Small Launch Companies Aim for 2022 Low-Cost, High-Frequency Space Access
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MONDAY
Highlights…
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= Terrestrial events, and…
= International terrestrial events in local time.
= Space events, and…
= International space / astro events in Hawaii Standard Time unless noted. Add 10 hours to obtain UT (‘Universal Time’).
Weekly Planet Watch – Evening Planets: Venus (SW), Jupiter (SW), Saturn (SW), Uranus (SE), Neptune (SW); Morning Planets: Mars (SE).
New Year 2022 Opens Galaxy, Star, Interstellar Matters with AAS 239 |
Continued From…
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
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THURSDAY
Dec 30 — CNSA, Launch Long March 3B / Zhongxing 6D (ChinaSat 6D), Xichang Satellite Launch Center, China: CNSA to launch ChinaSat 6D, built by the state-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), for military communications.
FRIDAY
Dec 31 — ‘Imiloa Astronomy Center, Hilo HI: Planetarium Show: Magnificent Makaliʻi; live traditional storytelling about Makaliʻi (Pleiades, Seven Sisters, Subaru) a symbol of the Makahiki – a New Year and a change of seasonal weather patterns; 12:30-13:15 HST.
SATURDAY
NET 2022 — Predicted Collision of 2 Stars (KIC 9832227), Constellation Cygnus: Scientists predict two stars, jointly named KIC 9832227, will merge & collide causing an increase in its brightness ten thousand fold, it would be visible to the naked eye; predicted date + / – one year.
NET Jan — Astra, Launch Rocket 3 LV0008 / VCLS Demo-2A, Cape Canaveral SFS FL: First launch from CCSFS, Astra to launch Venture Class Launch Services 2 Mission One, VCLS Demo-2A for NASA with ELaNa 41 five CubeSats.
Jan 1 — Deep Space: 45-year old Voyagers 1 & 2 providing data from Interstellar space, while scientists & engineers solidify interstellar probe concept designed to operate 100+ years, launch ~2036 to study heliosphere, interstellar medium.
Jan 1 — Chinese Society of Astronautics, Children and Youth Science Center of China, Association of Science and Technology and China Central Television Ltd., Broadcast / Beijing, China: Fantastic Science Night 2022: Spending New Years Eve on Mars.
Jan 1 — Space Center Houston, Houston TX: Breakfast with an Astronaut, Bill McArthur.
Jan 1 — Moon: At perigee (distance 358,069 km), 12:53.
SUNDAY
Jan 2 — W. M. Keck Observatory, Waimea HI: Last Day of Hawaiʻi Science Walk; videos [scanned via QR codes] describe research being done in Hawaiʻi; walk begins at corner of Pukalani Road and Ala ‘Ohi’a Road; continued from Nov 22, 2021.
Jan 2 — The Space Show, Online / Tiburon CA: Dr. David Livingston hosts open lines for New Year 2022 discussions.
Jan 2, 3 — Quadrantids Meteor Shower Peak: Appearing to radiate from constellation Quadrans Muralis; can produce up to 120 meteors per hour.
Jan 2 — Moon: New Moon, 08:35.
MONDAY
Jan 3 — Chang’e-4 Lander and Yutu-2 Rover, Statio Tianhe (Milky Way Base), Von Kármán crater, Moon South Pole–Aitken Basin, 45.5°S, 177.6°E: Spacecraft enter 4th year / reach 3 full years on Moon far side, landed 2019.
Jan 3-7 — Indian Science Congress Association, Pune, India: 108th Indian Science Congress: Science and Technology for “Sustainable Development with Women Empowerment”; at Symbiosis International University.
Jan 3-7 — American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, American Astronautical Society, San Diego CA: 32nd AIAA/AAS Space Flight Mechanics Meeting.
Jan 3-7 — AIAA, Hybrid / San Diego CA and Online: SciTech 2022: Enabling Sustainability Through Aerospace Technology.
Jan 3 — Earth: At perihelion, 0.983 AU from Sun, 20:54 HST.
Jan 3 — Moon: 7.5° S of Venus, 00:00.
TUESDAY
Jan 4 — Space Telescope Science Institute, Online / Baltimore MD: Lecture: Galaxy Clusters; by Mireia Montes Quiles (STScI).
Jan 4 — Moon: 4.1° SE of Saturn, 09:00.
WEDNESDAY
Jan 5 — Star Gaze Hawaii, Waikoloa HI: Stargazing at Westin Hapuna Beach Resort; adults US$50, kids $25, 19:00.
Jan 5 — Moon: 4.2° SE of Jupiter, 18:00.
THURSDAY
Jan 6 — Roscosmos, Launch Soyuz / OneWeb 13, Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan: Russia Soyuz rocket to launch 34 satellites to orbit for OneWeb.
Jan 6 — Aten Asteroid 2014 YE15: Near-Earth Flyby (0.049 AU)
FRIDAY
Jan 7 — The Space Show, Online / Tiburon CA: David Livingston hosts Marcia Smith of Space Policy Online.
Jan 7 — Space Center Houston, Houston TX: Breakfast with an Astronaut, Anna Fisher.
Jan 7 — Moon: 3.7° SE of Neptune, 04:00.
Jan 7 — Mercury: At easternmost elongation, 19.2° from Sun in evening
sky, 01:00.
Jan 7 — Apollo Asteroid 2020 AP1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.012 AU)
SATURDAY
Jan 8-9 — NASA, Exoplanet Exploration Program Analysis Group (ExoPAG), Salt Lake City UT: ExoPAG 25th Meeting.
Jan 8 — Venus: At inferior conjunction with Sun, 0.266 AU from Earth, 15:00.
SUNDAY
Jan 9-13 — American Astronomical Society, Salt Lake City UT: 239th Meeting of the AAS; at Salt Palace Convention Center.
Jan 9 — Moon: At first quarter, 08:12.
An industry-wide race is on to provide regular, customized orbital trajectories tailored to customer payload requirements at minimum price, with several new market entrants making bold moves: Astra Aerospace, headquartered at Naval Air Station Alameda on San Francisco Bay, is the first of the new crop to reach orbit with Rocket 3.3 from Pacific Spaceport Complex (Alaska) after a 6.5-year effort. Starting early in the new year, Astra is joining major industry forces SpaceX, ULA and Boeing in launching from CCSFS in Florida (SLC-46) with 5 cubesat payload ELaNA 41 under US$3.9M Venture Class Launch Services Demonstration 2 contract – Relativity Space of Long Beach CA and Firefly of Austin TX also working on VCLSD launches from Vandenberg SFB with Terran 1 / Alpha in 2022. Future plans for Astra include higher payload capacity 4.0 / 5.0 possibly 3-stage vehicle iterations capable of reaching SSO and point-to-point delivery. BluShift of Maine is operating the first biofuel launch system, once-flown Stardust 1.0 (1,219 m), and hopes to launch Starless Rogue 10 km NET Q1 2022; 100 km by Q2 2022. Launcher of Hawthorne CA is approaching the space access market as a compliment to and improvement on SpaceX rideshare program with compatible Launcher Orbiter craft, filling gaps to achieve highly specific orbital needs NET Oct 2022. Deutsche Bank anticipates the $8B satellite launch market will grow to $38B by decade end. (Image Credits: Astra, BluShift, Launcher, Deutsche Bank) 