logo
A tiny moon photobombs Mars as europe's Hera mission swoops past

A tiny moon photobombs Mars as europe's Hera mission swoops past

Observer29-03-2025

An asteroid-chasing spacecraft just swung past Mars on Wednesday. As it zipped by, it took hundreds of shots of the Red Planet, as well as several snaps of Deimos, one of the two small Martian moons.
The operators of the European Space Agency's Hera spacecraft were bewitched by the sci-fi aesthetics of the pictures.
'We were waiting with impatience to get these images,' said Patrick Michel, the principal investigator for Hera, during a Thursday news conference at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany. When the first shots of the moon appeared, many of the Hera team members burst into cheers. 'We've never seen Deimos in that way,' Michel said.
Navigators managed to fly Hera about 600 miles above Deimos, a craggy moon just 9 miles long. The pass shows the object in remarkable detail — a small island gliding above the crater-scarred Martian desert.
During the news conference, Ian Carnelli, the Hera project manager, was misty-eyed. 'I'm going to get emotional,' he said. 'The excitement was such that we didn't get any sleep.' Hera was using Mars in what is known as a gravity assist, both accelerating the spacecraft and adjusting its flight path. But its mission operators also wanted to take advantage of the Martian flyby and use it to test the mechanical eyes that will allow Hera to study the asteroid it is targeting, Dimorphos. In the coming days, the mission's scientists will reveal more photographs from Hera's encounter with Mars, which may include shots of Phobos, the planet's other moon.
As with any planetary flyby, there were some nerves about whether Hera would conduct its manoeuvres properly and end up on the right trajectory. 'The spacecraft behaved very well,' said Sylvain Lodiot, the Hera operations manager. 'We're on track to the asteroid system.' Hera is headed to Dimorphos as a follow-up to a 2022 Nasa mission, the Double Asteroid Redirection Test. DART deliberately crashed a spacecraft into that asteroid, aiming to change its orbit around a larger asteroid, Didymos. That was a test of whether a dangerous space rock bound for Earth could be deflected in a similar manner.
The experiment successfully changed the orbit of Dimorphos. But the asteroid's physical nature, and its full response to DART's collision, remains unclear; some evidence suggests that it acted like a fluid when hit, rather than a solid, causing it to eject a lot of debris and reshape itself. — NYT

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Workshop looks at advancing coastal water sustainability
Workshop looks at advancing coastal water sustainability

Observer

time2 days ago

  • Observer

Workshop looks at advancing coastal water sustainability

SUHAR: As part of its commitment to advancing scientific research and environmental sustainability, Sohar University hosted a high-level workshop on Monday entitled: 'Assessing the Impact of the Decision Support System for Coastal Waters (DISCO) on Stakeholders'. The event was organised in collaboration with the Directorate-General of Fisheries Research at the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Water Resources, and comes as part of the ongoing activities under the DISCO research project, which is strategically funded by the Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Innovation and receives a funding support from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The workshop commenced with a keynote address by Prof Kelvin Bwalya, Director of Research Development at Sohar University. He began by warmly welcoming the delegates on behalf of Vice-Chancellor Dr Hamdan al Fazari, quoting, "I extend a warm welcome to all the delegates to this prestigious event. Sohar University is always happy to host internationally recognised events to reaffirm our commitment to meaningful research that aligns with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and Oman Vision 2040." Prof Bwalya further expressed pride in the university's collaboration on a Nasa-funded research project alongside esteemed partners from the USA and Oman's Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Water Resources. Dr Dawood al Yahyai, Director-General of Fisheries Research, delivered another keynote address. He emphasised the critical role of the DISCO system in advancing sustainable marine resource management and enabling data-driven environmental decision-making through cutting-edge monitoring technologies. Led by Prof Dale Kiefer, Principal Investigator from the University of Southern California, the research team presented the developmental journey of the DISCO system and its technical capabilities in monitoring oceanographic and environmental conditions of coastal waters. Presentations were also delivered by Suad al Bimani from the Marine Science and Fisheries Centre, highlighting the key challenges facing Oman's coastal ecosystems. Dr Scott Burg and Prof Rakesh Belwal from Sohar University presented the methodology used for stakeholder impact assessment, which is part of the new evaluation phase of the project supported by Nasa. The scientific programme featured six main sessions, including live demonstrations, scientific presentations and interactive discussions. The participants were divided into two parallel focus groups to evaluate user needs, provide feedback on the system's capabilities, and explore ways to enhance its adoption and impact across relevant sectors. The event brought together experts and representatives from major national institutions, including the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Water Resources, Royal Navy of Oman, OQ, Majis Industrial Services, Sultan Qaboos University, the National University of Science and Technology, the University of Technology and Applied Sciences and Sohar University.

Trump withdraws NASA nomination of Musk associate
Trump withdraws NASA nomination of Musk associate

Muscat Daily

time4 days ago

  • Muscat Daily

Trump withdraws NASA nomination of Musk associate

Washington, D.C., US – President Donald Trump has withdrawn the NASA nomination of Jared Isaacman, a billionaire tech entrepreneur and private astronaut who has commanded and funded two SpaceX missions to Earth orbit, the White House has confirmed. Isaacman's removal comes just days after Elon Musk's official departure from the White House, where the SpaceX CEO was serving in the role of a 'special government employee' leading the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Trump said he would announce a new candidate soon. 'After a thorough review of prior associations, I am hereby withdrawing the nomination of Jared Isaacman to head NASA,' the US president posted on his Truth Social platform on Saturday. 'I will soon announce a new nominee who will be mission aligned and put America first in space,' he said. The move came just days before the Senate was scheduled to vote on his confirmation, where he was widely expected to be approved. According to The New York Times , President Donald Trump had concerns about Isaacman's political loyalty. The news outlet reported that Trump was informed of Isaacman's donations to Democrats in the past two campaign cycles. 'The Administrator of NASA will help lead humanity into space and execute President Trump's bold mission of planting the American flag on the planet Mars,' White House Assistant Press Secretary Liz Huston told Fox News Digital on Saturday. Isaacman, 42, said he was 'incredibly grateful' to Trump and 'all those who supported me throughout this journey'. 'I have gained a much deeper appreciation for the complexities of government and the weight our political leaders carry,' he posted on X. 'It may not always be obvious through the discourse and turbulence, but there are many competent, dedicated people who love this country and care deeply about the mission.' Meanwhile, Musk also took to X to post: 'It is rare to find someone so competent and good-hearted.' Trump announced his choice of Jared Isaacman in December, before the president's inauguration, and the nominee seemed poised to be confirmed by the US Congress. A US Congress Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation voted this April to advance his nomination to the full Senate for confirmation. Issacman had, in September last year, become the first private astronaut to perform a spacewalk after launching on a SpaceX rocket. Meanwhile, on May 30, the White House released its NASA budget request for the 2026 fiscal year. The documents propose a US$6bn budget cut for the agency, from US$24.8bn to US$18.8bn, with funding for NASA's science programmes slashed by 47 per cent. It indicated that NASA's workforce would be reduced by nearly a third, for example, and dozens of the agency's science missions – including the Juno Jupiter orbiter, New Horizons Pluto probe and a number of other spacecraft that are currently gathering data in deep space – would be cancelled. ANI

Astronomers scrutinise a star behaving unlike any other
Astronomers scrutinise a star behaving unlike any other

Observer

time7 days ago

  • Observer

Astronomers scrutinise a star behaving unlike any other

WASHINGTON: Astronomers have spotted a star acting unlike any other ever observed as it unleashes a curious combination of radio waves and X-rays, pegging it as an exotic member of a class of celestial objects first identified only three years ago. It is located in the Milky Way galaxy about 15,000 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation Scutum, flashing every 44 minutes in both radio waves and X-ray emissions. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km). The researchers said it belongs to a class of objects called "long-period radio transients", known for bright bursts of radio waves that appear every few minutes to several hours. This is much longer than the rapid pulses in radio waves typically detected from pulsars - a type of speedily rotating neutron star, the dense collapsed core of a massive star after its death. Pulsars appear, as viewed from Earth, to be blinking on and off on timescales of milliseconds to seconds. "What these objects are and how they generate their unusual signals remain a mystery," said astronomer Ziteng Wang of Curtin University in Australia, lead author of the study published this week in the journal Nature. In the new study, the researchers used data from Nasa's orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory, the ASKAP telescope in Australia and other telescopes. While the emission of radio waves from the newly identified object is similar to the approximately 10 other known examples of this class, it is the only one sending out X-rays, according to astrophysicist and study co-author Nanda Rea of the Institute of Space Sciences in Barcelona. The researchers have some hypotheses about the nature of this star. They said it may be a magnetar, a spinning neutron star with an extreme magnetic field, or perhaps a white dwarf, a highly compact stellar ember, with a close and quick orbit around a small companion star in what is called a binary system. "However, neither of them could explain all observational features we saw," Wang said. Stars with up to eight times the mass of our sun appear destined to end up as a white dwarf. They eventually burn up all the hydrogen they use as fuel. Gravity then causes them to collapse and blow off their outer layers in a "red giant" stage, eventually leaving behind a compact core roughly the diameter of Earth - the white dwarf. The observed radio waves potentially could have been generated by the interaction between the white dwarf and the hypothesised companion star, the researchers said. - Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store