International partnerships for Moon and Mars
…
An update on that historic all-woman spacewalk
…
And a milestone for the James Webb Space Telescope
… a few of the stories to tell you about
–- This Week at NASA – International Edition!
For the first time in almost two decades,
the International Astronautical Congress – or
IAC -- met in the United States, and kicked
it off with remarks from Vice President Mike
Pence about the future of human space exploration.
“With Apollo in the history books, the Artemis
mission has begun, and we are well on our
way to making NASA’s Moon to Mars mission
a reality.”
During the conference, NASA showcased plans
for the Artemis program, which will send the
first woman and next man the Moon by 2024,
using innovative commercial and international
partnerships, technologies and systems.
“We need international partners.
We can all do more when we work together than
any one of us can do if we go alone.”
In addition to highlighting our growing partnerships
with international space agencies, Administrator
Bridenstine also showcased our new lunar mobile
robot known as VIPER – the Volatiles Investigating
Polar Exploration Rover.
VIPER will sample water ice and collect about
100 days of data that will inform the first
global water resource maps of the Moon.
“VIPER is going to rove on the south pole
of the Moon, and VIPER is going to assess
where the water ice is.
We’re going to be able to characterize the
water ice, and ultimately drill and find out
just how is the water ice embedded in the
regolith on the Moon.”
The IAC also held a ceremony honoring humanity’s
first lunar explorers -- the Apollo 11 crew
-- with the 2019 World Space Award.
Buzz Aldrin, Neil Armstrong’s son Mark,
and Michael Collins’s grandson Luke accepted
the award.
Mission Control in Houston reports the new
battery charge/discharge unit installed during
thehistoric Oct. 18 spacewalk by Christina
Koch and Jessica Meir is activated and operating
properly.
The faulty unit is due to return to Earth
on the next SpaceX Dragon resupply ship for
inspection, and station managers will reschedule
the remaining three battery replacement spacewalks
at a future date.
In the meantime, the Isnternational Space
Station crew will prepare for five planned
spacewalks to repair a cosmic particle detector,
the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, in November
and December.
The sunshield for NASA’s James Webb Space
Telescope has passed a critical test in preparation
for its 2021 launch.
Technicians and engineers fully deployed each
of the sunshield's five layers, successfully
putting the sunshield into the same position
it will be a million miles from Earth.
Webb will observe distant parts of the universe
humans have never seen before.
Because it’s optimized for infrared light,
Webb's optics and sensors must remain extremely
cold, and its sunshield is key for regulating
temperature.
The NASA International Space Apps Challenge
was held Oct. 18-20.
This global 48-hour hackathon brought together
participants of all ages and backgrounds at
more than 200 events in more than 80 countries
to solve real-world problems with collaborative
solutions.
The teams work with NASA’s open source data
and products and design innovative solutions
to scientific challenges faced on Earth and
in space.
That’s what’s up this week @NASA …
For more on these and other stories follow
us on the web at nasa.gov/twan.
