Category: International

ISS Crew On Schedule for Launch Tonight at 11:01 EDT

ISS Crew On Schedule for Launch Tonight at 11:01 EDT

The launch of Soyuz TMA-04M remains on track for 11:01 pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) tonight.

Aboard are NASA astronaut Joe Acaba and Russian cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin.   Assuming a successful launch, they are scheduled to dock with the International Space Station (ISS) two days later, joining three crew members already aboard:  NASA’s Don Pettit, the European Space Agency’s Andre Kuipers, and ISS commander Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko.

We’ll be following the launch on NASA TV and reporting on Twitter.  Follow us @SpcPlcyOnline.

Soyuz TMA-04M Up and Away

Soyuz TMA-04M Up and Away

Soyuz TMA-04M successfully lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:01 pm Eastern Daylight Time (9:01 am May 15 local time at the launch site).

NASA astronaut Joe Acaba and Russian cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin are on their way to the International Space Station.

 

ESA, Japan Remain Committed to Space Cooperation with U.S.

ESA, Japan Remain Committed to Space Cooperation with U.S.

Despite concerns that NASA’s withdrawal from two joint Mars missions with the European Space Agency (ESA) would chill the waters for future space cooperation agreements, both ESA and Japan have recently made clear that they remain committed to working with the United States.

At ESA’s request, NASA recently sent a letter expressing its interest in participating in ESA’s newly-selected Jupiter Icy moons Explorer (JUICE) program.  NASA Planetary Science Division Director Jim Green told the NASA Advisory Council’s Planetary Science Subcommittee last week that NASA told ESA it would like to be a “minor partner” in JUICE with a payload contribution totalling $100 million over the life of the project.   ESA announced its selection of JUICE as its next large science mission on May 2. 

Green particularly thanked Tammy Dickinson at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) for helping NASA reply to ESA’s request expeditiously.   NASA’s Joan Salute later said ESA is planning to issue the Announcement of Opportunity (AO) for JUICE in June in preparation for instrument selection in January 2013.  Launch is planned for 2022 and it will take eight years to reach Jupiter.   Green said NASA plans to provide “a significant portion” of the payload, although negotiations on precisely what it will provide have not yet begun. 

Separately, as part of Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda’s meeting with President Obama on April 30, the two countries announced a number of cooperative initiatives including space cooperation.  Recognizing 42 years of joint space activities, the statement said the two countries “have committed to deepen civil space cooperation through early conclusion of a Framework Agreement on the peaceful exploration and use of outer space” and by pursuing specific activities that include:

  • cooperation between the U.S. GPS system and Japan’s Quasi-Zenith Satellite System;
  • collaboration on earth observation missions; and
  • continuation of International Space Station operations beyond 2016.

The two countries also agreed to deepen their “security partnership in space” through transparency and confidence building measures (TCBMs) including an International Code of Conduct and a framework for space situational awareness.

NASA has a long history of international cooperation in space dating back to its founding in 1958.   Europe and Japan have partnered with NASA on many space science and applications projects over many decades.   A Japanese satellite, GCOM-W1 (or Shikuzu), for example, is scheduled for launch from Tanegashima this Thursday, May 17, Eastern Daylight Time (May 18 in Japan) as part of the NASA-led “A-Train” earth observing satellite constellation.   Europe and Japan also are partners with the United States, Russia, and Canada in the International Space Station program.

Events of Interest: Week of May 14-19, 2012 – UPDATE

Events of Interest: Week of May 14-19, 2012 – UPDATE

UPDATE:  The House Appropriations Committee’s markup of the FY2013 defense appropriations bill on Thursday has been added.

The following events may be of interest in the week ahead.   The House and Senate both are in session this week.

During the Week

The House is scheduled to debate the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act that funds DOD space programs among many other items.  The House Rules Committee will meet on Tuesday and Wednesday to write the rule for that debate, with consideration of the bill (H.R. 4310) expected to begin on Wednesday.

On the NASA front, three new International Space Station (ISS) crew members are due to be launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome at 11:01 pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) on Monday, May 14 (May 15 at the launch site in Kazakhstan).  If all goes according to plan, they will dock on May 16 to join the three crew members already there and barely have time to unpack before preparing for arrival of SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft.  SpaceX and NASA are once again gearing up for the much anticipated second SpaceX test launch as part of the commercial cargo program.   It is scheduled for the wee hours of Saturday (May 14) morning — 4:55 am  EDT– from Cape Canaveral, FL.   The launch has been postponed a number of times, and SpaceX reserved May 22 as a backup date in case anything goes awry between now and Saturday.  Assuming things go well, however, the Falcon 9 rocket will deliver the Dragon spacecraft carrying supplies for the ISS crew to orbit.  After a series of test maneuvers over several days, where go-no go decisions will be made repeatedly, Dragon will move close to the ISS and be grappled by the ISS crew on Day 4 using Canada’s robotic arm and brought in to berth at the ISS.  SpaceX released a press kit last week with a detailed timeline of events.

Monday, May 14

Tuesday, May 15

Tuesday-Wednesday, May 15-16 

Wednesday, May 16

  • House begins debate on H.R. 4310, FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act, time TBD.  Watch on C-Span.

Wednesday-Friday, May 16-18

Thursday, May 17

Saturday, May 19

Editor’s Note:  The correct local time for the Soyuz TMA-04M launch is 9:01 am May 15 in Kazakhstan, rather than 10:01 am as earlier reported.  It was correctly stated as May 14, 11:01 pm EDT or 10:01 pm CDT.

June Conference to Spotlight ISS Research Results, Opportunities

June Conference to Spotlight ISS Research Results, Opportunities

A conference scheduled for June 26-28, 2012 in Denver, CO will spotlight the results of experiments already conducted aboard the International Space Station and discuss opportunities for the future.

The conference is being organized by the American Astronautical Society (AAS) and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) in cooperation with NASA.  In addition to keynotes and plenaries, the conference features parallel technical sessions on specific science and technology disciplines.  They include

  • human research,
  • communications & navigation technologies,
  • space science,
  • plant biology,
  • biotechnology,
  • materials science & combustion science,
  • spacecraft systems and technology,
  • technical earth imaging,
  • fundamental physics,
  • technologies for exploration applications,
  • earth science,
  • cell biology & tissue engineering,
  • human exploration, and
  • education

The European Space Agency (ESA) recently held a similar conference in Berlin and Japan held one in December.  The United States, Europe, Japan, Canada and Russia spent between $60-100 billion (depending on who is doing the math) on building the ISS.   Construction was completed in 2010 and attention is now focused on making the best use of it.  The ISS partners have agreed to operate the ISS at least until 2020.  In the 2005 NASA Authorization Act, Congress designated the U.S. segment of the ISS as a National Laboratory with the expectation that U.S. entities other than NASA would be interested in utilizing it.   CASIS was created last year to manage the ISS National Laboratory and promote its potential to prospective users.

For more information on the June conference, visit the AAS website.

Next ISS Crew Ready for Launch on Monday

Next ISS Crew Ready for Launch on Monday

Three new crew members for the International Space Station (ISS) are readying for launch on Russia’s Soyuz TMA-04M spacecraft late Monday evening Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

The launch is scheduled for 11:01 pm EDT on May 14, which will be 10:01 am May 15 in Kazakhstan where the Baikonur Cosmodrome is located.  NASA will carry the launch live on NASA TV beginning at 10:00 pm EDT.

NASA astronaut Joe Acaba and Russian cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin will dock with the ISS two days later, joining the three crew members who are there already:  Russian Commander Oleg Kononenko, NASA’s Don Pettit and Europe’s Andre Kuipers.

If all goes according to plan, one of the first tasks for the 6-person crew will be berthing SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft with the ISS.  The Dragon launch is currently scheduled for May 19.

SpaceX On Track for Early Morning Launch on May 19

SpaceX On Track for Early Morning Launch on May 19

SpaceX and NASA continue to plan for SpaceX’s test launch to the International Space Station on May 19.

The launch has been postponed several times and SpaceX has reserved May 22 as a backup date in case anything goes awry on May 19, but for now the launch of Falcon 9 with its Dragon spacecraft is set to blast off from Cape Canaveral, FL at 4:55 am ET a week from tomorrow.

NASA will carry the launch live on NASA TV, with coverage beginning at 3:30 am.  Media events associated with the launch were outlined in a NASA press release today.  SpaceX also released a press kit today. 

SpaceX refers to the launch as COTS 2, the second in its demonstration flights for NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program.  NASA calls it C2+ since the mission is combining objectives planned not only for the SpaceX COTS 2 mission, but also the third and last test launch that was planned in this series.

SpaceX and Bigelow Join Forces

SpaceX and Bigelow Join Forces

SpaceX announced today that it is joining forces with Bigelow Aerospace to market opportunities for people to fly into space on SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and Dragon crew space transportation system to inflatable space stations built by Bigelow Aerospace.

Bigelow Aerospace already has launched two small inflatable space station demonstrators, Genesis I and Genesis II, using Russian rockets in 2006 and 2007 respectively.   It is now working on the BA 330 module that it says could accommodate six people.

Key to its space station operations is a transportation system to get people up and back.   Bigelow has been working with Boeing, which is developing the CST-100 spacecraft that would be launched on a U.S. Atlas V rocket.  

Boeing and SpaceX are two of the four companies NASA is funding through Space Act Agreements to develop a commercial crew capability that NASA would use to transport astronauts to and from the International Space Station (ISS).  The other two are Sierra Nevada and Blue Origin.   Congress is pressuring NASA to pick either one or two of those companies for future funding rather than spreading the money over four companies.   NASA is resisting because it wants several options in case some of the companies’ projects do not succeed.

NASA also is funding SpaceX and Orbital Sciences Corp. through Space Act Agreements to develop commercial cargo space transportation systems.  SpaceX plans to use the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft for both cargo and crew.   Its second test launch as part of the commercial cargo program is currently scheduled for May 19, 2012 although it has been postponed a number of times.  Orbital has not yet conducted any tests of its system.

The announcement emailed by SpaceX today about its crew transportation system stresses that the agreement with Bigelow is for the non-U.S. market.   They will first start their marketing efforts in Asia.   Robert Bigelow said “We’re very excited about working with our colleagues at SpaceX to present the unique services that our two companies can offer to international clientele. We’re eager to join them overseas to discuss the substantial benefits that BA 330 leasing can offer in combination with SpaceX transportation capabilities.”  SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell said “Together we will provide unique opportunities to entities — whether nations or corporations — wishing to have crewed access to the space environment for extended periods.” 

SpaceX was founded by Internet billionaire Elon Musk, co-founder of PayPal, who serves as SpaceX’s Chief Financial Officer and Chief Technical Officer.   Robert Bigelow similarly is a billionaire who owns the hotel chain Budget Suites of America and is President of Bigelow Aerospace.

 

NRC Recommends New Method of Determining Planetary Protection Threat to Icy Bodies

NRC Recommends New Method of Determining Planetary Protection Threat to Icy Bodies

The National Research Council (NRC) has recommended a new method of calculating the possibility of microorganisms on spacecraft sent to study icy bodies in the solar system contaminating the objects they are sent to examine — called forward contamination.

The report, Assessment of Planetary Protection Requirements for Spacecraft Missions to Icy Solar System Bodies, looks at how to prevent contamination of bodies such as Jupiter’s moon Europa, Saturn’s moon Enceladus or Neptune’s moon Triton.   A 2000 NRC report made recommendations about planetary protection requirements for Europa, but much has been learned since then.   NASA asked the NRC to relook at the requirements.

Planetary protection requirements for the outer planets have been based on the Coleman-Sagan formula that calculates the probability of a spacecraft mission introducing a single microorganism that could grow in the environment of the target body.  According to the new NRC study, the 2000 Europa study recognized the shortcomings of the Coleman-Sagan formula in estimating the risk of forward contamination and this new study recommends a different approach entirely.

Historically, NRC planetary protection recommendations have become international standards through the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR) of the International Council of Science (ICSU).  In 2009, two workshops sponsored by COSPAR led to recommendations for a simplified version of the Coleman-Sagan formula and then to NASA asking the NRC to look at the issue.  This NRC committee found “no scientifically or logically defensible path for improving estimates of factors” for the Coleman-Sagan formula as NASA requested, however.  Instead, it recommends a “binary decision matrix”  — a series of yes/no questions — similar to what the NRC previously recommended (and COSPAR adopted) for samples being returned to Earth. 

The new NRC report argues that its binary decision matrix provides a “more robust basis for determining the appropriate level of planetary protection … because such a procedure would not compound inaccurate and non-independent estimates of probability factors.”

The NASA Advisory Council (NAC) Planetary Science Subcommittee (NAC-PSS) will meet tomorrow and Wednesday.  It is scheduled to be briefed on this new NRC report tomorrow afternoon at 2:45 pm ET according to the current agenda.  The chair of the study was Mitchell Sogin of the Marine Biological Laboratory and the vice-chair was Geoffrey Collins of Wheaton College.   Collins is on the NAC-PSS agenda to discuss the report’s recommendations.

Events of Interest: Week of April 30-May 4, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of April 30-May 4, 2012

The following events may be of interest in the coming week.  The House and Senate both are in recess this week.

Tuesday, May 1

Tuesday-Wednesday, May 1-2

Wednesday-Thursday, May 2-3

Wednesday-Friday, May 2-4