I can calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people

— Sir Isaac Newton

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APOD - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 4:00pm

Yes, but can your volcano do this?


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

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APOD - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 4:00pm

The


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

Uh oh. Hubble's Having Gyro Problems Again

Universe Today - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 2:20pm

The Hubble Space Telescope has gone through its share of gyroscopes in its 34-year history in space. Astronauts replaced the gyros during the last servicing mission in 2009, bringing it back up to six (three with three spares), but they only last so long. Last week, HST went into safe mode because one of the gyros experienced fluctuations in power. NASA paused the telescope’s science operations today to investigate the fluctuations and perhaps come up with a fix.

With this one gyro experiencing problems, only two of the gyros remain fully operational. HST works best with three gyros, and so engineers are working to understand the issue and hopefully figure out a way to fix it remotely. However, several years ago, engineers figured out a way to still conduct science operations with only a single gyro.

HST entered safe mode on April 23, 2024 when the one gyro sent faulty readings. This particular gyro also caused Hubble to enter safe mode last November after returning similar faulty readings. The gyroscopes are part of Hubble’s Pointing Control System, which includes three Fine Guidance Sensors, reaction wheels and the gyros. This allows Hubble to track stars with incredible accuracy, helping the telescope find its way as it scans the heavens, as well as keep Hubble locked onto to its targets.

To work correctly, Hubble must be able to stay focused on a target without deviating more than 7/1000th of an arcsecond, or about the width of a human hair seen at a distance of a mile.

Hubble team created a contingency plan in preparation for a time when the spacecraft might find itself with less than three working gyros again. The team developed a two-gyro mode that substitutes other sensors for one missing gyro. Although less efficient, two-gyro mode allows Hubble to continue collecting ground-breaking science data.

The end of a Hubble gyro reveals the hair-thin wires known as flex leads. They carry data and electricity inside the gyro. Credit: NASA

NASA said that Hubble gyros fail over time, usually because of “wear and tear” of thin (less than the width of a human hair), metal wires, called flex leads that carry power in, and data out, of the mechanism. Hubble’s flex leads pass through a thick fluid inside the gyro. Over time, the flex leads begin to corrode and can physically bend or break.

During its 34-year history, Hubble has had eight out of 22 gyros fail due to a corroded flex lead. For example, in 1999, four out of six gyros had failed, with the last one failing about a month before a servicing mission was scheduled to replace them (and do other upgrades to the telescope). This meant Hubble sat in safe mode waiting for the space shuttle and astronauts to arrive.

Engineers developed a two-gyro mode when the final planned Hubble servicing mission was (temporarily) canceled following the space shuttle Columbia disaster. The mission was reinstated after outcry from scientists and the public, and so NASA figured out a way to mitigate the risks of flying the space shuttle. Servicing Mission 4 replaced all six gyros one last time in 2009.

With his feet firmly anchored on the shuttle’s robotic arm, astronaut Mike Good maneuvers to retrieve the tool caddy required to repair the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph during the final Hubble servicing mission in May 2009. Periodic upgrades have kept the telescope equipped with state-of-the-art instruments, which have given astronomers increasingly better views of the cosmos. Credits: NASA

However, during the time it was thought no future servicing mission would happen, the observatory was proactively put into two-gyro mode to prolong its life. During this time, the team also devised a one-gyro mode, which could further extend Hubble’s life if needed.

“We knew gyros would be a limiting factor so we started to working on a reduced gyro mode to extend their life,” the director of the Space Telescope Science Institute Ken Sembach told me back in 2015 for my book, “Incredible Stories From Space.” “As it turned out, we did need that reduced gyro mode, and now they aren’t [as big of a] limiting factor for Hubble because we now know how to use the gyro resources in a new way. That added a longer life to the mission we didn’t think we would have.”

While the difference between two-gyro mode and one gyro-mode is negligible, one-gyro mode provides the option to have one of the remaining gyros placed in reserve. As of now, three of the six gyros onboard Hubble have had a flex lead fail and are no longer functional. NASA has not announced if the faulty readings are due to flex lead fail or another issue. If this gyro fails, the team will invoke one-gyro mode.

NASA did say that all of the science instruments are in good shape and they anticipate Hubble will “continue making groundbreaking discoveries, working with other observatories throughout this decade and possibly into the next.”

Hubble launched in 1990, and recently celebrated its 34th anniversary. While everyone expected HST would revolutionize astronomy, I don’t think anyone expected it would continue to be such a productive, world-class observatory even more than a thirty years after it launched. But, please, let’s keep it going for as long as possible!

The post Uh oh. Hubble's Having Gyro Problems Again appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Astronomy

Mars exploration, new rockets and more: Interview with ESA chief Josef Aschbacher

Space.com - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 11:00am
Space.com caught up with ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher recently to talk about Europe's space plans and priorities going forward.
Categories: Astronomy

Everything we know about James Gunn's Superman

Space.com - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 10:00am
James Gunn's Superman reboot kicks off the DC Extended Universe's refresh in 2025.
Categories: Astronomy

Sneak peek: Browncoats grab victory in Boom! Studios' upcoming 'Firefly: 'Verses' comic (exclusive)

Space.com - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 9:00am
A sneak peek at Boom! Studios' upcoming "What If?" one-shot, "Firefly: 'Verses."
Categories: Astronomy

SpaceX launches 23 Starlink satellites from Florida (video)

Space.com - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 8:00am
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched another batch of the company's Starlink internet satellites on Sunday (April 28).
Categories: Astronomy

NASA's mission to an ice-covered moon will contain a message between water worlds

Space.com - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 8:00am
NASA's Europa Clipper spacecraft, headed to Jupiter’s ice-covered moon Europa in October 2024, will carry a laser-etched message that celebrates humanity’s connection to water.
Categories: Astronomy

SpaceX's 30th Dragon cargo mission departs the ISS, heads home to Earth

Space.com - Sun, 04/28/2024 - 6:00am
SpaceX's 30th robotic Dragon cargo ship undocked from the International Space Station today (April 28) and headed back home to Earth.
Categories: Astronomy

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APOD - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 12:00pm

Watch Juno zoom past Jupiter.


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

Russia vetoes UN resolution against nuclear weapons in space

Space.com - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 11:00am
Russia's ambassador to the U.N. vetoed a resolution sponsored by the United States and Japan that called upon all nations to never deploy nuclear weapons in outer space.
Categories: Astronomy

Beavers are helping fight climate change, satellite data shows

Space.com - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 11:00am
As global warming intensifies droughts, floods and wildfires around the world, scientists in western United States are turning to beavers to help reverse some of the damage.
Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers just discovered a comet that could be brighter than most stars when we see it next year. Or will it?

Space.com - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 10:00am
Although it is still more than 18 months from its closest approach to Earth and the sun, comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS already has social media buzzing, with optimistic articles being written about how it could be a spectacular sight.
Categories: Astronomy

This Week In Space podcast: Episode 108 — Starliner: Better Late Than Never?

Space.com - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 9:22am
On Episode 108 of This Week In Space, Rod and Tariq talk about the long-awaited crew flight test of Boeing's Starliner commercial spacecraft.
Categories: Astronomy

Boeing's Starliner spacecraft will not fly private missions yet, officials say

Space.com - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 8:00am
Boeing's Starliner spacecraft is about to make its first launch May 6 with NASA astronauts on board. Unlike SpaceX, however, Boeing has not yet announced any private missions.
Categories: Astronomy

Climate Leaders Debate Goal for Controlling Global Warming

Scientific American.com - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 6:45am

A new U.N. program highlights the disconnect between climate messaging and the growing possibility of overshooting a key global warming threshold

Categories: Astronomy

SpaceX launches Falcon 9 rocket on record-tying 20th mission (video)

Space.com - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 6:00am
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched a European satellite-navigation mission on Saturday (April 27). It was a record-tying 20th liftoff for this particular booster.
Categories: Astronomy

Einstein Probe opens its wide eyes to the X-ray sky

ESO Top News - Sat, 04/27/2024 - 6:00am

The first images captured by the innovative mission were presented at the 7th workshop of the Einstein Probe consortium in Beijing. They illustrate the satellite’s full potential and show that its novel optics, which mimic a lobster’s eyes, are ready to monitor the X-ray sky. The space X-ray telescope zoomed in on a few well-known celestial objects to give us a hint of what the mission is capable of.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Will Get Gravitational Wave Alerts Within 30 Seconds

Universe Today - Fri, 04/26/2024 - 8:38pm

Any event in the cosmos generates gravitational waves, the bigger the event, the more disturbance. Events where black holes and neutron stars collide can send out waves detectable here on Earth. It is possible that there can be an event in visible light when neutron stars collide so to take advantage of every opportunity an early warning is essential. The teams at LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA observatories are working on an alert system that will alert astronomers within 30 seconds fo a gravity wave event. If warning is early enough it may be possible to identify the source and watch the after glow. 

The very fabric of space-time can be thought of as a giant celestial ocean. Any movement within the ocean will generate waves. The same is true of movements and disturbances in space, causing a compression in one direction while stretching out in the perpendicular direction. Modern gravity wave detectors are usually L-shaped with beams shining down each arm of the building. The two beams are combined and the interference patterns are studied allowing the lengths of the two beams to be accurately calculated. Any change suggests the passage of a gravity wave. 

LIGO Observatory

A team of researchers at the University of Minnesota have run a study that endeavours to improve the detection of the waves. Not only do they hope to improve the detection itself but also to establish an alerting mechanism so that astronomers get a notification within 30 seconds after the event detection. 

The team used data from previous observations and created simulated gravity wave signal data so that they could test the system. But it is far more than just an alerting system. Once fully operational, it will be able to detect the shape of the signals, track how it evolves over time and even provide an estimate of the properties of the individual components that led to the waves. 

After it is fully operational, the software would detect the wave for example from neutron star or black hole collisions. The former usually too faint to be able to detect unless its location is known precisely. It would generate an alert from the wave to help precisely pinpoint the location giving an opportunity for follow up study. 

Light bursts from the collision of two neutron stars. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/CI Lab

There are still many outstanding questions surrounding neutron star and black hole formation not least of which is the exact mechanism that leads to the formation of gold and uranium. 

graThe LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory) has just finished its latest run but the next is due in February 2025. Between recent observing runs, enhancements and improvements have been made to improve the capability of detecting signals. Eventually of course it comes down to the data and once the current run ends, the teams will get started. 

Source : Researchers advance detection of gravitational waves to study collisions of neutron stars and black holes

The post Astronomers Will Get Gravitational Wave Alerts Within 30 Seconds appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Astronomy

How the US is preparing for a potential bird flu pandemic

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Fri, 04/26/2024 - 6:11pm
As the US grapples with an ongoing bird flu outbreak in dairy cattle, the country’s health agencies are ramping up surveillance efforts and working to develop a vaccine if needed
Categories: Astronomy