Return to the Moon

May 2-8, 2022 / Vol 41, No 18 / Hawai`i Island, USA

2022 Moon Missions Set to Commence with CAPSTONE Lunar Orbiter

Launch window for NASA orbital pathfinder Cislunar Autonomous Positioning System Technology Operations and Navigation Experiment (CAPSTONE) runs May 3 – 15, opening a global flurry of lunar expeditions planned for the remainder of 2022. The 25-kg, 12U CAPSTONE craft will evaluate stability of a Near Rectilinear Halo Orbit intended to support future lunar exploration infrastructure while validating spacecraft-to-spacecraft Cislunar Autonomous Positioning System, enabling GPS-like navigation / communication. Following CAPSTONE into cislunar space, Artemis 1 (SLS rocket + Orion crew capsule) carrying 10 6U cubesat rideshares to be deployed from Orion Stage Adapter and an array of experiments on radiation measurement and mitigation carried within Orion itself, will likely launch in the July-August time frame. Artemis is planned to occupy a distant retrograde orbit around the Moon, similar to that of the CNSA Chang’e-5 service module, for 6-19 days out of projected 26–42-day total mission duration. Deeper into the year, ISRO is working on Chandrayaan-3 propulsion and avionics which may push declared August launch; KARI Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter targets August 1; Roscosmos has reset launch of Luna-25 lander to August 22; Intuitive Machines and Astrobotic are expected to announce 2022 launch dates for their respective CLPS Moon lander missions shortly; ispace of Japan also striving to carry out its first HAKUTO-R landing mission late in the year. (Image Credits: Rocket Lab, NASA, Intuitive Machines)

MONDAY

☆ May 2 — ISS, ~405-km LEO: Expedition 67 crew of 11 planning to give farewells to 4-member Crew-3 on Tuesday, Artemyev of Roscosmos to take over Command; working with station wide radiation dosimeters, Astrobees, Actiwatch; in-flight event between CNN, CBS with Jessica Watkins & Samantha Cristoforetti scheduled Friday 11:00 EDT.

☆ May 2 — Tiangong Space Station, ~370-km LEO: Tianzhou-4 cargo ship with dry mass of 6,640 kg expected to launch Thursday and dock to TSS for 12-month mission carrying supplies and propellant for Shenzhou-14 crewed mission set to launch early June; 4 additional missions planning to launch this year are Wentian, Mengtian, Tianzhou-5, Shenzhou-15.

Highlights…

o NewSpace: Planet working to deploy Pelican 32-satellite constellation by early 2023, increasing resolution capability from 50cm to 30cm; NewSpace India Limited launching future OneWeb deployments; Maritime Launch Services trading on Toronto-based NEO Exchange, planning polar & SSO launches from proposed Nova Scotia spaceport.

☆ Solar System: U.S. National Academies 2023-2032 Planetary Science / Astrobiology Decadal Survey calls for missions to Uranus, Enceladus, Moon, Ceres, Saturn, Titan, Mars, comet; New findings suggest all 5 nucleobase organic molecules, precursors to life, have been deposited on Earth via meteorite.

☆ Galaxy: ICRAR researchers monitoring 5B LY distant megamaser dubbed ‘Nkalakatha‘ with MeerKAT telescope; Penn State Astronomer Jason Wright argues for the primacy of techno signatures and artifacts over bio-signatures in SETI.

o Global: China plans ground and space-based NEO monitoring system & asteroid redirect experiment by 2025/6, Moon communications constellation by 2023/4; Director of Emirates Mars Mission hopes to work with ISRO; Edinburgh University researcher leads international call for space debris mitigation in The Case for Space Environmentalism.

USA: NASA extending 8 space missions including OSIRIS-REx, LRO, New Horizons, Mars Odyssey, Curiosity, InSight, MRO, MAVEN; Artemis team working to correct SLS valve and leak issues at VAB; VP Harris / Administrator Nelson commit to discontinue destructive ASAT testing.

● Hawai’i: ILO-X Moon Camera Naming Contest accepting statewide student submissions until May 26, 2022; Hawaiian Airlines will be first major airline to offer internet access via Starlink LEO constellation; “Flying whirlpool” phenomenon captured by Subaru Telescope identified as spent upper stage from NROL-85 Falcon 9.


= Terrestrial events, and…

o = 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: Mercury (WNW); Morning Planets: Venus, Mars, Saturn, Jupiter (ESE).


Meetings on Mars Science, Sample Return, and Analog Astronauts Preparing for Humans Off-Earth

The 39th Mars Exploration Program Analysis Group is meeting May 2-4 in Denver CO. Chaired by R. Aileen Yingst (TL), MEPAG will focus on priority science goals for the next decade. In conjunction is Science Objectives for Human Exploration of Mars Workshop May 4-6 which will identify realistic scenarios for surface stays, EVAs, specialized equipment and instruments for humans on Mars, taking into account lessons learned from Artemis lunar landings (NET 4 July 2026). Also this week, NASA is seeking input May 4-5 for Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Mars Sample Return mission addressing concerns such as ground disturbance from landing site preparation / recovery efforts with respect to natural, biological and cultural resources, as well as safety associated with extraterrestrial containment. While 8 orbiters, 2 landers and 3 rovers operate currently at Mars, NASA-ESA is hoping to launch a sample return ~2026 with China planning Tianwen-2 in 2028. The 2030s goal is in sight for humans to Mars, supported by people performing long-term space missions (Cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov / 437.7 days in space, Astronaut Mark Vande Hei / 355.2 days) and simulations on Earth. Advancing this goal, the 2nd Analog Astronaut Conference: Learning from Space to Improve Earth and Humanity is being held at Biosphere 2 on May 6-8 with speakers including Sian Proctor, Sara Sabry, Tim Ellis, Kai Staats, and Aidyl Gonzalez-Serricchio; while the next Humans to Mars Summit will take place May 17-19. (Image Credits: NASA, MEPAG, Analog Astronaut, Biosphere)

May 2 — Celestis Inc, Online: Live Launch Updates: Countdown to Ascension; featuring Marc Lee of Celestis, 18:00 CDT.

May 2-4 — Mars Exploration Program Analysis Group, NASA, Hybrid / Denver CO and Online: MEPAG Meeting.

☆ May 2 — Moon: 3.3° SE of Pleiades, 03:00; 7.0° NNW of Aldebaran, 20:00.

☆ May 2 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 HW: Near-Earth Flyby (0.041 AU)

☆ May 2 — Aten Asteroid 2019 JV1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.071 AU)

☆ May 2 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 GZ: Near-Earth Flyby (0.073 AU)

☆ May 2 — Apollo Asteroid 2000 HP40: Near-Earth Flyby (0.083 AU)

Continued From…
o Nov 4 – Jun 29 — Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Problems, NASA Human Exploration Research Analog (HERA), Moscow, Russia: Mixed gender, international crew of 6 participating in 8-month space / lunar simulation mission SIRIUS-21 (Scientific International Research In Unique Terrestrial Station).

● Mar 24 – May 26 — International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA Hawai’i), Online / Hawai’i Islands: ILO-X Moon Camera Naming Contest for HI Schools.

● Mar 26 – May 31 — AIAA LA-LV Section, Online: Women in Space Art Virtual Gallery.

NET May 1 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Nilesat 301, SLC-40, Kennedy Space Center FL: Falcon 9 to launch Nilesat 301 geostationary communications satellite, built by Thales Alenia Space; first stage booster to land on a drone ship in Atlantic.

TUESDAY

☆ NET May 3 — Rocket Lab, Launch Electron / NASA CAPSTONE, Launch Complex 1A, Mahia Peninsula, New Zealand: Cislunar Autonomous Positioning System Technology Operations and Navigation Experiment to pathfind near rectilinear halo orbit planned for Lunar Gateway; launch window open May 3-15.

● May 3 — NASA, Online / Washington DC: Teleconference discussing May 19 launch of Boeing Orbital Flight Test-2 (OFT-2); starts 11:00 ET, live coverage available.

o May 3-4 — McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada: McGill Bicentennial Space Research Conference 2022.

● May 3-4 — NASA Advisory Council Science Committee, Online / Washington DC: Science Committee Meeting: Science Mission Directorate (SMD) Missions, Programs and Activities.

☆ May 3 — Apollo Asteroid 2021 UX8: Near-Earth Flyby (0.073 AU)

☆ May 3 — Apollo Asteroid 175706 (1996 FG3): Near-Earth Flyby (0.078 AU)

WEDNESDAY

● May 4-5 — Lunar Surface Innovation Consortium, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel MD: Lunar Surface Innovation Consortium Spring Meeting.

● May 4-5 — NASA, Online: Meetings Seeking Public Input on Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) for the Mars Sample Return mission.

o May 4-5 — Secure World Foundation, Leo Labs, Clearspace Today, EPFL, et al, Lausanne, Switzerland: LEO Kinetic Space Safety Workshop.

May 4-6 — NASA, Hybrid / Denver CO and Online: Science Objectives for Human Exploration of Mars Workshop.

☆ May 4 — Moon: 2.50° N of M35 cluster, 18:00.

☆ May 4 — Uranus: At conjunction with Sun, 21:00.

☆ May 4 — Aten Asteroid 2017 HG1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.073 AU)

THURSDAY

★ May 5 — InSight, Elysium Planitia, Mars Surface: Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport (InSight) lander reaches 4 full years / enters 5th year in Space today, launched in May 2018, landed on Mars Nov 26, 2018.

May 5 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Starlink 4-17, LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center FL: Falcon 9 to launch batch of Starlink internet satellites; first stage booster to land on a drone ship in Atlantic.

● May 5 — AIAA LA-LV Section, Hybrid / Los Angeles CA and Online: 2022 Annual Awards Dinner; awards going to James Webb Space Telescope (Northrop Grumman), and Neutron Reusable Rocket (Rocket Lab) and DragRacer Small Satellites (Millennium Space Systems).

May 5 — Virgin Galactic, Online: VG to hold Q1 2022 financial results telecon; 14:00 PDT.

☆ May 5 — Eta Aquarids Meteor Shower Peak: The 1st of 2 annual showers that occur as a result of Earth passing through dust released by Halley’s Comet; Eta Aquarid meteors appear to radiate from Constellation Aquarius, Northern Hemisphere observers may to see 10+ meteors per hour, Southern Hemisphere 20-40 per hour; peak 22:00.

☆ May 5 — Moon: At apogee (distance 405,332 km), 03:00.

FRIDAY

May 6-8 — Biosphere, University Of Arizona, Oracle AZ: Analog Astronaut Conference: Learning from Space to Improve Earth and Humanity.

☆ May 6 — Moon: 5.6° S of Castor, 08:00; 2.07° S of Pollux, 14:00.

SATURDAY

☆ May 7 — Moon: 3.8° NNE of Beehive Cluster, 18:00.

☆ May 7 — Apollo Asteroid 2019 UB6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.062 AU)

SUNDAY

May 8 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Starlink 4-13, SLC-4E, Vandenberg SFB CA: Falcon 9 to launch batch of Starlink internet satellites; first stage booster to land on a drone ship in Pacific.

May 8-12 — American Nuclear Society (ANS), Online / Cleveland OH: 2022 Nuclear and Emerging Technologies for Space conference (NETS-2022).

☆ May 8 — Moon: At first quarter, 14:21.

☆ May 8 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 HJ: Near-Earth Flyby (0.058 AU)

☆ May 8 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 HF1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.022 AU)