African Space Leadership Congress Builds on Africa Space Generation Workshop

The 8th African Space Leadership Congress on Space Science and Technology for Sustainable Development is being held December 2-4 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, following the 3rd Africa Space Generation Workshop November 30 to December 1. With an African space economy valued at US$7B, ASLC is aimed at capitalizing and socializing efforts of African nations on space technologies. Addis Ababa is home to the Entoto Observatory and Research Center, East Africa’s only space observation facility, built by the Ethiopian Space Science Society (ESSS). Egypt TIBA-1 satellite successfully launches on an Ariane 5 booster. Since launch of the first Egypt NILESAT101 in 1998 over US$3B has been spent on space projects in Africa. Angola recovers from the Dec 2017 loss of ANGOSAT-1 with ANGOSAT-2 planned for launch by Roscosmos from Kazakhstan in 2020 and ANGOSAT-3 under construction by Airbus. South African Space Agency is in talks with NASA to contribute to Moon and Mars missions. Ethiopia’s first satellite ET-RSS1 is prepared for launch Dec 17 from China with a ground station at Entoto. Ethiopia Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed visits China Academy of Space Technology to inspect the satellite during 2019. Ethiopia signs agreement with ArianeSpace to begin building in Jan 2020 a satellite manufacturing, assembly, integration and testing facility. The African Union chooses Egypt among several competitors as 21st-Century headquarters for the new African Space Agency. (Image Credits: ESA, CAST, Entoto Observatory, Space Generation)

MONDAY

Highlights…
Dec 2 — ISS, 405-km LEO: Expedition 61 six-member crew planning for arrival of Dragon CRS-19 with 2,585 kg of supplies, and Progress 74 with up to 2,400 kg; Parmitano and Morgan to perform third EVA today for AMS spacewalks (224th overall for ISS).

Dec 2 — NewSpace: Ceres Robotics of Palo Alto CA planning 2022 flight ready Minikhod and 2023 Marsokhod rovers; Blue Origin New Glenn rocket launch planned from Cape Canaveral AFS LC 36 early 2021; Final Frontier Design commercial EVA spacesuits tested by Project PoSSUM are one step closer to certification.

Dec 2 — Solar System: Jupiter red spot predicted to rage for centuries to come; Saturn moon Titan new mapping show 6 categories of landscapes; ocean worlds could be explored by upside-down underwater rover currently being tested in Antarctica.

Dec 2 — Galaxy: New view of Galaxy Center reveals 27 previously undetected supernovae; TESS is expected to find 10,000-15,000 exoplanet candidates by 2025; continued study of NGC 6240 reveals 3 supermassive black holes.

Dec 2 — Global: Russia planning observatories at lunar base, Vostochny Cosmodrome construction second stage goes forward; UAE works to establish its first space law within next few months to address future space property rights and tourism; JAXA planning to establish space media platform on ISS.

Dec 2 — USA: Artemis 1 Orion craft to undergo environmental testing at Plumbrook Station while SLS flight software to go through formal system testing at MSFC; Lunar dust challenges being explored by UCF; Mojave Air and Space Port to be granted US$8M for renovation by DoT.

Dec 2 — Hawai’i: A Hua He Inoa program nurtures Hawaii naming for astronomical objects; CFHT Maunakea Scholars on 6 islands has >500 students to date; HI Rotary Club works on student exchange program with 44 interns total since 2013.

Dec 2 — Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), LEO: ESA / NASA craft studying sun, reaches 24 full years / begins 25th year of operations in space today, launched 1995; has discovered more than 3,000 comets.

= All times

for terrestrial events in local time unless noted.

= All times for international terrestrial events in local time unless noted.

= All times for space events, and…

= All times for international space / astro events in Hawaii Standard Time unless noted. Add 10 hours to obtain UT (‘Universal Time’).


Weekly Planet Watch Evening Planets: Venus (SW), Jupiter (SW), Saturn (WSW), Uranus (E), Neptune (S); Morning Planets: Mercury (ESE), Mars (ESE).

International Moon Village Workshop & Symposium 2019 Set for Dec 5-8 in Japan

Established in 2017 on the International Space University (ISU) campus in Strasbourg, France, the non-governmental Moon Village Association (MVA) based in Vienna, Austria, holds its 3rd annual Workshop & Symposium with events in the cities of Tokyo and Kyoto. The MVA association statute explains its mission is to encourage Moon stakeholders to “collaborate together for sustainable operations on the lunar surface as well as in cis-lunar space”. 26 Institutional members and 220 individual members from 39+ countries make MVA a decidedly international endeavor. Workshop chairs include astronauts Chiaki Mukai (L) and Takao Doi (R). Mukai, first Japanese woman to enter space, is representing co-host Tokyo University of Science, Doi represents co-host Kyoto University. Local sponsors The Science Union for Human Planetary Habitation in Space (SUHPHS) [composed of partner organizations the Japanese Association of Space Radiation Research (JASRR), the Japan Society of Aerospace and Environmental Medicine (JSASEM)] and JAXA support MVA Workshop & Symposium 2019. President Giuseppe Reibaldi will report on the latest activities of Moon Village, including MoU signings with ISU and Cyprus Space Exploration Organisation (CSEO). Astronaut Naoko Yamazaki is to give a keynote address on the Sustainability of Human Moon Exploration. Taro Asazuma and Takeshi Hakamada of Japan ispace will moderate a panel on Moon commerce, as will space entrepreneur Misuzu Onuki. Paul Wooster of SpaceX will give an announcement titled ‘Using Starship to Build a Base on the Moon’. (Image Credits: MVA, ISU, JAXA)

 

Dec 2 — Cornell University, Ithaca NY: Planetary Lunch: Probing Saturn’s Carbon Cycle with Cassini VIMS Stellar Occultations; by Andrew Foster of Cornell.

Dec 2 — Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona, Tucson AZ: Lecture: Beyond the Known World – New Horizons Mission into the Kuiper Belt; by Veronica Bray of LPL.

Dec 2-4 — Ethiopian Space Science and Technology Institute, Ethiopian Space Science Society, African Union et al, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: 8th African Space Leadership Congress on Space Science and Technology for Sustainable Development: Prospects and Challenges of African Space Development.

Dec 2 — Phoenicid Meteor Shower Peak: Meteor shower may produce 5 per hour, slow moving (18 km/sec) meteors from debris of comet 289P Blanpain.

Continued from…

Jan 2019 – Sep 2020 — New Horizons, Kuiper Belt: Full data collected from 7 instruments during KBO Ultima Thule flyby to be transmitted to Earth over this time period.

Nov 2019 – Nov 2020— Hayabusa2, Earth Trajectory: JAXA Hayabusa2 with two samples collected from C-type asteroid 162173 Ryugu on trajectory for Earth return.

Nov 29 – Dec 5 — European Commission, EU Space Programme, Copernicus, EGNOS, Galileo Network, ESA, et al, Helsinki, Finland: European Space Week 2019; featuring keynotes, discussions and conference sessions, hackathon, accelerator boot camp, a festive awards ceremony and more.

NET Dec — CNSA, Launch Long March 5 / Shijian 20 (SJ 20), Wenchang Satellite Launch Center, Hainan Island, China (19° N): China Long March 5 return to flight carrying SJ-20, an 8-metric ton technological demonstration satellite, into geosynchronous orbit.

TUESDAY

Dec 3 — Hayabusa2, Earth Trajectory: JAXA Hayabusa2 reaches 5 full year / enters 6th full year in space today, launched 2014.

Dec 3 — U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Washington DC: U.S. Chamber 2nd Annual Space Summit: LAUNCH – The Space Economy.

Dec 3 — Royal Institute of Navigation, Nottingham, United Kingdom: Meeting: Cube Sats.

Dec 3-5 — EU Commission, Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment, Helsinki, Finland: European Space Week.

Dec 3-6 — Chandra X-Ray Center (CXC), NASA, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Boston MA: Twenty Years of Chandra Science Symposium.

Dec 3 — Moon: At first quarter, 20:58.

Dec 3 — Apollo Asteroid 2017 AP4: Near-Earth Flyby (0.022 AU)

WEDNESDAY

Dec 4 — SpaceX, Launch Falcon 9 / CRS 19, Cape Canaveral AFS FL: SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket set to launch 21st Dragon spacecraft on 19th operational cargo delivery mission to ISS.

Dec 4 — NASA, Online / Washington DC: Instrument and Payload Solicitation Process Discussion for CLPS (and other opportunities); 14:00-16:00 EST, access to join Zoom meeting.

Dec 4 — Institute of Physics Merseyside, Liverpool, United Kingdom: Lecture: Can Astrophysics Help Save Our Planet? by Claire Burke, Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores University.

Dec 4-5 — Defense Strategies Institute, Alexandria VA: 6th Space Resiliency Summit.

Dec 4 — Moon: 3.8° SSE of Neptune, 06:00; at apogee (distance 404,439 km), 18:00.

THURSDAY

Dec 5 — Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston TX: 2019–2020 Cosmic Explorations Speaker Series:Apollo to Artemis: Exploring Our Moon — No Bugs, No Cheese: Sample Studies Since Apollo; by Dr. Juliane Gross.

Dec 5 — Royal Astronomical Society, London, United KingdomSouth East Exoplanet Meeting.

Dec 5-8 — Moon Village Association, Tokyo, Japan: 3rd International Moon Village Workshop & Symposium 2019; discussing various issues for the growth of such society on the Moon, discussing on-going and planned Moon programs.

Dec 5 — Apollo Asteroid 2019 WW: Near-Earth Flyby (0.022 AU)

FRIDAY

Dec 6 — Roscosmos State Corporation, Launch Soyuz / Progress 74P, Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan: Russia Soyuz rocket to launch Progress 74P resupply ship to ISS.

Dec 6 — Ames Research Center, NASA, Moffett Field CA: Bay Area Exoplanet Meeting.

Dec 6 — Framingham State University, Framingham MA: Event: Sustainable Space, Sustainable Earth – From Ideas to Action.

Dec 6 — Caltech Astronomy, Pasadena CA: Lecture: The Solar System’s Volcanic Wonderland; by Katherine de Kleer of Caltech, 19:00.

SATURDAY

Dec 7 — Griffith Observatory, Los Angeles CA: Griffith Observatory Public Star Party.

Dec 7 — Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, Kamuela HI: CHFT Winter Star Party 2019; from 19:00-21:00.

Dec 7 — Puppid Meteor Shower Peak: Appearing to radiate from constellations Puppis, Vela and Carina, up to 10 meteors per hour expected (some very bright) seen from southern hemisphere; followed closely by Monocerotid meteors which offer ~3 per hour.

Dec 7 — Apollo Asteroid 2019 VH5: Near-Earth Flyby (0.046 AU)

SUNDAY

Dec 8-13 — International Committee on Global Navigation Satellite Systems, UNOOSA, Bengaluru, India: 14th Meeting of the International Committee on Global Navigation Satellite Systems (ICG).

Dec 8 — Moon: 4.3° SSE of Uranus, 05:00.

Dec 8 — Apollo Asteroid 2015 XN55: Near-Earth Flyby (0.059 AU)