FighterJock
ACCESS: Above Top Secret
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I hope that NASA can stop OSIRIS-Rex leaking anymore rocks and soil and return a useful science payload back to Earth for study.
I’ve officially closed the Sample Return Capsule! The sample of Bennu is sealed inside and ready for our voyage back to Earth. The SRC will touch down in the Utah desert on Sep. 24, 2023. Thanks, everyone, for being a part of my journey #ToBennuAndBack pic.twitter.com/z75ITNiGBf
— NASA's OSIRIS-REx (@OSIRISREx) October 29, 2020
NASA's #LucyMission will go where no spacecraft has gone before — the Trojan asteroids of Jupiter. Join the Lucy character in this animated series as she prepares for the long journey ahead! pic.twitter.com/eN7FtBpJKh
— NASA Goddard (@NASAGoddard) November 25, 2020
#MissionToPsyche Update 1 of 2: Psyche’s SEP chassis is in main body integration at Maxar’s manufacturing facility. The equipment panels have been mated to Psyche’s propulsion module and technicians will soon begin installing attitude control components. https://t.co/F5LH6exTfK pic.twitter.com/5qDxIQCghq
— Maxar Technologies (@Maxar) December 2, 2020
#MissionToPsyche Update 2 of 2: Psyche’s high gain antenna has completed fabrication and is undergoing standard testing in Maxar’s Near Field Range to verify that it will work as intended once launched. https://t.co/F5LH6exTfK pic.twitter.com/1OaUipBVsX
— Maxar Technologies (@Maxar) December 2, 2020
Save the date! I'll be leaving Bennu on May 10 — but it looks like I might get one last close-up with the asteroid before my journey back to Earth 🛰🌎
— NASA's OSIRIS-REx (@OSIRISREx) January 26, 2021
Learn more about the departure and final flyby here: https://t.co/oQiMLUbi3Q pic.twitter.com/UT9SG4l5m8
Last October, our @NASASolarSystem OSIRIS-REx spacecraft briefly touched down & collected a sample from asteroid Bennu. Before departing for the journey back to Earth, it'll make one last close flyover to observe the sample site: https://go.nasa.gov/3rIG05U
#ToBennuAndBack
Last October, our @NASASolarSystem OSIRIS-REx spacecraft briefly touched down & collected a sample from asteroid Bennu. Before departing for the journey back to Earth, it'll make one last close flyover to observe the sample site: https://t.co/NaaCwNUS2J#ToBennuAndBack pic.twitter.com/F4iltptJUT
— NASA (@NASA) April 1, 2021
Maxar has built over 35 satellites with solar electric propulsion, using an active hall-effect thruster, including a commercial geo-conformation that exclusively uses the technology. This approach reduces fuel mass by 80% relative to traditional chemical fuel propulsion systems, allowing more allocation for revenue-generating payload mass. And this is a good thing, especially for our commercial customers who are constantly looking for ways to increase the capital efficiency of their operations.
On Slide 9, we showcase the Psyche mission as an example of how this technology can be used in deep space. As a reminder, Psyche is a NASA emission to explore a metallic asteroid. The mission will require the spacecraft to be on orbit for years and to travel 1 billion miles.
To get this done, we're using a more powerful hall-effect thruster than those used in the typical mission orbiting Earth. In fact, this will be the first time that a hall thruster has been used beyond lunar orbit, and as such, is a groundbreaking mission that could lead to a different approach in how spacecraft are powered and deep space going forward.
Meet the missions! 🌌
— NASA's Launch Services Program (@NASA_LSP) May 26, 2021
NASA's #LucyMission will be the first mission to explore Trojan asteroids - the outer solar system asteroids orbiting the Sun at the same distance as Jupiter. pic.twitter.com/J7qsfQQjAf
Launching on a ULA #AtlasV 401 configuration rocket in October 2021! Atlas V has a strong history in launching planetary missions for @NASA 🚀#ExplorationEnabled https://t.co/OmY5ccXers
— ULA (@ulalaunch) May 26, 2021
Our #LucyMission will become the first-ever mission to travel to the Trojan asteroids when it launches on a @ULAlaunch Atlas V 401 rocket this fall. Here's the assembled nose cone, ready to protect the spacecraft on its way out of Earth's atmosphere. pic.twitter.com/SQwyDcXsDK
— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) July 28, 2021
Our #LucyMission will become the first-ever mission to travel to the Trojan asteroids when it launches on a @ULAlaunch Atlas V 401 rocket this fall. Here's the assembled nose cone, ready to protect the spacecraft on its way out of Earth's atmosphere.
Lucy will be next. This is an interplanetary mission with a once in a lifetime launch window to the Jovian Trojans
— Tory Bruno (@torybruno) August 14, 2021
Oh look!View: https://twitter.com/ulalaunch/status/1397564754076606465Launching on a ULA #AtlasV 401 configuration rocket in October 2021! Atlas V has a strong history in launching planetary missions for @NASA 🚀#ExplorationEnabled https://t.co/OmY5ccXers
— ULA (@ulalaunch) May 26, 2021
On the morning of November 24, 1974, a hominid with 3.2 million years was discovered near the Awash River in Ethiopia. That first evening they celebrated at the camp; at some stage during the evening they named fossil AL 288-1 "Lucy", after the Beatles' song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds", which was being played loudly and repeatedly on a tape recorder in the camp.Oh look!View: https://twitter.com/ulalaunch/status/1397564754076606465Launching on a ULA #AtlasV 401 configuration rocket in October 2021! Atlas V has a strong history in launching planetary missions for @NASA 🚀#ExplorationEnabled https://t.co/OmY5ccXers
— ULA (@ulalaunch) May 26, 2021
Lucy's in the Sky with Diamonds!
Sorry to quote myself but did anyone see the ridiculous reporting of this as if it was certain to hit us tomorrow. In fact it’s still 99.4% not to hit us, and anyway this event isn’t until 2185.Using data collected by Osiris Rex they’ve been able to rule out Bennu hitting Earth in 2135, and that has only a 0.6% chance of hitting Earth in 2182
View: https://youtu.be/5nMDWS8AwJY
Sorry to quote myself but did anyone see the ridiculous reporting of this as if it was certain to hit us tomorrow. In fact it’s still 99.4% not to hit us, and anyway this event isn’t until 2185.Using data collected by Osiris Rex they’ve been able to rule out Bennu hitting Earth in 2135, and that has only a 0.6% chance of hitting Earth in 2182
View: https://youtu.be/5nMDWS8AwJY
No it’s 0.6% chance of hitting us and a 99.4% chance of not hitting us. Sorry for any confusion.Sorry to quote myself but did anyone see the ridiculous reporting of this as if it was certain to hit us tomorrow. In fact it’s still 99.4% not to hit us, and anyway this event isn’t until 2185.Using data collected by Osiris Rex they’ve been able to rule out Bennu hitting Earth in 2135, and that has only a 0.6% chance of hitting Earth in 2182
View: https://youtu.be/5nMDWS8AwJY
If Bennu only has a 99.4% chance of hitting us in 2185 then there is nothing to worry about it now, it may be something to worry about for our future ancestors in 2185.
Is anyone able to work out roughly what the force would be if it did hit Earth?With a mass of 10^10 kg, work to deflect it would have to start long before 2185.
An asteroid that large will be bad: Impact equivalent to 1-30 GT of TNT, depending on impact speed.
It will destroy an area several hundred km in diameter, and can cause global winter due to atmospheric dust. Getting close to exctinction level.
Isn’t that part of Elon’s thinking.An asteroid that large will be bad: Impact equivalent to 1-30 GT of TNT, depending on impact speed.
It will destroy an area several hundred km in diameter, and can cause global winter due to atmospheric dust. Getting close to exctinction level.
That’s why I like the idea of having both Moon and Mars bases so that if Earth does get hit in the future by an asteroid, then humanity can have somewhere to live and ride out the storm then return to Earth when it has recovered.
Isn’t that part of Elon’s thinking.An asteroid that large will be bad: Impact equivalent to 1-30 GT of TNT, depending on impact speed.
It will destroy an area several hundred km in diameter, and can cause global winter due to atmospheric dust. Getting close to exctinction level.
That’s why I like the idea of having both Moon and Mars bases so that if Earth does get hit in the future by an asteroid, then humanity can have somewhere to live and ride out the storm then return to Earth when it has recovered.
No I meant in term’s that it’s his motivation for Starship.Isn’t that part of Elon’s thinking.An asteroid that large will be bad: Impact equivalent to 1-30 GT of TNT, depending on impact speed.
It will destroy an area several hundred km in diameter, and can cause global winter due to atmospheric dust. Getting close to exctinction level.
That’s why I like the idea of having both Moon and Mars bases so that if Earth does get hit in the future by an asteroid, then humanity can have somewhere to live and ride out the storm then return to Earth when it has recovered.
I have always had that idea since I was younger Flyaway, way before Elon Musk.
#PI_Daily @MissionToPsyche update: Integration of the spacecraft is going well. Feels GOOD!
— Lindy Elkins-Tanton (@ltelkins) September 2, 2021
Today in addition, Hardware Review and Certification Record for the Flight Model Power Distribution Assembly (FM PDA HRCR). (not pictured) pic.twitter.com/geEIADSc5V
#PI_Daily @MissionToPsyche update: Integration of the spacecraft is going well. Feels GOOD!
Today in addition, Hardware Review and Certification Record for the Flight Model Power Distribution Assembly (FM PDA HRCR). (not pictured)
The Centaur upper stage for @NASA's #LucyMission arrives at ULA's Vertical Integration Facility for hoisting atop the #AtlasV first stage. The 401 configuration of the rocket will launch this mission to 8 asteroids, the most objects ever visited by a single spacecraft. pic.twitter.com/CZcxGo0u7C
— ULA (@ulalaunch) September 16, 2021
The Centaur upper stage for @NASA's #LucyMission arrives at ULA's Vertical Integration Facility for hoisting atop the #AtlasV first stage. The 401 configuration of the rocket will launch this mission to 8 asteroids, the most objects ever visited by a single spacecraft.
One last look at @LucyMission before payload encapsulation!
The spacecraft will soon depart Astrotech to meet its Atlas V rocket and launch to 7 Trojan asteroids!
One last look at @LucyMission before payload encapsulation!
— Thomas Burghardt (@TGMetsFan98) September 29, 2021
The spacecraft will soon depart Astrotech to meet its Atlas V rocket and launch to 7 Trojan asteroids!https://t.co/ul8c3rBwNf pic.twitter.com/ODpn6rgkSE