We Landed on the Moon… Again
We successfully landed on the moon. If you’re unsure, this isn’t the first time. Way back on July 20, 1969 we won the space race by landing humans on the moon. USA, USA, USA! To this day the United States remains the only country to land human being on the lunar surface. *Fist pumps in American Flag*
Since the Apollo missions though, no humans have been on the moon. If we’re trying to get to Mars, maybe we should make sure we can get people back to the moon first. That seems to be the plan. It’s sort of mind blowing that “supposedly” the technology they used to get humans to the moon was less than the tech in our iPhones.
While we wait for NASA to get it’s sh*t together, private companies are taking millionaires and billionaires to the edges of space. Most recently a company called Intuitive Machines built a moon lander, strapped it to a Space-X rocket, and sent it starbound. The lander, called the Odysseus robotic lander, almost didn’t make it. Luckily tech today is good enough that they were able to make a software patch in time to correct the issues.
The Odysseus is the first commercial venture to ever land on the moon. It’s going to collect data for the next week until it runs out of power. Then they’re just leaving it there? The next human mission to the moon is going to have to be a cleanup mission to get all our crap off the moon.
It’s nice to see the effort is there to get our space game going again with a new landing. Technically, we are the 52x defending champs. Nobody has landed a human on the moon except the US, andwe last did that in 1972. So the title remains with us. Why did we stop sending humans to the moon? It costs were….sky high.
Stunning First James Webb Telescope Images Released
We’ve now seen some of the clearest and best images of deep space in human history, as NASA has released the first images from the James Webb Space Telescope.
The images were unveiled during a special event Tuesday (July 12) at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
“This day gives a new meaning to as far as the eye can see,” Rep. Steny Hoyer from Maryland said during a news conference. “The vision of the world is greater today than it was yesterday. It will renown to the benefit to all people of this Earth.”
The four images released Tuesday included the Carina Nebula, the Southern Ring Nebula, Stephan’s Quintet and spectrum of WASP 96-b. More on what all that means below.
NASA unveiled the first of five images in a sneak peek Monday night, with President Biden showing the First Deep Field image at a White House press briefing.
The Webb Telescope essentially looks back in time some 13.5 billion years. That’s possible because of the distance many of these deep space objects are, and the amount of time it takes for light to travel from them to our eye.
For comparison sake, the James Webb Space Telescope sits about 1 million miles from Earth currently at a spot called “Lagrange Point 2.” At the speed of light, Webb is essentially 1.7 light years from us right now. And the images it is sending are of images 13.5 BILLION light years away. The Sun is about 93 million miles away, and its light takes about 8.3 minutes to get to us.
Webb’s journey to this point has been a long one. It launched from Earth on December 25, 2021 and took 30 days to get to its current location at Lagrange Point 2. That specific spot in space allows Webb to orbit at the same rate as Earth, giving it a sunscreen of sorts from its home planet.
The $10 billion project is designed to send it on a mission that will last 5 to 10 years. The project took 40 million total hours to build, including thousands of scientists, engineers and technicians from 14 countries and 29 U.S. states. It was first conceptualized starting in 1989, and construction began back in 2004.
Webb has spent the last few months going through cooldown, telescope alignment and other procedures allowing it to get ready for all its experiments.
We’ll see spectacular releases from Webb frequently in the future. But for now, here’s a look at the individual images unveiled Tuesday, representing the first to come from Webb.
Steve Vassalotti is co-host of “The Matt Cord Show with Steve Vassalotti” weekday mornings 6a-10a on 102.9 WMGK. He has been with the station since 2015. For WMGK he writes about inane nonsense that surrounds our daily lives, sports, food and other various topics. Steve writes about Philadelphia lifestyle content, the Philadelphia Eagles culture and trending topics.