Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter images of Apollo & spacecraft sites on the Moon

The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) site now offers images taken from the LRO spacecraft  of the sites on the Moon where an Apollo visit took place or where an unmanned spacecraft touched the surface: LROC Featured Sites (link via Behind The Black).

See a map of the sites with the interactive LROC Image Browser – lander_locations.

See also

LRO image of Luna 17
Luna 17, the Soviet Union spacecraft that carried the Lunokhod 1 rover
to the surface. You can make out the rover tracks around the lander.
LROC NAC image M175502049RE
Image Credit:  NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University

 

Earth + Saturn in natural-color: new panoramic mosaic from NASA Cassini

A press release from NASA:

NASA Cassini Spacecraft Provides New View of Saturn and Earth

NASA has released a natural-color image of Saturn from space, the first in which Saturn, its moons and rings, and Earth, Venus and Mars, all are visible.

The new panoramic mosaic of the majestic Saturn system taken by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which shows the view as it would be seen by human eyes, was unveiled at the Newseum in Washington on Tuesday.

Saturn and it's moons
On July 19, 2013, in an event celebrated the world over, NASA’s Cassini
spacecraft slipped into Saturn’s shadow and turned to image the planet,
seven of its moons, its inner rings — and, in the background, our home planet,
Earth. Image Credit:  NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI . Full image and caption

Cassini’s imaging team processed 141 wide-angle images to create the panorama. The image sweeps 404,880 miles (651,591 kilometers) across Saturn and its inner ring system, including all of Saturn’s rings out to the E ring, which is Saturn’s second outermost ring. For perspective, the distance between Earth and our moon would fit comfortably inside the span of the E ring.

“In this one magnificent view, Cassini has delivered to us a universe of marvels,” said Carolyn Porco, Cassini’s imaging team lead at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo. “And it did so on a day people all over the world, in unison, smiled in celebration at the sheer joy of being alive on a pale blue dot.”

The mosaic is part of Cassini’s “Wave at Saturn” campaign, where on July 19, people for the first time had advance notice a spacecraft was taking their picture from planetary distances. NASA invited the public to celebrate by finding Saturn in their part of the sky, waving at the ringed planet and sharing pictures over the Internet.

An annotated version of the Saturn system mosaic labels points of interest. Earth is a bright blue dot to the lower right of Saturn. Venus is a bright dot to Saturn’s upper left. Mars also appears, as a faint red dot, above and to the left of Venus. Seven Saturnian moons are visible, including Enceladus on the left side of the image. Zooming into the image reveals the moon and the icy plume emanating from its south pole, supplying fine, powder-sized icy particles that make up the E ring.

This collage includes about 1,600 images submitted by members of the public
This collage includes about 1,600 images submitted by members of the
public as part of the NASA Cassini mission’s “Wave at Saturn” campaign.
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI Full image and caption

The E ring shines like a halo around Saturn and the inner rings. Because it is so tenuous, it is best seen with light shining from behind it, when the tiny particles are outlined with light because of the phenomenon of diffraction. Scientists who focus on Saturn’s rings look for patterns in optical bonanzas like these. They use computers to increase dramatically the contrast of the images and change the color balance, for example, to see evidence for material tracing out the full orbits of the tiny moons Anthe and Methone for the first time.

“This mosaic provides a remarkable amount of high-quality data on Saturn’s diffuse rings, revealing all sorts of intriguing structures we are currently trying to understand,” said Matt Hedman, a Cassini participating scientist at the University of Idaho in Moscow. “The E ring in particular shows patterns that likely reflect disturbances from such diverse sources as sunlight and Enceladus’ gravity.”

Cassini does not attempt many images of Earth because the sun is so close to our planet that an unobstructed view would damage the spacecraft’s sensitive detectors. Cassini team members looked for an opportunity when the sun would slip behind Saturn from Cassini’s point of view. A good opportunity came on July 19, when Cassini was able to capture a picture of Earth and its moon, and this multi-image, backlit panorama of the Saturn system.

“With a long, intricate dance around the Saturn system, Cassini aims to study the Saturn system from as many angles as possible,” said Linda Spilker, Cassini project scientist based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. “Beyond showing us the beauty of the Ringed Planet, data like these also improve our understanding of the history of the faint rings around Saturn and the way disks around planets form — clues to how our own solar system formed around the sun.”

Launched in 1997, Cassini has explored the Saturn system for more than nine years. NASA plans to continue the mission through 2017, with the anticipation of many more images of Saturn, its rings and moons, as well as other scientific data.

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. JPL designed, developed and assembled the Cassini orbiter and its two onboard cameras. The imaging team is based at the Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo.

To view the image, visit: photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/pia17172 .

A new version of the collage of photos shared by the public, with the Saturn system as backdrop, is available at: photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/pia17679 .

More information about Cassini is available at  www.nasa.gov/cassini and saturn.jpl.nasa.gov .

Arts Catalyst and the Republic of the Moon

The Arts Catalyst is a UK based program that sponsors interactions and exchanges between the arts and the science/technology worlds. They usually have a few space related projects in progress at a given time. For example, there is the Republic of the Moon exhibition in London:

It’s nearly four decades since humans walked on the Moon, but it now seems likely that we will return there this century – whether to mine for its minerals, as a ‘stepping stone’ to Mars, or simply to do scientific research. In a provocative pre-emptive action, a group of artists are declaring a Republic of the Moon here on Earth, to re-examine our relationship with our planet’s only natural satellite.

After two decades working with space dreamers from the European Space Agency to anarchist autonomous astronauts, The Arts Catalyst will transform Bargehouse into an Earth-based embassy for a Republic of the Moon, filled with artists’ fantastical imaginings. Presenting international artists including Liliane Lijn, Leonid Tishkov, Katie Paterson, Agnes Meyer Brandis, andWE COLONISED THE MOON, the exhibition combines personal encounters, DIY space plans, imaginary expeditions and new myths for the next space age.

Marking the start of its twentieth anniversary year, The Arts Catalyst will animate the exhibition with performances, workshops, music, talks, a pop-up moon shop bysuper/collider and playful protests against lunar exploitation.  A manifesto declaring the Moon a temporary autonomous zone, with responses from artists and scientists to novelist Tony White’s call to “occupy the Moon!” will be published in print and e-Book formats to coincide with the exhibition.

The artists in Republic of the Moon regard the Moon not as a resource to be exploited but as a heavenly body that belongs to us all. The exhibition asks: Who will be the first colonisers of the Moon? Perhaps it should be the artists.

Related items:

Here is a video from several years ago when a group of  “artists, dancers, film-makers and scientists” tried out various activities while experiencing weightlessness during parabolic trajectories on a Russian Ilyushin Il-76 : Attention Weightlessness

Attention Weightlesses from The Arts Catalyst on Vimeo.

The Space Show this week

The guests and topics for The Space Show this week:

1. Monday, Nov. 11, 2013, 2-3:30 PM PST (5-6:30 PM EST, 4-5:30 PM CST): We welcome author ADAM JOHNSON to discuss his new book 2001: The Lost Science. The science and technology of the most influential films ever made.

2. Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2013, 7-8:30 PM PST (10-11:30 PM EST, 9-10:30 PM CST): OPEN LINES. All calls welcome regarding space, STEM, space policy. First time callers welcome. Remember, we have only one toll free line for all the callers. If you have been waiting, don’t hesitate to email me that you want to call in on the program and are waiting for the line to clear.

3. Friday, Nov. 15, 2013, 9:30-11 AM PST (11:30- 1 PM CST, 12:30PM-2:00 PM EST): We welcome back FRANK WHITE, founder of the Overview Effect. Frank will update us on the impact of the Overview Effect film and much more.

4. Sunday, Nov. 17, 2013, 12-1:30 PM PST (3-4:30 PM EST, 2-3:30 PM CST). We welcome JAMIE GUINED to the show. Jamie is Founder of LAUNCH Fitness & Human Performance, and creator of the first professional credential that is designed to provide fitness professionals with the knowledge and skills they need to become a valuable member of the commercial spaceflight aerospace medicine team: the Spaceflight Fitness Specialist. She is also an Exercise Scientist with the Exercise Physiology & Countermeasures Project at the NASA Johnson Space Center.

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.

 

Planet Hunters pass 20M classifications

The Planet Hunters citizen science program hits a large numeric milestone: 20 million classifications and counting! – Planet Hunters

PH-20million

 

Planet Hunters has just crossed the 20 million classification mark, a milestone to be celebrated! Thinking back to this time three years ago, the  the Zooniverse development team and Planet Hunters science team  were hard at work on the design and building of the site.  We didn’t know if people would come to the website to help find planets by reviewing Kepler light curves; we were showing graphs of a star’s brightness over time, not the beautiful galaxies in  the stunning images on Galaxy Zoo.  Since the day the project launched in December 2010, we’ve been blown away by the response. It’s been truly overwhelming. I know I couldn’t  have comprehended reaching 20 million classifications back then, and here were are with over 260,000 volunteers worldwide participating in Planet Hunters!

Everyone can participate in space