ISRO to Launch Chandrayaan-3 Mission to Moon South Pole with Lander, Rover; USA- India Collaborate on Space Exploration Projects

India Space Research Organization (ISRO) set to launch Chandrayaan-3 mission of lander and rover to Moon South Pole region targeting July 14 02:35 IST (window) extending to July 19, 4 km x 2.4 km landing site at 69.36° S, 32.34° E, following Chandrayaan-2 landing attempt failure in 2019. Mission life of lander and rover to equal one lunar day ~14 Earth days. Objectives include soft landing success, deployment of rover and measurements of near surface plasma ions, analysis of chemical and mineralogical composition of lunar surface. Propulsion module to carry lander and rover configuration to 100-km lunar orbit, with Spectro-polarimetry of Habitable Planet Earth (SHAPE) payload. Radio Anatomy of Moon-bound Hypersensitive Ionosphere and Atmosphere (RAMBHA) is one of four science payloads on the lander also carrying a retroreflector. The two rover payloads include LASER Induced Breakdown Spectroscope (LIBS) and Alpha Particle S-Ray Spectrometer (APXS). Furthering NASA-ISRO collaboration, India signs Artemis Accords, Prime Minister Modi and USA President Biden meeting signals progress towards joint space exploration including NASA to provide training for India Astronauts (Vyomanauts) at Johnson Space Center for ISS 2024 mission. Further collaborative project is NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) science instrument to combine payloads with radar systems from USA and India, to provide first dual imaging satellite. Gaganyaan also to be first independent India human spaceflight mission launching 3-member Vyomanaut crew to orbit of 400 km for 3 days in 2025. (Image Credits: ISRO, NASA)

MONDAY 

Jul 10  International Space Station, ~415-km LEO: Crew Bowen, Hoburg, Alneyadi working with data from BEAM investigations (module is >7 years old); Expedition 69 ongoing experiments are protein crystallization, Zero T2 exercise device, fluid science.

Jul 10  Tiangong Space Station, ~390-km LEO: Shenzhou 16 three-member crew working with international payloads (9 projects from 17 countries) – first installed is flame experiment from Japan.

Highlights…

o NewSpace: Industry and government consider extension of commercial spaceflight regulatory moratorium set to expire Oct 1; Astra Spacecraft Engines subsidiary incorporated in Delaware may allow company to access global workforce; Blue Origin looking to expand into Europe & increase Washington state operations ahead of Artemis 4 landing.

☆ Solar System: Curiosity to drive 50 meters to next impact craters, will use multispectral observations to characterize bedrock at ‘Roghi’; JUICE (now >1.6 AU from Sun) en route to Jupiter produces ultraviolet data of Milky Way; JWST images of Solar System 4 gas giants in near- and mid-infrared aiding studies of rings structures & search for undiscovered moons.

☆ Galaxy: USA-India research team proposes observation of lensed gravitational waves to measure cosmic expansion; Researchers using IceCube detector in Antarctica to map Milky Way using high-energy neutrinos; TESS observing ~200,000 brightest stars, finds 2 sub-Neptune exoplanets adding to its tally of 6,700 candidate exoplanets.

o Global: Starlink leaking EM radiation in 110-188 MHz, poising risk to protected radio observation band (150.05-53 MHz) per LOFAR; Ariane 5 now retired after 117 flights, Ariane 6 likely to launch NLT May 2024; Maritime Launch Services working to complete Spaceport Nova Scotia construction following first successful sub-orbital launch.

 USA: Upgraded Mojave Air and Spaceport now open following first significant renovation in 20+ years; NASA plans media event while SpaceX Crew-7 and spacecraft Endurance prepare for August launch; 20 regional space companies in Washington state meet with NASA Admin Nelson and Sen. Maria Cantwell.

● Hawai’i: ESA Euclid observing >1/3rd of celestial sky to ~10B LY to be complemented with 3 Hawai’i telescopes’ optical data, producing 3D map; Univ of Auckland study of Pan-STARRS, SDSS, DES data shows time dilation for 12 billion-year-old quasars is 5x that of local frame of reference; Subaru and JWST used by Kavli astronomers in China and Japan to characterize quasar host galaxies from 860 million years post Big Bang.

= Terrestrial and… o = International terrestrial events

= Moon activity

= Space and… = 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 (W), Saturn (S); Morning Planets: Jupiter (ENE), Uranus (ENE), Neptune (SE)

Interstellar Research Group Goes International with 8th Symposium in Quebec, Canada

The Interstellar Symposium is gathering July 10-13 at McGill University in downtown Montreal under theme In the Light of Other Suns to discuss how best to explore and live outside our Solar System. Conference organizer Interstellar Research Group (reconstituted from the regional Tennessee Valley Interstellar Workshop in 2020) is now partnering with International Academy of Astronautics and Breakthrough Initiatives, while maintaining ties to International Space University, British Interplanetary Society, and the Initiative for Interstellar Studies as it seeks to augment technological, philosophical, and economic infrastructure necessary to achieve the extension of human activity to new star systems. Pre-Symposium Seminars on space law and national space forces will be held July 9, followed by formal conference opening on July 10. Tulane University mathematical physicist Frank Tipler is scheduled to give the first keynote address on The Ultimate Rocket and the Ultimate Energy Source, and Their Use in the Ultimate Future, followed talks by philosopher Joseph Gottlieb of Texas Tech University and SETI Astronomer Claudio Maccone. Interstellar Travel: Are We Ready? panel featuring NASA Technologist Les Johnson, Helicity Space Board Advisor Alan Stern, UCSB Experimental Cosmology Laboratory Director Philip Lubin, et al is free and open to the public. In-person Canadian Space Agency Headquarters tour Space Explorers: THE INFINITE virtual reality tour of the ISS will be available to participants following the Symposium. (Image Credits: IRG, IAA, Breakthrough Initiatives, McGill University, OpenAI)

 

● Jul 10 — NASA, Online / Washington DC: Proposals Due: Lunar Terrain Vehicle Contract; LTV intended to be used for crewed operations beginning with Artemis 5 in 2029; contract award scheduled for November 2023.

o Jul 10-13 — Interstellar Research Group, International Academy of Astronautics (IAA), Breakthrough Initiatives, Montreal, Quebec, Canada: 8th Interstellar Symposium: In the Light of Other Suns; in coordination with McGill University.

o Jul 10-14 — European Astronomical Society, Hybrid / Kraków, Poland and Online: European Astronomical Society Annual Meeting.

● Jul 10-14 — International Astronomical Union, The Kavli Foundation, Traverse City MI: 2023 Kavli-IAU Astrochemistry Symposium called Astrochemistry VIII – From the First Galaxies to the Formation of Habitable Worlds.

● Jul 10-14 — Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems (PISCES), Hawaiʻi Island: 2023 Women’s STARS Program (STEM Aerospace Research Scholars).

☆ Jul 10 — Moon: At ascending node, 15:00.

☆ Jul 10 — Mars: 0.65° NNE of Regulus; 42° from Sun in evening sky, 08:00.

☆ Jul 10 — Apollo Asteroid 2018 NW: Near-Earth Flyby (0.046 AU).

☆ Jul 10 — Aten Asteroid 2023 LN1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.045 AU).

Continued From…

Jun 12 – Aug 12 — Institute for Scientist & Engineer Educators at University of California Observatories, University of Hawai’i, Hilo HI: Akamai Internship Program 2023.

o Jun 26 – Aug 25 — International Space University, ESA, Netherlands Space Office, Delft University of Technology, Leiden University, São José dos Campos, Brazil: 35th ISU Space Studies Program (SSP 2023).

o Jul 7-14 — Oukaimeden Observatory, Cadi Ayyad University, Marrakech, Morocco: 7th Oukaimeden International School for Astrophysics (OISA): Space Weather, Debris and Near Earth Objects.

o Jul 8-17 — National Space Foundation, NOIRLab, International Dark-Sky Association, AURA, Online / Global: Globe at Night July Campaign; to raise awareness of light pollution by inviting citizen-scientists to measure & submit night sky brightness observations.

● Jul 8-28 — UCSC Other Worlds Laboratory (OWL), Santa Cruz CA: Exoplanet Summer Program (ESP).

o Jul 9-14 — Geochemical Society, European Association of Geochemistry, Hybrid / Lyon, France and online: Goldschmidt Conference for Scientific Ideas in Geochemistry.

TUESDAY 

● Jul 11-13 — NASA Small Bodies Assessment Group (SBAG), Hybrid / Washington DC and Online: Meeting of the NASA SBAG; at University of Arizona Center for Outreach and Collaboration.

o Jul 11-13 — NascentEdge Group Limited, Shenzhen, China: Shenzhen Satellite Expo; expecting up to 1,000 participants.

☆ Jul 11 — Moon: 2.09° NNW of Jupiter, 11:00.

☆ Jul 11 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 MD2: Near-Earth Flyby (0.014 AU).

☆ Jul 11 — Amor Asteroid 2023 MQ1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.027 AU).

WEDNESDAY 

☆ Jul 12 — LandSpace, Launch Zhuque-2, Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, China: Second launch attempt, will be first methalox rocket to reach orbit if successful.

● Jul 12-13 — Lunar Surface Innovation Consortium (LSIC), Johns Hopkins University, APL, Online / Laurel MD: Lunar Proving Grounds Definition Workshop.

☆ Jul 12 — Moon: 2.17° N of Uranus, 07:00, 1.61° SE of Pleiades, 23:00.

☆ Jul 12 — Mars: Summer solstice north hemisphere, 14:00.

☆ Jul 12 — Apollo Asteroid 2018 UY: Near-Earth Flyby (0.019 AU).

THURSDAY 

Jul 13 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Starlink 5-15, SLC-40, Cape Canaveral SFS FL: Falcon 9 to carry last batch of Starlink V1.5 internet satellites to LEO; first stage booster to land on drone ship Shortfall of Gravitas.

☆ Jul 13 — Mars and Neptune: At heliocentric opposition, 17:00.

FRIDAY 

☆ NET Jul 14 — ISRO, Launch LVM-3 (Launch Vehicle Mark-3) / Chandrayaan-3, Satish Dhawan Space Center, Sriharikota, India: India to launch Chandrayaan-3 mission of lander and rover to Moon South Pole region about ~110km east of Chandrayaan-2 attempted landing site between Manzinus N and Manzinus U (70.83°S, 22.67°E).

● Jul 14 — The Space Show, Online / Las Vegas NV: Dr. David Livingston hosts Manuel Cuba of Helix Space.

☆ Jul 14 — Mercury: 0.46° NNE of Beehive Cluster, 19:00.

SATURDAY

☆ Jul 15 — Rocket Lab, Launch Electron / ‘Baby Come Back’, Mahia Peninsula, New Zealand: The Electron Rocket to loft (08:23 NZST) multiple payloads for NASA Starling mission, Telesat and Spire Global; Electron first stage attempt to be recovered after ocean splashdown.

● Jul 15-16 — Moon Society, Online / Austin TX: 2023 Lunar Development Conference: Short-term needs and Long-term goals.

☆ Jul 15 — Moon: 3.5° N of M35 cluster, 12:00.

SUNDAY

● Jul 16 — NASA, 54th Anniversary of Apollo 11 launch observed today, Nationwide USA / Global: The launch of 1969  Apollo 11 Mission / first humans to Moon with Commander Neil Armstrong, Command Module Pilot Michael Collins and Lunar Module Pilot Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, landing on Moon July 20.

☆ Jul 16 — Venus: 3.5° WSW of Regulus, 08:00.

☆ Jul 16 — Amor Asteroid 2023 G6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.024 AU).