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  • Watch Purple Lasers Light Up NASA's Parker Solar Probe in Test

    NASA’s Parker Solar Probe — which will fly closer to the sun than any spacecraft in history — recently passed an important prelaunch test of its solar panels with flying colors. Well, one color, in particular: Researchers used purple lasers at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center to examine the probe. 

    Coincidentally, the purple hue of the lasers recalls Pantone’s 2018 Color of the Year, a regal hue dubbed Ultra Violet by the Pantone Color Institute. Aptly enough, the company’s executive director, Leatrice Eiseman, said in a statement that the color “suggests the mysteries of the cosmos, the intrigue of what lies ahead and the discoveries beyond where we are now.” [NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Mission to the Sun (Infographic)]

    Engineers use purple lasers to test the solar panels on NASA's Parker Solar Probe.

    Engineers use purple lasers to test the solar panels on NASA’s Parker Solar Probe.

    Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman

    Aimed at the spacecraft’s solar array, the purple lasers helped researchers verify that the 44 strings of solar cells on each panel are still electrically connected, following vibration and acoustic testing conducted earlier this fall, according to a statement from NASA. The vigorous noise and shaking helped simulate launch conditions that the probe will undergo when it takes off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on July 31, 2018. 

    The spacecraft will study the ejections of material and light that create “solar weather,” and help scientists better understand some of the mysteries of our nearest star, such as why its atmosphere is hotter than its surface.

    Critically, the panels will provide the power for the probe’s sojourn in space. The laser testing was completed the week of Nov. 27, led by engineers at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab in Maryland, which is constructing the spacecraft and will operate it during its mission.

    These tests use lasers because their tight beams allow the illumination of a single string of solar cells at a time, according to the statement. The color of a laser beam is determined by the wavelength of light that composes it. The engineers happened to have purple lasers readily available, and the solar cells operate efficiently at that wavelength, according to the statement. 

    The test also employed infrared lasers, which are invisible to the human eye. 

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

  • Icy Surface of Jupiter Moon Europa May See Slo-Mo Flow

    The frozen surface of Jupiter’s icy moon Europa is seen in extreme detail in this remastered photo made from images taken by NASA’s Galileo spacecraft in the late 1990s. A new study suggests that the ice on Europa may move between the moon’s poles and its equator.

    Ice on Jupiter’s moon Europa may drift across the satellite’s surface from the equator to the poles, or vice versa, at a literally glacial pace, a new study finds.

    Potential future missions to Europa could analyze this ice flow to discover hints about whether the ocean hidden under the ice’s surface might be warm enough to support life, researchers said.

    Europa is nearly the size of Earth’s moon. Under an icy shell up to more than 18 miles (30 kilometers) thick, Europa may possess an ocean perhaps about 100 miles (160 km) deep, scientists have said. [Europa in Pictures: Jupiter’s Icy Moons]

    Since there is life virtually wherever there is water on Earth, Europa may be one of the most likely places in the solar system to find extraterrestrial life, said the new study’s lead author, Yosef Ashkenazy, a climate dynamicist at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel, and his colleagues. The study was detailed Dec. 4 in the journal Nature Astronomy.

    Europa’s icy crust shields the moon’s ocean from view. However, clues about how this underground ocean behaves might be deduced from Europa’s surface, especially regions known as chaos terrains, where ice has warped and broken into jumbled blocks. These strange areas cover up to 40 percent of Europa’s surface, clustered mostly around the Jovian moon’s equator.

    Prior work suggested that this chaotic terrain resulted from churning within the ice, causing blocks of it to rise vertically. Now, Ashkenazy and his colleagues have analyzed how this ice might also move horizontally across Europa’s surface.

    Previous research suggested that ice may vary in thickness across Europa’s surface because the moon’s poles are much colder than its equator. The differences in thickness could help drive ice to drift across Europa’s surface, but until now, scientists had not studied how this flow might behave.

    The scientists developed a model of Europa’s shell composed of warm, soft ice flowing beneath a cold, brittle, rigid ice crust, a bit like how Earth’s crust possesses hot flowing rock underneath colder, even more brittle rock. Underneath Europa’s crust, the model also simulated an ocean heated by a warm core and by friction generated by Jupiter’s gravitational pull. [Inside Europa: Jupiter’s Icy Moon Explained (Infographic)]

    The model found that if Europa’s icy crust was thick enough, temperatures would vary enough within the underground ocean for a kind of churning known as convection to occur. “In Earth’s atmosphere and oceans, convection is a quick process, but with the ice of Europa, it would occur over the timescale of millions of years,” Ashkenazy said.

    If convection occurred within Europa’s ocean, heat could flow from the equator to the poles, enough for the equator to become significantly cool compared to the poles, he said. “In this scenario, ice would flow from the equator to the poles,” Ashkenazy said, because the ice at the equator could be miles thicker than at the poles.

    However, if Europa’s crust is relatively thin and convection does not occur within its ocean, the poles would be much colder than the equator. “This would lead to warmer ice at the equator and thicker ice at the poles, and the pressure gradient would lead ice to flow from the poles to the equator,” Ashkenazy said.

    The rate of ice flow would be very slow, on the order of about 0.4 inches (1 centimeter) per year, Ashkenazy said. Still, future missions to Europa could look for signs of this ice flow by measuring how thick Europa’s crust was at different points across the moon’s surface. Doing so “can help improve our understanding of what’s going on beneath Europa’s surface,” Ashkenazy said.

    Follow Charles Q. Choi on Twitter @cqchoi. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Metal Asteroid Psyche Is Ready for an Early Visit from NASA

    This article was originally published at The Conversation. The publication contributed the article to Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

    Three times further away from the sun than the Earth lies an enormous lump of metal. Around 252km in diameter, the metallic “M-class” asteroid 16 Psyche is the target of NASA’s next mission to the belt of giant rocks that encircles the inner solar system. And the space agency now plans to visit it much sooner than originally planned.

    Not only has the launch has been brought forward one year to the summer of 2022, but NASA’s scientists have also found a way to get to Psyche (pronounced SYKe-ee) much faster by taking a more efficient trajectory. The new route means the Psyche spacecraft won’t have to swing around the Earth to build up speed and won’t pass as close to the sun, so it needs less heat protection. It is now due to arrive in 2026, four years earlier than the original timeline.

    The main aim of the journey to Psyshe is to gather more information about our own solar system. Psyche is one of many wandering members of the asteroid belt. Unlike the rest of its rocky neighbours, Psyche appears to be entirely made of nickel and iron, just like the Earth’s core. This, together with its size, has led to the theory that it might be the remains of the inside of a planet.

    Asteroids are made up of primitive materials, leftovers from the dust cloud from which our solar system originated. Different types of asteroids resemble the various steps it took to form planets from this dust cloud. This means they reveal a lot about the origin and evolution of our solar system. Scientists think Psyche could be what’s left of an exposed metal core of a planet very similar to Earth.

    We actually derive much of our knowledge about asteroids and the evolution of planets from the study of meteorites. Many asteroids and comets are primitive protoplanetary bodies accumulated from the same dust cloud our solar system originates from. As these protoplanetary bodies collide, gravity pulls them together into ever-larger bodies. Eventually these bodies become big and hot enough to partially melt, allowing heavy materials such as iron to sink to the core – and lighter material such as silicon to rise to the surface.

    This process, known as differentiation, explains why Earth and other planets such as Mercury, Venus or Mars have an iron core and silicon-rich mantle and crust. The 16 Psyche asteroid is thought to be the leftover iron core of a planet stripped of its mantle in a giant collision.

    But many questions regarding the formation of Psyche remain. How do you strip a planet of its mantle only leaving the core? Perhaps there is an alternative formation mechanism of an iron-rich body that does not involve differentiation? Psyche may once have been molten and, if so, did it cool from the inside out or from its surface to the core?

    Also, Earth’s magnetic field comes from a liquid outer core circling around a solid inner core. Did these processes occur on Psyche and create a magnetic field? What elements other than iron accumulate in a core? And how does the surface geology of an iron body look compared to a rocky or icy body?

    Asteroids are fascinating for lots of reasons. They contain a variety of valuable resources and slam into our planet on a regular basis, occasionally snuffing out most of Earth’s lifeforms. How much do you know about space rocks?

    Earth Causes Asteroid-Quakes

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    There are other reasons for visiting asteroids. For one thing, possible collisions with Earth can have devastating effects. The impact of an 15km-wide asteroid approximately 65m years ago is linked to the extinction of the dinosaurs. And the explosion of the 30m-diameter Chelyabinsk asteroid over Russia in 2013 led to injuries and damage on the ground. We need to know as much as possible about the composition and physical make-up of asteroids to devise the best ways to defend our planet.

    Asteroids also provide resources. Those containing water or other valuable materials may act as stepping stones for human exploration of the solar system. And asteroids crossing Earth’s orbit may become convenient targets for mining operations, providing materials that are running out on Earth and potentially taking environmentally detrimental extraction methods off Earth. Companies including Planetary Resources and countries like Luxembourg have already started to pursue these ideas in earnest.

    The Psyche spacecraft will carry four instruments to gather as much information about the asteroid as it can: a camera, a gamma-ray spectrometer to record what chemical elements are there, a magnetometer, and a radio gravity experiment. The data these devices collect should help us work out if Psyche is the frozen core of a former planet or simply a lump of unmelted metal. If it is a core, then it might help us determine exactly what’s at the centre of our own planet.

    Lindy Elkins-Tanton, the lead scientist of the mission, probably summarised it best: “We learn about inner space by visiting outer space”.

    Christian Schroeder, Senior Lecturer in Environmental Science and Planetary Exploration, University of Stirling

    This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article. 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.

  • Beagle 2: How We Found Our Lost Mars Lander After a Decade (And What's Next)

    This article was originally published at The Conversation. The publication contributed the article to Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

    The last picture taken of the Mars lander Beagle 2 showed it being successfully ejected from Mars Express on Christmas Day in 2003. But sadly, we never got a signal back from the lander and have ever since tried to work out what happened, and where it is. Eventually we made a breakthrough – and our findings have now been published in Royal Society Open Science.

    Beagle 2 fascinated many people from all walks of life, including me as a young planetary science researcher. I was attracted by the sense of possibility that it opened up. Space exploration didn’t have to be carried out just by Americans and Russians in their vast missions. The UK-led Beagle 2 caught some of the sense of the British optimism in the late 1990s, and the contemporary pop band Blur and artist Damien Hirst actually helped the late planetary scientist Colin Pillinger to get funding for the project.

    Our new results are based on a decade-long imaging campaign using the NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRISE camera. Even with its pixel sizes of 0.3 metres on the martian surface, finding a small lander was always going to be difficult. Before the start of the MRO/HiRISE mission in 2006 it was even impossible.

    In 2014, NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter captured these images of the lost Beagle 2 lander on the surface of the Red Planet. This image shows the various components of the lander, which was lost on Mars in 2003. Image uploaded Jan. 16, 2015.

    In 2014, NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter captured these images of the lost Beagle 2 lander on the surface of the Red Planet. This image shows the various components of the lander, which was lost on Mars in 2003. Image uploaded Jan. 16, 2015.

    Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona/University of Leicester

    Luckily, using Mars Express trajectory data, the European Space Agency (ESA) recalculated the Beagle 2 landing zone (the shape of an ellipse) from an original axis of 174km to 57km – greatly reducing the area on Mars that needed to be searched. Even so, we had to find a 1.5 metre lander in over 1400km2 of Mars.

    Between 2006 and 2014, a total of 26 HiRISE images were examined for signs of Beagle 2 – without success. However, German citizen scientist Michael Croon (a former member of the Mars Express operations team) had noticed a gap between HiRISE images within Beagle’s landing ellipse. With HiRISE, anyone can suggest a target to be imaged on Mars – if the case for it looks good, it will be taken and put on the public website.

    Beagle 2 after separation, on the left.

    Beagle 2 after separation, on the left.

    Credit: ESA, CC BY-SA

    In November 2014, Croon noted possible identification of the lander in the image he had requested, and asked for repeat imaging. The spot was some 20km from the original landing target in Isidis Planitia, a vast basin with signs of an ancient habitable environment. The red, oxidised martian surface at Isidis reflects light in a diffuse way but here was a strikingly bright object showing specular reflections – just the way light would be expected to reflect off the metallic and solar panel surfaces of a man-made object like Beagle 2.

    Careful examination of combined multiple HiRISE images taken to check our observations showed a flat-lying, multi-lobed structure – Beagle 2. It suggested that some of the four solar panels had indeed deployed after landing. There was also an object moving between seven repeat HiRISE images. This may well be the lander’s aeroshell rear cover with its small parachute moving around on its tether.

    So why didn’t Beagle 2 communicate after landing? As a small, 33kg lander – compare that to the one tonne Curiosity rover behemoth – fitting all the communication and science equipment into the conical lander aeroshell was challenging. If one or more of the solar panels failed to deploy fully due to some damage at landing, then the radio antenna underneath them in the lander base would not have been able to communicate back to us via the Mars Express Orbiter.

    Nonetheless, it seems that much of the landing sequence worked, including stable atmospheric entry, parachute deployments, airbag inflation and separation, and at least the first part of the sequence of solar panels unfolding from the base. The next step is to take even more images – that should help us work out how much of the deployment sequence occurred.

    Pillinger was in some ways ahead of his time in seizing a chance to land on Mars. Currently there are several credible plans to land robotic vehicles on Mars within the next five years. At a recent Lunar and Deep Space Exploration Conference in Beijing, China reaffirmed its intention to launch a rover to Mars in 2020.

    There are intriguing signs that China is opening up its ambitious space programme to the outside world and seeking collaborators. ESA and Chinese astronauts have trained together, and importantly data from the recent Yutu lunar rover were released to the wider world. NASA have for a long time allowed everyone to access their data, and this culture of open access to science is clearly spreading.

    ESA rover test near the Paranal Observatory in Chile.

    ESA rover test near the Paranal Observatory in Chile.

    Credit: ESA

    India is planning a follow up to their Mangalyaan Mars orbiter success with a Mangalyaan 2 – and this may have a lander as well. The Indian government has signed a letter of intent with the French Space Agency CNES to help enable this. CNES is also looking to participate in a mission to Mars led by the United Arab Emirates. Indeed, collaboration is increasingly important – there are signs that Europe, the UK, US, Russia and India are also opening up at least some parts of their space programmes. How many other spheres of human activity can say that?

    But it’s not all about spacecraft. Since 2003, planetary scientists in the UK have continued to work on 129 identified martian meteorites. A natural development from this research is a sample return mission from an area on Mars that we think from its mineralogy was likely to have been habitable for microbial life. The NASA Mars2020 mission is envisaged as the first part of such a mission. Scientists in the UK are discussing plans to have a facility where samples from the solar system, including Mars, could be curated and studied.

    Meanwhile SpaceX are leading the way for commercial organisations to reach Mars and the moon. Whether they can successfully make it to Mars by 2020 remains to be seen but an exciting new commercial emphasis on the parts of space exploration that have until now been solely the domain of government and intergovernmental agencies has clearly arrived.

    However, the crash landing of the 2016 ESA Schiaparelli technology demonstrator lander is a salutary reminder that landing on and exploring another planet is not yet routine. We hope to learn from this in the ExoMars2020 rover mission. Excitingly the ExoMars 2020 rover has a two-metre drill and sophisticated instruments to test for signs of ancient life.

    Beagle 2 shows the fine and indistinct line between success and failure in Mars exploration. It introduced a new generation to the possibilities of space exploration and successfully achieved the initial stages of landing before unsuccessful final deployment of the solar panels. It will remain a significant part of the UK’s space science heritage for many years to come.

    John Bridges, Professor of Planetary Science, University of Leicester

    This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article. 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.

  • Farewell, Cassini: Saturn Spacecraft's Crash Is Top Spaceflight Story of 2017

    Artist’s illustration of NASA’s Cassini spacecraft plunging into Saturn’s atmosphere on Sept. 15, 2017.

    After 13 years in the Saturn system, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft had become an icon.  

    The probe’s data and imagery reshaped scientists’ understanding of the ringed planet and its 60-plus moons, and brought Saturn’s beauty and mystery to the masses all over the world.

    All of that storied work came to an end on Sept. 15, 2017, when Cassini’s handlers sent the craft hurtling into Saturn in an intentional death dive. This plunge wrung the most possible science from the mission while keeping any potentially habitable environments safe from contamination, NASA officials said. [The Biggest Spaceflight Stories of 2017]

    “Not only did we do science here at the very end, but we protected the science to be done in the future,” Thomas Zurbuchen, head of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington, D.C., said the day after Cassini’s plunge.

    Cassini launched in October 1997 and took nearly seven years to reach Saturn. The spacecraft performed science during the long journey, capturing information about Venus, Earth and Jupiter as it passed each on speed-boosting flybys.

    But Saturn was the main event, and Cassini exceeded expectations: The mission transformed our understanding of the ringed planet system.

    “I never imagined the discoveries we’d make,” Cassini team member Larry Esposito, of the University of Colorado, told Space.com. “Nature was way more creative than I imagined.”  [Cassini’s 13 Greatest Discoveries During Its 13 Years at Saturn]

    For example, Cassini spotted weird waves and strange propeller structures in Saturn’s rings. And before the probe’s mission, scientists had thought that the rings formed with the gas giant, about 4.5 billion years ago. Observations by NASA’s Voyager mission raised a few questions about this assumption in the late 1970s and early ’80s, but most scientists continued to believe the rings were ancient.

    Cassini’s data, however, suggest that the rings are only a few hundred million years old, Paul Estrada, a planetary researcher at the SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Institute in California, told Space.com. (Estrada presented these results at the American Geophysical Union annual winter meeting in New Orleans earlier this month.)

    And then there are the moons. Cassini discovered seas of liquid hydrocarbons on Saturn’s biggest satellite, Titan. Before this find, Earth had been the only known world with bodies of stable liquid on its surface. The spacecraft also spotted geysers of water ice blasting from the south pole of the ice-covered moon Enceladus. This water is coming from a buried, potentially habitable ocean of liquid water, mission team members later determined. [Photos: Enceladus, Saturn’s Geyser-Blasting Moon]

    Cassini’s observations of Titan and Enceladus “began changing the way we viewed the habitable or potentially habitable moons of the outer solar system,” Jim Green, the head of NASA’s Planetary Science Division, said after the probe’s death dive.

    These observations also shaped Cassini’s ultimate fate: To make sure Cassini never contaminated Titan or Enceladus with Earth microbes, mission planners decided to hurl Cassini into Saturn, where it would burn up in the thick atmosphere. (Cassini was running out of fuel by September, so the end was near regardless.)

    “Because of planetary protection and our desire to go back to Enceladus, to go back to Titan, to go back to the Saturn system, we must protect those bodies for future exploration,” Green said.

    On April 22, 2017, Cassini began the first step of its mission’s “Grand Finale.” A flyby of Titan reshaped the spacecraft’s orbit, allowing Cassini to spend the next five months swooping between Saturn and its innermost rings.

    These daring dives took Cassini through the tenuous uppermost layers of Saturn’s atmosphere and along the edge of the inner rings — environments the probe hadn’t yet studied up close.

    On Sept. 8, Cassini made its final dive through the gap between Saturn and its rings. It made its last flyby of Titan on Sept. 11 and captured its farewell image of the Saturn system on Sept. 14.

    “For 13 years, we’ve been running a marathon of discovery, and we’re on the last lap,” Cassini project scientist Linda Spilker, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, said a day later. “We’re here today to cheer as Cassini finishes that race.”

    Early in the morning on Sept. 15, Cassini crossed the finish line, barreling into Saturn’s atmosphere. An analysis of the spacecraft’s final moments suggested that the mostly aluminum spacecraft melted away quickly, said Cassini program manager Earl Maize, also of JPL.

    The piece that lasted the longest may have been the plutonium power supply, which was wrapped in iridium to survive high temperatures in case of a problem during launch or an unexpected return to Earth. Still, even that gear wouldn’t have survived the burning temperatures created by friction with Saturn’s atmosphere for long, Maize said. Shortly after sending home its final signal, Cassini was no more.

    Fittingly, Cassini gathered data to the very end — and performed better in its death throes than mission team members had expected.

    “We got almost 30 seconds longer than we predicted,” Cassini spacecraft operations manager Julie Webster, also of JPL, said of Cassini’s data stream.

    “We believe we got every last bit of data,” Maize said.

    Cassini may be gone, but the probe’s impact will be felt for a long time to come. For starters, scientists will be sifting through its data sets for years.

    “There’s so much left, so much incredible science left,” Spilker said.

    “There’s lots of work for everyone,” Maize agreed. “The science data, to the extent that it can be funded by research grants, will continue for decades.”

    And Cassini has blazed a trail that other probes may soon follow. For example, NASA is currently considering launching a quadcopter to Titan that would fly through the moon’s hazy skies. Cassini’s observations will help select potential landing sites if that mission flies.

    The agency is also supporting the development of a possible mission that would look for signs of life in the plume of material generated by Enceladus’ geysers.

    “I think Cassini was quite a gift to humanity,” Spilker said the day after the spacecraft’s death dive. “Goodbye, Cassini, and thanks for the ringside seat at Saturn.”

    Follow Nola Taylor Redd at @NolaTRedd, Facebook, or Google+. Follow us at @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • The Biggest Spaceflight Stories of 2017

    Artist’s illustration of NASA’s Cassini spacecraft plummeting through Saturn’s atmosphere on Sept. 15, 2017.

    It’s been a busy, exciting and bittersweet year in spaceflight.

    The private spaceflight industry made some big leaps, the Trump administration announced a familiar destination for U.S. astronauts, and a venerable NASA spacecraft that fundamentally altered our understanding of habitable worlds met its fiery end.

    Let’s just jump right in, because this is going to be a long one: Here are Space.com’s picks for the top spaceflight stories of 2017. [See Space.com’s top science stories of 2017]

    NASA’s Cassini spacecraft plunged intentionally into Saturn’s thick atmosphere on Sept. 15, bringing the probe’s storied mission to an end.

    That mission — the $3.2 billion Cassini-Huygens project, a joint effort of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency — launched in October 1997 and arrived in the Saturn system on June 30, 2004. 

    On Dec. 25, 2004, the Huygens lander separated from the Cassini mothership and spiraled its way toward Saturn’s huge moon Titan. Three weeks later, Huygens parachuted through Titan’s thick, hazy atmosphere, becoming the first spacecraft ever to land softly on the surface of a world in the outer solar system.

    Huygens collected data at Titan for just a few hours. But the Cassini orbiter kept zooming through the Saturn system, studying the gas giant, its famous rings and its many moons for more than a decade. The mission’s discoveries have reshaped astronomers’ understanding of the Saturn system and our solar system’s ability to host life.

    For example, Cassini’s radar observations revealed lakes and seas of liquid hydrocarbons on Titan’s surface — potential abodes for life-forms, albeit exotic ones that would be very different from the water-dependent organisms of Earth.

    And the mission discovered geysers of water ice, organic materials and other stuff blasting from the south pole of another Saturn moon, the ice-covered Enceladus. Further Cassini observations strongly suggested that Enceladus harbors an ocean of liquid water beneath its icy shell, and that this ocean contains energy sources that could sustain life. (The Titan and Enceladus discoveries shaped the endgame for Cassini, which was running out of fuel: Mission managers wanted to dispose of the spacecraft properly, to make sure it never contaminated Titan or Enceladus with microbes from Earth.) 

    That’s just a small sampling of the incredible science that Cassini delivered over its 13-plus years at Saturn. And then there were the images, thousands of them, that brought the mystery and exotic beauty of the Saturn system to the world daily. RIP, Cassini. You are missed. [Cassini’s Greatest Hits: The Spacecraft’s Best Images of Saturn]

    This year made it clear that we’re in the middle of a private spaceflight revolution.

    Let’s start with SpaceX, whose Falcon 9 rockets flew 18 missions in 2017 — more than twice the company’s previous record for a calendar year. Fourteen of those liftoffs featured landings by a Falcon 9 first stage; five of the launches involved pre-flown boosters, and two of them lofted used Dragon cargo spacecraft toward the International Space Station (ISS).

    So, SpaceX hit some big milestones this year in its quest for full and rapid reusability, a key priority for company founder and CEO Elon Musk. Indeed, reusability is at the core of SpaceX’s planned Mars-colonizing spaceflight system, the latest blueprints of which Musk unveiled in September at a conference in Australia.

    A number of other private-spaceflight players also made significant progress in 2017. For example, Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin launched the new version of its New Shepard suborbital vehicle on its maiden flight, laying the foundation for possible crewed missions next year. Sierra Nevada Corp.’s Dream Chaser space plane conducted its first-ever “glide flight” in Earth’s’ atmosphere; Stratolaunch took its huge, satellite-lofting aircraft out for a maiden test drive on the runway; Rocket Lab and Vector flew their small-sat launchers for the first time, and Virgin Galactic’s latest suborbital spaceship, VSS Unity, conducted four glide flights in the skies over Southern California.

    SpaceX and Virginia-based company Orbital ATK made a series of uncrewed resupply runs to the ISS, and SpaceX and Boeing continued to develop their ISS astronaut taxis, with the goal of flying crews for the first time next year.

    Oh, and California startup Made In Space sent to the ISS a machine designed to manufacture exotic optical fiber in orbit, which the company eventually aims to sell here on Earth. This little space factory’s Dec. 15 launch may be a preview of spaceflight’s future: It flew to the orbiting lab aboard a pre-flown Dragon, which itself flew atop a Falcon 9 with a used first stage.

    On Dec. 11, President Donald Trump signed “Space Policy Directive 1,” which instructs NASA to send astronauts back to the moon — rather than to a near-Earth asteroid, as former President Barack Obama had ordered — as a stepping stone to Mars.

    “This time, we will not only plant our flag and leave our footprint — we will establish a foundation for an eventual mission to Mars,” Trump said of the directive, which makes official a decision announced by Vice President Mike Pence in October at the inaugural meeting of the revived National Space Council. (The NSC had last been active in the early 1990s, during the presidency of George H.W. Bush.)

    Neither Pence nor Trump gave any details about the new moon plan, however. It’s unclear when the next crewed lunar landings will take place, or how much it will cost to make them happen. [From Ike to Trump: Presidential Visions for Space Exploration]

    North Korea’s missile program is advancing faster than experts had predicted. The nuclear-armed rogue nation test-flew intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) three times this year, showcasing the apparent ability to hit the U.S. East Coast

    It’s unclear if North Korea has mastered all the requisite ICBM technology, such as a re-entry vehicle, which would protect a nuclear warhead during an operational launch. And experts don’t know for sure whether the Hermit Kingdom has miniaturized its nukes, allowing them to fit them on ICBMs. But this year shows that we probably shouldn’t underestimate North Korea or its technical skills.

    And now, back to the good news: This year, Peggy Whitson broke the record for the most total time spent in space by a U.S. astronaut.

    That record — 534 days — was set just last year, by Jeff Williams. Whitson smashed the old record while aboard the ISS in April, finally landing on Earth in September after a 288-day orbital stint that took her lifetime spaceflight tally to 665 days. 

    Whitson holds several other spaceflight marks as well. In 2007, she became the first woman ever to command the ISS, and on her latest mission, she became the first woman to do so twice. She has also spent more time on spacewalks (60 hours and 21 minutes) than any other female astronaut. And during her latest ISS stint, Whitson became the oldest woman to travel in space, at 57.

    The world record for most time spent in space is 879 days, which cosmonaut Gennady Padalka accumulated over the course of five missions, four of them to the ISS and one to the Soviet-Russian station Mir.

    NASA unveiled its 12 newest astronaut candidates (or “ascans,” as the agency calls them) in June. The seven men and five women were chosen from an initial pool of 18,300 applicants — more than twice as many as the previous record of 8,000, which was set back in 1978. (The most recent astronaut class, which was announced in 2013, had an applicant pool of about 6,400, NASA officials said.)

    The new ascans are now engaged in a two-year training program, at the end of which they’ll become full-fledged astronauts. These spaceflyers are earning their wings at a pretty exciting time: Some of them may ride private spaceships to and from the ISS, and others may fly to the moon or Mars.

    NASA’s OSIRIS-REx asteroid-sampling spacecraft zoomed past Earth on Sept. 22, a little over a year after launching off the planet. But the probe didn’t return because it was homesick; it came back to use Earth’s gravity to boost its speed and refine its course toward the potentially hazardous asteroid Bennu.

    If all goes according to plan, OSIRIS-REx (whose name is short for Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security-Regolith Explorer) will rendezvous with Bennu in August 2018, snag some samples of the space rock two years later and return these samples to Earth in September 2023. 

    China launched the uncrewed Tianzhou-1 cargo spacecraft to Earth orbit on April 20, and the freighter docked with the nation’s Tiangong-2 space lab two days later. Over the next five months, the two vehicles performed a series of robotic refueling exercises, demonstrating technologies that China will need in order to build and maintain an orbiting space station — a goal the nation hopes to achieve by the mid-2020s.

    Tianzhou-1 was intentionally de-orbited into Earth’s atmosphere on Sept. 22, the very day that OSIRIS-REx flew by. 

    India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) lofted 104 satellites to Earth orbit on Feb. 14, shattering the previous single-launch record of 37 spacecraft, which had been held by Russia’s Dnepr booster.

    The satellites aboard the PSLV came from six different nations: India, the United States, the Netherlands, Israel, Kazakhstan and Switzerland. The vast majority — 88 of the 104 craft — were small, Earth-observing cubesats built by the San Francisco-based company Planet (formerly called Planet Labs).

    On Sept. 7, the U.S. Air Force’s robotic X-37B space plane launched on another mystery mission to Earth orbit, the craft’s fifth overall. The vehicle may stay aloft for a while; each successive X-37B mission has set a new program duration record, and the most recent one orbited Earth for 718 days.

    The X-37B rode a Falcon 9 rocket to orbit on Sept. 7, marking the first time SpaceX had provided the space plane’s lift. All four previous X-37B launches had come atop United Launch Alliance Atlas V rockets. [In Photos: SpaceX Launches X-37B Space Plane, Lands Falcon 9 Rocket]

    This year occasioned some historical reflection, because some big spaceflight anniversaries came in 2017. For example, the first-ever artificial satellite, the Soviet Union’s Sputnik 1, launched to Earth orbit on Oct. 4, 1957, kicking off the space age

    And NASA’s twin Voyager probes marked 40 years in space in 2017: Voyager 2 launched on Aug. 20, 1977, and Voyager 1 lifted off on Sept. 5 of that year. Both probes are still going strong, exploring previously uncharted regions. Voyager 1 reached interstellar space in August 2012, and its sibling should reach that exotic realm in the next few years, NASA officials have said.

    Also this year, Voyager 1 fired its backup thrusters for the first time since 1980. The little engines performed well, and their utility should help extend the spacecraft’s life by a couple of years, mission officials said.

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

  • Lando Calrissian Almost Appeared in 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi'

    According to director Rian Johnson, Lando Calrissian almost made an appearance in “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” – but his potential role was taken by an entirely new character instead.

    “Of course I’d love to see Lando,” Johnson told The Playlist. “In terms of Lando, I briefly considered — would he work in the Benicio [del Toro] part, [DJ].”

    “I don’t think you would ever buy that Lando would just completely betray the characters like that and have that level of moral ambiguity,” Johnson continued. “Cause we love Lando and you’d come into it with that [expectation]. And also, DJ, the character that they met, for the purposes of Finn’s character, had to be a morally ambiguous character that you’re not sure about, that you’re guessing about, and we already know that we love the character of Lando so it just wouldn’t have played in that part story wise.”

    “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” is now in theaters.

    Originally published on Newsarama.

  • Christmas at the Space Station: Astronauts Celebrate with New Tree, Gifts from Earth

    As millions of people on Earth celebrate Christmas with their families and friends today (Dec. 25), exchanging gifts and sharing elaborate meals, astronauts at the International Space Station (ISS) will do much of the same — while floating weightlessly some 250 miles (400 kilometers) above the Earth. 

    The three NASA astronauts currently aboard the ISS (Joe Acaba, Mark Vande Hei and Scott Tingle) will have the day off this Christmas, NASA spokesman Dan Huot told Space.com. Because the crew are typically off-duty on the weekends, too, they’ll get to enjoy a special long weekend in space. Instead of doing research or working on science experiments, they will spend the day relaxing, calling their families and opening gifts. 

    Santa Claus might have a hard time delivering gifts to the ISS — his reindeer would have to fly as fast as 17,500 mph (28,000 km/h) without any air to breathe — but there will still be gifts for the crew to open Christmas morning. Some gifts traveled with the most recent crew of three, who arrived at the ISS on Dec. 19. A Cygnus cargo spacecraft that arrived in November also brought some gifts from the astronauts’ families. [Holidays in Space: An Astronaut Photo Album]

    “We have packages and gifts from our families and friends, and packages on board the ISS labeled to open on Dec. 25 for U.S. crewmembers and Dec. 31 for us from Russia,” Russian cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov told reporters Dec. 16, one day before he launched to the ISS with Tingle and Japanese astronaut Norishige Kanai. (Russia celebrates Eastern Orthodox Christmas on Jan. 7, but Russians traditionally open gifts on New Year’s Eve.)

    There’s even at least one small artificial Christmas tree aboard the space station. “We [already] have a Christmas tree aboard, and there is a new Christmas tree arriving soon,” Shkaplerov said during the prelaunch briefing. 

    But because there’s effectively no gravity at the ISS, the gifts won’t exactly be waiting under the tree. In fact, there is no real concept of “up” or “down” at the ISS, where the differences between floors, walls and ceilings becomes pretty vague. Whether the gifts are beneath, above or beside the tree is only a matter of perspective. 

    After opening their gifts, the astronauts will likely share a special holiday meal together, although the Christmas dinner menu has not yet been disclosed, Huot said. For last year’s space station feast, the Expedition 50 crew enjoyed turkey, corn-bread stuffing, gingerbread cookies and hot cocoa. 

    Expedition 30 crewmembers celebrate Christmas on the International Space Station in 2011. The Expedition 54 crew will do the same on Dec. 25, 2017.

    Expedition 30 crewmembers celebrate Christmas on the International Space Station in 2011. The Expedition 54 crew will do the same on Dec. 25, 2017.

    Credit: NASA

    Email Hanneke Weitering at hweitering@space.com or follow her @hannekescience. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Astronauts Just Watched 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' in Space!

    It’s official: “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” is truly out of this world.

    This photo from NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei captures movie night on the International Space Station astronauts and cosmonauts enjoy “Star Wars: The Last Jedi.”

    “Space Station movie night, complete with “bungee cord chairs’, drink bags, and a science fiction flick!” Vande Hei wrote on Twitter.

    While Vande Hei didn’t mention “The Last Jedi” by name, you can clearly see the image of X-wing pilot Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac) on the station’s big screen. [The Greatest “Star Wars” Villains Ever]

    Earlier this month, NASA officials confirmed that the space station crew would be able to watch the new “Star Wars” film on a projection screen, but didn’t give a set time for the showing. The station has the screen and a high-definition video projector onboard for their movie night enjoyment.

    It looks like the station crew waited until a recent crew change was complete to enjoy the film.

    On Dec. 14, the day before “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” opened in theaters nationwide, three station crewmembers — NASA astronaut Randy Bresnik, Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli and Russian cosmonaut Sergey Ryazanskiy — returned to Earth to end a 139-day space mission. They left behind NASA astronauts Joe Acaba, Mark Vande Hei and Russian cosmonauts Alexander Misurkin, who remained aboard the space station as its Expedition 54 crew.

    Then, on Dec. 17, three new crewmembers — NASA astronaut Scott Tingle, Russian cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov and Japanese astronaut Norishige Kanai — launched to the space station. They arrived two days later.

    Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalik and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • UFO? No, It's a SpaceX Rocket! These Falcon 9 Launch Photos Are Just Amazing

    MISSION VIEJO, Calif. — SpaceX’s launch of a Falcon 9 rocket Friday night (Dec. 22) was by all accounts a dazzling sight (and for some, an unsettling one) in the night sky and the photos are simply spectacular.

    The launch, which lifted off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, north of Los Angeles, carried 10 Iridium Next communications satellites into orbit just after sunset, leaving a vast glowing plume in its wake as it soared into space on a southward trajectory. [See more of the SpaceX launch photos here]

    That glowing cloud sparked thoughts of UFOs for some observers, which they shared on Twitter (SpaceX CEO Elon Musk made a UFO joke, too), and the Los Angeles Fire Department even issued a statement alerting the public that the “mysterious light in the sky”‘ was just a SpaceX rocket launch.

    Photographer Erica Kelly Martin captured this amazing view of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket soaring over the palm trees of Hollywood, California after its launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base on Dec. 22, 2017.

    Photographer Erica Kelly Martin captured this amazing view of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket soaring over the palm trees of Hollywood, California after its launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base on Dec. 22, 2017.

    Credit: Erica Kelly Martin

    Photographer Erica Kelly Martin captured a stunning view of the launch from Hollywood, California, with the Falcon 9’s second stage streaking spaceward.

    In La Jolla, the launch surprised Hany Girgis during a dinner out with friends.

    “We had someone in the group that knew it was the SpaceX launch. Otherwise, everyone at the table had no idea what it was,” Girgis, who posted the photo on his Instagram never_unpacking, said in an email. “Everyone there started pulling out their phones and taking video and photos. It was an incredible sight with the sun setting and the palm trees in the background.”

    Hany Girgis (<a href=never_unpacking on Instagram) captured this stunning view of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launch on Dec. 22, 2017 from La Jolla, California while dining with friends.”/>
    Hany Girgis (never_unpacking on Instagram) captured this stunning view of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launch on Dec. 22, 2017 from La Jolla, California while dining with friends.

    Credit: Hany Girgis, Instagram: never_unpacking

    For Michelle Snyder in Coronado, California, the launch was a surprise, but one she’ll never forget.

    “Caught off guard and had no idea what was happening at first … must say it was one of my life’s coolest moments!!!,” Snyder told Space.com in an email. She captured the stunning video of the launch the Hotel del Coronado featured above. “A forever memory with my daughters and parents who were in town visiting for the holidays. FOREVER MEMORY!!!

    In Big Bear, California, where Jennifer Garrison of Apple Valley was spending the holidays with family, the launch was a welcome addition the festive Christmas lights around the neighborhood. And, of course, it was a family event.

    “My 8-year-old, Nicholas, and 5-year-old, Ethan, are in a few of the photos, enjoying the view!” Garrison told Space.com.

    Skywatcher Jennifer Garrison and her two sons Nicholas, 8, and Ethan, 5, observe SpaceX's dazzling rocket launch from their location in Big Bear, California on Dec. 22, 2017.

    Skywatcher Jennifer Garrison and her two sons Nicholas, 8, and Ethan, 5, observe SpaceX’s dazzling rocket launch from their location in Big Bear, California on Dec. 22, 2017.

    Credit: Jennifer Garrison

    Reports of launch sightings came from far and wide, including some on Twitter from Tijuana in Mexico and others from Tucson, Arizona.

    It was in Tucson where observer Jeff Ladderud spotted the Falcon 9 lighting up the sky. He grabbed his iPhone, snapped a photo and sent it in to Space.com in an email.

    Skywatcher Jeff Ladderud captured this view of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch of Dec. 22, 2017 from Tucson, Arizona. The launch originated from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

    Skywatcher Jeff Ladderud captured this view of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch of Dec. 22, 2017 from Tucson, Arizona. The launch originated from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

    Credit: Jeff Ladderud

    “It was only taken with an iPhone camera, so quality isn’t stellar; but I was impressed that we could see the launch all the way from Tucson, AZ — some 575 miles away!” Ladderud told Space.com via email.

    The launch was also clearly visible from the air. Rafael Vecchi was on a commercial flight from Phoenix, Arizona to Salt Lake City, Utah, when the flight’s pilot made a surprise announcement.

    “The pilot came on the intercom to say that there was something he had never seen out the left window. He probably didn’t mean to say it like that, but it was unsettling to hear your pilot say that,” Vecchi told Space.com. ” So we all crowded to the windows. A few minutes he came on to say it was a rocket launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base. I’ve read Elon Musk’s biography and have watched some YouTube live launches, and it was amazing to see it in person.”

    Skywatcher Rafael Vecchi caught this view of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket launch on Dec. 22 from his seat on an airplane flying from Phoenix to Salt Lake City.

    Skywatcher Rafael Vecchi caught this view of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launch on Dec. 22 from his seat on an airplane flying from Phoenix to Salt Lake City.

    Credit: Rafael Vecchi

    Amazing, indeed! The launch was so well-observed that the stories here are just a few of the hundreds of photos and sightings we’ve received at Space.com. We’ll keep adding images to our gallery here over time.

    And for the record,here’s my view of the launch from the I-5 freeway in Irvine, California.

    Not enough photos? Here are some amazing launch photos by SpaceX:

    Editor’s note: If you captured an amazing photo of video of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launch and would like to share it with Space.com for a story or gallery, send images and comments to: spacephotos@space.com

    Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalik and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Be Amazed! SpaceX's Spectacular Iridium-4 Launch in Photos

    SpaceX Rocket Over City Lights” readability=”32″>

    SpaceX Rocket Over City Lights

    SpaceX Rocket Over City Lights

    Credit: SpaceX

    The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket arcs over city lights of Southern California in this long-exposure of the launch of 10 Iridium Next satellites from Vandenberg Air Force Base on Dec. 22, 2017.

    Streaking to Space” readability=”32″>

    Streaking to Space

    Streaking to Space

    Credit: SpaceX

    A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket streaks into space carrying 10 Iridium Next communications satellites in this long-exposure view of the launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Dec. 22, 2017.

    SpaceX Rocket Over Hollywood: Erica Kelly Martin” readability=”30.886120996441″>

    SpaceX Rocket Over Hollywood: Erica Kelly Martin

    SpaceX Rocket Over Hollywood: Erica Kelly Martin

    Photographer Erica Kelly Martin captured this amazing view of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket soaring over the palm trees of Hollywood, California after its launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base on Dec. 22, 2017.

    Falcon 9 Soars Over SpaceX HQ” readability=”32″>

    Falcon 9 Soars Over SpaceX HQ

    Falcon 9 Soars Over SpaceX HQ

    Credit: SpaceX

    A SpaceX Falcon rocket soars into space in this stunning view from SpaceX’s headquarters in Hawthorne, California. A used Falcon 9 first stage stands in the foreground.

    The SpaceX View from Big Bear” readability=”33″>

    The SpaceX View from Big Bear

    The SpaceX View from Big Bear

    Credit: Jennifer Garrison

    SpaceX’s dazzling Falcon 9 rocket launch only added to the festive holiday lights for Jennifer Garrison of Apple Valley, California, who captured this view from Big Bear on Dec. 22, 2017.

    A Family Rocket Launch” readability=”34.5″>

    A Family Rocket Launch

    A Family Rocket Launch

    Credit: Jennifer Garrison

    Skywatcher Jennifer Garrison and her two sons Nicholas, 8, and Ethan, 5, observe SpaceX’s dazzling rocket launch from their location in Big Bear, California on Dec. 22, 2017.

    Liftoff for SpaceX Iridium-4” readability=”32″>

    Liftoff for SpaceX Iridium-4

    Liftoff for SpaceX Iridium-4

    Credit: SpaceX

    A used SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Space Launch Complex 4E at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California to deliver 10 Iridium Next communications satellites into orbit on Dec. 22, 2017.

    SpaceX Launch View from Tucson” readability=”34.5″>

    SpaceX Launch View from Tucson

    SpaceX Launch View from Tucson

    Credit: Jeff Ladderud

    Skywatcher Jeff Ladderud captured this view of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch of Dec. 22, 2017 from Tucson, Arizona. “It was only taken with an iPhone camera, so quality isn’t stellar; but I was impressed that we could see the launch all the way from Tucson, AZ–some 575 miles away!” he told Space.com.

    SpaceX Launch View from an Airplane” readability=”34″>

    SpaceX Launch View from an Airplane

    SpaceX Launch View from an Airplane

    Credit: Rafael Vecchi

    Skywatcher Rafael Vecchi caught this view of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launch on Dec. 22 from his seat on an airplane flying from Phoenix to Salt Lake City. “The pilot came on the intercom to say that there was something he had never seen out the left window. He probably didn’t mean to say it like that, but it was unsettling to hear your pilot say that. So we all crowded to the windows. A few minutes he came on to say it was a rocket launcher from Vandenberg Air Force Base. I’ve read Elon Musk’s biography and have watched some YouTube live launches, and it was amazing to see it in person,” Vecchi said.

    ” readability=”33″>

    SpaceX’s Reused Falcon 9 on Iridium-4

    SpaceX's Reused Falcon 9 on Iridium-4

    Credit: SpaceX

    The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket seen here launching 10 Iridium Next satellites on Dec. 22, 2017 from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California was actually making its second flight. The rocket’s first stage booster launched 10 more Iridium Next satellites into orbit in June 2017.

    Headed for Space: SpaceX Iridium-4” readability=”32″>

    Headed for Space: SpaceX Iridium-4

    Headed for Space: SpaceX Iridium-4

    Credit: SpaceX

    A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket ascends spaceward carrying 10 Iridium Next communications satellite after launching from Space Launch Complex 4E of Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Dec. 22, 2017.

    SpaceX Iridium 4 Launch” readability=”32.5″>

    SpaceX Iridium 4 Launch

    SpaceX Iridium 4 Launch

    Credit: SpaceX

    SpaceX’s two-stage Falcon 9 booster lifted off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California tonight (Dec. 22) at 11:27 p.m. EST (0427 on Dec. 23 GMT), carrying 10 communications satellites for the commercial Iridium Next constellation.

    SpaceX Iridium-4 Mission Patch” readability=”31″>

    SpaceX Iridium-4 Mission Patch

    SpaceX Iridium-4 Mission Patch

    Credit: SpaceX

    The SpaceX mission patch for the Iridium-4 mission.

  • What to Look For in the 2017 Christmas Sky

    Orion, the Hunter, can look more like a box with a bow across the middle (Orion’s belt) to holiday-minded observers. Here, it can be seen at 8 p.m. EST Dec. 25 from New York.

    December is the month of the winter solstice, which a large part of mankind associates with such celebrations as Nativity festivals. The moment of the solstice occurred on Dec. 21 at 11:28 a.m. EST (0428 GMT): The sun, appearing to travel along the ecliptic, reached that point in the sky where it is farthest south of the celestial equator.

    While a variety of customs have been linked with this special season for thousands of years, the exchanging of gifts is prevalent among many different cultures. Mother Nature herself offers two gifts to sky observers in northern, temperate latitudes: the longest nights and a sky more transparent than usual. One reason for the clarity of a winter’s night is that cold air cannot hold as much moisture as warm air can. Hence, on many nights in the summer, the warm, moisture-laden atmosphere causes the sky to appear hazier. By day it is a milky, washed-out blue, which in winter becomes a richer, deeper and darker shade of blue. For us in northern climes, this only adds more luster to that part of the sky containing the beautiful wintertime constellations, as this week’s sky chart shows. Indeed, the sky this time of year can be seen as nature’s holiday decoration to commemorate the winter solstice and enlighten the long, cold nights of winter.

    The Yuletide evening sky is especially rewarding. The eastern sky is filled with brilliant stars and star patterns. Distinctive groupings of stars that form part of the recognized constellation outlines, or lying within their boundaries, are known as asterisms. Ranging in size from sprawling, naked-eye figures to minute stellar settings, they are found in every quarter of the sky and at all seasons of the year. The larger asterisms — ones like the Big Dipper in Ursa Major and the Great Square of Pegasus — are often better-known than their host constellations. Here are some of the best asterisms to spot as the year approaches its end. [Best Telescopes for the Money – 2017 Reviews and Guide]

    During these frosty evenings, one of the most famous asterisms is in the northwest. Originally known simply as the “Bird” in ancient times, without any indication of what sort of bird it was supposed to represent, it later became the constellation Cygnus, the Swan. But the brightest six stars of Cygnus make up an asterism that’s more popularly called the Northern Cross. Bright Deneb decorates the top of the Cross. Albireo, at the foot of the Cross, is really a pair of stars of beautifully contrasting colors: a third-magnitude orange star and its fifth-magnitude blue companion are clearly visible in even a low-power telescope. While it is usually regarded as a summertime pattern, the Cross is best-oriented for viewing now: It appears to stand majestically upright on the northwest horizon at around 8:30 p.m. local time, forming an apt Christmas symbol. Furthermore, just before dawn on Easter morning, that cross lies on its side in the eastern sky.

    High toward the south, at around 10:30 p.m. in your local time zone, we see what astronomy author Hans A. Rey (1898 to 1977) called a Great Hexagon of bright winter stars. To the south and a little east lies Sirius; up to the west, Rigel. Still higher, reddish Aldebaran; then at the north end of the circle, Capella. South and slightly east, we come to Castor and Pollux, the heads of the Gemini twins. Finally, south again to Procyon: in all, seven bright stars in six constellations. In the center of the hexagon, more or less, you have the ruddy star Betelgeuse. This is the rich region that gives the winter sky its splendor. 

    Can you also see a large package in the sky, tied with a pretty bow across the middle? Four bright stars outline the package, while three that are close together and in a straight line form the decorative bow. Now you can see how our modern imagination might work, but tradition tells us that those seven stars formed a mighty hunter called Orion, the most brilliant of the constellations, which is visible from every inhabited part of Earth. Two stars mark his shoulders, two more his knees and three his belt. Speaking of Orion’s belt, the legendary French astronomer Nicolas Camille Flammarion (1842 to 1925) referred to the three belt stars of Orion as “The Three Kings.” [Space Gifts 2017 – The Best Gift Ideas in the Universe]

    If you plan to be outside for a long period of time on these frosty, cold nights, remember that enjoying the starry winter sky requires protection against the prevailing low temperatures. One of the best garments to wear is a hooded ski parka, which is lightweight yet provides excellent insulation, along with ski pants, which are better than ordinary trousers. And it is also important to remember your feet. While two pairs of warm socks in loose-fitting shoes are often adequate, for protracted observing on bitter-cold nights, wear insulated boots.  

    For those who receive a pair of binoculars or a telescope for a holiday gift, Christmas week will offer the best views for observing the moon, one of the most fascinating celestial bodies. In fact, we can see a wealth of detail on its surface even with just a little optical power. Around those times when the moon is half-lit or gibbous phase, those features lying close to the terminator — that variable line between the illuminated portion and the part of the moon in shadow — stand out in sharp, clear relief. In contrast, around the time of full phase, the moon appears flat and one-dimensional as well as dazzling to the eye. The moon will arrive at first-quarter phase on the day after Christmas, Dec. 26 (Boxing Day for our friends in Canada and the United Kingdom) at 4:20 a.m. EST (0920 GMT), when its disk will be exactly 50 percent illuminated. How does its brightness compare at that moment with full? One would think it’s half as bright, but in reality, astronomers tell us that a first-quarter moon is only 1/11th as bright as a full moon. And believe or not, it isn’t until just 2.4 days before full that the moon actually becomes half as bright as full! 

    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 Verizon Fios1 News, based in Rye Brook, New York. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Japanese Rocket Launches Two Satellites Into Orbit

    The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency launched two satellites into space Friday (Dec. 22) on separate missions to study the Earth and test new ion engine technology.

    A JAXA H-2A rocket launched from the Tanegashima Space Center in southern Japan carrying the Global Change Observation Mission-Climate (GCOM-C) satellite and the Super Low Altitude Test Satellite (SLATS). Liftoff occurred at 8:26 p.m. EST (0126 GMT) on Friday, though the local time was 10:26 a.m. Saturday Japan Standard Time.[Earth from Space in 2017: DigitalGlobe’s Most Impactful Photos]

    A Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency H-IIA rocket launches the Global Change Observation Mission-Climate (GCOM-C) satellite and the Super Low Altitude Test Satellite (SLATS) into orbit from the Tanegashima Space Center on Dec. 23, 2017 Japan Standard Time (Dec. 22 EST).

    A Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency H-IIA rocket launches the Global Change Observation Mission-Climate (GCOM-C) satellite and the Super Low Altitude Test Satellite (SLATS) into orbit from the Tanegashima Space Center on Dec. 23, 2017 Japan Standard Time (Dec. 22 EST).

    Credit: Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd./JAXA

    The GCOM-C satellite, nicknamed Shikisai (which means “Color” in Japanese), is an Earth-observing satellite designed to be the first in a pair to monitor Earth’s climate from space over 15 years. It carries instruments to study Earth’s carbon cycle, clouds, aerosols, ocean color, vegetation, and snow and ice, according to a JAXA mission description. 

    “GCOM is expected to play an important role in monitoring both global water circulation and climate change, and examining the health of Earth from space,” JAXA officials wrote.

    The SLATS satellite (nicknamed Tsubame, or “Swallow”) is on a technology demonstration mission to test how ion engines could help keep satellites aloft in “super low orbits” below 186 miles (300 kilometers).

    “This orbit is an undeveloped region and it has yet to be fully utilized by satellites,” JAXA officials wrote in mission overview. “Satellites in a super low orbit will bring benefits such as high-resolution observations for optical imagers, low power transmissions for active sensors, and cost reductions for satellite manufacturing and launches.”

    Such a low orbit will subject SLATS to 1,000 times the atmospheric drag on satellites in higher orbits between 372 and 497 miles (600-800 km), JAXA officials said. Even the International Space Station is in a higher orbit of about 248 miles (400 km).

    “In order to solve the atmospheric drag issue, JAXA has adopted an ion engine,” JAXA officials wrote. “The ion engine uses fuel 10 times more efficiently than gas jets. Furthermore, we are developing a compact satellite to minimize air resistance, and will verify that our technology can support orbiting at super low altitudes over an extended period of time.”

    JAXA’s successful satellite launch on Friday came just over one minute before another rocket launch.

    The U.S. spaceflight company SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 rocket carrying 10 Iridium Next communications satellites into orbit from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. The launch created dazzling views for spectators across Southern California

    Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalik and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.