SpaceX Ascends as World Spacefaring Power with Unmatched Launch Cadence, Crew and Mass to Orbit
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MONDAY☆ Oct 3 — ISS, ~415-km LEO: Expedition 68 with Samantha Cristoforetti as Commander to welcome 4 members of Crew-5 bringing total crew to 11, ships docked to 5, and Bigelow BEAM attached. ☆ Oct 3 — Tiangong Space Station, ~390-km LEO: Shenzhou 14 three-member crew continue work to integrate modules, analyzing EVA small mechanical arm performance, testing newly installed external circuits. Highlights… o NewSpace: Europe startups Rocket Factory Augsburg, Skyrora, Isar Aerospace plan 2023 launches from Scotland & Norway; Astrobotic to provide power on Moon with Vertical Solar Array Technology / LunaGrid, construction beginning NET 2026; Intuitive Machines to build 40kW lunar fission surface reactor in partnership with X-energy. ☆ Solar System: Signals from Zhurong 100m ground-penetrating, high-frequency radar on Mars being analyzed for indication of historical flooding; Researchers studying geomagnetic data to determine if solar storm that sparked NOAA K7 warning was caused by coronal mass ejection. ☆ Galaxy: Earth location 26,000 LY from MWG center may be photometric microlensing ‘blind spot’, limiting detection by extraterrestrial civilizations; Spiral galaxy IC 5332 structure being observed by JWST while investigation of MIRI instrument grating wheel anomaly ongoing; Hubble data on protective corona enveloping Large & Small Magellanic Clouds furthers galaxy formation understanding. o Global: KARI opting to seek alternative providers for upcoming satellite launches previously booked to fly on Angara 1.2 and Soyuz, incurring extra US$61M in estimated costs; 1,656 star clusters within Milky Way being studied following discovery by China astronomers utilizing data released from ESA Gaia. ● USA: NASA Explorers video series season 5 “Artemis Generation” to highlight space education, lunar geology, human exploration of Moon South Pole; Artemis 1 undergoing leak troubleshooting and Flight Termination System battery swap in VAB with next launch opportunity likely November. ● Hawai’i: UH88 (Mauna Kea) and Faulkes North telescopes (Haleakalā) monitoring Dimorphos trajectory following NASA IRTF, CFHT (Mauna Kea), ATLAS-MLO (Mauna Loa), and ATLAS-HKO (Haleakalā) observations of DART impact; EPA suggests analysis of proposed Hawaii Big Telescope impact on cultural resources be conducted. |
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● = 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: Mercury (E); Evening Planets: Mars (ENE), Jupiter (E), Saturn (S), Uranus (E), Neptune (E).
World Space Week 2022 Gears Up for Thousands of Events Highlighting Space and Sustainability |
☆ Oct 3 — Apollo Asteroid 2022 SC9: Near-Earth Flyby (0.034 AU) ☆ Oct 3 — Apollo Asteroid 2019 TY6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.091 AU) Continued From… ★ Jun 28 – Nov 13 — CAPSTONE, Near-Rectilinear Halo Orbit Trajectory: Cislunar Autonomous Positioning System Technology Operations and Navigation Experiment heading to operating position at NRHO / cislunar space. ☆ Aug 4 – Dec 16 — Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter (KPLO), Lunar Trajectory: South Korea ‘Danuri’ to search for lunar resources, test technologies using Ballistic Lunar Transfer, 3 highly elliptical Earth orbits to initiate a trans-lunar injection and arrive at 100-km lunar orbit. o Aug 8 – Nov 11 — IAU, NAOJ, NARIT, Online / Global: NameExoWorlds 2022. o Oct 2-7 — American Astronomical Society, Hybrid / London, Ontario, Canada and Online: 54th Annual Meeting of the Division for Planetary Sciences. TUESDAY● Oct 4 — American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, National Academy of Engineering, Washington DC: Lecture: Are We Alone? Grand Challenges in Solar System Exploration; by Robert Braun from JHU/APL, in conjunction with NAE Annual Meeting; 14:00. o Oct 4-6 — Canadian Space Agency (CSA-ASC), Hybrid, Canada and Online: National Earth Observation Forum 2022. ● Oct 4-6 — Applied Technology Institute (ATI), Online / Riva MD: ATI Course: Satellite Communications Systems – Advanced; taught by Bruce Elbert of Wisconsin, Madison and Christopher Hoeber of Cornell University; US$2,090 per person. o Oct 4-10 — World Space Week Association, Global: World Space Week 2022: Space and Sustainability; to celebrate international contributions of space science and technology to the betterment of the human condition; Oct 4 is 65th observation of 1st Space mission Sputnik One launched by Soviet Union 1957; Oct 10 is 55th observation of Outer Space Treaty going into effect 1967. |
☆ Oct 4 — Moon: At perigee, distance 369,295 km, 06:41.
☆ Oct 4 — Amor Asteroid 2020 TA1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.066 AU)
☆ Oct 4 — Apollo Asteroid 65803 Didymos (1996 GT): Near-Earth Flyby (0.071 AU)
WEDNESDAY
★ Oct 5 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Crew 5 (US Crew Vehicle-5), LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center FL: SpaceX Crew Dragon to launch its sixth crewed mission / fifth mission carrying ISS crew: Nicole Aunapu Mann (to become 1st Native American Woman in Space), Josh Cassada (1st flight), Koichi Wakata (5th flight), Anna Kikina (1st flight).
☆ Oct 5 — Rocket Lab, Launch Electron / GAzelle, LC 1B, Mahia Peninsula, New Zealand: Electron rocket to launch GAzelle smallsat (formerly Orbital Test Bed 3) for General Atomics, which carries Argos 4 Advanced Data Collection System payload for NOAA, CNES, USA Space Force.
● Oct 5 — Washington Space Business Roundtable (WSBR), Washington DC: WSBR Luncheon; with Chirag Parikh of USA National Space Council and meteorologist Meredith Garofalo.
☆ Oct 5 — Moon: 3.9° SE of Saturn, 09:00.
☆ Oct 5 — Aten Asteroid 2018 VG: Near-Earth Flyby (0.047 AU)
THURSDAY
★ Oct 6 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / Galaxy 33 & 34, LC-40, Cape Canaveral SFS FL: Falcon 9 rocket to launch Galaxy 33 and Galaxy 34 commercial communications satellites, built by Northrop Grumman for Intelsat.
● Oct 6 — Goddard Visitor Center, NASA, Greenbelt MD: Systems Engineering Seminar: OSAM-1: Building on the bleeding edge of technology; with Wendy Morgenstern, 13:00.
☆ Oct 6 — Mercury: At perihelion, 0.3075 AU from Sun, 11:00.
☆ Oct 6 — Apollo Asteroid 2021 TJ10: Near-Earth Flyby (0.050 AU)
☆ Oct 6 — Apollo Asteroid 2006 SG7: Near-Earth Flyby (0.052 AU)
☆ Oct 6 — Amor Asteroid 2022 SB8: Near-Earth Flyby (0.061 AU)
☆ Oct 6 — Aten Asteroid 2018 PZ21: Near-Earth Flyby (0.063 AU)
FRIDAY
☆ Oct 7 — Moon: 2.79° SE of Neptune, 20:00.
☆ Oct 7 — Amor Asteroid 2013 TJ6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.030 AU)
☆ Oct 7 — Amor Asteroid 2022 SW4: Near-Earth Flyby (0.062 AU)
☆ Oct 7 — Amor Asteroid 2022 SC2: Near-Earth Flyby (0.073 AU)
☆ Oct 7 — Apollo Asteroid 2019 QO6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.087 AU)
SATURDAY
o Oct 8 — British Interplanetary Society, Worcester, United Kingdom: BIS West Midlands Space Day; 10:30-16:00.
☆ Oct 8 — Moon: 1.87° SE of Jupiter, 11:00.
☆ Oct 8 — Draconids Meteor Shower Peak: Appearing to radiate from constellation Draco, Draconids offer slow moving (20 km/s) meteors which are faint and fragment easily, about 10-20 per hour; peak 15:00.
☆ Oct 8 — Apollo Asteroid 2019 SB6: Near-Earth Flyby (0.079 AU)
☆ Oct 8 — Amor Asteroid 2022 RC9: Near-Earth Flyby (0.086 AU)
SUNDAY
☆ Oct 9 — Moon: Full Hunter’s Moon, 10:54.
☆ Oct 9 — Aten Asteroid 2022 FX1: Near-Earth Flyby (0.090 AU)
☆ Oct 9 — Amor Asteroid 477719 (2010 SG15): Near-Earth Flyby (0.092 AU)


