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Archive for April, 2025

April 21, 2025

Mars Night Sky

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Mea AI adiutor dicit:

The night sky on Mars shares some familiar features with what we see from Earth, but also presents a few dramatic differences. Since Mars is farther from the Sun than Earth, its sky becomes darker more quickly after sunset, revealing a clearer and more brilliant canopy of stars. With a thinner atmosphere and less light pollution, the stars on Mars appear sharp and more numerous to the naked eye. The Milky Way stretches across the sky much like it does on Earth, but with a bit more clarity due to the reduced atmospheric scattering.

One of the most striking differences in the Martian night sky is the presence of its two small moons, Phobos and Deimos. These irregularly shaped satellites are far smaller than Earth’s Moon, so they don’t dominate the sky in the same way. Phobos, the closer and faster-moving moon, rises in the west and sets in the east in just over 4 hours, appearing several times in a single Martian night. It looks like a bright star or a small disk moving rapidly across the sky. Deimos is smaller and more distant, moving slowly and appearing like a faint star that drifts lazily overhead.

Because of Mars’ distance from Earth, familiar constellations still appear in similar patterns, though slightly shifted. From the Martian perspective, Earth is just a bright bluish “star” in the sky, never appearing larger than a dot without a telescope. Depending on the season and viewing direction, other planets like Jupiter, Saturn, and Venus are also visible, and occasionally even brighter than they are from Earth. Meteor showers can still be seen on Mars, though they originate from different sources due to the planet’s unique orbit.

Another beautiful phenomenon visible on Mars is the aurora, which unlike Earth’s polar-focused light displays, can occur all over the planet due to Mars’ lack of a global magnetic field. These auroras are typically ultraviolet and would require special instruments to see, but they add to the mysterious charm of Martian nights. Overall, the Martian sky offers a uniquely serene and otherworldly view of the cosmos, blending the familiar with the alien in a way that’s both humbling and awe-inspiring.

Video credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/ESO/Bill Dunford

 

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April 16, 2025

SCALPSS Captures Landing on the Moon

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Wikipedia dicit:

Firefly Aerospace Blue Ghost, or simply Blue Ghost, is a class of lunar landers designed and manufactured by American private company Firefly Aerospace. Firefly plans to operate Blue Ghost landers to deliver small payloads to the surface of the Moon. The first Blue Ghost mission was launched at 1:11 a.m. EST (06:11 UTC) on January 15, 2025. It successfully landed on the Moon on March 2, 2025. The landers are named after the firefly species Phausis reticulata, known as blue ghosts.

Firefly is the prime contractor for lunar delivery services using Blue Ghost landers. Firefly provides or subcontracts Blue Ghost payload integration, launch from Earth, landing on the Moon and mission operations. Firefly’s Cedar Park facility serves as the company’s mission operations center and the location of payload integration. Firefly operates a 50,000-square-foot (4,600 m2) spacecraft facility with two mission control centers and an ISO-8 cleanroom to accommodate multiple landers.

Blue Ghost has four landing legs. It supplies data, power, and thermal resources for payload operations through transit to the Moon, in lunar orbit, and on the lunar surface. The spacecraft is designed and built to be easily adapted to each customer’s cislunar needs. Blue Ghost can be customized to support larger, more complex missions, including lunar night operations, surface mobility, and sample return, and is compatible with multiple launch providers. Firefly asserts that in-house end-to-end manufacturing and testing of the Blue Ghost structure is a differentiator among the CLPS landers.

NASA awarded Firefly the first Blue Ghost lunar delivery task order in February 2021 as part of the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative.

Video credit: NASA Langley Research Center

 

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April 15, 2025

Vertical Solar Array Technology

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NASA dicit:

NASA is planning a lunar landing near the moon’s South Pole in the 2026 time period, this mission is to be followed by the establishment of a lunar base later in the same decade. The Vertical Solar Array Technology (VSAT) project is focused on the development of solar array technologies necessary for sustained presence on the lunar surface circa 2030. Existing solar array structures and deployment system technologies are designed for either zero-g or horizontal surface deployment. VSAT will explore deployment of vertical arrays on masts of up to 10m in length in order to capture continuous sun light at the lunar south pole. The VSAT system must also be capable of stable deployment on uneven terrain and autonomous retraction to enable system mobility on the moon’s surface.

Finally, given the nature of space operations and the fuel requirements associated with a lunar landing, VSAT will be designed to be as lightweight as possible. The VSAT project objective is to engage industry in the development of the underlying technologies necessary for solar array deployments at the moon’s south pole. As part of the engagement process, the project will develop a reference mission and design to guide industry efforts. It is also expected that the project will fabricate high-risk elements of the reference design for development and test purposes. After creation of the reference missions and designs the project will solicit industry studies and analysis for the purpose of contracting with several vendors for eventual hardware development.

The VSAT project design goals are:
Vertical array deployment on extended mast in uneven terrain
Deployment mechanisms, and array system, designed for reliable, autonomous retraction and system mobility
Array system designed to be modular, adaptable to multiple mission architectures, and to minimize mass and packing volume

Video credit: Lockheed Martin

 

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April 14, 2025

Stacking the SLS Boosters

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Wikipedia dicit:

The Space Launch System (SLS) is an American super heavy-lift expendable launch vehicle used by NASA. As the primary launch vehicle of the Artemis Moon landing program, SLS is designed to launch the crewed Orion spacecraft on a trans-lunar trajectory. The first (and so far only) SLS launch was the uncrewed Artemis I, which took place on 16 November 2022.

Development of SLS began in 2011 as a replacement for the retiring Space Shuttle as well as the canceled Ares I and Ares V launch vehicles. SLS was built using existing Shuttle technology, including solid rocket boosters and RS-25 engines. The rocket has been criticized for its political motivations, seen as a way to preserve jobs and contracts for aerospace companies involved in the Shuttle program at great expense to NASA. The project has faced significant challenges, including mismanagement, substantial budget overruns, and significant delays. The first Congressionally mandated launch in late 2016 was delayed by nearly six years.

All Space Launch System flights are to be launched from Launch Complex 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The first three SLS flights are expected to use the Block 1 configuration, comprising a core stage, extended Space Shuttle boosters developed for Ares I and the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) upper stage. The improved Block 1B configuration, with the powerful and purpose-built Exploration Upper Stage (EUS), is planned to be introduced on the fourth flight; a further improved Block 2 configuration with new solid rocket boosters is planned for the ninth flight. After the launch of Artemis IV, NASA plans to transfer production and launch operations of SLS to Deep Space Transport LLC, a joint venture between Boeing and Northrop Grumman.

Video credit: NASA

 

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