Video: The Moon gets smacked by a big rock

A Spanish team working in the MIDAS (Moon Impacts Detection and Analysis Software) project at  the University of Huelva spotted an exceptionally bright impact on the Moon on Sept. 11, 2013, : Watch the Man in the Moon Get Hit in the Face: Video – Discovery News

Watch the Man in the Moon Get Hit in the Face: Video : Discovery News

Space policy roundup – Feb.24.14 [Update]

Space policy/politics related links:

Update:

 

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The Space Show this week

The guests and topics for The Space Show this week:

1. Monday, Feb. 24, 2014, 2-3:30 PM PST (5-6:30 PM EST, 4-5:30 PM CST): We welcome back DR. MADHU THANGAVELU. Dr. Thangavelu will be telling us about his latest USC student team design projects for innovative space development.

2. Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2014:, 7-8:30 PM PST (10-11:30 PM EST, 9-10:30 PM CST): We welcome back ALAN BOYLE of Cosmic Log and MSNBC to update us on space news and stories of interest.

3. Friday, Feb. 28, 2014, 9:30-11 AM PST (12:30-2 PM EST; 11:30 AM-1 PM CST): We welcome back STEPHEN MURPHEY do discuss his Do It Yourself Space Exploration (DIY), an organization dedicated to showcasing the “Do it yourself” space revolution.

4. Sunday, March 2, 2014, 12-1:30 PM PST (3-4:30 PM EST, 2-3:30 PM CST). We have a special program pending for this date but are waiting for final confirmation from one of the participants. More about this particular program later.

See also:
/– The Space Show on Vimeo – webinar videos
/– The Space Show’s Blog – summaries of interviews.
/– The Space Show Classroom Blog – tutorial programs

The Space Show is a project of the One Giant Leap Foundation.

Copenhagen Suborbitals: Co-founder Kristian von Bengtson leaving CS

The Copenhagen Suborbitals DIY rocket and space organization suffered a big blow this weekend when co-founder Kristian von Bengtson announced his resignation:

Von Bengston cited conflicts with the other co-founder, Peter Madsen, as making it untenable for him to stay. He was clearly a major source of ideas and energy for the group. (See his blog at Wired.)  It will be interesting to see if they can sustain their momentum without him as they try to continue the projects currently underway, including the launch of the big HEAT-2X rocket this summer, and towards their long term goal of a manned suborbital spaceflight.

Update: Here is a statement (somewhat garbled by the translator) from Peter Madsen: We must continue! – The Engineer (Google Translate).

Curiosity rolls backwards as it moves forward to its next waypoint

The Curiosity rover shows off another of its multiple talents by driving in reverse over a long distance:

Curiosity Adds Reverse Driving for Wheel Protection

Map of Recent and Planned Driving by Curiosity as of Feb. 18, 2014
This map shows the route driven and route planned for NASA’s Curiosity
Mars rover from before reaching “Dingo Gap” — in upper right — to the mission’s
next science waypoint, “Kimberley” (formerly referred to as “KMS-9”) — in
lower left. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona › Full image and caption

Terrain that NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover is now crossing is as smooth as team members had anticipated based on earlier images from orbit.

On Tuesday, Feb. 18, the rover covered 329 feet (100.3 meters), the mission’s first long trek that used reverse driving and its farthest one-day advance of any kind in more than three months.

The reverse drive validated feasibility of a technique developed with testing on Earth to lessen damage to Curiosity’s wheels when driving over terrain studded with sharp rocks. However, Tuesday’s drive took the rover over more benign ground.

“We wanted to have backwards driving in our validated toolkit because there will be parts of our route that will be more challenging,” said Curiosity Project Manager Jim Erickson of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

The rover team used images taken from orbit to reassess possible routes, after detecting in late 2013 that holes in the vehicle’s aluminum wheels were accumulating faster than anticipated. Getting to the chosen route, which appeared to be less hazardous for the wheels, required crossing a 3-foot-tall (1-meter-tall) dune. Curiosity crossed the dune on Feb. 9.

Erickson said, “After we got over the dune, we began driving in terrain that looks like what we expected based on the orbital data. There are fewer sharp rocks, many of them are loose, and in most places there’s a little bit of sand cushioning the vehicle.”

The mission’s destinations remain the same: a science waypoint first and then the long-term goal of investigating the lower slopes of Mount Sharp, where water-related minerals have been detected from orbit.

The science waypoint, which may be where Curiosity next uses its sample-collecting drill, is an intersection of different rock layers about two-thirds of a mile (about 1.1 kilometers) ahead on the planned route. This location, formerly called KMS-9 from when it was one of many waypoint candidates, is now called “Kimberley,” for the geological mapping quadrant that contains it. The mapping quadrant was named for the northwestern Australia region with very old rocks.

While the rover is headed for the Kimberley waypoint and during the time it spends doing science investigations there, the team will use orbital imagery to choose a path for continuing toward the long-term destination.

“We have changed our focus to look at the big picture for getting to the slopes of Mount Sharp, assessing different potential routes and different entry points to the destination area,” Erickson said. “No route will be perfect; we need to figure out the best of the imperfect ones.”

Curiosity has driven 937 feet (285.5 meters) since the Feb. 9 dune-crossing, for a total odometry of 3.24 miles (5.21 kilometers) since its August 2012 landing.

NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory Project is using Curiosity to assess ancient habitable environments and major changes in Martian environmental conditions. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, built the rover and manages the project for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. For more information about Curiosity, visit www.jpl.nasa.gov/mslwww.nasa.gov/msl and mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/. You can follow the mission on Facebook a www.facebook.com/marscuriosity and on Twitter at:  www.twitter.com/marscuriosity.