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Showing posts with label SciTech news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SciTech news. Show all posts

China's moon probe lands back on Earth - state media

Sci Technology News/ World News:  China’s Chang’e-5 moon probe has landed in the northern Chinese region of Inner Mongolia, the official Xinhua news agency reported, completing its return to Earth and bringing back the first lunar samples since the 1970s.

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Image Source: Google

The return capsule touched down in the Siziwang, or Dorbod, banner of Inner Mongolia, in the early hours of Thursday local time, Xinhua said, citing the China National Space Administration.

Also Read|SpaceX launches 4 astronauts to space station, beginning new era for NASA

China launched the Chang’e-5 spacecraft on Nov. 24 and landed a vehicle on the moon at the start of December.

The success of the mission would make China only the third country to have retrieved lunar samples after the United States and the Soviet Union, who 44 years ago launched the last successful mission to retrieve samples.

Also Read|‘unusual bright light’ discovered by the Astronomers which cannot be explained

The plan was to collect 2 kg (4.41 lbs) of samples, although how much was eventually gathered has yet to be disclosed.



News Source: Reuters

Nasa Manned Moon Mission :Indian-American astronaut Raja Jon Chari is a part of 18 member team

 A graduate of the US Air Force Academy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and US Naval pilot School, Raja Jon Vurputoor Chari is the only Indian-American within the list. He was selected by NASA to join the 2017 Astronaut Candidate Class.

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SciTech News/NASA: Raja Jon Vurputoor Chari,an Indian-American US Air Force colonel, is among 18 astronauts, half them women, who are selected by NASA for its ambitious manned mission to the Moon and beyond.

Also Read| NASA Publishes Plan to Land First Woman on Moon in 2024

The modern lunar exploration programme will land the first woman and next man on the Moon in 2024 and establish a sustainable human lunar presence by the end of the last decade , the American space agency said.

NASA on Wednesday named the 18 astronauts who will train for its Artemis moon-landing programme.

Also Read|SpaceX launches 4 astronauts to space station, beginning new era for NASA

Chari, 43, a graduate of the US Air Force Academy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and US Naval pilot School, is that the only Indian-American within the list.

He was selected by NASA to join the 2017 Astronaut Candidate Class.

He reported for duty in August 2017 and having completed the initial astronaut candidate training is now eligible for a mission assignment.

“My fellow Americans, I give you the heroes of the future who will carry us back to the Moon and beyond: the Artemis Generation”, vice president Mike Pence said at NASA’s Kennedy Space Centre in Florida on Wednesday.

“It really is amazing to think that the next man and the first woman on the Moon are among the names that we just read… We started today reflecting on a great hero of the past. The Artemis Generation are the heroes of american space exploration in the future”, Pence said after he introduced the members of the Artemis Team during the eighth National Space Council meeting.

Also Read|‘unusual bright light’ discovered by the Astronomers which cannot be explained

The astronauts on the Artemis Team come from a various range of backgrounds, expertise and experience. Most of the astronauts within the group are in their 30s or 40s. The oldest is 55, the youngest 32.

NASA will announce flight assignments for astronauts later, pulling from the Artemis Team. Additional Artemis Team members, including international partner astronauts, will join this group, as needed.

“We are incredibly grateful for the president and vice president’s support of the Artemis program, as well as the bipartisan support for all of NASA’s science, aeronautics research, technology development, and human exploration goals”, said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine.

“As a result, we’re excited to share this next step in exploration – naming the Artemis Team of astronauts who will lead the way, which includes the first woman and next man to walk on the lunar surface”, he added.

The selected astronauts will help NASA prepare for the coming Artemis missions, which begin next year working with the agency’s commercial partners as they develop human landing systems; assisting within the development of training; defining hardware requirements; and consulting on technical development. They also will engage the general public and industry on NASA’s exploration plans.

“There is so much exciting work ahead of us as we return to the moon, and it will take the entire astronaut corps to form that happen”, Chief Astronaut Pat Forrester said.

“Walking on the lunar surface would be a dream come true for any one of us, and any part we can play in making that happen is an honour,” he said.

The other members on the list include Christina Koch and Jessica Meir — the 2 astronauts who performed the world’s first all-female spacewalk last year.

‘unusual bright light’ discovered by the Astronomers which cannot be explained

 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) was able to capture the glow within three days using the Hubble Space Telescope but the results were baffling.

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On the left is an image of the Sombrero galaxy, and on the right side shows the detail in which Hubble was able to capture of the stars in the halo.
NASA/Digitized Sky Survey/P. Goudfrooij (STScI)/The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)

SciTech News: Astronomers found a unique celestial event as they found the brightest infrared from a short gamma-ray burst ever seen. the rationale why it's so important is because of the glow produced is brighter than what was previously considered as maximum. The half-a-second flash of light from a very violent explosion was detected earlier this year in May. The energy was produced by the explosion of gamma rays billions of light-years faraway from earth which contains more energy than what our Sun will produce in its lifetime.

“It’s amazing to me that after 10 years of studying the same type of phenomenon, we can discover unprecedented behaviour like this,” said Wen-fai Fong, assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Northwestern University and lead author of the study. “It just reveals the diversity of explosions that the universe is capable of producing, which is very exciting.”

National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) was able to spot the glow within three days using the Hubble Space Telescope. However, the results were baffling because it was 10 times brighter than the earlier prediction.

“These observations don't fit traditional explanations for brief gamma-ray bursts,” said Fong. “Given what we all know about the radio and X-rays from this blast, it just doesn’t match up. The near-infrared emission that we’re finding with Hubble is much too bright.”

In order to know the exact levels of brightness and therefore the distance of the origin, WM Keck Observatory on mauna kea in Hawaii was used by the team.

Scientists believe that explosions like these are caused by two merging neutron stars which cause short gamma ray bursts which will create immense levels of energy. This phenomenon is named Kilonova. These stars are dense to an extent that even a teaspoon of it on Earth can weigh a billion tons. Typically, it's the mass of our Sun compressed into a small city.

“What we detected even outshines the one confirmed kilonova discovered in 2017,” said co-author Jillian Rastinejad, a graduate student with Fong’s team at Northwestern University. “As a first-year graduate student working with real-time data for the first time when this burst happened, it’s remarkable to see our discovery motivate a new and exciting magnetar-boosted model.”


In the future, these events are often recorded better with NASA’s upcoming James Webb Space Telescope which will help scientists understand them better.

“Distances are important in calculating the burst’s true brightness as opposed to its apparent brightness as seen from Earth,” said Fong. “Just as the brightness of a light bulb when it reaches your eye depends on both its luminosity and its distance from you, a burst could be really bright because either it is intrinsically luminous and distant, or not as luminous but much closer to us. With Keck, we were able to determine the true brightness of the burst and thus the energy scale. We found it was to be much more energetic than we originally thought.”


Also Read|

SpaceX launches 4 astronauts to space station, beginning new era for NASA

Massive Asteroid 'Apophis',May Hit Earth in 2068,We have no solution,says Elon Musk


SpaceX launches 4 astronauts to space station, beginning new era for NASA

 The Dragon will ferry the astronauts to the space station on SpaceX’s first operational trip following a test flight with a two-person crew that returned from the orbiting lab three months ago.

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SciTech News: Four astronauts reached orbit on a SpaceX rocket after lifting off at 7:27 p.m. from Florida, within the company’s first regular NASA mission to the International space station. The Sunday launch seemed to go as planned as the Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. The rocket’s first stage successfully landed on a drone ship about nine minutes after take off .

The Dragon will ferry the astronauts to the space station on SpaceX’s first operational trip following a test flight with a two-person crew that returned from the orbiting lab three months ago.

The latest launch, referred to as the Crew-1 mission, comes 18 years after Elon Musk founded Space Exploration Technologies Corp. with the ultimate goal of populating other planets. The Crew-1 mission marks an important milestone within the development of a space industry during which private-sector companies provide business and tourism services in low-earth orbit. Following the retirement of the space shuttle in 2011, NASA awarded SpaceX and Boeing Co. nearly $7 billion in contracts to create new transport systems to the space station as a part of the agency’s Commercial Crew program.The launch was originally slated for Saturday, but was scrubbed due to bad weather condition.

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In the Crew-1 mission, Commander Michael Hopkins, 51, an Air Force colonel and test pilot, will make his second trip to the space station, seven years after his first. He’ll be joined by three others on the mission:

Shannon Walker, 55, a physicist and Houston native, will serve her second stint on the orbiting lab.

Victor Glover, 44, a Navy pilot from California, are going to be taking his first flight to space. He’ll be the first Black astronaut to stay on the space station for a full six-month rotation, according to NASA.

Soichi Noguchi, 55, a Japanese astronaut and aeronautical engineer, has the most space experience among the crew and can become one among the only a few people to go away the world on three vehicles: Russia’s Soyuz, the space shuttle, and therefore the SpaceX Dragon.


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Massive Asteroid 'Apophis',May Hit Earth in 2068,We have no solution,says Elon Musk

NASA Publishes Plan to Land First Woman on Moon in 2024


Massive Asteroid 'Apophis',May Hit Earth in 2068,We have no solution,says Elon Musk

 Astronomers have revealed that a large asteroid named 'Apophis' is predicted to pass extremely close or may hit the earth in 2068

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 SciTech News: If you thought 2020 is bad, watch for the year 2068 when a large asteroid could potentially wipe all of humanity! Yes, astronomers have revealed that an asteroid named 'Apophis' is predicted to pass extremely close or may hit the earth in 2068 because of a phenomenon called Yarkovsky effect. Interestingly, the asteroid is known as after The Egyptian god of Chaos and Evil. 

Researchers at the University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy (IfA) have announced the detection of Yarkovsky acceleration on the near-Earth asteroid Apophis. This acceleration arises from a very weak force on an object due to non-uniform thermal radiation.

Discovered in 2004, asteroid Apophis could be a 1,120-foot-wide (340-meter-wide) asteroid, about the dimensions of three-and-a-half football fields, NASA said. 

Earlier, it had been believed that the asteroid would pass by leaving the earth unscathed, but astronomers are no longer certain now. The detection of the Yarkovsky effect acting on Apophis means the 2068 impact scenario is still a possibility.

This force is especially important for the asteroid Apophis, because it affects the probability of an Earth impact in 2068, the astronomers said."

"All asteroids need to reradiate as heat the energy they absorb from sunlight in order to maintain thermal equilibrium, a process that slightly changes the orbit of the asteroid," they wrote.

Apophis is noteworthy due to its extremely close approach to the world on April 13, 2029, when the 300 metre-sized asteroid will come into sight to the unaided eye because it passes within the belt of communications satellites orbiting the world .

Earlier, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk had also predicted that massive asteroid Apophis will eventually hit humanity and there'll be no solution.

"Great name! Wouldn't worry about this particular one, but a big rock will hit Earth eventually & we currently have no defence," he wrote on the social media platform.


Also Read|


Space Object Thought To Be Asteroid Or Mini Moon Is An Old Rocket as per NASA

 

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Image Source: Google

SciTech: The object appears to be an old rocket from a failed moon-landing mission decades ago, finally making its way back to Earth.

The jig could also be up for an "asteroid" that's expected to get nabbed by Earth's gravity and become a mini moon next month.


Instead of a cosmic rock, the newly discovered object appears to be an old rocket from a failed moon-landing mission 54 years ago that's finally making its way back home, as per NASA's leading asteroid expert. Observations should help nail its identity.


"I'm pretty jazzed about this," Paul Chodas told The Associated Press. "It's been a hobby of mine to find one of these and draw such a link, and i've been doing it for decades now."


Chodas speculates that asteroid 2020 SO, because it is formally known, is actually the centaur upper rocket stage that successfully propelled NASA's Surveyor 2 lander to the moon in 1966 before it had been discarded. The lander ended up crashing into the moon after one among its thrusters did not ignite on the way there. The rocket, meanwhile, swept past the moon and into orbit round the sun as intended junk, never to be seen again—until perhaps now.


A telescope in Hawaii last month discovered the mystery object heading our way while doing a search intended to guard our planet from doomsday rocks. The object promptly was added to the International Astronomical Union's minor planet Center's tally of asteroids and comets found in our solar system, just 5,000 shy of the 1 million mark.


The object is estimated to be roughly 26 feet (8 meters) based on its brightness. That's within the ballpark of the old Centaur, which might be less than 32 feet (10 meters) long including its engine nozzle and 10 feet (3 meters) in diameter.


What caught Chodas' attention is that its near-circular orbit round the sun is quite the same as Earth's—unusual for an asteroid.


"Flag number one," said Chodas, who is director of the center for Near-Earth Object Studies at NASA's jet propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.

The object is additionally within the same plane as Earth, not tilted above or below, another red flag. Asteroids usually zip by at odd angles. Lastly, it's approaching Earth at 1,500 mph (2,400 kph), slow by asteroid standards.


As the object gets closer, astronomers should be able to better chart its orbit and determine how much it's pushed around by the radiation and thermal effects of sunlight. If it's an old Centaur—essentially a light empty can—it will move differently than a heavy space rock less susceptible to outside forces.


That's how astronomers normally differentiate between asteroids and space junk like abandoned rocket parts, since both appear merely as moving dots within the sky. There likely are dozens of fake asteroids out there, but their motions are too imprecise or jumbled to confirm their artificial identity, said Chodas.


Sometimes it is the other way around.


A mystery object in 1991, for example, was determined by Chodas and others to be a regular asteroid instead of debris, even though its orbit round the sun resembled Earth's.

Even more exciting, Chodas in 2002 found what he believes was the leftover Saturn V third stage from 1969′s Apollo 12, the second moon landing by NASA astronauts. He acknowledges the evidence was circumstantial, given the object's chaotic one-year orbit around Earth. It never was designated as an asteroid, and left Earth's orbit in 2003.


In this Aug. 13, 1965 photo provided by the San Diego Air and Space Museum, technicians work on an Atlas Centaur 7 rocket at Cape Canaveral , Fla. NASA's leading asteroid expert, Paul Chodas, speculates that asteroid 2020 SO, as it is formally known, is actually a Centaur upper rocket stage that propelled NASA's Surveyor 2 lander to the moon in 1966 before it had been discarded. (Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection/San Diego Air and Space Museum via AP)

The latest object's route is direct and much more stable, bolstering his theory.

"I could be wrong on this. i don't want to appear overly confident," Chodas said. "But it's the first time, in my view, that all the pieces fit together with an actual known launch."

And he's happy to note that it is a mission that he followed in 1966, as a teenager in Canada.

Asteroid hunter Carrie Nugent of Olin College of Engineering in Needham, Massachusetts, said Chodas' conclusion is "a good one" based on solid evidence. She's the author of the 2017 book "Asteroid Hunters."

"Some more data would be useful so we can know for sure," she said in an email. "Asteroid hunters from around the world will continue to watch this object to get that data. I'm excited to see how this develops!"

The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics' Jonathan McDowell noted there are "many, many embarrassing incidents of objects in deep orbit ... getting provisional asteroid designations for a few days before it was realized they were artificial."

It's seldom clear-cut.

Last year, a British amateur astronomer, Nick Howes, announced that an asteroid in solar orbit was likely the abandoned lunar module from NASA's Apollo 10, a rehearsal for the Apollo 11 moon landing. While this object is likely artificial, Chodas and others are skeptical of the connection.

Skepticism is good, Howes wrote in an email. "It hopefully will lead to more observations when it's next in our neck of the woods" within the late 2030s.

Chodas' latest target of interest was passed by Earth in their respective laps round the sun in 1984 and 2002. But it was too dim to see from 5 million miles (8 million kilometers) away, he said.

He predicts the object will spend about four months circling Earth once it's captured in mid-November, before shooting back out into its own orbit round the sun next March.

Chodas doubts the object will slam into Earth—"at least not this time around."


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