SpaceX Transporter-5 Rideshare Mission Heading to SSO as FAA Decision on Starship Launch from TX Nears

Soon surpassing 160 Falcon 9 launches / 120 landings in total, SpaceX is planning the Transporter 5 flight May 25 from Space Launch Complex 40, Cape Canaveral, Florida 14:35 EDT. This dedicated rideshare mission (with about 50 payloads) will be lofted to Sun-synchronous orbit, attempt 1st stage landing at Landing Zone 1 about 8 minutes after launch and fairing recovery from the Atlantic Ocean. It will carry 1,500-kg Bluewalker-3 by AST & Science for mobile communications, three 15-kg methane emission monitoring satellites for Canada-based GHGSat (C3 “Luca”, C4 “Penny” and C5 “Diako”), and Momentus Vigoride 3 tug orbital transfer vehicle, which is designed to move to different orbits and deploy payloads: FOSSA Systems, Orbit NTNU and 5 others. Also onboard are ELaNa 47 mission, Celestis Ascension flight (23rd overall mission for the company), Nanoracks Outpost Mars Demo-1, Earth observation ÑuSat from Argentina, 3 payloads from Australia, the Bulgaria / South Africa shared EnduroSat 1, and craft from Albania, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Poland, and Spain. Already designing and building in California and Texas, launching from Florida and California, by the end of May, the FAA environmental assessment decision on SpaceX launch of Starship / Super Heavy from ‘Starbase’ Boca Chica launch site in Texas is to be made. If it passes, the SN20 orbital launch (settling into the ocean off the coast of Kauai, Hawaii) would be first up. (Image Credits: SpaceX, Exolaunch)

MONDAY

☆ May 23 — ISS, ~405-km LEO: Expedition 67 seven-member crew working with newly arrived Boeing Orbital Flight Test-2 and cargo from Cygnus NG-17, Progress 79P & 80P; vascular aging, astrobee, combustion experiments ongoing.

☆ May 23 — Tiangong Space Station, ~370-km LEO: To be fully integrated and complete before end of year, TSS planning to have continuous human occupation beginning with Shenzhou 14 NET June 5.

Highlights…

o NewSpace: Astra to launch from SaxaVord Spaceport in Scotland, building 311,375.5 N thrust Rocket 4.0; Apple may bring satellite phones to mainstream users under rumored Globestar deal.

☆ Solar System: JPL working to fix faulty Attitude Articulation and Control System on Voyager 1, now 23,300,000,000 km from Earth; 9.2 metric ton Jupiter-3 made by Maxar / launching on Falcon Heavy will be most mass on commercial GTO payload yet.

☆ Galaxy: Western Sydney University / ASKAP research suggests ring-like object first thought to be Odd Radio Circle is intergalactic Supernova Remnant; Debate on METI ethics continues as projects plan to target center of MWG, Trappist-1.

o Global: Columbia is 19th Artemis Accords signatory; President Joko Widodo tours Starbase TX, invites SpaceX to consider launch options in Indonesia; ESA / Arianespace Vega C and Ariane 6 rockets on track for June / late 2022 inaugural launches.

USA: Boeing to redesign problematic propulsion valves made by Aerojet Rocketdyne; Defense Innovation Unit taps Ultra Safe Nuclear & Avalanche Energy to build nuclear spacecraft propulsion with demo NET 2027; NASA guide displays possible Artemis 1 launch windows, Administrator Nelson insists mission will go NLT August.

● Hawai’i: First image of Sgr A* taken in part by JCMT and Submillimeter Array likely to receive Hawaiian name per EHT Project Scientist Geoffrey Bower; Amalgamated Telecom Holdings of Fiji leveraging undersea data cable nexus, Starlink teleport synergy to advance pacific / global connectivity.


= Terrestrial events, and…

o = International terrestrial events in local time.

= Space events, and… = International space / astro events in Hawaii Standard Time unless noted. Add 10 hours to obtain UT (‘Universal Time’).


Weekly Planet Watch Morning Planets: Venus, Mars, Saturn, Jupiter (ESE).


China 2022 Advances for Space Station, Sea Launch, Reusable Launch Vehicle

Shenzhou 14 three-member crew, which may include Liu Yang, is preparing to arrive at Tiangong Space Station orbiting at ~370-km altitude with Tianzhou-4 cargo ship which is fully stocked with 6,000 kg of supplies and experiments / 750 kg propellant. Set to launch June 5 via Long March 2F from Jiuquan, the yet-to-be-announced Taikonauts will be the 9th crewed spaceflight for China. They will assist with Wentian and Mengtian laboratories assembly, launching July 24 and NET October respectively, and stay aboard for ~6 months. Shenzhou 15 crew will arrive in December about 10 days before Shenzhou 14 departs beginning the TSS permanent occupation sequence. CNSA / CASC are working on reusable first stage launch options using tethered landing devices and guidance grid fins for future Shenzhou LEO launches, while larger next-gen versions will allow for crewed lunar and deep space missions. Commercial startup Deep Blue Aerospace, operating in Jiangsu, is also advancing reusability with Nebula-1 medium lift orbital rocket, as 1st stage test unit achieves 1-km vertical take-off / landing. The only operating sea launch on the blue planet, Long March 11 from East China Sea platform has 3 successes so far with infrastructure developing at Haiyang, Shandong province. As China forms new international connections aboard TSS, allowing for commercial science and private astronauts, perhaps future projects will be formalized with spacefaring ‘Himalayan Neighbor’ India, Southeast Asia, and USA, Europe, Africa, UAE, others. (Image Credits: CNSA, CASC)

May 23-25 — SmarterShows, Maxar, Zemarc, et al, Long Beach CA: Space Tech Expo USA 2022.

o May 23-27 — European Space Agency (ESA), Bonn, Germany: Living Planet Symposium: Taking the Pulse of Our Planet From Space.

☆ May 23 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 GL1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.095 AU)

Continued From…
o Nov 4 – Jun 29 — Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Biomedical Problems, NASA Human Exploration Research Analog (HERA), Moscow, Russia: Mixed gender, international crew of 6 participating in 8-month space / lunar simulation mission SIRIUS-21 (Scientific International Research In Unique Terrestrial Station).

● Mar 26 – May 31 — AIAA LA-LV Section, Online: Women in Space Art Virtual Gallery.

TUESDAY

o May 24 – SSERVI, NASA, ASI, DLR, IRAP, Open University, VU, et al, Online / Europe: European Lunar Symposium 2022.

☆ May 24 — Moon: 3.3° SE of Neptune, 04:00; with Mars and Neptune within circle of diameter 4.82°, 07:00; 2.50° SE of Mars, 13:00; with Mars and Jupiter within circle of diameter 3.33°, 15:00; 2.92° SE of Jupiter, 18:00.

WEDNESDAY

★ May 25 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Transporter 5, Cape Canaveral SFS FL: SSO flight for NASA experiments, and secondary payloads for Celestis Ascension Flight, 14:35 EDT.

● May 25 — 61st Observation John F. Kennedy 1st Moon Speech, USA / Worldwide: NASA Artemis program to land 1st Woman and Person of Color on Moon is well underway as today is recognized for Kennedy declaring to congress “I believe that this Nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to Earth” (1961).

o May 25 – Moon Village Association, Online / Vienna, Austria: Global Expert Group on Sustainable Lunar Activities (GEGSLA) 16th Meeting; 15:00 CEST.

☆ May 25 — Mars: At heliocentric conjunction with Saturn, 01:00.

☆ May 25 — Amor Asteroid 2022 HU2: Near-Earth Flyby (0.089 AU)

THURSDAY

● May 26 — International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA Hawai’i), Online / Hawaii: Last Day: ILO-X Moon Camera Naming Contest for Hawaii Schools.

May 26 — Aerospace Corp., Online / Arlington VA: Space Policy Show Webinar; featuring SWF Krystal Azelton on the urgent need for space sustainability solutions.

☆ May 26 — Mars: With Venus and the Pleiades within circle of diameter 1.49°, 15:00; 0.27° ESE of Venus, 18:00.

FRIDAY

May 27-29 — National Space Society, Arlington VA: 2022 International Space Development Conference (ISDC 22): Living In Space.

● May 27 — The Space Show, Online / Tiburon CA: Dr. David Livingston to discuss commercial space and economics starting at Harvard.

☆ May 27 — Mercury: At aphelion, 0.4667 AU from Sun, 12:00.

☆ May 27 — Apollo Asteroid 7335 (1989 JA): Near-Earth Flyby (0.026 AU)

☆ May 27 — Aten Asteroid 2022 JU1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.038 AU)

SATURDAY

☆ May 28 — Moon: 0.38° ESE of Uranus, 05:00.

☆ May 28 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 JY: Near-Earth Flyby (0.038 AU)

☆ May 28 — Apollo Asteroid 5693 (1993 EA): Near-Earth Flyby (0.068 AU)

SUNDAY

☆ May 29 — Moon: 3.5° NNW of Mercury, 01:00; 3.3° SE of Pleiades, 09:00.

☆ May 29 — Mars: 0.58° SE of Jupiter, 01:00.

☆ May 29 — Aten Asteroid 2016 DB: Near-Earth Flyby (0.056 AU)