Space – Muslim Science http://muslim-science.com Bridging the gap between Science and Islam Wed, 21 Aug 2024 19:55:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.26 African moon mission seeks cash for first phase http://muslim-science.com/african-moon-mission-seeking-cash/ http://muslim-science.com/african-moon-mission-seeking-cash/#respond Mon, 12 Jan 2015 10:34:26 +0000 http://muslim-science.com/?p=2990

African moon mission seeks cash for first phase

By Paula Park

A group of African space enthusiasts have taken to the internet to raise money for what they say will be the continent’s first moon mission.

Africa2Moon’s main goal is to send a probe to orbit or land on the moon and beam back video images that will be passed on to African classrooms using the internet. The project aims to use space exploration to encourage young Africans to embrace science careers.

The project, conceived by the South African non-profit Foundation for Space Development, has turned to the crowdfunding website CauseVox to help finance the mission’s first phase up to November next year.

During this initial phase, the Foundation says work will be done to develop the final mission concept, carry out an associated feasibility study and hold outreach events.

Since fundraising began on 25 November, the project has brought in more than US$12,700  of the US$150,000 the Foundation hopes to raise by the end of January.

“Advancing an ambitious space project can contribute to getting more people that can join our industry.”

Sias Mostert, Space Advisory Company

“The main driver behind this mission is inspiring the youth of Africa to believe that space exploration … is not something that is the exclusive preserve of the most advanced countries,” Peter Martinez, the Foundation’s founding director tells SciDev.Net.

One in every nine African science graduates leaves the continent for jobs overseas, and most space science projects take place outside Africa, says Jonathan Weltman, the Foundation’s chief executive.

An African-sponsored space mission might be an incentive for scientists to stay on the continent and contribute to scientific expertise and infrastructure, Weltman tells SciDev.Net.

“The aspiration of any engineer or scientist is to try and reach the pinnacle of their field by working on the most important projects with the most recognised colleagues,” he says.

Sias Mostert is an executive at South African satellite program and systems engineering firm the Space Advisory Company. He donated US$1,000 to the Africa2Moon project, and sees the mission as a way to provoke interest in space and ensure that Africa can build the satellites and other infrastructure needed to boost development of information and communications technologies (ICTs).

“To roll out ICT infrastructure in Africa, space is the only quick solution,” Mostert tells SciDev.Net. “We also need great employees that are inspired, motivated and highly educated. Advancing an ambitious space project can contribute to getting more people that can join our industry.”

Peter M. B. Waswa, a Kenyan space engineer whose blog, spacekenya.org, advocates government-sponsored space exploration, says that crowdfunding is best for projects that the public can easily understand and get excited about. But it may be less suited to funding research projects or for building a significant space programme, he adds.

“Crowdfunding is not a viable option if you are interested in adopting space technology for sustainable national development aimed at improving the lives of ordinary citizens,” Waswa says.

> Link to Africa2Moon project

 

This article was originally published on SciDev.Net. Read the original article.

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Rosetta To Set History – Project of The European Space Agency http://muslim-science.com/rosetta-set-history-project-european-space-agency/ http://muslim-science.com/rosetta-set-history-project-european-space-agency/#respond Wed, 12 Nov 2014 10:21:27 +0000 http://muslim-science.com/?p=2769 Bid to land probe on cometThe moment has finally come. Six billion kilometres and 10 years into its mission, on Wednesday a spacecraft will attempt to place a lander on a speeding comet for the first time in history.

The European Space Agency’s £1bn Rosetta probe caught up with comet 67P in August and began flying around the giant lump of ice and dust to scan the surface for a landing site for Philae, its tiny lander.

After ruling out several sites as too dangerous, the agency settled on a one-square-kilometre landing spot it has named Agilkia. It is the best of the bunch, but there are still no guarantees that Esa can pull off one of the most ambitious manoeuvres in space exploration.

The Mont Blanc-sized comet is shaped like a rubber duck and has precipices and slopes to contend with. Its surface is pocked with holes and strewn with boulders. The difficulty of the landing is testament to how hard rocket science has become.

Any number of glitches could yet delay the landing. But if all goes to plan, Rosetta will unlock a spring-loaded mechanism at 9am GMT on Wednesday morning and gently nudge the lander towards the comet. For the next seven hours, Philae will descend 22km in silence, reaching its target on the “head” of the comet around 4pm GMT.

“Excitement is rising and so is our nervousness,” said Hermann Boehnhardt, lead scientist on the Philae lander. “For the moment, the focus is on the engineers and the lander and orbiter spacecraft and their subunits that have to do the job for the lander delivery and release.”

The lander, a cubic-metre box of electronics on legs, holds instruments that will analyse the comet and take images of its nucleus as it spews more and more dust and ice on its journey towards the sun. The measurements will help scientists answer the question of whether a bombardment from comets billions of years ago brought water and simple organic molecules to Earth, ultimately paving the way for life.

A small glitch struck on Monday night, when the Philae lander awoke but remained on its backup computer instead of switching to its main computer. The problem was resolved by implementing a procedure endorsed by IT departments the world over: mission controllers in Darmstadt turned it off and on again.

The problem had threatened to delay the landing, but scientists on the team said on Tuesday that after resolving the issue, the lander had warmed up well and that the original landing schedule was still feasible.

More important than being on time, the lander must be on target. If Philae strays outside its landing zone, it has a greater chance of toppling over in the more hostile terrain. To land in the right place, mission controllers must take into account the dust and water vapour billowing off the comet and its oddly shaped gravitational field. On touchdown, Philae will use harpoons and icescrews to secure itself to the comet.

The comet is already losing up to five litres of water a second, which blasts from the icy body in jets. As the comet gets closer to the sun, the jets of water vapour grow ever more intense. If all goes well, Rosetta may deliberately fly through one of the jets next summer.

Fred Jansen, mission manager, gives the landing a 75% chance of success. This was the original percentage the agency wanted when it committed to the mission back in 1992.

When the bizarre shape of the comet was revealed in July, some thought the landing was going to prove impossible. But months of work have now boosted confidence that the mission has a good chance of delivering Philae to the surface safely. “Twenty years ago we said we wanted to land on a comet we knew nothing about. There will be risks,” said Jansen.

Andrea Accomazzo, Rosetta flight director, has worked on the mission for 18 years. “The mission is already a major achievement in space exploration history,” he said. “Exploration implies risk. If you are not ready to take the risk, then you shouldn’t do exploration.”

The mission will continue, whether or not Philae makes it to the surface safely. The landing would be “the cherry on the cake”, said Jansen.

Rosetta has already gathered more data than has ever been collected before about a comet and the mission is set to run until at least December 2015.

 

Source:
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/nov/11/rosetta-landing-comet-67p-churyumov-gerasimenko-philae-lander

Image Description:

The comet as seen by the Rosetta on 6 November. The landing site chosen for its lander, Philae, is close to the top of the image above a large boulder-filled depression. Photograph: ESA/Rosetta/NavCam/PA

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UAE plans unmanned mission to Mars by 2021 http://muslim-science.com/uae-plans-unmanned-mission-mars-2021/ http://muslim-science.com/uae-plans-unmanned-mission-mars-2021/#respond Tue, 22 Jul 2014 06:24:00 +0000 http://muslim-science.com/?p=2360 (Reuters) – The United Arab Emirates said on Wednesday it planned to send an unmanned probe to Mars by 2021, in the Arab world’s first mission to another planet.

A UAE Space Agency will be set up to supervise the mission and develop a space technology industry in the country, a government statement said. It did not give details such as the cost of the probe or how it would be designed and built.

“The UAE Mars probe represents the Islamic world’s entry into the era of space exploration. We will prove that we are capable of delivering new scientific contributions to humanity,” said UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan.

With a population estimated at no more than about 8 million, most of whom are foreign workers, the UAE lacks the scientific and industrial base of the big spacefaring nations.

But it is keen to diversify its economy beyond oil into high-technology sectors, and its oil reserves give it immense financial power that it could use to buy expertise. One of the sovereign wealth funds of Abu Dhabi, the biggest emirate, is estimated to have assets worth nearly $800 billion.

The UAE’s fast-growing airlines, Emirates and Etihad, are among the world’s biggest buyers of planes from U.S. and European aerospace firms, and a factory in the Abu Dhabi desert now turns out sophisticated parts for Airbus.

The UAE has invested over $5.4 billion in satellite ventures such as data and television broadcast company Al Yah Satellite Communications, mobile communications firm Thuraya and earth mapping and observation firm Dubai Sat, the government said.

The Mars probe will take nine months to complete the more than 60 million-kilometer (37.5 million-mile) journey to Mars, and will make the UAE one of only nine countries with space programs exploring the Red Planet, the statement said.

(Reporting by Andrew Torchia; editing by Andrew Roche)

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