40 Countries Come Together at APRSAF 25 in Singapore
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MONDAY Highlights… Nov 5 — NewSpace: Astroscale, now with 3 international operation offices, raises US$90M for orbital debris removal projects; Landspace CEO Zhang Changwu confirms failure of 1st orbital rocket launch, company working to reconfigure operations / launch timelines; Fleet Space Technologies sending 2 small satellites to LEO aboard Rocket Lab “It’s Business Time” launch. Nov 5 — Solar System: Unusual 1,500 km (~930 mile) smoky plume being observed for more than 1 month near Mars Arsia Mons volcano; BepiColombo on journey to Mercury sending data to Earth from monitoring cameras and magnetometer sensors; Hayabusa2 scouting Asteroid Ryugu for clear landing area. Nov 5 — Galaxy: ESO observations give further evidence that center of Milky Way does indeed have a supermassive black hole; Kepler exoplanet data sets continue to be examined as craft in Heliocentric Orbit reaches its retirement due to fuel exhaustion; Hubble releases photo of Serpens Nebula 1,300 LY distant in Milky Way. Nov 5 — Global: UAE Space Agency celebrates deployment of KhalifaSat, developing Astronaut class, Mars Hope mission, international collaborations; India small-scale landing test for Chandrayaan-2 keeps craft on track for Jan 2019 launch; China plans to launch Pakistan Astronaut to space in 2022. Nov 5 — USA: EarthRise50 celebrating the 50th anniversary of the iconic EarthRise photo taken by Apollo 8 crew, proposes EarthRise Dinner hosting, other events looking toward 2068; NASA advancing parachutes for landing Mars 2020 mission, latest test deployed in four-tenths of a second; Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico observes 55 years of operation. Nov 5 — Hawai’i: Thirty Meter Telescope receives Hawaii Supreme Court approval for building on Mauna Kea, environmental impact studies to continue into 2019; Maunakea Scholars Program initiated by CFHT to be offered on 6 Hawaii islands; PISCES to host Hawai‘i International Space Exploration And Robotics Challenge in Sep 2019. |
= All times
for terrestrial events in local time unless noted.
= All times for international terrestrial events in local time unless noted.
= All times for space events, and…
= All times for international space / astro events in Hawaii Standard Time unless noted. Add 10 hours to obtain UT (‘Universal Time’).
Weekly Planet Watch – Evening Planets: Mercury (SW), Mars (S), Jupiter (SW), Saturn (SW), Uranus (E), Neptune (SE); Morning Planets: Venus (ESE).
ILOA Galaxy Forum Hawai’i, and New Worlds Institute Host Moon, Science, STEM Events
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Nov 5 — Parker Solar Probe, Heliocentric Orbit: Spacecraft reaches 1st perihelion today, 0.17 AU, at 22:37 EST.
Nov 5 — Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan), Mars Orbit: India ISRO orbiter reaches 5 full years / enters 6th year in Space today; launched Nov 5, 2013. Nov 5 — SMi Group, London, United Kingdom: Small Satellites and Disruptive Technology Focus Day. Nov 5 — Institute of Environmental Sciences and Technology (IEST), NASA, American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM), CSA, JHU / APL, Annapolis MD: 30th Space Simulation Conference. Nov 5-10 — Shanghai Key Laboratory for Astrophysics, Shanghai Normal University, Purple Mountain Observatory, Yunnan Observatory, Chinese National Science Foundation, Dali, China: Galaxy Evolution Workshop: The Co-Evolution of Galaxies and Their Central Regions. Nov 5 — Moon: 7.0° NNE of Spica, 14:00; 1.7° SSW of 1 Ceres, 22:20; 8.8° NNE of Venus, 23:00. Continued from…Nov 4-5 — Moon Village Association, National Space Society, University of Southern California, Los Angeles CA: 2nd International Moon Village Workshop; fostering cooperation for existing or planned global Moon exploration programs of public and private initiatives. Nov 4-7 — Geological Society of America, Indianapolis IN: 2018 Geological Society of America Annual Meeting. Nov 4-7 — International Association of Advanced Materials, Stockholm, Sweden: Advanced Energy Materials World Congress (AEMWC 2018). TUESDAYNov 6 — Arianespace, Launch Soyuz / MetOp C, Sinnamary, French Guiana: Designated VS19, Arianespace Soyuz Rocket to launch MetOp C polar-orbiting weather satellite for ESA and Eumetsat using a Fregat upper stage; 19:47:27 EST. |
Nov 6-7 — Institute for Research on Exoplanets, McGill Space Institute, Montreal, Québec, Canada: Workshop: The Future of Space Astronomy in Canada.
Nov 6-8 — Venus Exploration Analysis Group, NASA, Laurel MD: 16th Venus Exploration Analysis Group (VEXAG) meeting; at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab.
Nov 6-9 — Asia-Pacific Regional Space Agency Forum, Singapore: The 25th session of the Asia-Pacific Regional Space Agency Forum (APRSAF-25).
Nov 6 — Apollo Asteroid 2018 TF3: Near-Earth Flyby (0.021 AU)
WEDNESDAY
NET Nov 7 — Northrop Grumman, Launch Pegasus XL / ICON, L-1011, Skid Strip, Cape Canaveral AFS: Pegasus XL rocket to launch NASA Ionospheric Connection Explorer (ICON) satellite into orbit.
Nov 7 — International Lunar Observatory Association, Galaxy Forum, Space Age Publishing Company, Kamuela HI: Galaxy Forum Hawai’i 2018: Kamuela — Astronomy from the Moon and Hawai’i 21st Century Astrophysics; featuring Mayor Harry Kim, representatives from ILOA, CFHT, Subaru, EAO / JCMT, Keck; 16:15-18:15.
Nov 7 — W. M. Keck Observatory, Kamuela HI: Keck Astronomy Talk: Dragonflies, Dark Matter, and the Hunt for Ghostly Galaxies; by Pieter van Dokkum from Yale University, 19:00.
Nov 7 — Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona, Tucson AZ: Lecture: Impact Origin of the Moon? by Professor Erik Asphaug.
Nov 7-8 — Space Studies Board of the National Academies, Irvine CA: Space Studies Board Meeting.
Nov 7 — Moon: New Moon, 06:02.
Nov 7 — Asteroid 4 Vesta: 3.1° S of Pluto, 15:49.
Nov 7 — Aten Asteroid 2010 VQ: Near-Earth Flyby (0.040 AU)
Nov 7 — Apollo Asteroid 2015 NU2: Near-Earth Flyby (0.068 AU)
THURSDAY
Nov 8 — Rising Tide Capital, EarthRise50, J P Morgan Chase, Mack-Cali, et al, Jersey City NJ: Kickoff Event: RISE to Expand Opportunity.
Nov 8 — Lunar and Planetary Society, Houston TX: Seminar: The Origin of the Moon Within a Terrestrial Synestia; by Simon Lock of Harvard University.
Nov 8 — Consortium for Execution of Rendezvous and Servicing Operations (CONFERS), Washington DC: 2018 Global Satellite Servicing Forum (GSSF); featuring AGI, Thales Alenia, Virgin Orbit, Astroscale, Northrop Grumman, Chandah Space Technologies, and others.
Nov 8 — Cornell University, Ithaca NY: Lecture: What’s Next for Super-Earths? Population Demographics To Probabilistic Planetary Physics; by Angie Wolfgang of Penn State.
Nov 8 — British Interplanetary Society, London, United Kingdom: Lecture: Catching Stardust; by geologist and cosmochemist Natalie Starkey.
Nov 8 — Library of Congress – Science, Technology and Business Division, Washington DC: GRACE-FO and ICESat-2: NASA’s Leadership in Monitoring the Polar Regions from Space; by Thorsten Markus from NASA.
Nov 8 — Moon: 3.7° NNE of Jupiter, 09:00.
Nov 8 — Aten Asteroid 2010 VB: Near-Earth Flyby (0.082 AU)
FRIDAY
Nov 9 — STEAMSPACE, Austin TX: Cities in Space Student Competition and Conference 2018; over 500 students present their designs for living on the Moon and Mars; STEAMSPACE is dedicated to opening the space frontier in our lifetime to everyone beyond the boundaries of race, gender, ideological and socioeconomic difference.
Nov 9 — National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Socorro NM: 34th Annual New Mexico Symposium.
Nov 9-10 — New Worlds Institute, Austin TX: New Worlds 2018 and Space Cowboy Gala; featuring Astronauts, Engineers, Entrepreneurs, Scientists, NewSpace, Space Agencies, and Artists.
Nov 9-10 — Geoscience Australia, Canberra, Australia: 3rd Meeting of the Asian Oceanian VLBI Group (AOV).
Nov 9 — Moon: 6.6° NNE of Mercury, 04:00; 8.4° NNE of Antares, 05:00.
Nov 9 — Mercury: 1.8° N of Antares, 02:00.
Nov 9 — Apollo Asteroid 2015 TL178: Near-Earth Flyby (0.055 AU)
SATURDAY
Nov 10 — Wilhelm und Else Heraeus Stiftung, Berlin, Germany: The Hubble Constant Controversy – Status, Implications and Solutions.
SUNDAY
Nov 11 — Rocket Lab, Launch Electron / “It’s Business Time” Multi-Payload, Launch Complex 1, Mahia Peninsula, New Zealand: Nine-day launch window opens for first fully commercial launch dubbed ‘It’s Business Time’ with two Spire Lemur 2 CubeSats and one GeoOptics CICERO satellite; live coverage available.
Nov 11 — National Space Society of North Texas, Irving TX: National Space Society of North Texas monthly meeting; 15:30.
Nov 11 — Moon: 1.4° N of Saturn, 06:00.