Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Looking back on 2024
Episode Date: December 25, 2024The Planetary Society team reviews the best space moments of 2024, from the China National Space Administration's return of samples from the far side of the Moon to the triumphant launch of NASA's Eur...opa Clipper mission. Kate Howells (Public Education Specialist) shares the winners of The Planetary Society's Best of 2024 awards. Then, Mat Kaplan (Senior Communications Advisor), Ambre Trujillo (Digital Community Manager), and Asa Stahl (Science Editor) team up for a rundown of the year's highlights. We close out 2024 with Bruce Betts, our chief scientist, as he shares his last random space fact of the year. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2024-looking-back See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We're taking a look at space exploration in 2024, this week on Planetary Radio.
I'm Sarah Al Ahmed of the Planetary Society, with more of the human adventure across our
solar system and beyond.
2024 was packed with new discoveries, launches, and space adventures.
In a moment, the Planetary Society team will join us to review the best moments in space
exploration, starting off with Kate Howells, our public education specialist.
She'll announce some of the winners of the Planetary Society's Best of 2024 awards.
Then, Matt Kaplan, our senior communications advisor, Amber Trujillo, our digital community manager,
and Asa Stahl, our science editor, come together for an epic rundown of what the space community
accomplished this year.
We'll close out 2024 with Bruce Betts, our chief scientist, as we share our last What's
Up and Random Space Fact of the Year.
If you love planetary radio and want to stay informed about the latest space discoveries,
make sure you hit that subscribe button on your favorite podcasting platform.
By subscribing, you'll never miss an episode filled with new and awe-inspiring ways to
know the cosmos and our place within it.
Throughout November, thousands of Planetary Society members and space fans around the
world voted for their favorite missions, images, and accomplishments of the year in the Planetary Society's Best of 2024 awards. Usually the winners are all
over the space map, but this year one mission really stood out. The awards are designed
by Kate Howles, our public education specialist. Kate joins us now from Canada to tell us who
swept the awards.
Hey Kate, happy holidays! We're so close to the end of the
year. Yes, I can't believe it. It's another year that has just flown by. Every year we try to
celebrate by putting out our best of whatever year awards and allowing people to vote on them.
We finally have this year's winners and there seems to be a clear trend. Yes, Europa Clipper
really swept the awards this year. What awards did Europa Clipper take home with it? Yes, Europa Clipper really swept the awards this year.
What awards did Europa Clipper take home with it?
Yes, so every year one of the categories that people vote for is the most exciting moment
in planetary science.
And so this usually includes launches, landings, discoveries, breakthroughs.
This year the winner was NASA's Europa Clipper mission launching.
So this took off in October and it's on a six-year journey to Europa.
So maybe in 2030 it'll start winning awards again as it arrives at Europa.
But that launch was the most exciting moment.
The mission itself was voted the most exciting upcoming planetary science mission.
And another category we always include is the best planetary society accomplishment
made possible by our members. So these are usually advocacy related or sci tech projects
that we fund or just huge events that we hold or any other kind of impact of the work that
we all do. And Europa Clipper is something that we have been advocating for, for over
a decade now. And that was voted the most impactful and most exciting thing that we have been advocating for for over a decade now. And that was voted
the most impactful and most exciting thing that we've done. Our members really feel proud
of the role that they have had and rightfully proud of the role that they've had in making
this really exciting mission possible. So you can also read all about the work that
we did making this mission happen. We have a great article that kind of summarizes
the years and years of work that we've done.
I was really amazed to see how many Planetary Society members
wrote Congress on the subject.
It was something like 400,000 messages went into Congress.
Yeah, it's astonishing.
And, you know, we held events where we educated
members of Congress on Europa and why it's worth going there.
You know, this was just such a multi-pronged effort of really advocating in every way possible
to really convey to those who make the decisions about what NASA does,
that this is a really valuable mission with a really interesting and very important science goal, and that it just
has to be done. And our members and supporters around the world lent their voices to this chorus
and helped make it happen. That's just the power of advocacy right there. But I also want to note
that recently JPL had a big round of layoffs and a large portion of the Europa Clipper team were
impacted. So this is another wonderful moment for advocacy.
Yeah, absolutely. It's so important.
I'm also going to leave a link for our action center on this episode of Planetary
Radio. So you can go ahead and help us sign those letters to Congress so we can
help support missions like Europa Clipper and all of the other ones.
Well, thanks for this, Kate, and congratulations to all of the winners.
Thanks, Sarah. Thanks for having me on.
Kate, and congratulations to all the winners.
Thanks, Sarah. Thanks for having me on.
Europa Clipper may have absolutely crushed it, but there are so many other missions, images, and space people that deserve celebrating in 2024.
You can see the full list of winners and the beautiful imagery that comes with it
in the Planetary Society's article called The Best of 2024.
And if you missed voting this year, no worries. Your next
chance is going to come back around in November 2025. But before we pack it in for the year and
retire to our cocoa and our loved ones, it's time to look back at everything the space community
accomplished in 2024. From the end of the Ingenuity Mars helicopter to the first sample return from
the far side of the moon, There's a lot to cover.
We'll dive in with three of my amazing colleagues here at the Planetary Society.
The creator of Planetary Radio and now our Senior Communications Advisor, Matt Kaplan
returns, joined by Asa Stahl and Amber Trujillo.
You may recognize Asa and Amber from our social media videos.
Amber's our digital community manager who lovingly cares for our member community and does all of our social media posts.
And Dr. Asa Stahl, the newest member of the Planetary Society team, is our science editor.
He produces beautiful online classes for our members and writes some really insightful articles about the results from space missions across the solar system and beyond.
Without further ado, here's what happened in space this year. articles about the results from space missions across the solar system and beyond. Without
further ado, here's what happened in space this year.
Hey team, thanks for joining me.
Thanks for having us.
Glad to be here.
Thanks for having us.
Man, it has been a wild year and we've had some really cool adventures together. So I'm
glad to be here with all of you at the end of the year to look back at all the wonderful
things that happened in 2024.
I'm so excited to talk about all of the amazing things because there's a lot to cover.
I know. Well, let's get started with something that we all got to personally experience together.
One of the biggest things that happened this year in, you know, astronomical events was
the total solar eclipse in early April, and all of us got to share it together at Eclipse-O-Rama in Texas.
That was a moment.
There was an eclipse? Yeah. That was so exciting.
And I mean, if you had to pick one cosmic event for the year,
like 50 million people they think who witnessed totality and another
600 million or so who were under the
partial eclipse. And our party was just couldn't have been much better with all the special guests
like Tim Dodd of Everyday Astronaut. I hope that everybody out there got to enjoy at least the
partial. It was really cool to note that this is probably the most viewed total solar eclipse in human history.
Like that is a moment.
And for that to happen as we are finally in solar maximum, I think that made it extra
special.
You know, that was part of it.
For me, it wasn't just getting finally to see the corona, the magnificent corona that
we all thought we might miss because of the clouds.
And I did miss seven years before at the previous, uh, North American eclipse,
but it was the prominences because we were close to solar max that were just
spectacular.
Yeah. The fact that you could actually see the pink color, those little tongues.
Oh my God, that was breathtaking.
Yeah, absolutely.
One of my favorite parts was actually seeing
all of the members and getting to meet them,
which was very special for me.
Yeah, it was a lot of fun.
Yeah, I wanted to say the same thing
that I had started at the Plant Care Society
like two months before that,
and then just got thrown into this giant event,
which was incredible.
And one of the coolest parts was not only meeting
most of the staff in person, but also all of these members and seeing their commitment and their
passion. Being able to share that together and all being united in this sort of cosmic
perspective was incredible.
Part of what made this total solar eclipse so special is that we were, at least at the
moment, we weren't sure if we were in full solar maximum at the time, or if we were approaching it. But they did actually make that announcement just a few
months ago in October, we are officially at solar maximum. You got to write an article
about that earlier this year, I believe Asa.
That's right. Yes, it was called Should you be worried about solar storms? And the TLDR
is, I mean, yes, you probably should be. So, yes, the sun is on this 11-year activity cycle,
which has to do with how the geometry
of its magnetic field changes over time.
And that cycle has a maximum phase and a minimum phase.
At maximum, you're more likely to have strong solar flares,
chromal mass ejections,
the solar storms that will get launched away from the sun, and some fraction of them hit Earth
and then caused geomagnetic storms
and other particle vents and fun stuff,
which can be good in the sense that we'd get crazy auroras.
Like, I don't know if y'all remember,
but in May this past year,
there was a huge coronal mass ejection,
multiple of them, actually,
that hit Earth and caused a G5 category.
That's how they're classified. Geomagnetic storm, which is the most severe, ejection, multiple of them actually, that hit Earth and caused a G5 category.
And that's how they're classified.
Geomagnetic storm, which is the most severe.
And it led to some of the most strong, beautiful auroral displays we've had in
centuries and luckily it didn't fry too many satellites or do anything like that.
There were just a couple of anomalies, but you could imagine that maybe in the
future, possibly in the near future, even now that we're at solar maximum, these things will continue to happen to some extent.
And they can happen anytime, but they're more likely to happen now. I mean, did you all get
to see any aurora this year? My daughter in Chicago was able to go to the lakeside
and catch a little bit, not much, just a little bit of tinting of the sky, but still Chicago.
Yeah, my little brother in New Mexico, in Albuquerque,
was able to capture it down there, which was nuts.
And I couldn't catch it where I was at,
but maybe next time.
We'll probably get some more opportunities
in the next year or two.
So especially, you know, if you're ever considering
maybe taking a winter trip to
Iceland or like a far latitude, north or south, now's the time.
I can recommend Fairbanks.
Alaska?
Yeah.
Yeah, my interview with the Aurora guy earlier this year, he's up in Fairbanks, Alaska, which
is where he takes all that beautiful imagery. I hope we all get to see that in person one
of these days, but the human created object that's going to get closest to the sun of anything out there is going to witness it more
directly, which is going to be the Parker Solar Probe, which has already touched the solar corona,
but is about to make its closest pass by the sun ever. I am so excited about this because I love me some Parker Solar Probe.
It is just an amazing feat of engineering that John Hopkins Applied Physics Lab has mastered.
We are in the peak of the solar weather where we're looking for those CMEs and the Parker Solar Probe is built to not only dive into that weather in order to understand our
star the Sun, but also reveal really profound clues about the Sun's corona.
Why is it so much hotter than its surface?
It's already started to uncover a lot of that stuff.
But as you said, it was the first spacecraft to touch the Sun.
And now on December 24th, it will be the closest
any human made object has been to the sun,
which is, it is just nuts.
But I wanna backtrack a little bit
because at the beginning of November,
the Parker Solar probe completed
its final Venus gravity assist,
which is that nice little boost from the planet.
And it's actually
got very close. It passed something within 233 miles of Venus's surface. It's actually done
planetary science on Venus, which a lot of people don't know. That gravity assist allowed Parker to
go into its closest perihelion, which refers to its closest
approach to the Sun, and this will take place on Christmas Eve, December 24th.
It's literally going to cut through plumes of plasma that are still rooted
to the Sun, and it's maybe even gonna fly through a patch of solar eruption. So
it's really just an amazing spacecraft. I'm so
excited to get those videos back because if any of the listeners have looked up the videos from
Parker Solar Probe, they're just so cool. And I know it's just going to capture some amazing science
and hopefully some visuals as well. Solar adjacent but not about the sun directly.
There have been a lot of wonderful new missions that have launched this year,
one of which includes a solar sail, NASA's ACS3.
This is something that we've kind of helped out with because of our light sail program.
We did that program to make sure that we could prove that you could use
solar sailing as a viable means for propulsion for small scale spacecraft.
In our case, we use some CubeSats, but we helped give that data to NASA.
We collaborated with them so they could take that next step.
But ACS3 launched in April on the 23rd.
I do understand that they're having some issues with it tumbling,
but I mean, it's still a wonderful demonstration of their new solar sail boom technology.
And hopefully that means that through the work that we've done and through JAXA and
through NASA, we'll hopefully see some more solar sails in the future.
It is always so gratifying to see all of these other developers of solar sails crediting
the Planetary Society for proving the concept.
Another reason for our members and others who like the society to be proud.
Well, that was a really cool tech demo, a CS3.
But I think this is one of those years where we think back on space technologies.
The thing we're really going to think about is commercial space and all of these rocket launches that have happened,
because this has been a wild year.
Yeah, we're just getting started.
Right? Let's start with the Boeing Starliner.
I know that you and I covered this a few times over the last few months, Matt. So what do
you think? You know, forgive me for editorializing a little bit. I don't know whether I'm more
embarrassed for Boeing or angry with its management for allowing a truly great company and innovator to go so
wrong. And I'm not talking about just Starliner here of course, but Starliner
I'm sad to say is a good example. On the other hand, I really admire NASA for
making the safety of the astronauts. Butch Wilmore and Sonny Williams their
highest priority. You know, we covered a little bit of the arguments that took
place apparently in private between
Boeing engineers and NASA when they were talking about whether it was going to be safe to bring
them home on this Starliner.
And NASA eventually called it and said, Nope, bring it back autonomously, which it did successfully.
But you know, even now, after months and months of research on the ground and at the ISS,
when the Starliner was still parked there,
they're still not sure, at least not as it been reported,
of why they had these problems, these various problems,
the helium leaks and maybe more troubling,
the thruster malfunctions,
which may have been software related.
We're told now, next launch in 2025,
but I have not seen a firm date for that.
And of course, Wilmore and Williams,
they're not going to come home until next year.
And it won't be on a Starliner.
And really, when you see those Dragon, crew Dragon spacecraft
going there almost routinely now back and forth,
also carrying cargo. I don't know what to say about Boeing. Of course, there are also the rumors
that that company wants to get out of the commercial space sector altogether, including
the sale of its partnership with Lockheed Martin, ULA, or United Launch Alliance. It's going to be
an interesting story to follow, not one of the happier ones of 2024.
You did bring up the fact that they're not coming back on a Starliner.
They're coming back on a SpaceX-made vehicle.
And SpaceX has also had just a phenomenal year, particularly with their Starship super
heavy booster.
Yeah, it's been so, so cool to watch.
I mean, regardless of what you think about Elon Musk as a person, when you see those
Mechazilla chopstick arms catch a gigantic rocket from midair, which happened on my birthday,
October 13 this year, that was a nice present.
A nice present, yeah.
You can't help but be amazed, right?
And so for those who have not been keeping track, that was integrated flight test number
five of the Starship setup, which is a super heavy booster and then a thing that's also
called Starship or just ship on top of it.
That's the thing that would carry payloads and potentially humans at one point, maybe
the moon as part of Artemis three.
And so there's still a lot of steps that
have to be taken. There's still a lot of other tests that need to prove that Starship is
ready to take humans to the moon. But yeah, it's been incredible to see that technological
innovation. I think that we haven't seen that level of just brand newness in what spacecraft
can do in a long time. And people are excited about it.
I am so looking forward to in 2025, this refueling in space of one
Starship refueling another, which takes me back because I'm old to the days
of Gemini when we were first learning if spacecraft could meet up in space.
This is really going to be something to watch for.
Absolutely. Especially because the efficiency of that refueling, not just showing that they can do
it, but how well they can transfer fuel from one Starship to another in space will dictate how many
Starships they need to launch to be able to get one to the moon. That could be anywhere between
three or more than 20. So definitely something to watch out for.
But there were also some really great moments
in human space flight this year.
We haven't seen any humans go up to the moon yet,
but we did see people go further from the earth
than has happened since the Apollo 17 mission.
I'm speaking specifically of the Polaris Dawn mission.
That mission was another huge step
for the commercial sector.
They used SpaceX Dragon, right, capsule again,
and they also launched on a Falcon 9 rocket.
But it was very monumental in a couple of ways.
It was commanded by Jared Isaacman, who at this point,
a lot of people have heard his name
because he is Trump's nominee for a NASA administrator.
And this was actually his second mission after funding
the Inspiration 4 mission, which helped raise over $240 million for St. Jude. He continued
that cause through Polaristan, which is very cool.
The mission launched on a Falcon 9 on September 10th for a five-day mission and it went into an elliptical orbit around Earth. And as I
said, the mission achieved several monumental milestones. They, as you said, reached the highest
altitude any human has been since the Apollo mission in 72. They conducted the first commercial
spacewalk where they're exposed to the vacuum of space. They used commercial spaces, which
were also designed by SpaceX.
And they were the first to test Starlink's laser-based communications in space, which
is super critical technology for the future of Moon and beyond missions. So this is another
big huge step in humans becoming an interplanetary species. They also gathered really crucial
data to advance the understanding of human health, which is another
pain point when, you know, thinking about humans going into space is how are we going
to survive? And they did all this great science, like testing the radiation environment, decompression
sickness and a bunch of other stuff. It was just another big win for space.
They went pretty far out there and did some really interesting radiation-specific testing,
which we're going to need if we're going to send humans to the moon, especially for long-duration
missions. So thinking about lunar exploration, because there have also been some really big
steps there, but not just for the United States. I think for me, the standouts this year for going
to the moon were actually the Japanese Space Agency and the Chinese
National Space Administration. So let's start with Jax's SLIM mission because this one totally floored me.
Yeah, it was so cool. I mean, it was the mission that just would keep getting knocked down and
then always come back up again. It really, I mean, you can name a few different space missions,
Perseverance, and they have, but this one would have been a good one, too. But so Slim was a lunar lander that achieved that milestone on January 19th,
so at the start of the year, and made Japan the fifth country
to ever achieve a soft landing on the moon.
So huge milestone for Japan and for JAXA, its National Space Agency.
But also not not just that it performed the first precision lunar landing.
Its goal is to land within 100 meters of its target,
and it got to within about 50.
And it would have gotten to within less than 10 meters
if it weren't for at the literally last minute
in its descent, one of its thrusters failed.
For I think a reason they still haven't figured out
or disclosed and ended up kind of moving a little bit too much to the side as it landed and then it
tipped over a little bit.
And so one of its solar panels was configured suboptimally for catching solar rays and collecting
energy.
So at first it seemed like maybe this won't even turn on, you know, this could have been
a complete failure, but then they could, they managed to turn it on. And then not only that, but it survived lunar night, multiple lunar nights,
when it had to essentially be hibernating and withstanding conditions that it was not meant to
withstand. So it just kept coming back to do more cool science. It released a couple of rovers,
a cute hopping rover and a cute rolling rover. So yeah, a huge testament to Japan's
space capabilities, which we're only going to see more of soon. I mean, they're participating
in future Artemis missions. There's going to be humans on the moon driving around a
pressurized rover built by JAXA. You know, that's going to happen. And this is just stepping
stone to stuff like that.
Funny to me too, because it created this kind of trend in early 2024, where spacecraft were
trying to soft land on the moon and they all tipped over, man.
It started with JAXA's SLIM mission, but then we had this moment in February with the next
mission that attempted it.
Yeah, it was a bit of a hard landing for these guys.
It was Intuitive Machines spacecraft, Odysseus. This was the first commercial space
company to build a lander and land it on the moon, which is pretty cool. It was also the
first time that we've been back to the moon for over 50 years for the United States. They
landed in this South Polar region, which is a very popular target this year.
And the fact that private companies now are achieving this proves that commercial landings
can work.
And, yeah, I'm just really excited to see where 2025 is going to take us.
Yeah, that was a really triumphant moment, right?
People from the United States finally getting to land something on the moon for the first
time in 50 years.
But of all the achievements and lunar exploration this year,
I'm just going to executive decision here, but China's Chang'e 6 mission.
I think that's the mission we should give the award to.
Yeah, no question.
Totally.
Talk about a triumph.
I mean, this is just a stunning success on the part of Chang'e.
Think of what was involved in making this happen.
Basically, sample return in the way that we've talked about doing it from Mars
that was laid out by NASA and now has been pulled back to be reconsidered. The
fact that it included a little mini rover which was able to back off and
take a couple of shots of the main spacecraft doing its work.
And that it had to put a communication satellite in orbit or China had to put another one of
those in orbit around the moon so that they could stay in touch with this thing because
of course it was on the far side of the moon down at the South Pole, that very popular
Aitken basin where we all have such high hopes of finding water
that's going to make it a heck of a lot easier to live and work up on the moon someday.
We all hope just an absolutely brilliant success by the Chinese and a real marker of how serious
they are about making things happen on the moon, their plans, independent of the US and
ESA, to put a base up there, their own consortium well underway. And then you look back to the
US and sure, we had that big success that we just heard about, but also the cancellation
of the Viper Rover, which was basically ready to go. One of the projects that the Planetary Society
is hoping could be saved.
I think one of the things that really kind of like
kicked off this year for me
was the end of the Ingenuity Mars helicopter.
That was such a bittersweet moment.
Yeah, I mean, it was only supposed to go
for almost a month and five flights.
It ended up going for almost a thousand days and more than
70 flights. I mean, it was supposed to be a technology demonstration mission and boy,
did it demonstrate new technology. I mean, with essentially the computing power of like a smartphone
or, you know, easy off the shelf parts that you could get on earth. it went and use some automated computational power to
navigate on its own as it was flying from place to place on Mars.
And yeah, just showed us that powered flight on Mars was within our grasp.
And also the fun fact that I feel like I have to mention, because I think it is
so cool is that it carried a piece of the original Wright
Flyer. So we had the same object, the same thing on both the first power flight on Mars
and Earth. So cool.
And even in its end, we just heard in the last few days from NASA that it made news
because it was the topic, the subject of the first investigation of a crash of a flying
object on another world, which is just so cool. We're in a science fiction. I gotta say, you know,
they're still not quite finalized, but it seems like the initial indications that ingenuity,
you know, used onboard measuring devices to look at the ground it was flying over and then detect features like rocks
that it was flying past
and determine how fast it was flying
in different directions and adjust accordingly.
And so 70 flights in,
it was in a pretty different place than when it started,
a place that was less amenable
to that sort of feature characterization.
It was just kind of rippling sand,
no rocks, nothing to really keep track of. And so it lost track of how fast it was going. And it did crashed against the sand,
it kind of pitched and rolled. It snapped all of its rotor blades. I didn't realize this. I know
one was flung away, but before that all of them snapped and then one got completely thrown away
into the sand, you know, a distance away. So pretty dramatic ending. And yet in the end, it landed upright,
I believe, and it's still functioning, they're still able to communicate with it. So that's
just incredible.
Wow. We're going to need that data as we go on to our next kind of helicopter-like mission.
This is a little sidetrack because it's not Mars related, but we did also hear that
the Dragonfly mission to Titan got the full green light this year. So that data, the way that
Ingenuity works in that context, we're then going to be able to apply that to the next, it's not a
quadcopter, is it octocopter? Octo. Octo, yeah, we're going to be able to apply that to the next
octocopter that's going to a moon of Saturn. Those folks at APL, the Applied Physics Lab, they stayed in touch with the ingenuity folks
at JPL because they want to learn.
We will return with our look back at 2024 after this short break.
Greetings, Bill Nye here.
2024 was another great year for the Planetary Society, thanks
to support from people like you. This year we celebrated the natural wonders of space
with our Eclipsarama event in the Texas Hill Country. Hundreds of us, members from around
the world, gathered to witness totality. We also held a Search for Life Symposium at our
headquarters here in Pasadena
and had experts come together to share their research and ideas about life in the universe.
And finally, after more than 10 years of advocacy efforts,
the Europa Clipper mission is launched and on its way to the Jupiter system.
With your continued support, we can keep our work going strong into 2025.
When you make a gift today, it will be matched up to $100,000 thanks to a special matching challenge
from a very generous Planetary Society member. Your contribution, especially when doubled,
is critical to expanding our mission. Now is the time to make a difference before years end at planetary.org slash planetary fund.
As a supporter of the Planetary Society, you make space exploration a reality.
Thank you.
Taking this back to Mars and all the wacky rocks along the way, we've had some really
cool moments as both Curiosity and Perseverance have explored the area around them.
The first one being kind of a complete accident for the Curiosity rover, but this one kind
of floored me.
The discovery of pure sulfur on the surface of Mars?
Yeah, not messing around.
Not just sulfur-containing minerals, but yellow sulfur. And why?
Because of an accident, because the rover rolled over a rock and cracked it, and my goodness,
there inside was a little treasure waiting for us to observe. I got to go back to the start though,
because we have such a long history at the Planetary Society with not just curiosity and perseverance,
the rover's still exploring the red planet, but all the way back in Mars exploration,
I mean, spirit and opportunity.
We had a wonderful Planet Fest celebration for the landing of Spirit.
And then 12 years ago, over 12 years now,
is when we got together for Planet Fest in Pasadena.
I was standing next to our colleague, Casey Dreyer.
I have never seen him so excited in his life.
Of course, now he's witnessed childbirth,
so maybe it's been surpassed.
But it was the most exciting thing in the world
to stand with these thousands of people
and then have curiosity scientists come over from JPL when they knew it was safe and get a standing ovation from all of
us in Pasadena. And it just keeps coming, as you said, this discovery of sulfur first in that one
rock accidentally and then they found more in Gadez Valley, they're still trying to figure out why it's there.
They really don't know. And this is in spite of, you know, curiosity turning
really the most sophisticated suite of instruments ever sent out on a robotic craft.
And of course, those instruments largely replaced because they needed room for all the sample
handling stuff inside Perseverance. But I guess we'll get to that in a minute.
Yeah, I mean, I was really lucky because I got to go to the 10th International Conference
on Mars this year, which was held in Pasadena.
So lucky me, I just got to trot right down the street, right?
But I went there anticipating that we were going to be talking primarily about what was
going on with these cool new Curiosity rocks, maybe speculating about what was going to
happen with the Mars sample return.
And then in the midst of that, they dropped one of the biggest potential news stories
from the Perseverance rover since it landed.
Just amazing.
And really, even after finding all these tantalizing hints, but no more than hints, of past life, possible past life on Mars.
Now we get this rock which has been named Cheyava Falls,
which I guess is a real waterfall on Earth
in the Grand Canyon, that the rover found in July
of this year, and it went to work on it,
and it has found these various bits of evidence,
which have direct relationship to finding the same kinds
of characteristics in rocks on earth,
which are only created by life.
And this does not mean that we've found
that evidence of past life,
certainly not in any confirmable way,
but it does put us, you know, at least on
the first step of that proposed seven-step cold scale, the confidence of life detection
scale.
And the first step is not very far up the ladder, but it's important and it's really
a revolutionary find on the planet Mars.
It gives me great hope that if we can get those samples
that are waiting for us up there on the surface now
and inside Perseverance,
get them back to the big labs on Earth.
Let's get those samples back here,
something we've been pushing for for decades
and really find out if Mars billions of years
perhaps before Earth had anything crawling on it.
Even if Chiaba Falls doesn't contain active signs of life or, you know, old signs of life,
which would be, you know, amazing, it would still tell us about the conditions of habitability
in Mars' past, you know, that there are these leopard spots, these markings on the rock
that could have been directly formed by microbes
back in the day, or they could have been the symptoms
of a process that would have been fuel for microbes
to live off of, to sort of eat that energy.
And so either we'd see evidence of those microbes,
which would be incredible, or we see greater signs
that microbes could have survived on Mars
and learn how widespread that sort of
thing could have once been or maybe even still is. So it's a win-win. You just got to bring them back.
One of the biggest events of last year was actually the return of samples,
Biosyros Rex to Earth from asteroid Bennu. But when those samples came back at the end of last year, they could not get that
container open. So thankfully, we kicked off this year by them finally actually managing
to open that container.
Okay, so I think that there's like a thing with science. In science, you love rocks,
and then in astronomy, you just love space rocks. There's a thing with rocks. And the
OSIRIS-REex samples have some of
the coolest rocks. As you mentioned, yeah, it returned its samples and it's now Osiris Apex
because it Pokemon-ed and evolved once it dropped off the samples. And we'll now study Apophis,
another asteroid that will be a close call for Earth, but that's another story. It landed and they had this reveal, which I actually had the opportunity to be at Johnson
Space Center to see when they got the samples out. It was a marvelous mission. It secured the
samples too well, however. The initial reveal of the material from the outside of the sampler head
is what I was able to witness. But the bulk of that
asteroid material couldn't be accessed because, as you said, NASA technicians could not remove
two very stubborn fasteners. And I know listeners are thinking, just give me a screwdriver and I
would have stripped that thing in minutes, but we're talking about NASA here. They're very careful
for good reason and these are precious samples. But one thing about NASA technicians and engineers and scientists is they're so innovative and on January 10th,
they finally got it open and their patience was very much worth it. Researchers identified
a whole bunch of carbon and hydrated minerals, aka water, in the sample, which supports the hypothesis about the potential role of asteroids
in bringing the building blocks of life to Earth.
Pan-spermia.
Are you kidding me?
Like that is amazing.
And you know, I spoke to Dante Loretta, and I know, Sarah, you have and Matt has as well.
I am a huge fan of Dante Loretta.
He is the principal investigator for Osiris-Rex and this was something he really stressed, that this
mission had the potential to reveal life's beginnings. They, you might have to
stop me honestly because I will talk forever about Osiris-Rex, but they found
that Bennu likely holds the original ingredients that built our solar system.
It's a time capsule and And among those ingredients are these
really cool clay minerals, particularly something called serpentine, which is fascinating because
this sample mirrors the kind of rock found at mid-ocean ridges here on Earth, where material from
the mantle that lay beneath Earth's crust meets water. And this discovery hints at something absolutely wild,
that Bennu could have broken off from some long lost primitive world, an ocean world that no
longer exists, but it left behind this piece of its story. And humans were just like, I'm going
to go probe that thing. And they did. And now we have
this amazing sample. And one of the biggest questions driving this mission is understanding
how Earth became a habitable planet. Bennu has just this pristine composition that gives
us a direct glimpse into the earliest days of the solar system. No melting, no re-solidifying, just ancient,
glorious rock. I love Osiris-Rex, clearly.
LESLIE KENDRICK A big reason why I think the general public
is so kind of mystified by asteroids is not because of the clues into the formation of our
world and the search for life, although that's something we're really passionate about. But
the broader audience of humans on Earth care mostly about making sure that we don't
go the way of the non-avian dinosaurs.
They want to make sure we're studying these things so we can survive.
And I think one of the major missions in that task over the last, you know, years has been
the NEOWISE mission, which came to its end this year.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Sadly, but very successfully. And another one that we were
very involved with from the start, it's a principal investigator for a long time,
Amy Meinser, great friend of the Planetary Society, wonderful science communicator.
WISE, of course, and she was part of that mission, became NEOWISE, the Wide Field Infrared Explorer, added Near Earth Object Wide Field Infrared Explorer.
And they took this spacecraft, which was not designed for it.
It ran out of its cryogenic coolant.
And they said, hey, why don't we use this
to start looking for some of these rocks
that want to kill everybody?
And sure enough, they were able to find,
I think eventually over 300 newly found, newly discovered near-Earth objects, along with more than a score of comets.
And finally, yeah, you know, if all good things come to an end, it did finally reach the end of the mission, just what, last November 1st.
But not until it had completed this complete survey of the sky last summer.
And it was a great precursor to what's going to come next.
Another mission that Amy has had in development for a long time.
She's now back at JPL putting together Neo Surveyor,
which is going to be the spacecraft that is specifically designed
to look for these near-Earth objects,
the ones that cross our path. It is on track as far as we know for launch in September of 2027.
None too soon. Nothing has been more important to the mission of the Planetary Society than
defending Earth. And if we're going to defend Earth, as we all have heard for many, many years,
we need one of these infrared
telescopes out there dedicated to the search. We found the really big guys, but there's still
plenty of them out there ready to take out a city and we need to find them before they find us.
Well, step one is find the things, characterize and track them. But then step two was figuring out how to actually
deflect these things so we don't get hit in the face with them. And the first mission
in this vein was the first planetary defense mission was DART, the Double Asteroid Redirection
Test, which was my first rocket launch ever. So that was a really like I feel deeply connected
to it even though I didn't work on the team. Then that DART mission slammed straight into dimorphous, which was an asteroid moon of
Didymus.
That was a beautiful mission, but we also got to see the follow-on mission, the European
Space Agency's HARA mission, launch this year as well.
Yeah, and it's an incredible one-two punch we're going to get.
Not because HARA is going to literally smash into the same asteroid system, it's not, but because it's going to follow up and study that asteroid system. This
is the, you know, the one downside of intentionally crashing your spacecraft into something is that
you don't get to watch it do that and then follow up on it later. So in this beautiful partnership,
ESA and NASA are providing each step to this sort of one, two punch. And so Hera is going to arrive at this Asteroid system in 2026.
It launched in October of this year.
So it's got a little bit to go still, but once it gets there,
it's going to deploy a couple of CubeSats and orbit this Asteroid system.
And just, yeah, see how Dart reshapes DIME workforce's surface,
how it altered its orbit.
So it's going to give us a powerful new window, not just into how this
deflection method works for protecting our planet, but also
just asteroids in general, you know, in the same vein as a
Cyrus Rex. And not only that, this mission is worth calling
out has been an incredible feat of engineering and
organizational prowess. ESA launched this mission only five years after they approved it.
That's super short for a space mission.
That is incredible.
And because of that efficiency, it's made it much more likely that ESA's future
potential mission to the asteroid Apophis called Ramses will be able to do the same thing.
We'll be able to get built and launched
within just a few years of it being approved.
And that's going to really matter for that one
because Apophis is only coming on a particular date
and you can't miss it.
So that mission hasn't quite been confirmed yet,
but it does, by all indications, seem to be on its way
to being confirmed.
And that is also thanks to Hera.
Seeing Hera launch was a really big moment,
but that happened just one
week before, I think, what we would all agree is the biggest launch of this year, Europa Clipper,
which finally, after 10 years of us advocating for it, has finally left Earth and is on its way
to the Jovian system. Thank goodness. I am so glad to have seen this mission get underway.
I just want to still be around and able to talk about it in 2030 when it finally gets
out there to the Jovian system.
There were so many people involved, including politicians who are no longer in office who
advocated for it at the top of their agendas.
The great cooperation that we get from leaders of the mission like Bob Popolardo, who, you know, I was talking to for years on planetary radio.
And now, Sarah, you've carried on that tradition of getting reports from Bob, the project scientist
for this, as it starts to head out there.
Sarah Bruckner Listening to his legitimately harrowing tale
about that launch was probably one of the highlights of all the interviews I've done
this year, because that mission launch was delayed by of the highlights of all the interviews I've done this year,
because that mission launch was delayed by Hurricane Milton coming through that area.
Unfortunately, that hurricane, which at one point was a category five, was straight on,
dead heading for Cape Canaveral. And the entire mission team, the ones that got to be there,
at least, was kind of crammed into one hotel together when a tornado came through and ripped
the roof off the building across the street. Then they had to turn around and go to this launch
together. I mean, what a wild human moment for these people.
And that was just at the launch. There was also the months of uncertainty leading up
to it, right around those transistors in the spacecraft. That was a wild curveball that could have destroyed years
of work and set back human space exploration by decades. And instead we get a mission that is
actually that actually launched and that could do so much. Yeah and I guess the latest is that they
think that those transistors are going to be strong enough, durable enough to make it through at least the primary mission of Europa Clipper.
And I hope that we are, as we often are by mission, surprised by just how durable the entire spacecraft turns out to be.
They also, we learned, the same transistors are on juice, the European Space Agency mission to the icy worlds of Jupiter. So we wish them the best as
well. But yeah, it's a tough place to hang out, the vicinity of Jupiter. And that, of course, is why
Europa Clipper is not going to orbit Europa itself. It's going to orbit Jupiter in that very
elliptical orbit. That means it'll only have to be in that intense radiation for a fairly limited portion
of its time out there.
The people on the Europa Clipper mission, after all of this fantastic work, were hit
in a pretty horrible way recently when a large number of their team who works over at the
Jet Propulsion Lab here in Pasadena, unfortunately were laid off just weeks after this mission launched.
And here again, the Planetary Society fighting to make sure that the loss of these incredibly
valuable resources be minimized if not eliminated,osing engineers and scientists whose skills
and knowledge simply cannot be replaced.
Who may very well find themselves higher paying jobs
in the private sector,
but are lost to the planetary science
that all of us at the planetary society
want to accomplish in large part.
So it's, I know it's gonna be a big big, big priority for us for our advocacy team in 2025.
Even if you can get, you know, an amazing high paying job working in the commercial sector,
they're not going to be doing the sort of fundamental science, the state of stuff that
people's dreams are made of. That's why they work for JPL and places like that. And it takes so much
effort to slowly brick by
brick build up these expert teams, these institutions
capable of doing these amazing missions. And then it's so easy
to just let that vanish with the wind. I mean, I remember going
back and looking through all of the planetary radio episodes,
where each of you interviewed Bob Poppilardo. There's a bunch
of them. And it's really cool to see over more than a decade,
maybe even close to two decades.
He evolves in how he's describing Europe,
but because we learn more, the mission gets refined,
but our hopes for it remain the same.
And that is going to be achieved, you know,
and I just wish that more of the team
could have stuck around to see it come to fruition.
Yeah, well said.
Well said. Well, I know that all of us here are going to do everything we can to advocate for NASA funding
so that missions like this don't lose their teams and these NASA facilities have enough money to keep on their staff.
And if anybody wants to help join us in that, we have some actions on our Action Center that you can take.
But also, please consider joining us in Washington, DC,
this year in March on the 24th.
We're going to be taking a group of Planetary Society members
into Congress, going door to door,
talking about why we love space exploration
and missions like Europa Clipper so much.
And I think what's gone on this year in 2024
and all of the years that we've been working together here at the Planetary Society,
we're kicking off our 45th anniversary as an organization.
And during the last 45 years, I think we have really seen the power of space exploration to not only teach us more about the universe around us,
but to accelerate our technology and to connect us across continents.
This is a really powerful
thing.
So who knows what's going to happen in the next year?
I know there's a lot up in the air for NASA in particular as this new presidential administration
comes into power.
All that being said, I think we have some really wonderful opportunities upcoming, some
really cool things happening, and it is worth advocating for space exploration.
Boy, Sarah, again, very well said.
Thank you.
And thanks for joining me for this rundown.
I know there's been so much that's happened in the past year, but of all the people on
Earth, I don't know anybody else I would have rather spent this journey with on than you
guys.
So it's been a pleasure being in 2024 with you.
Thank you.
Yeah, looking forward to the next one.
Well, happy holidays, everyone, and happy New Year.
Happy holidays.
Happy New Year.
Congratulations to all of the amazing teams, engineers,
and scientists that made 2024 so special.
And here's to all the people that are looking forward
to their own moments in 2025.
Now it's time
for the last What's Up of 2024 with Dr. Bruce Betts, our chief scientist.
Hey, Bruce.
Hey, Merry Planetary Radio. Happy Planetary Radio.
Happy Newton-Miss-slash-Almost-Solstice-slash-holidays-no-matter-what-you-celebrate.
Yeah, Isaac, happy birthday.
Jared Lieber Right? That's a cool coincidence that he was
born on Christmas. Well, we just heard from several people on the Planetary Society crew
about all the cool things that happened in the last year of space exploration, but I haven't
had a chance to ask you yet. What were some of your favorite things that happened in 2024?
Pete Slauson Well, you know better than I, all those things that happened that I haven't
misplaced in time. But that solar eclipse thing, total solar eclipse and our eclipse of
Rama, that was good stuff.
Jada McAllister That was so cool. I mean, it was a wonderful moment to see an eclipse,
but I'm glad we all got to be there together. And I'm glad that you got to meet my brother.
That was cool.
He talked a lot about how much he liked you afterwards.
Pete Slauson Yes, I can fool people for a few minutes.
No one has listened to this program this long though.
All right.
What else happened this year?
There were things that just kept going.
A whole fleet of Mars things just kept doing cool stuff on the in orbit and on the ground surface.
So I always love that. The end of Ingenuity, but since it was scheduled to make five flights and
wasn't even clear it should be on the payload at first, the fact that it made a bunch of flights
and did all sorts of cool stuff. That was kind of big. S1 05.01 Not really though. I'm so surprised by how long that spacecraft persisted. It really did.
LW Yeah, no, it lasted longer than any of my radio controlled things, although I haven't spent quite
as much on testing. I just can't believe they flew in the Mars atmosphere. Little known fact
that I occasionally mention, I was the program scientist for the Mars airplane program, the ill-fated,
ill-nonfunded, rushed Mars airplane program that I was told here. It's, you know, that's
a thin atmosphere.
But you know that because of ingenuity and its success, I have seen people that are reviving this
idea.
Someone actually presented it at NIAC this year, a new Mars airplane.
So your dream lives on, Bruce.
It is interesting.
I never said it was my dream.
It was my job.
Let's get back to the good stories.
We had, you know, oh, crack and open those Osiris-Rex samples Rovers on Mars curiosity finding pure sulfur
launches launches Europa Clipper and Hera Hera going out to the asteroid we've lacked with
The dart mission to check out that binary system and Europa Clipper
Really though?
I mean we as an organization have been advocating for Europa Clipper for over a decade.
To actually see that thing go up is amazing.
Yes.
It's really exciting.
I mean, all these missions take so long, but then they're the ones that we've been involved
with and our members have been involved with and trying and trying and trying to get them
flown because of their importance.
And Europa Clipper is one of them and it's up and it's out there and it's
headed off, headed on its way.
And one of the things that you've been working on for a long time and we have as
an organization as well is planetary defense.
And we didn't get a chance to talk about this too much in the show, but the end
of the NeoWise mission, I feel, is like a pretty big thing this year.
Yeah. NeoWise, which started out as WISE and then was looking off at the universe and then ran out of its coolant and so became a really great Neo discovery and characterization mission.
Not ideal because it wasn't optimized for it. That's what the next round that we're still pushing and is funded for now, and it should
be great.
We'll do a more specialized version of that.
But Neowise did a lot of great stuff, being able to use the infrared bands to characterize
the asteroids as well as visible and do it without atmosphere and without the geometric limitations
on Earth. Just a lot of science of understanding things better.
Yeah. Well, cover this a little bit in next week's show because I talked with Bill Nye
about this, but wouldn't it be wacky if in our lifetime we actually come up with a solid
answer for not only how many of these objects are near us, but how to deflect them
because of this work. Like, this is a solvable problem and we've done so much work in this space
as a space community, both with the amateur astronomers who aren't really amateur
and all of these spacecraft. Like, this could be a problem we actually solve.
Pete That's what I've been harping on for a long time and others. It's different in the realm of natural disasters, especially large scale ones
that we actually can do something about it.
We can actually prevent it.
So far we're not at the prevention or even fantasy of prevention, earthquakes
or hurricanes, so we can track them, but we can't prevent them.
But this it's going to take more work and we're getting there, but the probability of impact,
if we don't do something, dangerous impact,
damaging dangerous impact is 100%.
We will get hit, could be tomorrow and it could be later.
So we keep working, we keep pushing
and the bigger and bigger community does too
and it's wonderful to see that moving forward. And the Neo Surveyor mission,
that's what that community has been pushing for since I got involved over 20 years ago,
is we need a dedicated space orbiter nodule, that's the technical term, to check out the skies.
Nicole Soule-Northam We're gonna do it, Bruce.
Bruce Fischer Yeah.
Nicole Soule-Northam We totally are, I believe. I believe with our space community and all of our to the skies. Jared Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's been a great year for space. Here's to next year, 2025. It got a bunch of other cool stuff coming up.
2025 the year of awesome space again.
Go also our 45th anniversary year as an organization.
Congratulations.
That's going to be awesome.
Let's get excited about a truly random space fact.
I thought to myself, what is the last
in the alphabetical list of moons in our solar system? And you, of course, immediately said to
yourself, Ymir. But you said, Bruce doesn't really know how to pronounce that because it's
probably Old Norse based. But Y-M-IMIR is the last, as far as I can tell,
in the alphabetical listing of moons of either planets or dwarf planets in the solar system.
And it's way out there from Saturn, way out there, takes 3.6 Earth years to complete an
orbit around Saturn. Isn't that wild? That's a long time.
So we need a Z name.
I was just going to say, we need to get in touch with the IAU and fix that right now.
Yeah.
Everybody go out there, look on the night sky and think about what Z name you would
use for a moon in our solar system that hasn't been used for something else, you know, large and important. Thank you. Good night.
We've reached the end of 2024, but we'll be back next year on January 1st to kick off the Planetary
Society's 45th anniversary celebration with our CEO, Bill Nye.
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And until 2025, happy holidays, happy new year, and ad astra.