Japan at Forefront of Space Exploration / Innovation with New H3 Rocket, Artemis Partnership, Lunar Missions


Medium-lift H3 Launch Vehicle inaugural launch carrying Advanced Land Observing Satellite-3 “DAICHI-3” (ALOS-3) to 669-km SSO is set for NET February 13 at 10:37:55 JST. ALOS-3 is a new generation Earth observatory geared towards natural disaster mitigation with 0.7-m resolution. H3 features a first stage expander bleed cycle engine and will be offered in several variants including an extended 2nd stage model for Lunar Gateway and a heavy lift with 28,300 kg to LEO capacity. JAXA has also nurtured a strong human spaceflight program in cooperation with NASA – Astronaut Koichi Wakata is currently working on ISS, taking photographs of Earth, participating in EVAs to prepare for ISS Roll Out Solar Array (iROSA), and measuring cosmic rays via CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) on the exterior portion of Japanese Experiment Module “Kibo”. A new group of Japan Astronaut candidates are vying for a place in the JAXA corps, with the selection process on the third of five stages – announcement of the new class is to be made in February, which may include an Astronaut who will touch the lunar surface on a mission TBD (post Artemis-3). Meanwhile EQUULEUS 6U cubesat with AQUARIUS H2O propulsion system is on course for Earth-Moon L2, and JAXA SORA-Q rover is riding with commercial ispace lander set to reach Moon in late April. (Image Credits: JAXA, Japan Foreign Ministry)

MONDAY

Feb 6 ISS, ~415-km LEO: Expedition 68 seven-member crew preparing for Progress 83 arrival with nearly 3,000-kg of supplies; working with studies on plasma crystals, muscle tone changes, and particles in fluids.

Feb 6 Tiangong Space Station, ~390-km LEO: Shenzhou 15 three-member crew may to overlap with Shenzhou-16 crew which is likely to include Jing Haipeng; Shenzhou-17 or 18 may include an international member.

Highlights…

o NewSpace: Sierra Space inflatable LIFE habitat on track for NASA human certification following Accelerated Systematic Creep Test; Thales Alenia Space to develop autonomous craft to ferry cargo to / from REV space factory NET 2025; The Exploration Company raises US$44M for development of reusable Nyx orbital vehicle (demo launching NET 2024).

☆ Solar System: NASA working to determine cause of JunoCam 23-hour anomaly and associated data loss during 48th flyby; Lucy team adds 700-m asteroid 1999 VD57 to mission profile, bringing total targets to 11; SwRI analysis of Cassini data suggests smallest Saturn moon Mimas may contain ocean under ice shell.

☆ Galaxy: Ultra-stripped supernovae reveals binary star system ~11 LY from Earth; China/UK-led JWST observation of photons emanating from ionized helium may be first detection of Population III stars 100,000x more massive than Sol, born just 400,000 years after Big Bang.

o Global: Space Concordia hopes to be first university to build / launch a liquid fueled rocket past Karman line with 12-m tall, 4.5-t thrust Starsailor; Axiom mission Ax-3/4 to be mostly booked for national space agencies – likely from Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Hungary; KARI selects Arianespace Vega C for KOMPSAT-6 launch, originally set for Roscosmos Angara.

USA: Astronauts Douglas Hurley and Robert Behnken are latest recipients of Congressional Space Medal of Honor in recognition of SpaceX Demo-2 mission; Houston Spaceport wooing new customer contracts worth ~$4B, opening up 120 additional acres for development.

● Hawai’i: Popular NAOJ Subaru livestream which captured luminous swirl (thought to be related to SpaceX launch of SV-06) in sky over Mauna Kea being shared globally; Northwestern Univ. Astronomer Jason Wang utilizes Keck to create 12-year timelapse of HR8799 exoplanetary system motion; Science writer Ethan Siegel delineates steps that may aid community reconciliation regarding Maunakea astronomy.

= Terrestrial and… o = International terrestrial events

= Moon activity

= Space and… = International space / astro events in Hawaii Standard Time unless noted. Add 10 hours to obtain UT (‘Universal Time’).


Weekly Planet Watch Morning Planets: Mercury (SE); Evening Planets: Venus (WSW), Mars (S), Jupiter (SW), Uranus (SW), Neptune (SW).


International and Interglobal Astrophysics in Focus at IAUS 377 in Malaysia, and Royal Society ‘Astronomy from the Moon’ Meeting in UK

The International Astronomical Union is hosting IAU 377 Symposium on ‘Early Disk-Galaxy Formation: From JWST to the Milky Way’ in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia February 6-10 to gather experts in areas of Galactic astronomy, high-redshift astronomy, and theory & modeling of galaxy formation and evolution. This will be the first IAU in Southeast Asia in the 21st Century (previously held 1990). Preceding IAUS 377 are the Monsoon School January 31 – Feb 4 at Universiti Malaya, and the 3-part Global Malaysia Astronomers Convention which was held in January over 7 days in multiple locations. Under theme Connecting the Near and the Far IAUS 377 will feature 80 speakers, 65 posters, 30 students and ~180 participants. Some of the speakers are (TL-R) Paul Ho (EAO), Haininh Li (NAOC), Arianna Long (Univ. of Texas – Austin), Hafiz Saadon (Malaysia University), and Yuan-Sen Ting (Australian National University). The Royal Society meeting in London, United Kingdom on Feb 13-14 will convene lunar astronomy specialists including Joseph Silk, Ian Crawford, Martin Elvis, John Zarnecki, Jack Burns, and Xuelei Chen for a scientific discussion on ‘Astronomy from the Moon: The Next Decades’. Among the topics are low radio frequency science, lunar cosmology, ROLSES, Astrophysical Lunar Observatory, LuSEE Night, SunRISE, lunar orbit array, lunar gravitational-wave detection, lunar observatories in visible light, commercial opportunities, technosignature searches, and geology & environment of the Moon. (Image Credits: IAU, Universiti Malaya, Royal Society, STScI, NASA, ESA, CSA, et al)

o Feb 6-10 — International Astronomical Union, Malaysia National Planetarium (Planetarium Negara), Johns Hopkins University, Australian National University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: IAU Symposium 377: Early Disk-Galaxy Formation: From JWST to the Milky Way.

o Feb 6-10 — Italian Society of Planetary Sciences (SISP), University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy: XVIII National Congress of Planetary Sciences.

o Feb 6-17 — United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS), Vienna, Austria: Meeting of the Scientific and Technical Subcommittee of COPUOS.

☆ Feb 6 — Moon: 4.2° NNE of Regulus, 13:00.

☆ Feb 6 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 YO6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.031 AU)

☆ Feb 6 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 BT1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.043 AU)

☆ Feb 6 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 BD: Near-Earth Flyby (0.091 AU)

Continued From…

Oct 15 – Jun 15, 2023 — International Space Elevator Consortium, Online: Space Elevator Academic Challenge: Improving Humanity’s Future; for students 17-25.

☾ Dec 11 – Apr 25, 2023 — Hakuto-R / ispace Mission 1, Lunar Landing Trajectory: Carrying UAE Rashid 10-kg rover, 0.25-kg JAXA SORA-Q rover, Hakuto-R performing orbital control maneuvers to reach Lunar Orbital Insertion, followed by Moon touchdown nominally ~4.5 months after launch.

Jan 18 – May 11 — Wichita State University, Wichita KS and Online: 2023 Interstellar Seminar ‘LASI 150G’; 1-credit hour seminar begins today; every Wednesday 14:30-15:20, led by Prof. Mark Schneegurt.

NET Feb — ISRO, Launch GSLV Mk III (LVM3) / OneWeb 36, Satish Dhawan Space Centre, India: ISRO to launch next batch of 36 communication satellites for OneWeb constellation.

Feb 2-8 — American Astronautical Society Rocky Mountain Section, Breckenridge CO: Rocky Mountain AAS Guidance, Navigation and Control Conference 2023.

TUESDAY

☆ Feb 7 — ISS, In-Flight Education Event, ~415-km LEO and Online: Expedition 68 In-Flight Event with the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and NASA Flight Engineer Nicole Mann; starts 12:10, live coverage available.

● Feb 7 — 2023 USA State of the Union Address, Washington DC: President Biden to give speech to Congress; will address wide range of issues, perhaps USA Artemis Moon missions, Mars and Beyond.

Feb 7 — Space Transportation Association, Washington DC: STA Luncheon with Jody Singer (Marshall Space Flight Center Director), and Jim Free (NASA Associate Administrator for Exploration Systems Development).

Feb 7-9 — SatNews, Mountain View CA: Silicon Valley SmallSat Symposium 2023: Growth2 For Your SmallSat Business; at Computer History Museum.

WEDNESDAY

Feb 8-9 — Federal Aviation Administration, Commercial Spaceflight Federation, Washington DC: 25th FAA Commercial Space Transportation Conference; at Ronald Reagan Building.

☆ Feb 8 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 BS: Near-Earth Flyby (0.049 AU)

☆ Feb 8 — Apollo Asteroid 2021 VH2: Near-Earth Flyby (0.055 AU)

THURSDAY

Feb 9 — Hope Orbiter, Mars Orbit: UAE Hope, studying Mars atmosphere and climate, reaches 2 full years / enters 3rd year in Mars orbit today; launched July 19, 2020 on JAXA H2A rocket, arrived at Mars on this day 2021.

☆ Feb 9 — Roscosmos, Launch Soyuz / Progress 83P, Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan: Russia Soyuz rocket to launch 83rd Progress cargo delivery ship to International Space Station.

Feb 9 — SDA Bocconi School of Management-SEE Lab, Secure World Foundation, Space Policy Institute, Hybrid / Washington DC and Online: Space Exploration Investments: Turning Uncertainty into Measurable Risk and Benefits; at Elliott School of International Affairs.

☆ Feb 9 — Aten Asteroid 2022 CX1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.044 AU)

☆ Feb 9 — Aten Asteroid 2021 TE3: Near-Earth Flyby (0.080 AU)

FRIDAY

NET Feb 10 – ISRO, Launch Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV), Satish Dhawan Space Center, India: Launch of SSLV rocket on Demo 2 mission carrying a microsat.

☆ Feb 10 — Tianwen-1 Orbiter, Mars Orbit: China Tianwen-1 orbiter reaches 2 full years / begins 3rd year of operation in Mars orbit; Lander & Rover touched down ~3 months after this date at Utopia Planitia 25.1°N, 109.9°E.

☆ Feb 10 — Solar Orbiter (SolO), Elliptical Heliocentric Orbit: ESA / NASA craft to observe and measure solar phenomena reaches 3rd full year / enters 4th year in space, having launched 2020.

☆ Feb 10 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 BR1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.055 AU)

SATURDAY

Feb 11 ISS, Rendezvous and Docking of Progress 83P, ~415-km LEO: Progress cargo delivery ship set to dock at ISS, 03:53 EST, live coverage available.

★ Feb 11 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Starlink 5-4, SLC-40, Cape Canaveral SFS FL: SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket to launch next batch of Starlink internet satellites.

☆ Feb 11 — Moon: 3.2° NNE of Spica, 23:00.

☆ Feb 11 — Apollo Asteroid 2017 AE5: Near-Earth Flyby (0.058 AU)

☆ Feb 11 — Amor Asteroid 2023 BD6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.065 AU)

☆ Feb 11 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 CK6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.072 AU)

SUNDAY

Feb 12 — JAXA, Launch H-3 / ALOS 3, Tanegashima Space Center, Japan: H3 rocket on its 1st test flight will carry Advanced Land Observing Satellite 3 (ALOS 3) Earth observation satellite for JAXA (launch set Feb 12 at 15:37:55 HST / Feb 13 JST at 10:37:55).

o Feb 12-21 — National Space Foundation, NOIRLab, International Dark-Sky Association, AURA, Online / Global: Globe at Night February Campaign; campaign to raise awareness of light pollution by inviting citizen-scientists to measure & submit night sky brightness observations.