TSS and ISS: 10 in Space Work with International Experiments, New Crew, Maintain Human Outposts Off Earth

Shenzhou 15 crew Fei Junlong, Deng Qingming, and Zhang Lu are now halfway through their 6-month mission aboard Tiangong Space Station. The crew 2 EVAs helped integrate / install elements of the 3-module station: Tianhe core, Wentian and Mengtian laboratory. With high-res Earth observation, combustion science, and agronomy ongoing – TSS will have 23 experimental racks in a pressurized environment and 52 platforms for exposed experiments. Tianzhou 6 cargo ship is set to launch May 10, followed by Shenzhou 16 May 25. Xuntian Space Telescope is launching 2024 to the same orbit as TSS to survey an all-sky area of 17,500 square degrees over 10 years. International Space Station Expedition 68, now a 7-member team, will become Expedition 69 with uncrewed Soyuz MS-22 craft undocking March 28. Sergey Prokopyev, Dmitry Petelin, and Frank Rubio will remain in space until September 27 (having launched September 29, 2022). The change in Soyuz ships delays the flight of the 1st Belarus woman cosmonaut (to be chosen from 6 current contenders) to Spring 2024. Remaining docked to ISS are NG-18 ‘SS Sally Ride’, Progress MS-22/83P, Soyuz MS-23 and Crew-6, while Dragon CRS-27 cargo ship is set to launch March 14 via SpaceX Falcon 9 from KSC FL. Expedition 68 science includes eye investigations for structure and function, measurements of health / sleep / performance, plant and vegetable habitats, 3D cultured cardiac muscle, and radiation-tolerant bacteria. (Image Credits: CNSA, CMSA, Xinhua, NASA, ISS Partners)

MONDAY

Mar 13 ISS, ~415-km LEO: Expedition 68 new arrivals from Crew 6 Stephen Bowen, Andrey Fedyaev, Warren Hoburg, Sultan Al Neyadi become oriented to ISS; Soyuz MS-22 undergoes further testing before departure.

Mar 13 Tiangong Space Station, ~390-km LEO: CMSA discusses expansion of TSS from T-shaped 3-module configuration to cross-shaped, 4 or more modules allowing for more docking ports, commercial activities and private Astronauts.

Highlights…

o NewSpace: INNOSPACE of S. Korea set to launch suborbital rocket HANBIT-TLV from Alcântara Space Center in Brazil during launch window ending March 21; Axiom, Capella, Terran Orbital, Ursa Major are among enterprises recognized as innovative space companies of 2023 by Fast Company.

☆ Solar System: NASA/ ISA payload Lunar GNSS Receiver Experiment ready for integration on Firefly Blue Ghost lander in Cedar Park Texas; University of Chicago modelling suggests Venus lost oceans 3 bya, unless data from DAVINCI, VERITAS and EnVision in 2030s find evidence of volcanism.

☆ Galaxy: Interstellar Boundary Explorer back online and continuing mission studying solar wind / interstellar medium interaction following firecode reset; Cornell astronomers utilizing JWST to observe galaxy SPT0418-47 discover younger companion galaxy SPT0418-SE with unusual abundance of heavier elements e.g. carbon, oxygen and nitrogen.

o Global: Katherine Bennell-Pegg to be first Australia woman Astronaut, begin 1-year training at European Astronaut Centre in Germany; JAXA H3 failure may delay launches of Martian Moons eXploration, HTV-X cargo spacecraft for ISS; ESA / Arianespace expect Vega-C return to flight by EOY following identification of faulty nozzle throat insert that led to VV22 failure.

USA: NASA Orion team investigating off-nominal “liberation of charred material” from heat shield during Artemis 1 re-entry; Rocket Lab well-positioned to compete for ~30 ‘Lane 1’ National Security Space Launch contracts between 2025-2034 with Neutron; Artemis 2 now anticipated to launch NET Nov 2024 per Exploration Systems Development head Jim Free.

● Hawai’i: UH-Mānoa Institute of Geophysics and Planetology hiring tenure-track positions in Planetary Science and Instrumentation / Materials Science and Mineral Physics; IfA-led Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) tracking C/2023 A3 expected to reach perihelion Sep 24, 2024 with ≤ -5 magnitude.

= 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 (E), Jupiter (W), Uranus (W).


54th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference Being Held In-Person This Week in Woodlands TX

The latest Moon and planetary discoveries will be presented and discussed at Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC) 2023 running March 13-17 at the Woodlands Waterway Marriott Hotel and Convention Center. Organized by Lunar and Planetary Institute and the Johnson Space Center, the preeminent planetary science conference will be conducted in-person, with online content streaming / interaction through Gather.town. Hundreds of technical papers will be delivered orally and during 98 poster sessions, while 7 plenaries will be held including NASA Headquarters Artemis and Mars Sample Return Town Halls. Special session The Geology of the Artemis Exploration Zone will consider papers such as High-Value Science Targets in the Malapert Massif Artemis III Landing Region by Alex Longo of UNC-Chapel Hill and Considerations for High Latitude Landing Sites in Conjunction with Artemis Landings at the Lunar South Pole by Noah Petro (GSFC) and Harrison Schmitt, the famed Apollo 17 lunar geologist who is the last human to have walked on the surface of the Moon. A variety of student and early-career events will run concurrently with the conference, including LPSC Insights: Get Connected, Stay Connected & Community Meeting / Survey for interest in community working groups on March 13, Art and Science Workshop March 15 (held in-person) and LPSC Mentoring (March 13), Networking Sessions (March 13-15) and Live from LPSC (March 16) held virtually. (Pictured T-B: LPSC 2023 Co-Chairs Eileen Stansbery (NASA JSC), Lisa Gaddis (USRA / LPI); Image Credits: LPI, NASA)

Mar 13 — NASA, Online / Washington DC: Follow up call to President Biden’s full budget proposal for NASA and supporting information; 10:00 EDT, live coverage available.

Mar 13 — Lunar and Planetary Institute, USRA, The Woodlands TX: LPSC Insights: Get Connected, Stay Connected; for students and mentors, 17:30.

Mar 13-16 — ViaSatellite, Washington DC: Satellite 2023: Leaning In, Linking Up.

● Mar 13-17 — Lunar and Planetary Institute, USRA, NASA Johnson Space Center, Hybrid / The Woodlands TX and Online: 54th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC).

☆ Mar 13 — Moon: 1.59° NNE of Antares, 16:00.

☆ Mar 13 — Aten Asteroid 2020 FV4: Near-Earth Flyby (0.045 AU)

☆ Mar 13 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 CW3: Near-Earth Flyby (0.097 AU)

Continued From…

Oct 15 – Jun 15, 2023 — International Space Elevator Consortium, Online: Space Elevator Academic Challenge: Improving Humanity’s Future; for students 17-25.

☾ Dec 11 – Apr 25, 2023 — Hakuto-R / ispace Mission 1, Lunar Landing Trajectory: Carrying UAE Rashid 10-kg rover, 0.25-kg JAXA SORA-Q rover, Hakuto-R performing orbital control maneuvers to reach Lunar Orbital Insertion, followed by Moon touchdown nominally ~4.5 months after launch.

Jan 18 – May 11 — Wichita State University, Wichita KS and Online: 2023 Interstellar Seminar ‘LASI 150G’; 1-credit hour seminar begins today; every Wednesday 14:30-15:20, led by Prof. Mark Schneegurt.

● Feb 27 – Mar 24 — UC Santa Barbara Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, Santa Barbara CA: Course: Building a Physical Understanding of Galaxy Evolution with Data-driven Astronomy.

o Feb 24 – May 24 — National Museum of China, Beijing, China: Exhibit Featuring China’s Human, Lunar and Space Program.

● Mar 1-31 — NASA, Online / Washington DC: Celebrate Women’s History Month with NASA.

● Mar 10-19 — SXSW LLC, Austin TX: South by Southwest (SXSW); conference, festival and exhibition.

TUESDAY

★ Mar 14 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Dragon CRS-27, LC39A, Kennedy Space Center FL: Dragon 2 Cargo resupply mission to be launch by SpaceX Falcon to ISS; first stage booster to land on drone ship in Atlantic Ocean.

● Mar 14 — Washington Space Business Roundtable (WSBR), Washington DC: WSBR Flagship Luncheon and Silent Action; with FCC Chairperson Jessica Rosenworcel, at Walter E. Washington Convention Center.

● Mar 14 — Outer Planets Assessment Group (OPAG), The Woodlands TX: OPAG Meeting; in conjunction with LPSC 54.

● Mar 14 — NASA, JPL, Online / Global: Celebrate Pi Day with NASA.

● Mar 14 — NASA, Online: Keynote session at 2023 South by Southwest Conference: Unfold the Universe with NASA’s Webb Space Telescope; 14:00 EDT, live coverage available.

☆ Mar 14 — Moon: At last quarter, 16:09.

☆ Mar 14 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 CM: Near-Earth Flyby (0.026 AU)

☆ Mar 14 — Aten Asteroid 2020 FJ3: Near-Earth Flyby (0.066 AU)

WEDNESDAY

Mar 15 — NASA, Online / Washington DC: Artemis Moon Mission Spacesuit Reveal; 10:30 EDT, live coverage available.

● Mar 15 — Space Foundation, Online: Space Matters Webinar Series; panel of experts discuss National Space Council Users’ Advisory Group, 13:00 EST.

☆ Mar 15 — Neptune: At conjunction with Sun, 14:00.

☆ Mar 15 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 DM: Near-Earth Flyby (0.021 AU)

☆ Mar 15 — Apollo Asteroid 2008 TP26: Near-Earth Flyby (0.080 AU)

THURSDAY

Mar 16 ISS, Dragon CRS-27 Docking and Rendezvous, ~415-km LEO: SpaceX Dragon cargo ship on the CRS-27 mission to dock with ISS; live coverage begins 05:30 EDT.

o Mar 16-19 — Altair Enterprises Ltd., Interstellar Space Technologies, Revolv Ltd., Vernewell, Online / London, United Kingdom: International Space Convention 2023: Reaching the Unconnected, Space Sustainability, and International Cooperation Initiatives; with >120 speakers covering 80+ topics.

☆ Mar 16 — Mars: At east quadrature, 90° from Sun, 08:00.

☆ Mar 16 — Mercury: 0.38° SE of Neptune, 08:00.

☆ Mar 16 — Apollo Asteroid 2014 FS32: Near-Earth Flyby (0.062 AU)

☆ Mar 16 — Apollo Asteroid 2023 DM: Near-Earth Flyby (0.080 AU)

FRIDAY

★ Mar 17 — Parker Solar Probe, Heliocentric Orbit: Spacecraft reaches 15th perihelion today.

Mar 17 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / SES 18 & SES 19, LC-40, Cape Canaveral SFS FL: Falcon 9 to launch SES 18 and SES 19 communications satellites for SES of Luxembourg.

● Mar 17 — MIT Sloan Space Industry Club, Cambridge MA: 8th Annual MIT Sloan New Space Age Conference 2023.

☆ Mar 17 — Mercury: At superior conjunction with Sun, 01:00.

☆ Mar 17 — Apollo Asteroid 2009 DO111: Near-Earth Flyby (0.082 AU)

☆ Mar 17 — Apollo Asteroid 2018 UQ1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.027 AU)

☆ Mar 17 — Aten Asteroid 2018 DA2: Near-Earth Flyby (0.089 AU)

SATURDAY

Mar 18 — AIAA LA-LV Section, Hybrid / Lawndale and Online: Section Meeting, Presentation ‘Supply Chain and Traceability in Space Production Applications’, and Panel Discussion.

SUNDAY

☆ Mar 19 — Moon: At perigee (distance 362,662 km), 05:10; 3.3° SE of Saturn, 08:00.

☆ Mar 19 — Aten Asteroid 2019 FF: Near-Earth Flyby (0.055 AU)

☆ Mar 19 — Amor Asteroid 2023 BE10: Near-Earth Flyby (0.058 AU)

☆ Mar 19 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 WH15: Near-Earth Flyby (0.068 AU)