Nine year old wins contest to name OSIRIS-REx target asteroid

NASA’s OSIRIS-REx Mission will take off in 2016 on a mission to visit the near-Earth carbonaceous asteroid (101955) . It will grab a sample of the object and bring it back to earth for analysis.

The name 101955 is, to say the least, a bit boring. So the University of Arizona (home of the OSIRIS-REx mission lead team), The Planetary Society and MIT Lincoln Laboratory (the home institution of the discoverers of the asteroid) sponsored a contest to give it a new name.

Today it was announced that the name Bennu was selected. It was proposed by Mike Puzio, age 9, of North Carolina. He said

that the large heron-like Touch-and-Go Sample Mechanism (TAGSAM) arm and winged OSIRIS-REx spacecraft made him think of Bennu. Puzio stated, “The winged OSIRIS-REx and its heron-like TAGSAM evoke attributes of Bennu, as does the egg shape of the asteroid itself.”

Bennu was an important avian deity in ancient Egypt and one of the symbols of the god Osiris. Egyptians usually depicted Bennu as a gray heron. The double nature of asteroids delivering life’s molecules and sometimes bringing destruction such as the recent fall in Chelyabinsk, Russia, inspired the mission name, OSIRIS-REx, and now the asteroid’s name.

More here:

Video: The Mercury Control Center

NASA Kennedy Space Center posted this program about the Mercury control center.

http://youtu.be/Y5eIXtnoe2k

Caption:

Before one small step for man, and one giant leap for mankind, a team of daring space pioneers and a pair of experimental rocket projects came together and set forth in the nation’s first pursuit to further humankind’s understanding of the Earth and the heavens. With the eyes on the sky and the future of space exploration beyond the horizon, flight controllers inside NASA’s Mercury Control Center watched the American space program take flight. And so here, the story of American space exploration began.

Night sky highlights for May 2013

NASA’s What’s up for May 2013? describes the night sky for the coming month:

Space policy roundup – April 30, 2013

An extended look at the President’s proposed NASA budget: Further Analysis of NASA’s 2014 Budget Proposal – The Planetary Society.

The AAS doesn’t like the planetary science funding in the budget:

===

Jeff Foust reports on the recent Planetary Defense Conference 2013 in Flagstaff, Arizona and the discussions and studies presented their regarding possible what to do if a large object was found heading towards earth: Planetary defense: deflection and disruption – The Space Review

===

Res Communis posts the latest collection of space and aviation law, regulation and policy links: Library: A Round-up of Reading

===

There will be a conference at the Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies in Belgium on 12-13 September 2013 that will deal with “legal and policy aspects of the commercial use of space and space tourism”: Call for Papers: Commercial Use of Space & Space Tourism – Legal and Policy Aspects -Res Communis.

Cubesat workshop presentations on line

The 10th Annual Spring [CubeSat] Workshop 2013 took place last week. The agenda (pdf) included a vast array of CubeSat projects, technologies, and applications.  You can watch the talks on line: Videos of presentations – CubeSat Workshop 2013.

This item via  2013 CubeSat Workshop – KentuckySpace Blog.

 

 

Everyone can participate in space