Next-Generation Suborbital Researchers Conference Anticipates New Era of Commercial Spaceflight

Southwest Research Institute and the Commercial Spaceflight Federation co-host the Next-Generation Suborbital Researchers Conference at Omni Interlocken Resort in Broomfield, Colorado March 2-4. NSRC is the premier conference for scientists and educators with an interest in commercial suborbital vehicles. Conveners include Alan Stern (clockwise from TL) and Cindy Conrad of SwRI. Distinguished speakers will include Colorado Lieutenant Governor Dianne Primavera, Astronaut Instructor Beth Moses of Virgin Galactic, Chief Scientist Steven Squyres of Blue Origin, and NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine. A new generation of suborbital spacecraft are expected to come online starting in historic year 2020, led by Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo and Blue Origin New Shepard. These vehicles and others are expected to revolutionize space access with their ability to carry a variety of payloads. Possibilities for gathering data will include Earth atmosphere, solar physics, microgravity, planetary science, and space life science. Italy signs contract with Virgin Galactic for a dedicated flight including three researchers. NASA issues a draft solicitation for the Flight Opportunities program, which includes balloons, aircraft, and suborbital vehicles. For the first time, researchers will be allowed to fly with their experiments. One category is for projects linked to NASA lunar exploration plans. Applicants can seek up to US$650,000 for suborbital flights related to the Moon. (Image Credits: Blue Origin, Virgin Galactic, Southwest Research Institute, State of Colorado, Cornell University, Purdue University) |
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MONDAY
Highlights…
Mar 2 — ISS, 405-km LEO: Expedition 62 three-member crew Jessica Meir and Andrew Morgan collecting samples for Fluid Shift and OsteoOmics bone density investigations while Commander Oleg Skripochka studies plasma crystals; Dragon resupply launch planned for March 6 with docking Mar 9; Cygnus NG-12 to re-enter Earth atmosphere today.
Mar 2 — NewSpace: SpaceX gains approval for Starship construction facility in Port of Los Angeles; Orbex Prime launcher prepared for 2022 TriSept customer launch; Astroscale to launch two satellites in 2020 to practice docking in space using magnetic plates.
Mar 2 — Solar System: Catalina Sky Survey discovers object 2020 CD3 captured in Earth orbit as temporary ‘mini-moon’; InSight lander records Marsquakes while engineers will attempt to push heat flow probe into surface; Yutu-2 discovery of 12 meters of Moon dust on far side being analyzed; NASA public challenge seeking Venus rover obstacle avoidance technology.
Mar 2 — Galaxy: New measurements of red giant stars fuel debate over Hubble-Lemaitre constant; Chandra X-Ray observatory finds double stars Terzan 5 CX1 changing behavior; Keck and Gemini observatories contribute to discovery of binary white dwarf stars.
Mar 2 — Global: India testing Gaganyaan crewed spacecraft, will share Chandrayaan-2 orbiter data with USA, future cooperation statement includes joint Synthetic Aperture Radar Satellite; China plans launch of new crewed spacecraft on Long March-5B in April; Canada Western University developing Integrated Vision System for future lunar rovers.
Mar 2 — USA: Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley of SpaceX Crew Dragon training for long stay as part of ISS crew; Artemis-1 planned for NET April 2021 following successful Northrop Grumman test of Launch Abort System motor; NASA issues solicitation for CLPS providers to deliver lunar rover in 2023.
Mar 2 — Hawai’i: NAOJ and Subaru launch Galaxy Cruise citizen science program; PAN-STARRS data being used by India ARIES scientists to search for signs of extraterrestrial life; UH Hoku Ke’a and Caltech Submillimeter observatories scheduled for removal by 2023.
Mar 2 — Mars Society Netherlands, Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management, The Hague, The Netherlands: Meeting: Ethical Discussion on the Colonization of Mars.
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for terrestrial events in local time unless noted.
= All times for international terrestrial events in local time unless noted.
= All times for space events, and…
= All times for international space / astro events in Hawaii Standard Time unless noted. Add 10 hours to obtain UT (‘Universal Time’).
Weekly Planet Watch – Evening Planets: Venus (W), Mars (SE), Jupiter (SE), Uranus (WSW); Morning Planets: Saturn (SE).
Galaxy Forum Southeast Asia 2020 Chiang Mai, Thailand to be Held at Princess Sirindhorn AstroPark March 3

International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA) and National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (NARIT) are holding the first ILOA Galaxy Forum in Chiang Mai – a growing regional hub of Astronomy and related technology in no small part to due to efforts of Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, whose patronage of the science has earned her the nickname “Princess of Astronomy”. The newly (Feb 1, 2020) opened 21-acre, US$13M AstroPark complex bearing her name contains NARIT administrative headquarters, an amphitheater, planetarium, museum, laboratories, research facilities, and an educational observatory – joining Chachoengsao, Nakhon Ratchasima and Songkhla Regional Observatories. Thai National Observatory, situated on 2,565-meter Doi Inthanon mountain, highest in Thailand, houses the 2.3-meter Thai National Telescope – one of the largest in Southeast Asia. Building a world class astronomy industry in Asia will be a topic of the Galaxy Forum, on which Dr. Paul Ho (BL-R) of East Asian Observatory, a branch of East Asian Core Observatories Association, will speak. Jonathan Hung, President of Singapore Space and Technology Association will address Singapore space technology and lunar communications. President of IAU National Committee for Astronomy in Thailand, Boonrucksar Soonthornthum, and NARIT Director Saran Poshyachinda will share astronomical developments from within Thailand, and Princess Sirindhorn herself will address the assemblage with opening remarks. Additionally, ILOA Director Steve Durst will present on Astronomy from the Moon, a new frontier of astronomy in which SEA is poised to lead. (Image Credits: NARIT, EAO, Princess Sirindhorn) |
Mar 2-4 — Southwest Research Institute, Commercial Spaceflight Federation, Broomfield CO: 2020 Next-generation Suborbital Researchers Conference.
Mar 2-4 — National Academies of Sciences, Irvine CA: Astro2020 Meeting: Panel on Electromagnetic Observations from Space.
Mar 2-6 — International Astronomical Union, Federal Universities of Brazil, Bento Gonçalves, Brazil: IAU Symposium 359: Galaxy Evolution and Feedback Across Different Environments (GALFEED).
Mar 2-6 — ESO, Santiago, Chile: Planets 2020 Workshop: Ground and Space Observatories – A Joint Venture to Planetary Science.
Mar 2-31 — NASA, Nationwide USA: NASA solicits ‘Artemis Generation’ Astronaut applicants.
Mar 2 — Moon: 3.3° N of Aldebaran, 05:00; at first quarter, 09:57.
Continued from…
Jan 2019 – Sep 2020 — New Horizons, Kuiper Belt: Full data collected from 7 instruments during KBO Arrokoth flyby to be transmitted to Earth over this time period.
Nov 2019 – Nov 2020— Hayabusa2, Earth Trajectory: JAXA Hayabusa2 with two samples collected from C-type asteroid 162173 Ryugu on trajectory for Earth return.
Feb 28 – Mar 6 — Gemini Observatory, ‘Imiloa Astronomy Center, Mauna Kea Observatories, UH Hilo, Keck Observatory, CFHT, et al, Hilo HI: Workshop: Journey Through the Universe 2020.
Mar 1-6 — University of Chile, University of Sao Paulo, et al, Concepcion, Chile: Conference: First Stars VI.
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TUESDAY
Mar 3 — International Lunar Observatory Association, National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (NARIT), Chiang Mai, Thailand: Galaxy Forum Southeast Asia 2020: Chiang Mai; 09:00-17:30 @ Princess Sirindhorn Astro Park; with Her Royal Highness Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn giving Opening Remarks.
WEDNESDAY
Mar 4 — UK Science & Technology Facilities Council, Astropreneurs, Harwell, United Kingdom: Space Life and Biomedical Sciences Symposium.
Mar 4 — SpaceBase, Online / New Zealand: Zoom Webinar: Space Entrepreneurship from the Edge of the World; featuring representatives from SpaceBase, New Zealand Space Agency, WNT Ventures and Callaghan Innovation.
Mar 4 — Foothill College, Los Altos Hills CA: Foothill College Astronomy Talks: The Biggest Sky Survey Ever Undertaken: Exploring the Universe with the Rubin Observatory; by Phil Marshall of SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory at Stanford University, 19:00.
Mar 4 — Moon: 1.27° SE of M35 cluster, 00:00.
THURSDAY
Mar 5 — ISRO, Launch GSLV Mk.2 / GISAT 1, Satish Dhawan Space Center, Sriharikota, India: Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mk. 2, designated GSLV-F10, to launch India first GEO Imaging Satellite.
Mar 5 — National Institute of Aerospace, NASA, Hampton VA: Revolutionary Aerospace Systems Concepts Academic Linkage (RASC-AL), due date to submit proposals for undergraduate and graduate student teams to design mission concepts for the Moon and Mars.
Mar 5 — Cosmonauts Ltd, London, United Kingdom: SPACEtalks.biz: The Interstellar Business ConfEx; new international Space Sector conference and exhibition with a purely commercial focus.
Mar 5 — LPI, Houston TX: Lecture: Looking Inside the Moon: From Apollo to GRAIL and Beyond; by Walter Kiefer, 19:30, free.
Mar 5, 6 — JPL, Caltech, NASA, Pasadena CA: von Kármán Lecture Series 2020: Lecture: The Search for Life – Exploring Ocean Worlds; by Morgan Cable from JPL.
Mar 5 — Moon: 8.8° S of Castor, 09:00; 5.1° S of Pollux, 14:00.
FRIDAY
Mar 6 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / CRS 20, Cape Canaveral AFS FL: SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket set to launch 22nd Dragon spacecraft on 20th operational cargo delivery mission to ISS.
Mar 6 — Arianespace, Launch Soyuz / Falcon Eye 2, Sinnamary, French Guiana: Soyuz rocket, designated VS24, to launch Falcon Eye 2 high-resolution Earth imaging satellite for United Arab Emirates.
Mar 6 — Global Space Law Center of the Cleveland State University (CSU) Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Cleveland OH: Returning to the Moon: Legal Challenges as Humanity Begins to Settle the Solar System.
Mar 6 — Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum, NYC NY: Astronomy Nights: Beyond Me, a Musical and Scientific Work in Progress; with Steve Howell of NASA.
Mar 6 — Moon: 1.39° NNE of Beehive Cluster, 13:00.
SATURDAY
Mar 7-8 — UKSEDS, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom: National Student Space Conference (NSDC).
Mar 7-8 — International Planetarium Society Inc., Multiple Locations: International Day of Planetaria; promote knowledge of planetaria to the public.
Mar 7-14 — IEEE, Big Sky MT: 2020 IEEE Aerospace Conference.
Mar 7 — Asteroid 2925 Beatty: Near-Earth Flyby (0.999 AU)
SUNDAY
Mar 8 — East Asian Observatory, JCMT, Hilo HI: International Women’s Day Celebration 2020 at EAO.
Mar 8 — Daylight Saving Time (USA): Set clock ahead 1 hour; does not include Hawai’i, American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, and Arizona (except the Navajo Reservation).
Mar 8 — Moon: 3.6° NNE of Regulus, 13:00.
Mar 8 — Neptune: at conjunction with Sun, 0.924 AU from Earth, 03:00.
Mar 8 — Venus: 2.20° NNW of Uranus, 06:00.