Poetry and student art heading for Mars

Expected to launch to Mars in November, the MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission) spacecraft

will explore the planet’s upper atmosphere, ionosphere and interactions with the sun and solar wind. Scientists will use MAVEN data to determine the role that loss of volatile compounds, such as CO2, N2, and H2O, from the Mars atmosphere to space has played over time, giving insight into the history of Mars atmosphere and climate, liquid water, and planetary habitability.

The spacecraft will also carry a DVD with over 1100 haiku poems selected in the outreach contest Going to Mars. Here the five Contest winners, which received more than 1000 votes in the public voting:

It’s funny, they named
Mars after the God of War
Have a look at Earth
Benedict Smith
United Kingdom

Thirty-six million
miles of whispering welcome.
Mars, you called us home.
Vanna Bonta
USA

Stars in the blue sky
cheerfully observe the Earth
while we long for them
Luisa Santoro
Italy

distant red planet
the dreams of earth beings flow
we will someday roam
Greg Pruett
Idaho, USA

Mars, your secret is unknown for humanity we want to know you.

Fanni Redenczki
Hungary

Alan Boyle reports on the contest at MAVEN mission team / picks haiku for Red Planet / We’re green with envy – NBC News.com.

Find more space poetry resources here, including an epic poem about Mars settlement.

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Also on the DVD will be digital images of student art selected in the Going to Mars student art contest:

Young people from all over the world submitted 377 unique entries into the Going to Mars student art contest! The contest ran from May 15 to April 8 and was followed by online public voting to determine the First and Second Place winners. The total number of votes on all entries was nearly 82,000!

As a special recognition of the inspiring artwork we received, we are pleased to announce that all 377 entries will be included as digital files on the DVD that will fly to Mars onboard the MAVEN spacecraft!

ISEC Space Elevator Conference, Aug.23-25, Seattle, WA

The ISEC Space Elevator Conference  will take place August 23-25 at the Museum of Flight in Seattle, Washington.

Online Registration is open until August 18, 2013.

The Technical Program will run from Friday, August 23, 2013 through Sunday, August 25, 2013:

  • Space Elevator Overview Presentation: The popular conceptual design
  • Presentations on Tether Climbers: The theme and main focus of this year’s conference
  • The Strong Tether ChallengeCanceled this year due to lack of competitors
  • Carbon Nanotube (CNT) Research: Latest progress in high strength CNT research
  • Various Workshop on Space Elevator Feasibility:  Multiple workshops throughout the conference on various space elevator topics.
  • SE Impact on the Future: Transformations enabled by the SE – space exploration, resource utilization, and more
  • Shotgun Science Session: Ideas not ready for prime time: rapid sequence, 5 minutes each

On Saturday 24th, there will be a one day Family Science Fest.

The Space Elevator Conference presents the third annual Family Science Fest on Saturday, August 24. This day-long, family-friendly event has something for everyone and you’ll have the entire museum to explore, top to bottom. Local companies, organizations, schools and universities will offer hands-on activities, displays and demonstrations with the focus on STEM (science, technology, engineering and math). Roam the museum’s Side Gallery and watch teams compete in a special robotics competition; visit Robot Alley and the Gadget Gallery; participate in a special STEM Scavenger Hunt; learn about the Space Elevator and its importance to mankind at Space Elevator 101 and 201 presentations. This event is included in the Museum of Flight admission price.

 

HamTV system delivered to the ISS

The hardware for a system to transmit digital TV over the over the amateur radio station on the ISS was carried aboard the Japanese HTV cargo module recently launched to the station .

There has been slow scan TV but not true video over the ISS ham system. This document gives the history and status of efforts to implement video transmission : Ham Video: A DATV transmitter on Columbus – AMSAT.org – 2013 (pdf).

From the latest AMSAT News Bulletin:

 HamTV Transmitter Launched to ISS

On Saturday, August 3 at 1948 UT the Japanese HTV-4 cargo vessel was successfully launched to the International Space Station (ISS). On-board was the HamTV transmitter and a number of CubeSats carrying amateur radio payloads.

The Japanese space agency JAXA has announced details of four CubeSats on the launch. They will be deployed from the ISS by the JEM Small Satellite Orbital Deployer (J-SSOD) between October 2013 and
March 2014.

The four CubeSats are:
• PicoDragon a 1U CubeSat developed by Vietnam National Satellite Center(VNSC), University of Tokyo, IHI aerospace. CW beacon on 437.250 MHz and 1k2 AFSK AX.25 telemetry on 437.365 MHz
• ArduSat-1 and ArduSat-X 1U CubeSats developed by Nanorack, NanoSatisfi. ArduSat-1 437.325 MHz 9k6 MSK CCSDS downlink. ArduSat-X 437.345MHz 9k6 MSK CCSDS downlink.
• TechEdSat-3 a 3U CubeSat developed by NASA Ames Research Center

The company NanoRack has announced it is sending 36 Units of CubeSats to the ISS (believed to be 26 separate CubeSats, some 2U or 3U in size). At the time of writing it is believed they will be going on a later cargo vessel.

The main mission of HamTV is to perform contacts between the astronauts on the ISS and school students, not only by voice, but also by unidirectional video from the ISS to the ground within the ARISS program.

The ESA Columbus module on the ISS will host the 2.4 GHz video transmitting station in addition to the existing 144 MHz FM amateur radio station. This new equipment can broadcast images from the ISS during the school contacts or other pre-recorded video images up to 24 hours a day to allow ground stations tuning.

It is planned to transmit DVB-S signals on 2.4 GHz at either 1.3Msps or 2.3Msps with 10 watts of RF.

The IARU Amateur Satellite Frequency Coordination Panel have announced frequencies of 2422.0 MHz and 2437.0 MHz.

HamVideo is the name of the onboard DATV S-band transmitter. HamTV is the name of the complete system, comprising DATV downlink and VHF voice uplink. Kaiser Italia SRL was the prime-contractor for the design and development of the flight and ground segment
http://www.kayser.it/index.php/exploration-2/ham-tv

Read the HamTV overview paper here.

HamTV Link Budget
http://www.amsat.it/Amsat-Italia_HamTV.pdf

HamTV on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/Hamtvproject

ARISS DATV Antennas Installed on Columbus
http://www.ariss-eu.org/columbus.htm

Spaceflight story – Japan’s HTV-4 launches supplies and science to
the ISS http://tinyurl.com/ANS-216-C

Italy, the Moon, and a passing moment on the ISS

Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano on the International Space Station posts some beautiful pictures and a wonderful description of seeing his country at night from space:

Moon-rise-1024x679[1]The edge of the Moon is seen through high altitude noctilucent clouds.

Parmitano writes vividly about his view from the Cupola:

Using my torch, I enter Cupola and slowly, deliberately, I open each window, one after the other. Even though there are just a matter of minutes left before we fly over Italy, we are still above central Africa, where a raging monsoon stretches to fill my entire field of vision, from one horizon to the other, for hundreds of kilometres. In the darkness of the orbital night, lightning flashes an unreal light on one of the most beautiful scenes I have ever seen. The blue light streaks across my view, flaring from dozens of storm cells. With a frantic, syncopated rhythm worthy of the greatest percussionists, the white clouds lit up by the lightning momentarily rip open the black African night, made darker by the absence of street lighting. There is a violence to it that I can almost feel from up here, 400 kilometres above the highest clouds. The lack of thunder lends a surreal air to the storms, and the silence is deafening.

[…]

Looking towards the north, I see the Balearic Islands fully lit, and I consciously refrain from looking east straight away: I want to savour these moments. Beneath me, through Cupola’s central window, I see Tunis, Hammamet and then Sfax, and I realise there’s not much time left. Through the window right in front of me, lit up like village streets in Carnival, I see one of the most overwhelming sights I’ve ever seen as an astronaut: an unmistakable shape, completely cloudless, the boot of Italy lies perfectly outlined by lights that run continuously from the tip of Calabria to the Ligurian coast, tracing its profile like a brand-new constellation in the nocturnal depths of the Mediterranean Sea. Sardinia and Corsica, not as bright as the rest, move slowly across the scene, and on the north-eastern horizon, a violent storm seems to ravage central Europe, from Austria to Germany. From up here, Naples and Rome proudly dominate the scene, radiating a splendour above all other cities. But Bologna, Florence, Milan, Turin – they are all visible, thousands of kilometres away. Vesuvius forms a dark circle in a land utterly saturated by light.

[…]

It’s late, and tomorrow will be a long day. With those lights still filling my eyes, I slowly close the seven windows and cross the Station to return to my sleeping pod. Not even dreams could replace the beautiful reality that revolves, oblivious, beneath us.

Mediterraneo[1]

Astronaut Barbie from Mattel

Mattel puts Barbie into space. And a new space collectible is born. Remember not to open the package!

 

Everyone can participate in space