An improved view of Triton

Neptune’s moon Triton is far, far away but we got a close up look at it when the Voyager 2 probe passed by in 1989. The Voyager’s imagery of Triton has been enhanced with modern processing techniques:

Voyager Map Details Neptune’s Strange Moon Triton 

August 21, 2014 : NASA’s Voyager 2 spacecraft gave humanity its first close-up look at Neptune and its moon Triton in the summer of 1989. Like an old film, Voyager’s historic footage of Triton has been “restored” and used to construct the best-ever global color map of that strange moon. The map, produced by Paul Schenk, a scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, has also been used to make a movie recreating that historic Voyager encounter, which took place 25 years ago, on August 25, 1989.

The Voyager 2 spacecraft flew by Triton, a moon of Neptune, in the summer of 1989.

The Voyager 2 spacecraft flew by Triton, a moon of Neptune, in the summer
of 1989. 
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Lunar & Planetary Institute.
Full image and caption

The new Triton map has a resolution of 1,970 feet (600 meters) per pixel. The colors have been enhanced to bring out contrast but are a close approximation to Triton’s natural colors. Voyager’s “eyes” saw in colors slightly different from human eyes, and this map was produced using orange, green and blue filter images.

In 1989, most of the northern hemisphere was in darkness and unseen by Voyager. Because of the speed of Voyager’s visit and the slow rotation of Triton, only one hemisphere was seen clearly at close distance. The rest of the surface was either in darkness or seen as blurry markings.

The production of the new Triton map was inspired by anticipation of NASA’s New Horizons encounter with Pluto, coming up a little under a year from now. Among the improvements on the map are updates to the accuracy of feature locations, sharpening of feature details by removing some of the blurring effects of the camera, and improved color processing.

Although Triton is a moon of a planet and Pluto is a dwarf planet, Triton serves as a preview of sorts for the upcoming Pluto encounter. Although both bodies originated in the outer solar system, Triton was captured by Neptune and has undergone a radically different thermal history than Pluto. Tidal heating has likely melted the interior of Triton, producing the volcanoes, fractures and other geological features that Voyager saw on that bitterly cold, icy surface.

Pluto is unlikely to be a copy of Triton, but some of the same types of features may be present. Triton is slightly larger than Pluto, has a very similar internal density and bulk composition, and has the same low-temperature volatiles frozen on its surface. The surface composition of both bodies includes carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane and nitrogen ices.

Voyager also discovered atmospheric plumes on Triton, making it one of the known active bodies in the outer solar system, along with objects such as Jupiter’s moon Io and Saturn’s moon Enceladus. Scientists will be looking at Pluto next year to see if it will join this list. They will also be looking to see how Pluto and Triton compare and contrast, and how their different histories have shaped the surfaces we see.

Although a fast flyby, New Horizons’ Pluto encounter on July 14, 2015, will not be a replay of Voyager but more of a sequel and a reboot, with a new and more technologically advanced spacecraft and, more importantly, a new cast of characters. Those characters are Pluto and its family of five known moons, all of which will be seen up close for the first time next summer.

Triton may not be a perfect preview of coming attractions, but it serves as a prequel to the cosmic blockbuster expected when New Horizons arrives at Pluto next year.

The new Triton map and movie can be found at: www.lpi.usra.edu/icy_moons/

In another historic milestone for the Voyager mission, Aug. 25 also marks the two-year anniversary of Voyager 1 reaching interstellar space.

The Voyager mission is managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in Pasadena, California, for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, manages the New Horizons mission for NASA’s SMD.

For more information about the Lunar and Planetary Institute, visit: ww.lpi.usra.edu

For more information about Voyager, visit:

For more information about New Horizons mission, visit:

 

MakerBot Mars Base Challenge – winners selected

NASA JPL and Thingiverse sponsored the MakerBot Mars Base Challenge in which contestants were to

design a utilitarian Mars base that can withstand the elements and maybe even make you feel at home, despite being 140 million miles away from Earth, on average.

Three winners have been selected : Welcome To Mars. Here’s Where You’ll Be Staying: In a fun competition to design a 3-D-printed Martian habitat, three designs are finalists. – Popular Science.

The design models are 3D printable.

The Queen B (Bioshielding) 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Mars Apartment by NoahHornberger

10_revised_preview_card[1]

Martian Pyramid by Valcrow 

MarsPryamid-4_Feature_preview_card[1]

The Mars Acropolis by cstarrman 

Mars_Acropolis_1_preview_card[1]

 

Video: Oscillating flame in micro-g

NASA posts this brief clip showing a flame experiment as part of a Space Station microgravity combustion science study:

From the caption:

From ignition to pulsating-jellyfish then warp-drive ending! Understanding combustion may lead to more efficient engines and spectacular videos.

Science Objectives
The Flame Extinguishment – 2 (FLEX-2) experiment is the second experiment to fly on the ISS which uses small droplets of fuel to study the special spherical characteristics of burning fuel droplets in space. The FLEX-2 experiment studies how quickly fuel burns, the conditions required for soot to form, and how mixtures of fuels evaporate before burning. Understanding these processes could lead to the production of a safer spacecraft as well as increased fuel efficiency for engines using liquid fuel on Earth.

Earth Applications
Watching fuel burn in a perfect sphere provides a unique view of fire that would be impossible to recreate on Earth. Better knowledge of fire’s dynamics could lead to improved fuels for vehicles and aircraft, including efficient, environmentally friendly mixtures of chemicals that burn well together and produce less soot. Soot results from the incomplete burning of a hydrocarbon, and it is harmful to human and environmental health. The FLEX-2 experiment provides a unique view on soot formation that would be impossible under the influence of Earth’s gravity.

Space Applications
The FLEX-2 experiment measures soot buildup, flame heat and the burning rates of various types of fuels and fuel mixtures. Understanding how fuels burn in microgravity could improve the efficiency of fuel mixtures used for interplanetary missions by reducing cost and weight. It could also lead to improved safety measures for manned spacecraft.

Conditions for this test:
Test conducted with 50/50 fuel mixture of iso-octane and heptane in a standard air environment (21% oxygen and 79% nitrogen at 1 atm). Burn with 3-mm droplet experienced flame oscillations, which appear as a hole in the flame shell that repeatedly opens and closes. These oscillations create asymmetries in the flame, resulting in a force imbalance on the droplet.

For more FLEX-2 information, click on the link below: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sta…

Latest on the Register’s LOHAN (Low Orbit Helium Assisted Navigator) adventure

The UK’s Register newspaper has been hosting reports on the LOHAN (Low Orbit Helium Assisted Navigator) project, which aims to launch a small rocket powered plane (named Vulture 2) from a high altitude balloon. (See infographic below.)  Plans to fly the package in Spain were undermined by bureaucratic barriers to “explosive” model rocket motors. So they will fly it at Spaceport America in New Mexico if they can raise enough travel money via crowd-funding :  LOHAN packs bags for SPACEPORT AMERICA! – The Register –

[infographic]

Find videos about their endeavors here, including this one about their 2010 Paper Aircraft Released Into Space (PARIS)  project in 2010 to set a Guinness world record for highest paper plane launch :