the comet’s surface, and “we want to have a better look at the layered terrains,” he said. Stardust-NExT will reach Tempel 1 on Valentine’s Day (February 14) 2011.

Meanwhile, stay tuned for the EPOXI closest approach to Hartley 2 on Thursday morning. Information on how to view events live are available on NASA’s website.

Shuttle Discovery Launch Delayed "At Least A Day"

Shuttle Discovery Launch Delayed "At Least A Day"

NASA has decided to delay the launch of space shuttle Discovery’s STS-133 mission for “at least a day” as it analyzes voltage irregularities observed during launch preparations. A news conference at 6:30 pm EDT will discuss the situation. Watch it live on NASA TV.

Job Opening at State Department for Space and Advanced Technologies Expert

Job Opening at State Department for Space and Advanced Technologies Expert

The State Department has a posting open for a GS-14 to work in the Office of Space and Advanced Technology in the Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs. The individual will serve as “an authority in analyzing the foreign policy implications of, and recommending policies concerning, space and advanced technologies.” Applications can be submitted through November 5. See the posting for more details.

UPDATE: Events of Interest: Week of November 1-5, 2010

UPDATE: Events of Interest: Week of November 1-5, 2010

UPDATE: The GWU lecture on aerospace medicine on Wednesday has been added.

The following events may be of interest in the coming week. See our calendar on the right menu for more details or click the links below.


Tuesday, November 2

  • ELECTION DAY!! GET OUT AND VOTE.
  • NASA press conference on 10 years of permanent occupancy of the International Space Station. Watch NASA TV beginning at 9:30 am EDT.

Wednesday, November 3

  • Last launch of space shuttle Discovery currently scheduled for 3:52 pm EDT. If there are additional schedule delays, we will post them as soon as we know.

Friday, November 5

Shuttle Slips Another Day, to Wednesday

Shuttle Slips Another Day, to Wednesday

Space shuttle Discovery’s launch has slipped another day and now is scheduled for Wednesday, November 3 at 3:52 pm EDT.

According to NASA’s shuttle website, NASA Test Director Jeff Spaulding said that the launch team is confident that repairs to Discovery’s Orbital Maneuvering System will allow a launch at that time. The weather forecast is 70% go for launch that day. The launch window remains open until November 7.

Shuttle Launch Slips One Day

Shuttle Launch Slips One Day

The last launch of space shuttle Discovery has slipped one day to November 2 at 4:17 pm EDT. According to NASA’s shuttle website:

“Managers are meeting to discuss the plan to repair helium and nitrogen leaks in the pressurization portion of space shuttle Discovery’s right-hand Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) pod. The leaks must be fixed before launch and the decision was made to delay picking up the launch countdown by at least a day.”

Student Essay Competition Reminder: Win Over $700!

Student Essay Competition Reminder: Win Over $700!

The journal Space Policy would like to remind graduate students in space policy and law school students that the deadline for the 2010 Maxim Tarasenko Essay Competition is December 31, 2010. The competition is sponsored by the journal and the Secure World Foundation, with a prize of 500 ($788 at today’s exchange rate), a one-year subscription to the journal, and publication of the winning essay in the journal.

Essays are due to Frances Brown, editor of Space Policy, by December 31, 2010. Complete rules are available in the announcement. The contest honors Maxim Tarasenko, a highly respected Russian space policy analyst and member of Space Policy’s Editorial Board who tragically died in 1999.