June 17-23, 2024 / Vol 43, No 25 / Hawai`i Island, USA
ISS Expedition 71 Planning Series of 3 EVAs; Starliner Astronauts Staying Longer
|
MONDAY☆ Jun 17 — International Space Station, ~415-km LEO: Expedition 71 planning to complete three EVAs in June-July, bringing total spacewalks for ISS to 272; seven-member crew with 2 from Boeing Starliner working with plasma crystal experiment, maintaining Iceberg cold stowage facility; Starliner helium leaks extends mission. ☆ Jun 17 — Tiangong Space Station, ~390-km LEO: Shenzhou 18 three-member crew planning next EVA (total for TSS 16 to date), to install more experiment payloads and monitor space-debris protection gear. Highlights… o NewSpace: Rocket Lab subsidiary SolAero Technologies may receive US$24M for solar-cells powering satellites and spacecraft; 8 large pieces of space debris, presumed to be from Dragon capsule, under investigation by SpaceX after retrieval from Canada; Obayashi Corporation of Japan moving forward with ~2050 space elevator plan, estimated to cost US$100B. ☆ Solar System: 3 previously unknown craters on Mars being named after former PRL director and two India towns; innovative model suggesting iron snow on Europa increases the diversity of potentially habitable niches in icy worlds; PI Jack Burns gives update at AAS 244 on ROLSES experiment which landed near Moon South Pole on IM-1. ☆ Galaxy: International teams of astronomers using Swift data and AI to analyze distance of gamma-ray bursts and expansion of Universe; most recent study of satellite galaxy 380,000 ly from Earth suggests self-interacting dark matter may explain its low-density halo. o Global: 10 Taikonaut candidates (including 1 from Hong Kong and 1 from Macao) will go through training after being selected by CNSA; Singapore NTU and OSTin ELITE satellite undergoing tests at Thailand GISTDA, preparing for 2025 launch. ● USA: Artemis 3 mission may modify plans using SLS, Orion, Starship to accomplish 2026 human Moon landing, while SpaceX continues success of Starship tests; congress seeks to reduce budget cuts for Chandra space telescope future operations. ● Hawai’i: NASA satellite will be used to calibrate UH88 telescope on Mauna Kea and measure brightness; ILOA Hawai`i moves forward with precursor astronomy mission ILO-C to Shackleton Rim on CE-7, looking toward ILO-1 to Malapert Mountain summit; Mauna Loa Observatory monitoring CO2 since 1958 shows largest two-year jump in NOAA record. |
● = 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: Mars (E), Saturn (SE); Neptune (ESE).
Europe Hosts UN COPUOS, 12th ELS, and Many Lunar-Related Events
|
● Jun 17 — Maunakea Visitor Information Station, International Lunar Observatory Association, Hale Pohaku ~9,200 ft, Mauna Kea HI: Maunakea-Malapert Moon Presentation and Observation; ILOA discusses the ‘Mountain on the Moon’ Malapert Massif, followed by Moon gazing lead by VIS astronomers; starts 18:00 HST, limited to 45 people. ● Jun 17 — IEEE Computer Society, Seattle WA: 3rd AI for Space Workshop 2024; emphasis on vision of and learning algorithms for autonomous space systems; Seattle Convention Center, US$100-425. ● Jun 17-18 — NASA Heliophysics Advisory Committee, Washington DC: Meeting of NASA Heliophysics Advisory Committee. ☆ Jun 17 — Mercury: 0.88° N of Venus, 01:00; with Venus and M35 cluster within circle of diameter 1.21°, 21:00. ☆ Jun 17 — Apollo Asteroid 2024 LU1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.012 AU) Ongoing… ● May 28 – Aug 7 — LPI-JSC Center for Lunar Science and Exploration, Houston TX: Exploration Science Summer Intern Program. ★ NET Jun / Summer — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Polaris Dawn Crew Dragon, LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center FL: Jared Isaacman, Scott Poteet, Sarah Gillis and Anna Menon to reach apogee of 1,400 km, perform first commercial EVA, and test spacecraft-to-spacecraft communications with Starlink on 5-day mission. ● Jun 8 – Aug 3 — International Space University (ISU), Rice University, NASA, Johnson Space Center, Houston TX: 36th ISU Space Studies Program (SSP 2024). o Jun 16-21 — SSERVI, The Open University, UKSA, ESA, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, United Kingdom: 12th European Lunar Symposium; at Easterbrook Hall, Crichton Campus. o Jun 16-21 — Society of Photographic Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE), National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), Optronics, Yokohama, Japan: SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation. TUESDAY☆ Jun 18 — Rocket Lab, Launch Electron / Kinéis 1-5, Launch Complex, Mahia Peninsula, New Zealand: Launch of mission dubbed “No Time Toulouse” of 5 satellites for France Kinéis IoT constellation designed to operate with 25 nanosatellites of 30 kg each. ★ Jun 18 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Astra 1P/SES-24, SLC 40, Cape Canaveral SFS FL: Launch of ASTRA 1P broadcast satellite for SES to Geostationary Transfer Orbit. |
● Jun 18 — 41st Observation of the 1st USA Woman in Space, Nationwide USA / Global: Celebrating the first American woman to fly in Space, Sally Ride on Space Shuttle Challenger STS-7 mission in 1983, while USA plans First Woman to the Moon South Pole 2026 via developing Artemis program.
o Jun 18 — United Nations Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS), Vienna, Austria: United Nations Conference on Sustainable Lunar Activities; UN COPUOS Side Event.
☆ Jun 18 — Mercury: 0.53° N of M35 cluster, 01:00.
☆ Jun 18 — Venus: 0.40° S of M35 cluster, 19:00.
WEDNESDAY
o Jun 19-28 — United Nations Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS), Vienna, Austria: 67th session of United Nations COPUOS.
☆ Jun 19 — Apollo Asteroid 2024 KY1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.041 AU)
THURSDAY
o Jun 20 — Moon Village Association, COSPAR, International Astronomical Union, For All Moonkind, Vienna, Austria: Sustainable Lunar Environment: Challenges and Opportunities; United Nations COPUOS) Side Event, Room M4 at 13:15 CEST.
● Jun 20 — NASA Science Mission Directorate, Online / Washington DC: NASA Science Mission Directorate Virtual Town Hall Meeting.
☆ Jun 20 — June Solstice: Longest day of the year (opposite in Southern Hemisphere) as Sun reaches a point farthest north of celestial equator, 10:51.
☾ Jun 20 — Moon: 0.50° ENE of Antares, occultation, 02:00.
☆ Jun 20 — Apollo Asteroid 2010 XB24: Near-Earth Flyby (0.088 AU)
FRIDAY
☆ Jun 21 — CNSA, Launch Long March 2C / Space Variable Objects Monitor (SVOM), LC-2, Xichang Satellite Launch Center, China: Long March 2C rocket to launch France / China multi-band astronomical observatory to monitor gamma-ray bursts from 625-km orbit.
● Jun 21 — LPI, USRA, NASA, Online / Houston TX: Abstracts Due: Lunar Surface Science Workshop 24: Science Drivers and Capabilities for Lunar Surface Habitat Research Facilities; being held Aug 20.
☾ Jun 21 — Moon: Full Strawberry Moon, 15:09.
☆ Jun 21 — Amor Asteroid 2024 LO2: Near-Earth Flyby (0.036 AU)
SATURDAY
☆ Jun 22 — Apollo Asteroid 2024 LJ: Near-Earth Flyby (0.022 AU)
SUNDAY
☆ Jun 23 — International Space Station, U.S. EVA #90, ~415-km LEO: Expedition 71 planning 6.5-hour spacewalk starting 17:00 HST, live coverage available.
o Jun 23-28 — AOGS Committee, Pyeongchang, Gangwon-do, S Korea: 21st Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS-2024) meeting.
☾ Jun 23 — Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, Moon Orbit: NASA spacecraft reaches 15 full years / enters 16th year in Moon orbit today; launched Jun 18, 2009, arrived at Moon 5 days later.
☆ Jun 23 — Amor Asteroid 2024 KN1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.037 AU)