• Zero tolerance mode in effect!

Освоение солнечной системы

Всё, что удалось найти про страхи:

Fear is when you’re not prepared. We respect the environment we’re going into, but I wouldn’t use the term fear. We’ve done all the preparation we can, which emotionally desensitizes you, so you can focus on your tasks.

 
Специалисты компании Arianespace и сотрудники Европейского космического агентства (ESA) завершили подготовку ракеты Ariane 5, которая уже завтра, 13 апреля, должна отправить в космос аппарат JUICE, который займется изучением ледяных спутников Юпитера.

©ESA
Запуск JUICE запланирован на 13 апреля, прямая трансляция начнется в 14:45 по московскому времени, старт состоится в 15:15.
Главной целью экспедиции космического зонда JUICE являются три крупнейшие ледяные луны Юпитера — Европа, Ганимед и Каллисто. Согласно исследованиям астрономов, под их поверхностью скрываются океаны жидкой воды. JUICE должен изучить спутники Юпитера и оценить их потенциальную пригодность для жизни.



 
В добрый путь.
 
В добрый путь.


Европейское космическое агентство (ESA) запустило свою первую за 12 лет миссию к Юпитеру - рисунок украинской девочки украсил ракету ARIANE 5 с аппаратом Juice.
Об этом сообщают ESA и Sky News.
Сообщается, что к самой большой планете Солнечной системы летит автоматическая межпланетная станция Juice, которая должна достичь Юпитера до 2031 года. https://www.epravda.com.ua/rus/news/2023/04/14/699137/

При этом аппарат должен преодолеть почти 600 миллионов километров. По плану станция должна изучить три из четырех крупнейших спутников Юпитера - Европу, Каллисто и Ганимеда.
Космический корабль создала компания Airbus, он расположен в носовом конусе ракеты-носителя Ariane 5.

Как пишет Sky News, рисунок украинской девушки Ярины Закалюжной украсил ракету Juice, направляющуюся к Юпитеру. Его выбрали по результатам конкурса.
 

How many moons does Earth have?​



Silhouette of mother and child watching the moon against the blue night sky.

Is this Earth's only moon? (Image credit: Surasak Pumdontri / EyeEm via Getty Images)


How many moons does Earth have? The answer seems obvious: Earth has only one moon. It's even in the name: the moon. At first, Earth's moon needed no other name, because for millennia, we didn't know any other natural satellite existed. But over centuries of astronomy and space exploration, we've discovered hundreds of moons in the solar system, and there may be more than you think circling our planet.

"The moon" holds the title of Earth's only solid, permanent moon, said Gábor Horváth (opens in new tab), an astronomer at Eötvös Loránd University in Hungary. But it's not the only object to be pulled into Earth's orbit; a host of near-Earth objects and dust clouds are also caught in Earth's gravity. These often-temporary satellites technically qualify as minimoons, quasi-satellites or ghost moons.
So the question of how many moons Earth has is more complicated than you might think. The number has changed over time — from zero, to one, to sometimes multiple moons.
Back in Earth's early days, about 4.5 billion years ago, our planet was moonless. Then, around 4.4 billion years ago, a Mars-size protoplanet called Theia struck Earth. Large chunks of Earth's crust were catapulted into space. The rocky debris came together — maybe in just a few hours — to form the moon, according to 2022 research published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters (opens in new tab).
Other "moons" that measure just a few feet across have been far more temporary, captured by Earth's gravity for short periods before escaping back into space. In 2006, there was the up-to-20-foot-wide (6 meters) asteroid 2006 RH120 (opens in new tab), a space rock that lingered for 18 months and was the first observed long-term capture (opens in new tab) of an asteroid into Earth's orbit. And 2020 CD3, a space rock up to 11.5 feet (3.5 m) across, left Earth's orbit in March 2020 after spending three years as our mini second moon. In 2020, scientists also spotted SO 2020, a minimoon that drifted back into space in early 2021. Turns out, though, that SO 2020 wasn't a natural moon; it was the remains of a rocket booster from the 1960s.

An example of a recent minimoon was a space rock up to 11.5 feet (3.5 m) across known as 2020 CD3 which was in Earth's orbit for three years before leaving. (Image credit: Stephane Masclaux via Shutterstock)
For 13 hours in 2015, scientists thought they had found a new temporary moon orbiting Earth. But they quickly realized their mistake when it was revealed that the "moon" was merely the European Space Agency's Gaia space telescope, prompting the International Astronomical Union's Minor Planet Center to issue a retraction (opens in new tab).
In addition to the moons that come and go from Earth's orbit, there are space objects that NASA calls quasi-satellites, such as the asteroid 3753 Cruithne. These space rocks orbit the sun so similarly to Earth that they stick with our planet throughout its 365-day orbit. The quasi-moon Kamo'oalewa — suspected of being an artifact of the actual moon — is driven primarily by the sun's gravity but appears to orbit Earth in a corkscrew-like path.
Related mysteries
Who owns the moon?
How many humans could the moon support?
How long would it take to walk around the moon?
Some space objects, such as asteroid 2010 TK7, earn the title of "moon" because they get caught in the unique gravity of the sun-Earth or Earth-moon systems. The gravity of the two larger bodies creates regions of centripetal force, called Lagrange points, that hold smaller objects in place in gravitationally stable points in space, according to NASA (opens in new tab). Two Lagrange points, L4 and L5, form an equilateral triangle with Earth. Effectively, the objects captured in these Lagrange points, called Trojans, fall in line with Earth and join its orbit around the sun.
"Parallel to the formation of the solid Moon and stabilization of its orbit around the Earth, the Lagrange points L4 and L5 have also arisen, and have started to collect [and] trap the interplanetary dust particles," Horváth told Live Science in an email. Some astronomers call these particle clouds "ghost moons." They're also called Kordylewski clouds, after the Polish astronomer who first reported them in the 1960s. At first, many scientists were unconvinced, but since then, research by astronomers such as Horváth has confirmed (opens in new tab) that dust clouds are accumulating at these Lagrange points.
However, these ghost moons will never form a more solid moon, because the dust can't conglutinate, or join or adhere together, Horváth said. And while the Lagrange points remain constant, the material in them is dynamic, constantly entering and exiting the dust cloud.
 
25 апреля 2023 года в 19:40 по МСК запланирована посадка японского лендера HAKUTO-R на Луну.

На борту аппарата находится первый луноход ОАЭ “Рашид” и японский микроробот-трансформер SORA-Q. Если все пройдет успешно, HAKUTO-R станет первым частным аппаратом, совершившим мягкую посадку на Луну, а Япония – четвертой страной в истории (после СССР, США и Китая), посадившей аппарат на поверхность Луны.

 
Увы, но связь с аппаратом после посадки установить не удалось. Скорее всего посадка не удалась. ;(
По сообщению компании ispace аппарату скорее всего не хватило топлива для посадки.
 

Saturn regains status as planet with most moons in solar system​

Discovery of 62 new moons restores ringed planet’s lead after it was briefly overtaken by Jupiter

Hannah Devlin and Nicola Davis
Fri 12 May 2023 18.07 BSTLast modified on Fri 12 May 2023 19.21 BST


Saturn has regained its crown as the planet with the most moons in the solar system, just months after being overtaken by its fellow gas giant Jupiter.
The leap-frog comes after the discovery of 62 new moons of Saturn, bringing its official total to 145. Jupiter, which added 12 moons to its tally in February, has 95 moons that have been formally designated by the International Astronomical Union (IAU).

“Saturn not only has nearly doubled its number of moons, it now has more moons than all the rest of the planets in the solar system combined,” said Prof Brett Gladman, an astronomer at the University of British Columbia who was involved in the observations.
The new moons, which have been assigned strings of numbers and letters for now, will eventually be given names based on Gallic, Norse and Canadian Inuit gods, in keeping with convention for Saturn’s moons. Gladman said his team would be consulting with Inuit elders to ask for proposals that could be put to the IAU for approval.
Many of the new objects are likely to be remnants of a relatively recent moon-moon collision that resulted in a larger moon fracturing and “spreading its children” in orbit about the planet.
While it is possible that Jupiter may, in future, temporarily inch ahead, the latest findings appear to cement the case that, ultimately, Saturn has more moons. Since Jupiter is closer, astronomers can spot much smaller moons.
Saturn
Saturn’s rings could be remains of moon that strayed too close, say scientists
Read more
“At a fixed size there are three times more Saturn satellites than Jupiter satellites,” said Gladman. “They’re not all known yet, but we already know the final answer.”

In recent decades, the number of confirmed moons has steadily increased as telescopes and analysis methods have stepped up in sensitivity. The latest study used a technique called “shift and stack” to discover fainter, and smaller, satellites. It involves shifting sequential images at the rate that the moon is moving across the sky, making the moon appear brighter when all the data is combined.

Dr Edward Ashton, who led the project at the University of British Columbia and now works at Taiwan’s Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, compared the challenge of connecting the various appearances of the moons in the data to a child’s dot-to-dot drawing. “But with about 100 different games on the same page and you don’t know which dot belongs to which puzzle,” he said.

The team used data taken using the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on top of Mauna Kea, Hawaii between 2019 and 2021, to detect moons down to a diameter of 2.5km.

It is hoped that Nasa’s Dragonfly mission, due to launch in 2027, will be able to make closer observations of at least one of Saturn’s small outer moons.

Separately, scientists have published findings suggesting that the rings of Saturn were acquired relatively recently in the history of the solar system. Experts working on data collected by Nasa’s Cassini spacecraft said the latest observations suggest that the massive rings did not form at the same time as the planet, but formed no more than 400m years ago.

“It is natural to think that the rings have been formed together with Saturn [which is] about 4.5bn years old,” said Dr Sascha Kempf, a co-author of the research at the University of Colorado Boulder.

But it seems that Saturn’s rings are not here to stay: research has previously revealed they are disintegrating.

“The rings are not for eternity and we are probably lucky that we can observe them now,” Kempf said.
 
Не нашел куда:


Rock that punched hole in New Jersey house confirmed to be 4.6 billion-year-old meteorite​

By Sharmila Kuthunur

This apparent meteorite struck a house in Hopewell Township, New Jersey on May 8, 2023.

This apparent meteorite struck a house in Hopewell Township, New Jersey on May 8, 2023. (Image credit: Hopewell Township Police Department)

A metallic-looking rock that smashed through the roof of a residential home in New Jersey’s Hopewell Township earlier this week is indeed a meteorite — a rare one about 4.6 billion years old, scientists confirmed on Thursday (May 11).

"It was obvious right away from looking at it that it was a meteorite in a class called stony chondrite," Nathan Magee, chair of the physics department at The College of New Jersey (TCNJ), whose office was contacted by the Hopewell Township police soon after the rock was found on Monday (May :cool:, told Space.com.
Chondrites are primitive rocks that make up 85% of meteorites found on Earth. Most chondrites found to date have been discovered in Antarctica; only rarely does one crash in populated areas.
Related: What are meteorites?

Researchers at The College of New Jersey have confirmed that this rock, which struck a house in Hopewell Township, New Jersey on May 8, 2023, is a 4.6-billion-year-old meteorite. (Image credit: The College of New Jersey)
The New Jersey rock, which is about 6 inches long by 4 inches wide (15 by 10 centimeters), is a notable exception. It slammed into the Hopewell Township house, dented the floorboard, punched two holes in the ceiling and was still warm when it was discovered by Suzy Kop in her father's bedroom around noon on Monday.

"I'm looking up on the ceiling and there's these two holes, and I'm like, 'What in the world has happened here?'" Kop told 6 ABC's Trish Hartman (opens in new tab).
Once emergency responders cleared Kop, her family and their home of any harmful radioactive residues, Kop handed over the space rock to the nearby college for further inspection.
At TCNJ, Magee's team consulted Jerry Delaney, a retired meteorite expert who had worked on the meteorite collection at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The team confirmed the space rock to be about 4.56 billion years old, which means it has been around since the beginning of our solar system and represents the leftover fragments from its creation.
The 2.2-pound (0.9 kilograms) meteorite, which will likely be named Titusville, NJ — the postal address closest to its landing site — is "in excellent condition, and one of a very small number of similar witnessed chondrite falls known to science," Magee said in a statement on Thursday.
The top layer of the meteorite has a blackened crust a few millimeters thick from partially burning up in Earth's atmosphere. Using a hand lens designed to look at rocks closely, his team found that the meteroite's minerals are blue and gray in color, with a small amount of other metals mixed in, Magee told Space.com.
 

Blue Origin выиграла контракт NASA на создание корабля для доставки людей на Луну в миссии Artemis V


NASA выбрала вторую компанию для доставки людей на Луну. За третью миссию с высадкой экипажа на Луну в рамках программы Artemis будет отвечать Blue Origin миллиардера Джеффа Безоса (Jeff Bezos). Она построит систему посадки для миссии Artemis V, запуск которой запланирован на сентябрь 2029 года. Компания не упомянула о выборе транспортного средства, однако уже известно, что Blue Origin работает над посадочным аппаратом Blue Moon.

 Источник изображения: Blue Origin

Капсула Boeing Orion доставит четырёх астронавтов к лунной орбитальной станции Gateway, где два члена экипажа воспользуются посадочным аппаратом Blue Origin, пристыкованным к космической станции, чтобы приземлиться на южном полюсе Луны. Экспедиция продлится неделю, в течение которой они будут управлять ровером и проводить научные эксперименты, в то время как другие астронавты будут расширять и обслуживать Gateway.
NASA уже выбрало корабль компании SpaceX для первой (Artemis III) и второй (Artemis IV) миссий с высадкой людей на Луну. В прошлом году агентство заявило, что будет принимать предложения для второго посадочного корабля, чтобы обеспечить запасной вариант и способствовать конкуренции. Blue Origin подала заявку на другой лунный контракт в декабре прошлого года. Компания возражала против победы SpaceX и подала в суд на NASA за якобы игнорирование проблем безопасности при заключении контракта, но федеральный суд отклонил эти претензии.

Это большое событие для Blue Origin. Хотя у компании уже есть контракт с NASA на научную миссию на Марсе и финансовая поддержка космической станции Orbital Reef, прежде ей не удавалось добиться успеха в лунной программе. Это также подчёркивает, что NASA все больше полагается на частные технологии для полётов за пределы земной орбиты. К примеру, скафандры для лунных миссий сделает компания Axiom Space.
 
Усім відоме фото «Схід Землі» (Earthrise) насправді є другим із серії трьох знімків зробленим екіпажем «Apollo-8», перша фотографія була чорно-білою. Перед вами оброблена перша фотографія у кольорі та у незвичному, проте оригінальному ракурсі (апарат робив оберт навколо Місяця трохи вище лінії екватора).До речі, саме так завжди показує свою копію зображення астронавт місії Вільям Андерс (William Anders)


 

'Shooting stars' seen raining down on the sun for the 1st time (images)​

Astronomers have discovered never-before-seen meteor-like fireballs in stunning plasma displays on the sun.


Solar meteors discovered in the images by the European Solar Orbiter spacecraft.

The European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter sees a partial section of the sun with spectacular meteor-like displays.(Image credit: ESA/Solar Orbiter EUI/HRI/Patrick Antolin)
Astronomers have spotted never-before-seen meteor-like streaks seemingly rain on the surface of the sun, but you should think twice before attempting to catch these falling stars.
"If humans were alien beings capable of living on the sun's surface, we would constantly be rewarded with amazing views of shooting stars, but we would need to watch out for our heads!" Patrick Antolin, a solar physicist at Northumbria University in London and lead author of the discovery, said in a statement.
These solar shooting stars are quite different from shooting stars that appear over Earth, which are fragments of space dust, rock, or small asteroids that enter the atmosphere at high speeds and burn up, creating streaks of light. The solar shooting stars are giant clumps of plasma dropping to the star's surface at incredible speeds.
On Earth, most meteors don't make it to the surface due to the thick atmosphere of our planet, but the sun's atmosphere — the corona — is much thinner, and thus these clumps are not completely stripped as they fall. Thus solar shooting stars could make it to our star's surface intact.
 

Moon Heat Anomaly Appears to Be a New Form of Lunar Volcanism​

Space07 July 2023

compton-belkovich-region-642x260.jpg
The region of the Moon where the Compton-Belkovich volcanic complex can be found. (Galileo Project/JPL/NASA)

A massive blob of ancient granite has been found lurking beneath the Moon's surface, evidence of a type of volcanism we've never seen there before.
Analysis suggests it's a deeply buried giant mass of solidified magma, or batholith, deposited some 3.5 billion years ago. We see this on Earth fairly frequently, but planetary scientists are excited to observe it on the Moon.
"Any big body of granite that we find on Earth used to feed a big bunch of volcanoes, much like a large system is feeding the Cascade volcanoes in the Pacific Northwest today," says planetary scientist Matthew Siegler of Southern Methodist University and the Planetary Science Institute.
"Batholiths are much bigger than the volcanoes they feed on the surface. For example, the Sierra Nevada mountains are a batholith, left from a volcanic chain in the western United States that existed long ago."
compton-belkovich-hotspot-1.jpg
The Compton-Belkovich hotspot. (Siegler et al., Nature, 2023)
Granite is abundant on Earth but extremely rare elsewhere in the Solar System since it requires specific conditions to form.

Those conditions include a lot of liquid water, and plate tectonics, which help melt and recycle material in the planet's crust. Granite production requires multi-stage remelting of basaltic rock, or crystal fractionation in liquid basalt.
The Moon has neither liquid water, nor plate tectonics.
Yet beneath a volcanic region known as Compton-Belkovich, close to the north pole on the Moon's far side, microwave instruments on China's Chang'e 1 and Chang'e 2 orbiters picked up something strange. They detected anomalous heat, around 20 times higher than average for the lunar highlands.
The researchers were able to analyze the publicly available data from the China National Space Administration, and the findings surprised them.
"What we found was that one of these suspected volcanoes, known as Compton-Belkovich, was absolutely glowing at microwave wavelengths," Siegler says. "What this means is that it is hot, not necessarily at the surface, as you would see in the infrared, but under the surface.

"The only way to explain this is from extra heat coming from somewhere below the feature within the deeper lunar crust. So Compton-Belkovich, thought to be a volcano, is also hiding a large heat source below it."
compton-belkovich-batholith.jpg
A geophysical model of the Compton-Belkovich batholith. (Siegler et al., Nature, 2023)
Compton-Belkovich is notable because the region contains a great deal of thorium, a product of radioactive decay. The analysis conducted by Siegler and his colleagues indicates that radioactive elements in a granite matrix are likely the source of the heat beneath it.
That granite matrix is much larger than they would have expected, too – around 50 kilometers (31 miles) across.
This, the researchers say, is evidence for an evolved magma plumbing system much larger than expected for the Moon.

A system this large needs one of three things: a large mantle plume feeding in magma from within the Moon; an anomalously wet pocket inside the Moon in that location; or a patch of elements that could provide enough radiogenic material to produce enough heat for consistent re-melting.
All three imply large-scale compositional inconsistencies within the Moon that need to be explained.
"If you don't have water it takes extreme situations to make granite. So, here's this system with no water, and no plate tectonics – but you have granite," Siegler says.
"Was there water on the Moon – at least in this one spot? Or was it just especially hot?"
The research has been published in Nature.
 

Glorious New Saturn Image: JWST Has Now Captured All 4 Giant Planets​

Space03 July 2023
By Michelle Starr

GasIceGiants-642x260.jpg


From left, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune as seen in near-infrared by the JWST. (NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI)

With the addition of Saturn, the James Webb Space Telescope has finally captured all four of our Solar System's giant worlds.
JWST's observations of the ringed planet, taken on 25 June 2023, have been cleaned up and processed, giving us a spectacular view of Saturn's glorious rings, shining golden in the darkness.
By contrast, the disk of Saturn is quite dark in the new image, lacking its characteristic bands of cloud, appearing a relatively featureless dim brown.
This is because of the wavelengths in which JWST sees the Universe – near- and mid-infrared. These wavelengths of light are usually invisible to the naked human eye, but they can reveal a lot.
For example, thermal emission – associated with heat – is dominated by infrared wavelengths. When you're trying to learn about what's going on inside a planet wrapped in thick, opaque clouds, studying its temperature is a valuable way to go about it.
Some elements and chemical processes emit infrared light, too. So seeing the planets of the Solar System in wavelengths outside the narrow range admitted by our vision can tell us a lot more about what they have going on.
jwst-saturn.jpg
Saturn in near-infrared wavelengths, using a filter that blocks emission from methane in Saturn's atmosphere. (NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, M. Tiscareno/SETI Institute, M. Hedman/University of Idaho, M. El Moutamid/Cornell University, M. Showalter/SETI Institute, L. Fletcher/University of Leicester, H. Hammel/AURA; J. DePasquale/STScI)

Saturn​

As we saw last week, when we clapped eyes on the raw JWST Saturn images, the observations involved filters that dimmed the light of the planet, while allowing light from the rings and moons to shine brightly. This is so a team led by planetary scientist Leigh Fletcher of the University of Leicester in the UK can study the rings and moons of Saturn in more detail.

They hope to identify new ring structures and, potentially, even new moons orbiting the gas giant. The image above shows three of Saturn's moons, Dione, Enceladus, and Tethys, to the left of the planet. Although dim, the disk of the planet also reveals information about Saturn's seasonal changes.
The northern hemisphere is reaching the end of its 7-year summer, but the polar region is dark. An unknown aerosol process could be responsible. Meanwhile, the atmosphere around the edges of the disk appears bright, which could be the result of methane fluorescence, or the glow of trihydrogen, or both. Further analysis could tell us which.
jwst-jupiter.jpg
JWST's image of Jupiter in near-infrared. (NASA, ESA, CSA, Jupiter ERS Team; Ricardo Hueso/UPV/EHU and Judy Schmidt)

Jupiter​

Jupiter was the first of the giant planets to get the JWST treatment, with images dropping in August of last year – and boy howdy were they stunning.

The spectacular detail seen in the planet's turbulent clouds and storms was perhaps not entirely surprising, but we also got treated to some rarely seen features: the permanent aurorae that shimmer at Jupiter's poles, invisible in optical wavelengths, and Jupiter's tenuous rings.
We also saw two of the planet's smaller, lesser-known moons, Amalthea and Adrastea, with fuzzy blobs of distant galaxies in the background.
"This one image sums up the science of our Jupiter system program, which studies the dynamics and chemistry of Jupiter itself, its rings, and its satellite system," said astronomer Thierry Fouchet of Paris Observatory in France, who co-led the observations.
jwst-neptune.jpg
Neptune in near-infrared, showing its rings for the first time in over 30 years. (NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, J. DePasquale/STScI, N. Rowe-Gurney/NASA-GSFC)

Neptune​

Observations of Neptune arrived in the latter half of September 2022. Because Neptune is so very far away, it tends to get a little neglected; you're probably used to seeing, if anything, the images taken by Voyager 2 when it flew past in 1989. JWST's observations gave us, for the first time in more than 30 years, a new look at the ice giant's dainty rings – and the first ever in infrared.

It also revealed seven of Neptune's 14 known moons, and bright spots in its atmosphere. Most of those are storm activity, but if you look closely, you'll see a bright band circling the planet's equator. This had never been seen before and could be, scientists say, a signature of Neptune's global atmospheric circulation.
jwst-uranus.jpg
Uranus as seen in near-infrared, showing its bright pole, clouds, and rings. (NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, J. DePasquale/STSci)

Uranus​

Uranus is also pretty far away, but it's also a huge weirdo. Although very similar to Neptune, the two planets are slightly different hues, which is something of a mystery, and Uranus is also tipped sideways, which is challenging to explain too.
JWST's observations, released in April 2023, aren't solving these conundrums, but they have revealed 11 of the 13 structures of the incredible Uranian ring system, and an unexplained atmospheric brightening over the planet's polar cap.
JWST has a lot to say about the early Universe; but it's opening up space science close to home, too. As its first year of operations comes to an end, we can't help but speculate what new wonders will be to come in the years ahead.
 
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