#02 SPACE
+ If you didn't have plans on October 20th at 3:12 pm Pacific time, you do now! The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is scheduled to touch down on the asteroid Bennu, rapidly collect a small amount of sample in a touch-and-go maneuver, and jet back off into space. The event will be broadcast on NASA TV starting with orbit departure around 10 am Pacific time the same day. The collected sample will return to Earth in 2023 and despite the diminutive and far-flung nature of the small asteroid, there is plenty it could teach us about our home planet.
+ The European Bepi-Colombo spacecraft flew by Venus this week as part of a circuitous journey that will eventually end in orbit around Mercury in a few years. Although Venus is not Bepi-Columbo's final destination, planetary scientists don't pass on good opportunities. They used the probe to follow up on the discovery of phosphene, a potential sign of biologic activity, in Venus's atmosphere. Scientists also are looking for sulfur dioxide, a sign of ongoing volcanism. Bepi-Colombo only got within about 6,700 miles of the surface this time around, probably too far away to learn much, but should be able to get a better look next year when it will pass by Venus at an altitude of only 400 miles.
+ Astronauts on the space station have another problem to deal with after the oxygen supply failed on the Russian side of the orbiting laboratory. This is in addition to a small but persistent leak air leak the crew has been trying to track down lately. It's unclear if the two are related, but rest easy knowing that the crew is safe thanks to redundant systems and extra supplies kept onboard.
+ "Instead of guessing, why not actually build the experiment and send it to space?" Although that might be a common phrase to hear at NASA center, it is much less often offered as a piece of advice for second graders. Maggie Samudio’s second-grade class at Cumberland Elementary School in Indiana went on their own odyssey that ended with hardware in space aboard Blue Origin's New Shepard rocket and proved that fireflies would be able to light up in space. Welcome to the democratization of space! "We’re able to fly that for half the cost of high school football uniforms... So really any school district now that affords football can afford spaceflight.” |