Author: jappe

  • NASA Says No Special Treatment for SpaceX in Falcon 9 Investigation

    Falcon 9 Launch Failure
    NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said that the agency is carrying out an independent review of the June 28 Falcon 9 launch failure, but using existing mechanisms rather than a separate panel.
    Credit: NASA TV

    WASHINGTON — Responding to congressional criticism that suggested NASA was giving SpaceX special treatment, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said the agency is conducting an independent review of the company’s June launch failure.

    In an Aug. 24 letter to House Science Committee Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas), Bolden said the appearance of special treatment accorded to SpaceX over Orbital ATK was a “misunderstanding” because NASA is taking a different approach to reviews of the two companies’ launch failures.

    “First and foremost, I want to assure you that NASA is performing an independent analysis” of the June 28 Falcon 9 launch failure on SpaceX’s seventh cargo mission to the International Space Station under its Commercial Resupply Services (CRS) contract with NASA, Bolden wrote in the letter, released by the agency Aug. 25. [See photos of the failed SpaceX rocket launch]

    Orbital’s Antares rocket failed in October, also on a CRS mission to the space station.

    Bolden’s letter is in response to one by Smith Aug. 4, where he questioned NASA’s decision to establish a formal independent review panel for the Antares failure but not for the Falcon 9 accident. Smith indicated that choice appeared to reflect favoritism towards SpaceX.

    “The discrepancy between the approaches taken by NASA in response to these two similar events raises questions about not only the equity and fairness of NASA’s process for initiating independent accident investigations, but also the fidelity of the investigations themselves,”Smith wrote.

    In his response, Bolden noted that immediately after the Antares failure, NASA decided to establish a formal independent review team.

    While NASA was formally part of Orbital’s own accident investigation board, Bolden said the independent review was intended to “inform and amplify the learning for the NASA team.”

    For the Falcon 9 failure, however, NASA instead elected to have the agency’s Launch Services Program (LSP) lead the review into the accident. Unlike Antares, which has no other NASA contracts beyond its CRS flights, NASA has contracts for Falcon 9 missions beyond ISS cargo missions. That includes the launch of the Jason-3 satellite, which prior to the June failure was scheduled for launch in August.

    Bolden wrote that William Gerstenmaier, NASA associate administrator for human exploration and operations, concluded LSP’s review of the failure “would lead to an in-depth understanding of the events.” It would also, he said, be an efficient use of resources, since NASA’s commercial crew program is also interested in the investigation.

    Bolden’s response to Smith included an Aug. 3 “memorandum for the record” from Gerstenmaier discussing his decision to let LSP lead NASA’s investigation into the Falcon 9 failure. “Their experience and understanding of the Falcon 9 system for NASA robotic missions places LSP in a unique position to most efficiently and independently evaluate the events that occurred on CRS-7 that led to its failure and to ensure that the resulting corrective actions are implemented appropriately,” he wrote in the memo.

    Unlike the Antares investigation, NASA does not have a full voting representative on SpaceX’s accident investigation board. However, Bolden said that NASA still has “leverage” over the report’s findings because of its other launch contracts, which give the agency the right to accept or reject the findings of that investigation and any corrective actions before allowing those launches to take place.

    That difference in approaches in NASA’s independent reviews of the failures, Bolden acknowledged, may not have been clear to Smith and others. “Note that due to this misunderstanding, many of the questions posed were written under an incorrect premise that NASA is not conducting an independent review” of the Falcon 9 launch failure, he wrote, referring to a set of questions in Smith’s letter.

    Neither company has formally completed their investigations into their respective launch failures, but both have identified their likely causes. Orbital ATK executives said earlier this year they traced the cause of the Antares failure to excessive bearing wear in the turbopump of an AJ-26 first-stage engine, but have not disclosed what caused that wear. Orbital is replacing the AJ-26 with the RD-181 engine, and expects the Antares to return to flight in early 2016.

    SpaceX Chief Executive Elon Musk said in a July 20 briefing that the company believes a strut holding down a helium bottle with an upper stage propellant tank failed, causing the tank to overpressurize and burst. Musk said at the time that the Falcon 9 could return to flight as soon as September, but the company has not yet announced a launch date.

    This story was provided by SpaceNews, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

  • Pluto Probe Starts Beaming Home 'Treasure Trove' of Flyby Data

    Pluto’s Ice Mountains
    NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft spotted ice mountains 2 miles (3 kilometers) high on Pluto during its July 2015 flyby of the dwarf planet.
    Credit: NASA/JHUAPL/SWRI

    NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft has begun beaming home the best data from its epic July Pluto flyby.

    On July 14, New Horizons became the first probe ever to fly by Pluto, zooming within 7,800 miles (12,550 kilometers) of the dwarf planet’s enigmatic surface. New Horizons sent some images and measurements back to its handlers immediately after the encounter, but stored the vast majority onboard for later transmission.

    That transmission — which involves tens of gigabits of information — began in earnest on Saturday (Sept. 5) and should take about a year to complete, mission team members said. [Destination Pluto: NASA’s New Horizons Mission in Pictures]

    “This is what we came for — these images, spectra and other data types that are going to help us understand the origin and the evolution of the Pluto system for the first time,” New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, said in a statement.

    “And what’s coming is not just the remaining 95 percent of the data that’s still aboard the spacecraft — it’s the best data sets, the highest-resolution images and spectra, the most important atmospheric data sets and more,” Stern added. “It’s a treasure trove.”

    New Horizons is beaming its data back with the help of NASA’s Deep Space Network, a system of big radio dishes in California, Spain and Australia that serves a variety of agency spacecraft.

    The typical downlink rate is between 1 and 4 kilobits per second, NASA officials said. And communication is far from instantaneous; New Horizons is about 3 billion miles (4.8 billion kilometers) from Earth, so it takes signals from the craft, which are traveling at the speed of light, about 4.5 hours to get here.

    The images that New Horizons has already beamed home revealed towering ice mountains and vast, geologically young plains on Pluto, as well as giant canyons on the dwarf planet’s largest moon, Charon. Mission team members therefore have high hopes about the probe’s complete flyby data set.

    “The New Horizons mission has required patience for many years, but from the small amount of data we saw around the Pluto flyby, we know the results to come will be well worth the wait,” said New Horizons project scientist Hal Weaver, of the the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.

    New Horizons is probably not done gathering data. The probe’s handlers will soon begin steering it toward a small object called 2014 MU69, which lies about 1 billion miles (1.6 billion km) beyond Pluto. If NASA approves a proposed extended mission for New Horizons, the spacecraft will fly by 2014 MU69 in early 2019.

    Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • Galileo satellites in launch zone

    Europe’s ninth and tenth Galileo satellites have reached their launch pad, taking their position atop the vertical Soyuz launcher in readiness for Friday’s launch.

  • What's The Point? The Real Reason Scientists Study Space (Op-Ed)

    Hannah Rae Kerner is chair of Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS), executive director of the Space Frontier Foundation, and a Ph.D. student at Arizona State University studying machine learning applications for astrophysics and robotic control. She contributed this article to Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

    Recently, my dad and I were in a Bojangles’ restaurant in Charlotte, North Carolina. I grew up in that city, and I was visiting my family before starting graduate school in Tempe, Arizona. I was struggling to keep my egg and cheese biscuit together almost as much as I was struggling to answer my dad’s question about what exactly I’d be doing in grad school. I explained for a while, my sentences peppered with words like “autonomous,” “neural networks,” “spectrometry” and “swarming.” He listened and made a good attempt to understand, at least enough to relay the answer to others, and at the end delivered the inevitable, “Wow. That’s really cool stuff.” And then, “You know, all of that stuff is really cool and everyone working on it is supersmart, but I always kind of wonder what the point of it all is.” 

    If you’re a topical expert — researcher, business leader, author or innovator — and would like to contribute an op-ed piece, email us here.
    Credit: SPACE.com

    As the leader of two national space advocacy organizations, I should have been able to deliver a clear and confident answer. My dad’s question was of the sort people in my field are asked all the time by the public and the media. But I stumbled. I rambled off some nonsense about how space research and technologies often result in useful medical and household technologies  like MRIs, baby food and sneakers. To be honest, I always stumble on this question, probably because I’m never quite convinced by my own answer. Now I’ve realized why: It’s not the right answer. 

    What’s the point?

    As space scientists, we’re forced to explain how our work translates to people’s daily lives, how we’re helping them directly. In answering the question, “What’s the point?”, in converting the meaning of our work to units of impact on the average citizen, we are forced to dilute that meaning. In answering this question, we claim to be trying to put it “in layman’s terms,” but rather than teaching and fostering understanding, we are mutilating our work into some sort of “spin-off” explanation that feels like a lie. 

    The right answer is that thinking about problems on scales like the astronomical is good. It is fundamentally worthwhile for humans to push the boundaries of their understanding, to convert the unknown into the known through the power of scientific inquiry. 

    Rather than “What’s the point?” the question should be, “What does thinking about and understanding these problems mean for humans and for the evolution of humanity as a part of the universe?”

    Opening eyes

    Scientific inquiry has led humans to discover that not just this planet but eight other planets (fine, seven other planets) orbit a star that is halfway through its lifetime. Humans discovered that at least one of those planets contains water and methane, because scientists built a robot, slingshot it across orbits that humans had discovered, and made it land itself on a planet 140 million miles 225 million kilometers) away and drill a hole, all by itself.

    Astronomers took this image, a teeny-tiny sliver through the fabric of space-time, looking back more than 13 billion years:

    Hubble Telescope Spots Most Distant Galaxies

    NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has made the deepest image of the universe ever taken in near-infrared light. The faintest and reddest objects in the image are galaxies that formed 600 million years after the Big Bang. The image was taken by the new Wide Field Camera 3 in the same region as the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF), which was taken in 2004 and is the deepest visible-light image of the universe.
    Credit: ASA, ESA, G. Illingworth (UCO/Lick Observatory and the Univ. of California, Santa Cruz), R. Bouwens (UCO/Lick Observ. and Leiden Univ.), and the HUDF09 Team

    Humans have not only walked on the moon, but also collected geological samples on it, tested theories of gravity on it and hit a golf ball on it. People took this picture of the Earth from the moon , showing humanity just how vulnerable this planet is, and inspiring its inhabitants to protect the only place in the universe known to harbor life:

    Apollo 8 Earthrise

    “Earthrise,” the first picture taken of planet Earth by people orbiting the moon. This shot was captured by Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders on December 24, 1968, as his spacecraft became the first to fly around the moon.
    Credit: NASA

    Every one of those discoveries occurred because people were studying what inspired them, what they felt was worthwhile — what they loved to think about every day. What a backwards and miserable population humans would be if they could not work on the things that they love, that they feel are meaningful, that blow their minds. That people can hold an understanding, however tenuous, of something so large as the universe in something so small as the human brain makes this pursuit worthwhile. 

    The point of it all is that humans are seeking the point of it all.

    Follow all of the Expert Voices issues and debates — and become part of the discussion — on Facebook, Twitter and Google+. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. This version of the article was originally published on Space.com.

  • Wow! Space Station Astronauts Awed by Dazzling Auroras (Video)

    Earth’s natural light show — the auroras — flared into high gear Monday (Sep. 7), creating a breathtaking display that astronaut Scott Kelly said was like no other aurora he’d ever seen.

    Bright-green rivers of light and a deep-crimson haze decorated Earth’s atmosphere during the Labor Day light show. From his vantage point on the International Space Station, Kelly caught several snapshots of the waving green lights, as well as a vivid time-lapse video.

    “I would say yesterday was probably the second-most impressive thing I’ve ever seen,” Kelly said in an interview broadcast today (Sep. 8) on NASA TV. “The first thing was when I saw Earth from space the first time.” [Amazing Auroras: Breathtaking Northern Lights Photos of 2015]

    Kelly posted several photos of the waving green lights on Twitter, and included a time-lapse video of the lights’ movement, writing that it was a Labor Day gift to the United States. 

    In the interview, Kelly was joined by the other eight people currently living on the orbiting laboratory as he discussed the unbelievable natural fireworks.

    “Yesterday, we had some incredible auroras outside, like none I’ve ever seen before with regards to how vivid it was,” Kelly said during the interview. “We had heard a solar storm was on its way, and usually, we think it takes a couple of days from solar activity to an incredible show outside. But in this case, it was much faster, and the Earth responded much quicker.”

    Skywatchers at high northern latitudes of Earth were able to see the auroras as well. Sightings were reported from Alaska, parts of Canada, southern Norway and Sweden, and as far south as Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

    The Labor Day auroras began when a geomagnetic storm engulfed the Earth, according to Spaceweather.com. Geomagnetic storms are caused by flurries of energetic, charged particles released by the sun. This storm was only of moderate strength — a G2 on a scale that goes up to G5. A G2 storm can cause minor problems for satellites in orbit and power grids on Earth (whereas stronger storms can damage these systems severely). Nonetheless, this “moderate” storm created a spectacular auroral display.

    Editor’s note: If you have an amazing photo of Monday’s aurora or any other night-sky view you’d like to share for a possible story or image gallery, please contact managing editor Tariq Malik at spacephotos@space.com.

    Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her @SarahExplains. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Space Station Astronauts Talk Crewed Mars Missions (Real and Fictional)

    International Space Station Crew Members on Sept. 8, 2015
    International Space Station crew members, including Scott Kelly, Mikhail Kornienko, Gennady Padalka, Oleg Kononenko, Sergei Volkov, Kjell Lindgren, Kimiya Yui, Andreas Mogensen and Aidyn Aimbetov, talk with reporters on Sept. 8, 2015.
    Credit: NASA TV

    HOUSTON — If Scott Kelly were on a spaceship heading out to Mars — rather than on board the International Space Station, where he has been for the last 6 months — he would be arriving at the Red Planet just about now.

    Instead, Kelly and his eight crewmates — astronauts and cosmonauts from five different nations — took time out of their day circling the Earth on Tuesday (Sept. 8) to talk to reporters about life on board the outpost and what a trip to Mars might be like for those in the future.

    “I think for the folks who go to Mars — especially the first ones — it is going to be such an incredible destination and event that they are going to be really psyched up getting there,” stated Kelly, reflecting on the differences between reaching the midway point of his almost yearlong mission and the 6 months it will take future astronauts to reach the fourth planet from the sun. [5 Manned Mission to Mars Ideas

    “I am not saying I am not psyched up for the rest of this, [but] in some ways, almost being halfway through, a lot of what we are going to [do for the remainder of the mission] is very similar to what we have already done,” he added.

    Kelly, who took over command of the station’s Expedition 45 crew on Saturday (Sept. 5), launched to the outpost in March along with Russian cosmonauts Mikhail Kornienko and Gennady Padalka. Like Kelly, Kornienko is set to stay aboard the orbiting laboratory until March 2016, gathering medical data in support of future crewed missions deeper into the solar system, including to Mars.

    Padalka, meanwhile, is set to return to Earth on Friday (Sept. 11), landing together with Danish astronaut Andreas Mogensen and Kazakh cosmonaut Aidyn Aimbetov, who arrived on the space station just one week ago. When he lands, Padalka will have logged a record-setting 878 days in space over the course of his five missions — more than enough time to have flown out to Mars, spent a year and a half on its surface, and then returned to Earth.

    “We have a person who has been here the whole time that is getting ready to leave — Gennady — and that obviously wouldn’t happen on Mars. So that [too] makes it a little bit different, with people coming and going,” Kelly observed. “So I think it is hard to compare the two experiences.”

    “But man, I’m excited for the folks who get to go to Mars,” he added.

    For now, Kelly and his space station crewmates, including fellow NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren, may have to make do with fictional voyages to Mars like the one depicted in the upcoming 20th Century Fox film, “The Martian.” Kelly and Lindgren recently called down from space to chat with the movie’s star, Matt Damon, while the actor was touring NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.

    “It was certainly fun for us, and from a picture of [Damon] at JPL, it looks like he was having fun as well,” Lindgren said. “It is neat to think about the trip we’ll have to Mars.”

    Lindgren said that both he and Kelly had read and enjoyed author Andy Weir’s book, on which the Ridley Scott film is based, and they were looking forward to seeing the movie when it opens in theaters on Oct. 2.

    “We’re hopeful for a copy up here, either on the day of the release or soon thereafter,” Lindgren said.

    Mogensen, who will be on Earth by the time “The Martian” premieres, said that sometimes movies can be so realistic today that they can detract from part of the experience of first flying into space.

    Cosmic Quiz: Do You Know the International Space St…

    The International Space Station is the largest structure in space ever built by humans. Let’s see how much you know about the basics of this science laboratory in the sky.

    Sunlight glints off the International Space Station.

    0 of 10 questions complete

    Cosmic Quiz: Do You Know the International Space St…

    The International Space Station is the largest structure in space ever built by humans. Let’s see how much you know about the basics of this science laboratory in the sky.

    Start Quiz
    Sunlight glints off the International Space Station.

    0 of questions complete

    “I remember thinking that maybe our movie industry has ruined the moment a little because they are so good now at making highdefinition IMAX movies,” Mogensen said. “You can actually go to a good cinema [film] that is very, very close to what we see.”

    But on the other hand, the European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut said, life aboard the International Space Station is so unique that it is “almost impossible to imagine what it is going to be like until you get up here.”

    “What’s really incredible for me is a sense of being aboard this gigantic spaceship that is slowly circling the Earth,” said Mogensen, recalling the hum of the station’s fans as he gazed down at the world below. “It just reminds you of being aboard the Starship Enterprise and arriving at a new planet and, yeah, about to explore this new planet. So it is [a] really cool feeling.”

    Watch astronauts and cosmonauts on the International Space Station reply to reporters on collectSPACE.com.

    Follow collectSPACE.com on Facebook and on Twitter at @collectSPACE. Copyright 2015 collectSPACE.com. All rights reserved.

  • Space-Borne Astronaut Runs Robot On Earth | Video

    Credit: ESA

  • Hopping 'Hedgehog' Robot Could Explore Comets and Asteroids (Video)

    This summer, researchers tested two “hedgehog” robot prototypes, to get an idea of the machines’ potential to explore space locations inaccessible to conventional rovers.

    Wheeled robots like the car-size Mars rover Curiosity work well on planetary surfaces, but in the low-gravity environment of a comet or an asteroid, such machines would be in danger of floating away or snagging on the rough terrain, NASA officials said.

    That’s where the Hedgehog comes in. This spiked cube moves around using spinning and braking internal flywheels. The spikes keep the robot attached to the ground and protect its more delicate body from the terrain.

    Hedgehog Robot Illustration

    The Hedgehog robot will function regardless of which side lands facing up. Image released Sept. 3, 2015.
    Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Stanford

    “Hedgehog is a different kind of robot that would hop and tumble on the surface instead of rolling on wheels,” Issa Nesnas, Hedgehog team leader at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, said in a statement.

    “It is shaped like a cube and can operate no matter which side it lands on,” Nesnas added. “The spikes could also house instruments such as thermal probes to take the temperature of the surface as the robot tumbles.”

    Two Hedgehog prototypes were tested this summer aboard a NASA C-9 aircraft that flies parabolic arcs to generate microgravity conditions for a few seconds at a time. During 180 parabolas over the course of four flights, the robots’ handlers tried out several ways of moving them around on various types of terrain.

    Some of the maneuvers in Hedgehog’s repository include “yaw” (a turn in place using the spikes) or a “tornado” (in which the robot can spin aggressively on a spike and launch off the surface).

    One prototype was created by JPL and the other by Stanford University. The JPL prototype weighs roughly 11 lbs. (5 kilograms), while the Stanford prototype is smaller and lighter, and contains shorter spikes. Also, the two prototypes brake differently: JPL’s uses disc brakes, whereas the Stanford robot uses friction belts, NASA officials said.

    The research is in Phase 2 development under the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts program, and is led by Marco Pavone, assistant professor of aeronautics and astronautics at Stanford.

    Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • World View Offers Cost-Sharing Balloon Flights to Stratosphere

    World View Enterprises’ First Commercial Balloon Flight
    A World View Enterprises balloon about to lift off from southeastern Arizona on March 8, 2015, on the company’s first commercial flight.
    Credit: World View Enterprises

    The cost of sending a scientific experiment to the stratosphere aboard a balloon just went down.

    Arizona-based World View Enterprises announced today (Sept. 8) that it’s introducing a cost-sharing system that will let researchers and educators loft payloads to near space, about 130,000 feet (39,600 meters) above Earth, via a balloon for as little as $20,000. (Typical “full flight” contracts, by contrast, cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, company representatives said.)

    The new system applies to payloads that range in mass from less than 1 pound (0.45 kilograms) to more than a few hundred pounds, World View representatives said.

    “Until now, access to the stratosphere has been incredibly rare and very expensive. That’s what makes World View’s fractional payload pricing model a game-changer,” World View chief scientist Alan Stern, who also leads NASA’s New Horizons Pluto mission, said in a statement. “We plan to take what was rare and make it routine and affordable.”

    World View has already lofted payloads for NASA and other customers on unmanned balloon flights, and the company is working to get people to the stratosphere as well, for $75,000 per seat. Each manned flight would feature six paying passengers and two World View crewmembers.

    World View hopes to start launching these crewed flights, which would allow passengers to see the curvature of the Earth and the blackness of space, sometime next year, company representatives have said.

    Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • What's That Strange Bright Dot in the Morning Sky?

    Astrophotographer Jeff Dai sent in a photo of Venus and Jupiter over Lake Namtso, Tibet, caught on July 15, 2015. Venus will be extremely bright in the morning sky during September and October.
    Credit: Jeff Dai

    If you see a bright light just above the horizon at sunrise, don’t panic! It’s not a UFO — it’s probably just Venus.

    Planetariums, observatories, weather offices and maybe even police stations may receive a bevy of inquiries in the coming days and weeks concerning a strange bright dot that is now dominating the predawn eastern sky. As sunrise comes later and later, more and more people may see this bright morning object.

    But it’s only the planet Venus in the opening stages of a spectacular morning apparition that will continue through September and October. In addition, Jupiter will join Venus in the early-morning sky for a gorgeous celestial tango. [Photos of Venus, the Mysterious Planet Next Door | Venus]

    Venus made the transition from the evening sky to the morning sky on Aug. 15, when it was rising 45 minutes before sunrise. By the start of September, it was coming up before the break of dawn, at around 4:50 a.m. local time. For the rest of this month, it rises about 2.5 minutes earlier than it did the previous morning. From Sept. 21 through Oct. 26, Venus will rise no later than 3:30 a.m., and will hold court in complete darkness for more than 2 hours before the eastern sky begins to brighten.

    All month long, Venus will continue to brighten, and early-morning commuters will likely wonder about this brilliant luminous object that suddenly burst upon the predawn scene. By the end of September, Venus will be firmly established as a dazzling harbinger of sunrise.

    Meanwhile, for the second time in 2015, Venus and Jupiter will engage in a close conjunction — this time, separated by just more than 1 degree, with Venus passing to the lower right of Jupiter and shining more than 10 times brighter than the gas giant. Then, there will be two “mysterious” bright lights for the price of one!

    As October ends, Venus rises almost 4 full hours before the sun and hangs at nearly 40 degrees at sunrise. 

    A quick transition

    Some stargazers might wonder why Venus became a dazzling morning entity more quickly than those occasions when it seems to take many days, weeks and sometimes even months to make the transition into the evening sky. 

    The difference between this current transition and evening-sky transitions lies in Venus’ position relative to the Earth. When Venus is moving from the morning sky into the evening sky (called “superior conjunction”) it’s positioned on the opposite side of the sun relative to Earth. Located about 160 million miles (257 million kilometers) from Earth on these occasions, Venus is moving at its slowest against the background stars. What’s more, it is also moving in the same apparent direction against the stars as the sun — to the east. So, in the days leading up to and after superior conjunction, Venus continues to languish in the bright glare of the sun. 

    In an evening transition, Venus moves just far enough away from the sun to be glimpsed for a short time, low near the western horizon shortly after sunset. After a number of weeks, it climbs high enough to become visible in the evening sky.

    But for a morning transition, things are much different: On Aug. 15, Venus was at “inferior conjunction,” meaning it was passing between Earth and the sun. It was also only about 25 million miles (40 million km) from Earth — more than six times closer than at superior conjunction — so it appears to be moving much faster against the background stars. And, most important of all, as seen from Earth, the sun and Venus appear to be moving in opposite directions. While the sun plods along toward the east, Venus is racing away to the west, which allows it to literally “bolt” into the morning sky and become readily established as a predawn beacon over a span of just a week or two, as opposed to many weeks in the evening. 

    And lastly, because it’s so much nearer to Earth, morning apparitions begin with Venus already near its peak brilliance.    

    Crescent Venus

    Through a telescope right now, the phase of Venus looks most remarkable. Observers with optical aid will be treated to the marvel of a large crescent. You can even see the crescent with 7 X 50 binoculars. In the weeks to come, the crescent will slowly thicken and shrink as Venus pulls away from the Earth. As November opens, Venus will resemble a half moon. Later that month, continuing through the remainder of the fall and into the winter, Venus will have shrunk to a tiny, albeit brilliant, gibbous disk.  

    So, if you hear about any early-morning UFO sightings during the coming weeks, know that these are most likely Venus sightings!

    Editor’s note: If you capture an amazing view of Venus or any other night sky view and want to share it with Space.com, send images and comments in to managing editor Tariq Malik at: spacephotos@space.com

    Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmer’s Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, New York.

    Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Space Station Crosses Sun's Face in Spectacular New Photo

    Space Station Crosses Sun's Face
    This composite photo made from five images shows the International Space Station crossing the sun’s face on Sept. 6, 2015. The images were captured from Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.
    Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

    An amazing new photo shows the International Space Station crossing the sun’s face.

    The picture, a composite of five images taken Sunday (Sept. 6) from Shenandoah National Park in Virginia by NASA photographer Bill Ingalls, captures a “transit” of the International Space Station (ISS) across the solar disk.

    Such transits don’t last very long, because the space station zooms around Earth at more than 17,000 mph (27,000 km/h) — the $100 billion complex completes one lap around our planet once every 90 minutes or so.

    Transits can offer more than just aesthetic appeal. For example, in the 18th century, astronomers were able to calculate the distance from the Earth to the sun by carefully observing two transits of Venus across the sun’s face (one in 1761 and the other in 1769) from various locations around the globe. And NASA’s Kepler space telescope has spotted thousands of potential exoplanets by detecting the tiny brightness dips they cause when crossing in front of their stars from the observatory’s perspective.

    The ISS is currently staffed by nine space fliers. But three of them — cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, Denmark’s Andreas Mogensen and Kazakhstan’s Aidyn Aimbetov — will come back to Earth Saturday (Sept. 12), returning the orbiting lab to its normal complement of six crewmembers.

    Editor’s note: If you capture an amazing photo of a night sky view and want to share it with Space.com, send images and comments in to managing editor Tariq Malik at: spacephotos@space.com

    Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • Spiky Hedgehog-Bots Will Explore Comets And Asteroids | Video

    Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

  • Auroras Dance Below Space Station As Orion Rises | Time-Lapse Video

    Credit: NASA/@StationCDRKelly/Mash Mix by Space.com’s @SteveSpaleta