Space Sunday: cat videos from space and images of a cold world

Credit: NASA/JPL via Associated Press

For 60 years, NASA’s Deep Space Network (DSN) has been the means by which the agency has maintained contact with every mission it has sent beyond Earth’s orbit. As missions have become more and more sophisticated, so has the amount of data flowing to and from the DSN’s three major ground stations – one in California, one in Spain, and one in Australia, and so positioned so that between them they provide a full 360O coverage of space around Earth – has increased.

While the DSN does work in cooperation with similar facilities operated by other nations – notably the Japanese Deep Space Network and EASTRACK , the European Space Agency’s network – NASA has been facing practical limits on how much data the DSN can send and receive – even allowing for past moves to higher bandwidth radio transmissions to increase data flow volumes – without increasing the number, size and power of the radio dishes the network has at its disposal; something which would be a long and costly process to put in place.

So instead, the agency is now moving to laser-based optical communications. some of these have been trialled with communications between Earth and orbiting satellites and the International Space Station, but a new system currently in development called DSOC (“dee-sock”), for Deep Space Optical Communications, now promises to revolutionise NASA’s deep space communications.

I first mentioned DSOC back in October 2023 when covering the launch of the Psyche mission to send a robotic vehicle to study the asteroid 16 Psyche (see: Space Sunday: Psyche and an eclipse). As I noted in that piece, the mission spacecraft – also called Psyche, carries a proof-of-concept DSOC system for communicating with Earth, and that system would be tested during – and possibly well beyond – the first twelve month’s of the vehicle’s outward flight from Earth.

Optical communications are of extreme importance for deep space missions for a number of reasons. First and foremost, that allow for the use of much greater bandwidths, allowing a greater volume of data to be transmitted in the same time as used for conventional radio transmissions. Secondly, the tight focus of optical transmissions removes a lot of the signal attenuation experienced by radio frequency transmissions, whilst also increasing overall signal strength and security. Finally, optical systems don’t require large receiving dishes, etc., and so can be far more compact and lighter than radio systems, allowing spacecraft mass to be reduced.

The Psyche mission’s route to asteroid 16-Psyche, going by way of a Mars gravity assist (2026). The dotted lines show the two main periods for testing DSOC. Credit: NASA

Testing of the Pysche mission’s DSOC proof-of-concept system recently started, and on December 22nd, 2023, it achieved a significant milestone by transmitting a pre-recorded 15-second high-definition video from the spacecraft to the Hale Telescope operated by the Palomar Observatory. On receipt, Palomar transmitted the video to to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, where it was played in real time on the Internet. Transmitted across a distance of 31 million kilometres, the video was sent at a rate of 267 Mbps and took 101 seconds to reach Earth in its entirety.

And of course, being a video destined to be seen on the Internet, its subject was that of a cat; specifically a tabby called Taters, who was being entertained with a laser pointer toy.

Despite the light-hearted nature of the test, it underscores the potential for DSOC capabilities in future space missions. It shows that not only does the laser-based system transmit and receive far more data than can be achieved through conventional radio link in the same time period, it has the potential to bring “real time” (allowing for the  inevitable lag on transmission times) video to things like rover missions on Mars, allowing mission planners and vehicle drivers to see terrain, etc., with greater continuity and clarity and faster than can be achieved through the recording, transmission, receipt and stitching together of multiple still images.

When it comes to human missions into deep space, capabilities like DSOC could become invaluable in helping crews on Mars (for example) maintain a sense of grater connection to family and friends on Earth simply because of the ability to see and record personal messages in high-definition video. To both these ends, the DSOC tests using the Psyche spacecraft could be extended all the way out to its rendezvous with Mars, allowing engineers to gather precise data on the capabilities and options for enhancing optical communications systems for use with robotic and crewed missions.

JWST Reveals a Dynamic Uranus

Learning aside the prepubescent titters mention of its name tends to give rise two in some quarters, Uranus is one of the most enigmatic planets within our solar system. A gas giant, Uranus is smaller than Saturn, but slightly larger than Neptune. It has mean diameter four times that of Earth, with a mass some 14.5 time greater than that of Earth.

Orbiting the Sun at an average distance of 20AU – 20 times that of the Earth’s average distance from the Sun – Uranus takes 84 terrestrial years to complete a single circuit around our star. To put this in context, it has not even completed three orbits since William Herschel first observed it in 1781 and was able to determine it to be a planet (or possibly – as he originally thought – a comet) rather than dismissing it as just another star, as those before him all the way back as far as Hipparchus had done.

Earth and Uranus to scale. Credit: NASA

But what makes Uranus curious is the fact that it is the only major planet (that is, excluding Pluto and the other dwarf planets) to have an extreme axial tilt – some 82.23º. The exact cause for this isn’t known for certain, but the most common theory is that very early in its history, Uranus was dealt a blow from a body of rock larger than Earth, knocking it over whilst causing the impacting body to break apart.

The upshot of this is a very – by our standards at least – unusual set of circumstances for the planet. These include the fact that in each 84-Earth-year orbit around the Sun, each of Uranus’ poles receives around 42 years of continuous sunlight, followed by 42 years of continuous darkness, and it is during the dozen(ish) terrestrial years of the equinoxes, when the Sun is facing the equator of Uranus, that the planet’s mid-latitudes experience  a period of day–night cycles similar to those seen on most of the other planets. However, despite this – and because of a still-to-be-understand mechanism, the planet’s equatorial regions experience higher temperatures than are seen at its poles.

This mystery is deepened by the fact that Uranus is markedly colder than the other gas giants, but it has a low thermal flux, radiating little to no excess heat. Again, why this should by is unknown. One theory is that that force of the impact – if it was an impact – which tipped the planet over may have cause Uranus’ core to shed all of its primordial heat; another theory is that there may by one or more compositionally different layers within the planet’s mantle which cause convection flows which carry heat so far up towards the outer mantel and its boundary with the atmosphere before pushing the heat back down towards the core before it can be properly expelled.

The most widely-accepted view of the interior of Uranus. Credit: Frederik Beuk

Uranus, with its ring system and 27 known moons, all tilted in the same manner as the planet, has only ever been visited once by a vehicle from Earth, and that was Voyager 2, which came to within 81,500 km of the upper reaches of the planet’s atmosphere on January 24th, 1986 as it swung by the planet en-route to Neptune. At that time, Uranus appeared surprising bland and uninteresting, despite the fact is rotates around its axis once every 17 hours; in fact, the spacecraft only noted 10 features visible in the planet’s atmosphere as it passed, a marked contrast with the likes of Neptune, Saturn and Jupiter.

Since then, Uranus has been observed by the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), which allowed astronomers their first close-up glimpse of the planet’s north polar latitudes. HST’s imaging, largely in the visible and ultra-violet wavelengths did help to reveal a more dynamic thrust to Uranus’ atmospheric mechanisms, whilst further observations in the infra-red suggested that Uranus is every bit as dynamic as its gas giant siblings.

These latter findings have now been added to by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which earlier in 2023 was commanded to turn its huge eye towards Uranus and have a good look. In doing so, JWST was able to image the planet’s slender series of rings – so dark they are hard to discern in the visible spectrum when images by telescopes – and several of the tiny moons which orbit Uranus and help shepherd those rings.

An enlarged image in the infra-red spectrum, as taken by the James Webb Space Telescope, shown the northern hemisphere of Uranus, complete with its ring system and several of its 27 moons (the blue-white dots around the planet and its rings), some of which help “shepherd” the rings and keep them in their position around the planet. These nine moons are (starting upper right, in the 2 o’clock position and progressing clockwise): Rosalind, Puck, Belinda, Desdemona, Cressida, Bianca, Portia, Juliet, and Perdita. Credit: NASA / ESA / CSA / STSci

In particular, Webb was able to capture the elusive Zeta Ring, the closest to the planet and so diffuse it has proven hard to image with any clarity. In addition, JWST caught multiple atmospheric formations, including the planet’s “polar cap”.

This cap – a collection of high-altitude weather formations rather than any ice cap of the type with which we’re familiar – tends to form during the solstices, when one or other the Uranus’ poles is pointing more-or-less directly towards the Sun – in this case, the summer solstice, which reaches its peak in 2028. Observing the development of this cap, as JWST has and will continue to do over the next few years, may help unlock some of the mysteries surrounding the dynamics of the planet’s atmosphere and weather. Beyond the bright disc of the polar region, JWST also imaged cloud formations suggesting both developing and on-going storms, the understanding of which might inform astronomers as to the planet’s heat flow mechanisms.

A wider-field view of Uranus, as captured by JWST in September 2023, with more of the planet’s moons annotated, and several galaxies far beyond our own also visible. Credit: NASA / ESA / CSA / STSci

Gaining a clearer view of the planet’s ring system is important for those who want to send a mission to study the planet and its moons at some point in the future. Interest in doing this is actually fairly high in some quarters, with no fewer than five orbital missions being proposed in just the last 15 years alone. However, having a clearer understanding of the composition and disposition of the Urainian ring system, particularly the inner rings like the Zeta Ring, is seen as vital to the success of any orbital mission.

Thus, Webb’s unparalleled infrared resolution and sensitivity is allowing astronomers to see Uranus its system with unparalleled clarity, helping them to better understand the planet, the challenges any future missions their might face and – perhaps most intriguingly of all – helping them understand how exoplanets which show similarities with Uranus and Neptune may have formed and how they work.

Two art exhibitions for winter at BOSL in Second Life

BOSL’s Hello Winter, December 2023: (r to l): Hannah Starlight, Lizzy, Evelyn Ravens

Winter 2023 see the Best of Second Life (BOSL), operated by Regin Congrejo and Jamee Thomson (Jamee Sandalwood), host two art exhibitions within its home region, both of which I was able to visit a little earlier in the month.

The first is an ensemble exhibition, which is being held within BOSL’s main gallery. Entitled Hello Winter, it opened on December 2nd and runs through until January 13th, 2024. It features art and photography from 11 Second Life residents, some of whom are more than likely familiar names to SL arts patrons, and others may not be so familiar. They comprise: Sheba (Sheba Blitz), Dante Helios (Dantelios), Kylie (KylieQuinn), Elan (Ineffable Mote), Brion Ravens (Brian Ravenhurst), Evie Ravens (Evelyn Irelund), Hannah Starlight, Jennifer Steele (JenniferSteele Wilder), Lizzy (Lizzy Swordthain), Matt Thomson (MTH63), and Jamee Thomson (Jamee Sandalwood).

BOSL’s Hello Winter, December 2023: (l to r): Dante Helios, Sheba, Kylie

The majority have selected Second Life as their subject for their winter-themed images, although Jennifer Steele and Elan both present paintings from the physical world, and Matt Thomson straddles digital worlds with pieces that appear to have been produced world and pieces of digital abstract art which has been something of a hallmark of his.

It’s a very easy-going selection of art and images, each with its own appeal and sense of the season, be it traditional in for or more expressionist in content (if not necessarily in genre).

Down at the Waterfront Café, which can be seen if you stand on tippy-toe and look over the wall on the far side of the main gallery’s car park (and also reached vey a downhill walk commencing at the left-hand end of the wall as you look at it), is a further exhibition of Jamee Thomson’s work.

BOSL’s Waterfront Gallery, December 2023: Jamee Thomson

Running through until January 20th, 2024, this is actually Jamee’s first solo exhibition in something like a year, offering 11 pictures, 10 of which have been captured from within Second Life and the 11th appears to be a digital creation. Jamee’s Second Life landscapes are  instantly recognisable wherever they are seen, thanks to a combination of her use of colour and her ability to breath both depth and life into her work – and the landscapes offered within the Waterfront Café are ample proof of this.

Both exhibitions make for pleasing visits, and their proximity to one another make them an enjoyable joint visit – if you don’t fancy the walk between the two galleries (which is in itself a pleasant meander), the region’s teleport boards make hopping between the two locations easy.

BOSL’s Waterfront Gallery, December 2023: Jamee Thomson

SLurl Details

BOSL Innovation Pavilion is rated Moderate

2023 SL SUG meetings week #51 summary

Nom Nom Café Library, November 2023 – blog post

The following notes were taken from the Tuesday, December 19th Simulator User Group (SUG) meeting. They form a summary of the items discussed, and is not intended to be a full transcript. A video of the meeting is embedded at the end of this summary, my thanks as always to Pantera for recording the meeting and providing it.

Meeting Overview

  • The Simulator User Group (also referred to by its older name of Server User Group) exists to provide an opportunity for discussion about simulator technology, bugs, and feature ideas.
  • These meetings are conducted (as a rule):
  • They are open to anyone with a concern / interest in the above topics, and form one of a series of regular / semi-regular User Group meetings conducted by Linden Lab.
  • Dates and times of all current meetings can be found on the Second Life Public Calendar, and descriptions of meetings are defined on the SL wiki.

Simulator Deployments

  • No scheduled deployments, just region restarts.

Viewer Updates

On Monday, December 18th, the Maintenance-W RC viewer (bug and crash fixes) updated to version 7.1.2.7213596294.

  • Release viewer: version 7.1.1.7039128750, formerly the Maintenance V(ersatility) RC viewer (displaying user-customized keybindings in chat), issued December 1, promoted December 14.
  • Release channel cohorts:
    • glTF PBR Materials Maintenance RC, version 7.1.2.7215179142 issued December 15 – numerous bug fixes and improvements.
    • Maintenance X RC, version 7.1.1.7088410646, December 7 – usability improvements.
    • Maintenance Y, version 6.6.17.6935642049, issued November 21 – My Outfits folder improvements; ability to remove entries from landmark history.
    • Emoji RC viewer, version 6.6.15.581551, August 31.
  • Project viewers:

Game Controllers Update

From Leviathan Linden:

I had a fresh working game_control viewer [on Github] on Wednesday [Dec 13]. There is an updated viewer that allows avatar control “Actions” to be translated into GameControl input. 
DaveP pointed out that game_control could be hijacked to supply midi input if the number of supported buttons was uncapped. Right now the game_control event is limited to 32 buttons because they are stored in a 32-bit mask. However, that would require button state to be represented in lists, which I had originally proposed, but received feedback saying scripters would prefer the bitwise masks –> much faster to process.

In Brief

  • Party week + No Change window, so not a lot discussed / little news.
  • Leviathan Linden has implemented llGetAspectRatio() for attachments, and is aiming to release it in the new year with the Gingerbread simulator update (likely mid-to-late January).
    • There are no parameters for the function, it just returns horizontal/vertical ratio float value if the scripted object is an attachment.
    • The item doesn’t need to be attached as HUD, any attachment point works.
  • The bug within the current Fall Colors simulator release (currently on all RC channels) which causes repetitive collision sounds has not been completely resolved. See BUG-234835 “Can hear Collisions “play” on RC channels”.
  • The first hour of the meeting focused on a general discussion on possible scripted updates for the SL camera (including whether or not some general camera improvements might be better handled viewer-side).
  • Please refer to the video below for the core meeting – which extended beyond the hour due to the live music; unfortunately, I had to depart for the physical world just after the first hour was up.

† The header images included in these summaries are not intended to represent anything discussed at the meetings; they are simply here to avoid a repeated image of a rooftop of people every week. They are taken from my list of region visits, with a link to the post for those interested.

A mystical Aurelias in Second Life

Aurelias, December 2023 – click any image for full size

At the start of 2023, I dropped into Aurelias, a Full region designed by Sparkle (Sparkely Sugar) – see A Winter’s Aurelias in Second Life. So with the end of the year now peeking over the horizon at us, I decided to hop back a short while ago and have another look and see what the end of the year has brought. Certainly, the updated description for the region piqued my curiosity nicely.

Welcome to Aurelias, a captivating town that echoes the spirit of Charles Dickens and transports you to a bygone era. As you stroll through our cobblestone streets, you’ll feel the enchantment inspired by classic fables and fairytales.

– Aurelias About Land description

Aurelias, December 2023

Now, for those who might read that description and have images of scenes from A Christmas Carol or one of Dickens’ other (lesser known to many?) Christmas works such as The Cricket on the Hearth, The Battle of Life, The Haunted Man and/or the New Year leaning The Chimes; it might come as a disappointment or relief (depending on one’s perspective at this time of year) that this is not the case; the key within the description is spirit of Charles Dickens.

This can be taken to mean that within the region there are elements which might be seen as being inspired by the ideas of a Dickensian / Victorian era – and some which might possibly have certain echoes from some of Dickens’ stories – but there is not anything here that one can point to an definitively state it has been drawn from any particular story or novel.

Aurelias, December 2023

For example: the cobbled streets of the little town square and its surrounds, lit as they are by what might be taken as gas lamps, might have something of a Dickensian air to them, but you’re not going to find a door with Scrooge and Marley above it; and while one of the business premises might well have a slightly Scroogian chap standing inside, would the focal character of A Christmas Carol (as seen at the start of the novella) allow a gramophone player in his place of business? Or a board game?

Instead, the region casts a wider net, presenting a location caught under a ghostly sky where many tales – folk and fairy, novel and short story – might be found to offer little touches and hints.

Aurelias, December 2023

The little township sits on the raised north side of the region as a quiet gathering of mixed businesses, some of which appear perfectly natural – the tea-shop, the pubs and antiques shop – others of which hint at darker, more mysterious things. A large, well-appointed house sits to one side of the square proper, the delivery truck sitting outside it casting a more Georgian lean to the setting (along with the style of some of the other buildings). All are in turn watched over from the west and east by headlands which cup between them a small bay and upon which sit, respectively a gaunt house wrapped in mist and where strange robed figures look outward and a poem that is somewhat mindful of words by Oscar Wilde (within A Woman of No Importance) might be found; and on the other by a tall-roofed church presided over by a severe-looking minister and another large house  complete with paths and steps giving access to the coast below its gardens.

Snow hugs the shoulders of the gaunt house, and alongside it sits a skating rink. They form an odd couple; on the one hand they are drawn together in presenting the only indications that winter has reached this land; on the other, the gaiety of the rink contrasts strongly with the brooding presence of the house, pushing them apart.

Aurelias, December 2023

To the south the land falls away to wetlands in might be found more mystery and sense of haunting or suchlike, together with a decrepit graveyard, potentially long abandoned given its general state. However, and despite it sitting within a swampy landscape, it can still (for those who think in that direction) perhaps conjure thoughts of young “Pip” Pirrip’s encounter with the criminal Magwitch at the start of Great Expectations, thus allowing the setting to carry another spiritual link to Dickens.

Also within the wetlands, shaded by tall trees, braziers burn, lights gleams from branches and mists float over the waters and old ruins and a cave await discovery – all of which makes for plenty of opportunity to dream up stories of ghosts and goblins or fae folk and elves or – given the presence of glowing cauldrons, a spell-bound house and the town’s magic shop – perhaps witches and wardrobes; just let your imagination range free.

Aurelias, December 2023

Once again an engaging setting, one neatly linked to Sparkle’s Homestead region and store to the south.

SLurl Details

2023 SL viewer release summaries week #50

Logos representative only and should not be seen as an endorsement / preference / recommendation

Updates from the week through to Sunday, December 17th, 2023

This summary is generally published every Monday, and is a list of SL viewer / client releases (official and TPV) made during the previous week. When reading it, please note:

  • It is based on my Current Viewer Releases Page, a list of all Second Life viewers and clients that are in popular use (and of which I am aware), and which are recognised as adhering to the TPV Policy. This page includes comprehensive links to download pages, blog notes, release notes, etc., as well as links to any / all reviews of specific viewers / clients made within this blog.
  • By its nature, this summary presented here will always be in arrears, please refer to the Current Viewer Release Page for more up-to-date information.
  • Note that for purposes of length, TPV test viewers, preview / beta viewers / nightly builds are generally not recorded in these summaries.

Official LL Viewers

  • Release viewer: version 7.1.1.7039128750, formerly the Maintenance V(ersatility) RC viewer, issued December 1, promoted December 14 – displaying user-customized keybindings in chat – NEW.
  • Release channel cohorts (please see my notes on manually installing RC viewer versions if you wish to install any release candidate(s) yourself).
    • glTF PBR Materials Maintenance RC, version 7.1.2.7215179142 issued December 15 – numerous bug fixes and improvements.
    • Maintenance-W RC viewer, version 7.1.2.7213596294, December 18 – bug and crash fixes.
  • Project viewers:
    • No updates.

LL Viewer Resources

Third-party Viewers

V6-style

V1-style

  • Cool VL viewer updated to version 1.32.0.3 (Stable) (PBR) on December 17 – release notes.

Mobile / Other Clients

  • Speedlight updated to version 30 (?) on December 15 – release notes.

Additional TPV Resources

Related Links

Space Sunday: 1,000 sols and counting

NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover using the WATSON camera mounted on its robot arm to take this “selfie” showing the rover’s camera mast looking at WATSON and the Ingenuity helicopter sitting on the surface of Mars after being dropped there by the rover. This image was r=taken on the 46th sol of the mission (April 6th, 2021). Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU/MSSS

1,000 Martian sols ago, two further ambassadors from Earth arrived on the Red Planet, winched safely down onto the floor of Jezero Crater by a hovering “skycrane”. Since then, both have performed their work near-flawlessly over a period of almost 3 terrestrial years – one doing do for far, far longer than its designers and operators had ever hoped. They are, of course, the Mars 2020 mission rover Perseverance and its companion “Mars Helicopter” Ingenuity.

The mission actually arrived on Mars on February 18th 2021, but the passing of 1,000 sols (as the local Martian day is called) is an excellent opportunity to review the Mars 2020 mission as a whole, and look to the future.

Ingenuity had a planned mission duration of 90 terrestrial days during which it was expected to be able to make up to five flights; no-one really knew how well the craft’s batteries, electronics and mechanical systems would stand up to the hostile conditions on Mars once operations got underway. But as of December 2nd, 2023, the 1.8 kg drone has complete 64 flight and clocked up just over 2 hours of airborne time. In doing so, it has proven that entirely automated flight on other planets without direct human control is possible, and that a small, camera-equipped aerial vehicle can work in tandem with ground units to help reconnoitre potential routes of exploration and identify potential points of scientific interest.

Perseverance, meanwhile, has spent the intervening time studying an ancient river delta within the crater, believed to have formed as water poured down from the plains above early in Mars’ history, depositing clays and other minerals as they gradually flowed outwards and eventually gave rise to a lake within Jezero. The primary mission for the rover has thus far been to explore the delta and seek both evidence of past habitability and search for actual biosignatures indicative of past life. In doing so, Perseverance has gathered 23 air and soil samples, some of which may be returned to Earth in a future (if controversial, in terms of NASA funding) sample-return mission.

In this false-colour image of Jezero Crater, the river that once broached the crater walls and carried water into its basin to form a shallow lake can be seen on the left, with the river’s delta clearly visible on the crater floor. The colours are intended to highlight different mineral deposits within the delta, with green representing the widespread carbonates. Most recently, Perseverance has been exploring the green-tinted area above the main river channel. Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU/MSSS

The data gathered by the rover confirms that Jezero Crater – originally formed some 4 billion years ago via an asteroid impact – was subject to multiple periods of flooding which took place over an extended period commencing several hundred million years after the crater was formed. These periods of flooding initially gave rise to the deposition of sandstone and mudstone in the crater, suggesting a modest lake was created. Later, this lake underwent a more sustained period of cyclic flooding and evaporation, giving rise to the deposition of salt-rich mudstones as the waters expanded and contracted.

At its peak, it is believed the lake was perhaps 35 kilometres in diameter and 30 metres deep. Later, as Mars’ climate became more erratic, the crater was subjected to sudden, violent bursts of flooding from above, with large rocks and boulders from outside of the crater being deposited within it by repeated flash floods before the lake – and all surface water on Mars – slowly vanished, being lost to space through evaporation as the atmosphere was lost, or ras a result of it retreating underground, where it froze.

Of the samples gathered and studies by the rover’s on-board science lab, many carried tantalising markers which might be associated with the formation of basic forms of life. These include carbonates, minerals that form in watery environments often favourable to the development of organic molecules (although the molecules themselves could be the result of either organic or inorganic reactions within the water). The rover has also found quantities of fine-grained silica and deposits of phosphate, both of which have been rich in carbonates, and which are respectively known to both preserve fossilised microbes and help microbes kick-start their life processes here on Earth – although evidence of them doing the same on Mars remains elusive.  Some of the carbonate-carrying phosphates have been found to contain iron, something again associated with life here on Earth.

December 2023 is a key month for Perseverance, as it brings to a close the rover’s fourth science campaign within Jezero Crater and the start of a new endeavour. Commencing in 2024, Perseverance will follow the course of the river bed back towards the crater wall – a distance of around 4 km – to where mission personnel believe they have located an “easy” climb up the crater walls and which intersects the river’s channel at its lower end.

This image of Jezero Crater, captured by NASA’s Perseverance rover, shows the potential route (yellow line) that the robot may take to the crater’s rim. Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU/MSSS

Climbing the crater up to the plains above will expose Perseverance’s science instruments to bedrock and material even older then the outflow plain it has thus far studied, allowing it to reach back to the time the crater was formed. Along the way it will be able to both study the changing rocks and any atmospheric changes as it climbs upwards. As well as analysing the rock samples it gathers, the rover will also store some in the remaining 13 sample tubes contained in its belly, allowing them to be cached together with some of the remaining tubes of material gathered from the crater floor so that an alternate collection of samples can await the arrival of the still-to-be-fully-defined sample return mission, should landing within Jezero itself prove too difficult for the proposed lander part of the mission, and the samples cached there are abandoned.

 Video Promotes Rosalind Franklin

If fortune favours the unfortunate, the next rover to trundle across the surface of Mars will be Europe’s long-awaited Rosalind Franklin. Originally called the ExoMars rover, this vehicle has suffered a number of setbacks during its 20 years in development and pre-flight hell. However, (and touching large amounts of wood, given I have something of a loose association with the mission), things are currently on course for an October 2028 launch, that the European Space Agency felt confident enough to release a new promotional video showcasing the mission.

Some 60% heavier and slightly larger than NASA’s Mars Exploration Rovers Opportunity and Spirit, the European rover is, like them, solar-powered. It also shares a similar mission arc as both of the MER rovers and the nuclear-powered Curiosity and Perseverance: to locate evidence for water on Mars and seek out evidence for past signs of life. However, in one respect its mission does differ, as Rosalind Franklin will also focus seeking evidence for current microbial life on Mars.

To assist with the latter, the rover will be equipped with a drilling mechanism capable of reaching up to two metres beneath the planet’s surface – far beyond depths so far plumbed in the search for evidence of Martian microbial life – with the samples gathered then put through extensive study and analysis by the rover’s multiple science systems.

The landing site for the mission is Oxia Planum, a region located between two outflow channel systems: Mawrth Vallis to the northeast and Ares Vallis to the southwest. Scientists believe this region will contain remnants of the planet’s wetter past, increasing the potential for finding evidence for past or even current microbial life on the planet. Once there – the flight to Mars will take almost exactly 2 years, courtesy of the capabilities of its launch vehicle – Rosalind Franklin will travel up to 70 metres a day when on the move, with an overall primary mission expected to last some 7 months.

Voyager 1 Hits Problems

Humanity’s first interstellar ambassador, Voyager 1, is now just over 47 years into its voyage and more than 162 AU (or 24 billion kilometres) from Earth – and like all of us as we grow older, it is increasingly showing signs of its age. Already, the more energy-intensive science instruments on the lonely spacecraft have been shut down, and engineers have had to repeatedly work their way gingerly around assorted problems the craft has encountered; such is the distance separating vehicle and home planet that even the tiniest errors risks breaking all communications.

An artist’s impression of a voyager probe in deep space. Credit: NASA

Most recently, Voyager 1 has started having issues with two key systems: the Flight Data System (FDS) and the Telemetry Modulation Unit (TMU). The latter is responsible for transmitting to Earth data on the spacecraft’s condition, orientation, etc., together with information from its operational science instruments, and receiving and managing communications from Earth. The data it sends is gathered by the three computers of the FDS, which combine everything obtained from the other instruments and sub-systems into a single package for the TMU to send. Except recently, all the TMU has been sending is a repeating pattern of meaningless binary, although it has continued to act on messages from Earth.

It had been thought the problem lies with the TMU itself, but after careful and painfully slow diagnoses (round-trip communications between Voyager 1 and Earth are on the order of 45 hours); the problem was found to be within the FDS. Over the weekend of December 9th/10th, mission engineers ordered the FDS to perform a sequential restart, which it was hoped would kick-start the system into once again passing meaningful data to the TMU. It didn’t.

Created using NASA’s Eyes on the Solar System, this image shows what it might be like to look back at our solar system from 162 AU

So currently, Voyager 1 remains capable of receiving commands from Earth, but it cannot provide any understandable feedback on whether anything succeeded, or what systems are trying to report back through the FDS. As such, the Voyager mission team have indicated it will take several weeks to formulate a new plan of action in order to try to resolve the problem.

Spaceplanes, Spaceplanes

Both the United States and China were due to launch their highly secretive, automated “spaceplanes” this past week – although as it turned out, only one of them actually did so.

The United States X-37B programme had been due to commence its seventh mission – and the fourth flight of the 2nd of the two X-37B craft the US Space Force and US Air Force jointly operate – on December 14th. It was to be the first flight of the craft atop a SpaceX Falcon Heavy, seen as offering the craft the ability to fly missions at much higher orbits than can be achieved using its over launch vehicles – the ULA Atlas V 501and the Falcon 9 Block 4 -, potentially allowing for more flexible and even longer-duration on-orbit operations.

The USSF / USAF X-37B (vehicle 1), shortly after its return to Earth on November 22nd, 2022, following a 908-day orbital mission. Credit: US DoD

The cause of the delay has not been stated, but appears to have been called by SpaceX rather than the US DoD, and following the postponement, the Falcon Heavy was removed from Pad 39A at Kennedy Space Centre. At the time of writing, no revised launch target has been announced.

China, however, so no such delays in the third flight of its Shenlong “Divine Dragon” spaceplane, which lifted-off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre on December 14th, as planned, using a Long March 2F booster.

Little is actually known about the Chinese vehicle – although there is an emerging consensus that it is potentially similar in overall size and form to the US X-37B. The craft first flew the craft in September 2020 and then was launched a second time in August 2022 – this mission lasting for 276 days, which is still a small fraction of the time the US craft tends to spend in orbit (908 days on its last mission). That said, the second Shenlong mission did cause surprise and concern in the west when it apparently launch / placed / jettisoned something into space  – China has remained tight-lipped as to what it was.

An artist’s rendering of what the Chinese automated space plane might look like. Credit: Erik Simonsen / Getty

No information on the flight or its potential duration has been given by the Chinese authorities, with the official statement post-launch something of a laconic repetition of the announcements which followed the first two flights of the vehicle.

The test spacecraft will be in orbit for a period of time before returning to the domestic scheduled landing site. During this period, it will carry out reusable technology verification as planned to provide technical support for the peaceful use of space.

– Official and bland Chinese statement following the latest Shenlong launch

That both vehicles were originally intended to launch so close together is not a coincidence. The USSC/USAF has been very open in its desire to learn more about the Chinese vehicle’s purpose and capabilities – and the China probably likewise want to know more about the American vehicle. Thus, having them in space at the same time allows the two nations to observe one another’s craft via Earth-based means and – perhaps – mimic the manoeuvrings of one another’s vehicles.