Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Looking back on 2023
Episode Date: December 27, 2023Members of The Planetary Society staff revisit some of 2023's most exhilarating moments and groundbreaking discoveries in space this week on Planetary Radio. Kate Howells, Public Education Specialist,... announces the winners of The Planetary Society's Best of 2023 awards. Jack Kiraly, Director of Government Relations, shares the strides made in space advocacy. Then Rae Paoletta, Director of Content and Engagement, and Mat Kaplan, Senior Communications advisor and former host of Planetary Radio, return to break down their favorite space moments of the year. Stick around until the end for What's Up with Bruce Betts, the Chief Scientist of The Planetary Society, as he looks forward to the next year of space science and exploration. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2023-looking-back See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We're looking back on 2023, 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.
Space science and exploration in 2023 was an extraordinary testament to human curiosity,
perseverance, and the fantastic things that we can accomplish when we work together.
This week, we're revisiting some of this year's most exhilarating moments and groundbreaking discoveries. Highlights include the triumphant return of samples from asteroid Bennu,
the astonishing revelations from the James Webb Space Telescope,
and the dawn of a new globally collaborative era of lunar exploration.
Kate Howells, our Public Education Specialist and Canadian Space Advisor,
will join us to announce the winners of the Planetary Society's Best of 2023 Awards.
Jack Kearley, our Director of Government Relations,
will share the strides that we've made together with our space advocacy.
Then Ray Paoletta, our Director
of Content and Engagement, and Matt Kaplan, our Senior Communications Advisor and former host of
Planetary Radio, return to break down our favorite space moments of the year. We'll close out my last
episode of my first year as host of Planetary Radio with Bruce Betts, the Chief Scientist of
the Planetary Society. We'll look forward to what next year has in store in What's Up. 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. Okay, let's get into it. It is now time for the winners of the Planetary
Society's Best of 2023 Awards. Each year, we ask space fans around the world to vote on the most
exciting moments, images, and missions. Here's Kate Howles, our Public Education Specialist and
Canadian Space Advisor with the results. Hey, Kate. Hi, Sarah. How are you doing?
Doing good. It's always a really nice time of year when we're looking forward to what's going on next year.
And finally getting to look back at everything we accomplished this year. It's been a wild ride.
Absolutely. Every year flies by, and it's only really when we look back at all the things that happened that year that you really remember,
wow, yes, there was a lot going on. It was a full year. That's part of why I like having this Best of 2023 vote or whatever
we do each year. It's a really great moment to be able to just kind of look back at the really
shiny highlights from the last year. Absolutely. Of course, this one was a little funny. We're
just going to jump right into it because the first thing that we
really got people to vote on was the best solar system image of the year. And I was in this
internal debate with myself between the JWST image of Uranus, which was ridiculously cool,
and that up-close image of Io from Juno. And then people chose something completely different.
Yeah. I was also surprised by the winning image
because yeah, there are some really striking photos from elsewhere in the solar system. But
the one that people liked the best was actually a much more local image. It's a picture of the
Earth seen from the perspective of the moon. So you can see the moon in the foreground. And it's
taken during a total solar eclipse. So you can see the moon's shadow on the
earth in the distance. It was taken by the Japanese iSpace Hakuto-R lunar lander. So it was before it
attempted its landing and it's a really unique image, but yeah, it's not as visually striking
as some of the others, but it's more intellectually interesting that you're seeing an eclipse from
this very different perspective. It really is one of those images that you look at, and it's
something you can only see if you're literally on another world. Yeah, so that was surprising,
but I wouldn't say that the most exciting moment in planetary science this year was something that
I didn't see coming. Yeah, agreed. This one, the winner here was the
OSIRIS-REx mission successfully returning a sample of the asteroid Bennu to Earth. Again,
people choosing winners that relate to our planet. This is an asteroid sample coming back to Earth
after years long journey through space. And finally coming back to here where we can analyze those
asteroid samples in Earth-based labs. It is definitely a very exciting moment. And anything
plummeting to Earth from space is going to be exciting. So I was not too surprised that this
one was chosen. It's cool, too, that I feel like we've all been along for the journey with the
spacecraft. We've seen its little moments over the years, first launching, taking its first images of Earth,
and then actually reaching Bennu
and snatching a sample out of it.
I know that Bruce Betts keeps telling me
I need to stop anthropomorphizing robots,
but I don't know.
I feel like Osiris-Rex is our buddy at this point.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
And it's just very exciting to see
what we're going to learn from this mission now that we have the samples back home and they're already being analyzed.
We're already finding things out. But I think as with a lot of sample return missions,
the best is potentially yet to come. It's great to have these samples here so that as our
technology advances, we can continue reanalyzing them and discovering new things.
technology advances, we can continue reanalyzing them and discovering new things.
And we'll hear more about the results from that in a moment.
But let's move on to our favorite planetary science mission of the last year.
This one is definitely what I voted for as well.
Yeah, it's hard to beat the James Webb Space Telescope at this point.
It is doing such cool stuff. And it's a bit of a cheat option because
it does so much more than planetary science. But really, even though it has astronomy and cosmology
science goals, it also does do so much planetary science from exoplanets to studying the planets
of our own solar system. And there have been some amazing images and some really cool discoveries made already.
So yeah, no big surprise at this one.
One, also very much looking forward to what it's going to do in the coming years.
This is one of those telescopes where I wish it could just be around forever
or if we had a fleet of them because the science coming out of this thing is ridiculous
and I wish every astronomer in the world could get the telescope time that they need
on this because the results would be amazing. Yeah, and I'm a big fan of space telescopes
because not only do they deliver that hard science, but they also just bring these images
that are so accessible. Anybody can look at one of these pictures from space and see that it's
beautiful and that it's fascinating. And I think that's just such great low-hanging fruit for people to discover an interest in space. So I'm all for
more missions like this going up. We can't get through all of the awesome things that people
voted for just for this last year, but I do want to ask you about the coming year. What is the
planetary science mission that people are most looking forward to? This is another one that is sort of a multi-purpose mission doing planetary science,
but also other really cool things. It is NASA's Artemis program. So this is NASA-led, but
a very international program to send humans back to the moon. And why we consider it a planetary
science mission is that lunar science is going to be conducted through this mission, through the
associated mini missions that are part of the overall program. There's going to be conducted through this mission, through the associated
mini missions that are part of the overall program. There's going to be a lot of really
cool research being conducted. And ultimately, human spaceflight does enable a lot of planetary
science. So especially when we're landing on a planetary body, the moon rocks brought back
by the Apollo program are still yielding discoveries today.
So I think there's a lot to look forward to with bringing humans back to the surface of the moon.
And people are just excited about this program in general.
I think astronauts always capture the imagination.
People from all over the world are engaged.
I'm Canadian.
We have a Canadian astronaut going on the Artemis II mission.
That's extremely exciting.
So our astronaut,
Jeremy Hansen, is going to be one of the astronauts that orbits the moon. Yeah,
this is a great mission. I'm not surprised people are excited about it because people do always get
excited about astronauts. It's great to see a human representation in space, you know, somebody
who's out there as an ambassador for the rest of us. And, you know, lots of us who are interested
in planetary science and robotic exploration, we can see robots as being sort of ambassadors for us.
We can, like you said, anthropomorphize them and see ourselves in them, but seeing yourself in an
actual human explorer is much easier. So people do get excited about that. So yeah, no big surprise
that that won in the most exciting upcoming mission category. We'll see if it keeps winning
in the coming years as it continues to be like it's an ongoing mission, but that always has more coming
up. But yeah, definitely a really exciting one. Just wait until we're getting high res videos
back from the moon surface, live streamed on the internet. I think everyone around the world is
going to double down and think this is even more cool in the coming years. That's a very good point. Yes. I mean, people got so excited about the Apollo broadcast,
and this is going to be a whole new era of seeing that kind of thing for yourself.
We didn't get to experience that, Kate. This is going to be our moment.
That's true. Yes, that's very true.
It'll be so amazing. I hope we're all in the same room together watching on a screen when we get to watch them bouncing around on the moon together.
I'm sure if we're not in the same room, we'll at least be chatting on Slack, as we tend to do within the Planetary Society staff when big space moments happen.
Always my favorite people to talk to when something cool happens.
Well, thanks for joining me, Kate.
Thank you, Sarah.
And happy 2024.
You too.
I'll leave a link to the full list of results from this year's Best of 2023 awards on the webpage for this episode of Planetary Radio.
You can find that at planetary.org slash radio.
Up next, we have Jack Curley, our Director of Government Relations, with an update from the world of space advocacy.
Hey, Jack. Hey, Jack.
Hey, Sarah. How are you doing?
Doing well. It's been such a cool year. I feel like, for me, I guess uniquely,
I had a really cool year because it's my first year as host of Planetary Radio,
but you too had a really cool year. This was your first year working at the Planetary Society.
It sure was. It'll be officially a year
in February, but basically a full year, right? And a lot has happened in DC. Yeah. And we do have a
new person that will be joining our crew next year. So we're looking forward to that. But
in the meantime, you're still our most noobish member of the crew, which is a weird thing to say,
considering what you pulled off this year.
You just came into this job. We had our day of action. You ran that whole thing. It was
mind-blowing, Jack. It was a labor of love for sure. And, you know, it's something I'm
really passionate about. And honestly, it was a, I'll say, nostalgic, sentimental thing for me,
I'll say nostalgic, sentimental thing for me, because the Day of Action was the first thing I ever did with the Planetary Society back in 2014.
Back when we didn't call it the Day of Action, it was a different event entirely.
But the intent was the same, was, you know, dozens of people coming together, descending on Capitol Hill and advocating for space.
And that's how I got my start. And so to see this come full circle almost exactly 10 years later is truly, truly heartwarming for me.
That's really special. What were our biggest advocacy goals for this year?
Wow. It's been quite a year in DC. It seems like a lot has happened. I think the first thing that I got thrown into,
I think one of our biggest things that we were pushing this year was getting a 2029 launch date
for the Veritas mission, which for those who don't know, is the next US-led orbiter of Venus,
the first US-led mission of this type to Venus since 1989. And it had been delayed
indefinitely earlier this year. And that was my first big project, was working on that advocacy
campaign. And the response was phenomenal. And people still are talking about Veritas. It made
it into both the House and Senate budget bills, which we're still debating the 2024 budget, even though that's
the calendar year starts this week, and we're already three months into the fiscal year. But,
you know, Veritas made it into both of those bills, a lot of daylight between the Democratic
held Senate version of their bill and the Republican led House version of their bill.
But Veritas makes it into both and very strong statements on supporting
that mission. So that I think was a huge success for us this year. But on top of that, Mars sample
return was a big advocacy push this year. Neo Surveyor, Dragonfly were all part of our day
of action and part of what I've been talking about here in DC, supporting a broad and balanced
portfolio for planetary science.
I know I'm biased because we're on the inside.
We're a part of the Planetary Society. But just taking a step back for a second, the fact that we have such strong advocacy
for these space missions and that there are so many people willing to give their time
and their love to put their voice behind space exploration really touches my heart and makes
me feel happy and safe because
knowing that missions like Mars Sample Return or Veritas or Dragonfly, one of my favorites,
could potentially not get the funding that they need makes me just feisty inside. So I'm really
happy to have someone like you at the helm to help us do this. And I mean, this is why the
Planetary Society exists in the first place is to educate the public and engage them and activate them to make a difference, to make their voice heard on whether it is Mars programs or Venus programs or outer planets, whatever gets us excited. astrophysics and astronomy. The images that we've seen just in the last, it's only been operational
for a year and a half, but the James Webb Space Telescope, and now these follow-on missions to
that with the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope going in a couple of years, and the Habitable Worlds
Observatory, which work just started on that this year. There's so much to be excited about.
And the Planetary Society was founded to advocate for these things here in D.C., but also on Main Street all across America
and around the world. And so it really is truly amazing what our members and supporters are able
to do and make such a gigantic impact on policy and on the way that the world thinks and looks
at these missions and these efforts to better understand the cosmos
and our place within it. I'm hoping too that next year's total solar eclipse in the United States
and Mexico and Canada are going to get even more people jazzed about space exploration,
even more people wanting to throw their advocacy out there. Well, next year's the year of the moon,
right? I mean, we're kicking the year off with the total solar eclipse. Actually, we're kicking the year off. January 8th, I think is the date right now for it.
But the first commercial lunar payload services, CLPS mission is going to be launching on January
8th. It's going to be the first commercial landing on the moon. Then you have the eclipse. Then you
have Artemis II slated for November. Lunar Trailblazer is going to be in
there. We have so many things to be excited about. About the moon, our closest planetary body,
right there. We can see it every day. And we're going to be a part of that. We're going to be a
part of exploring that. And so next year is really going to kick off. And that's why it's so important
for people to be space advocates so that when somebody has a question about planetary exploration, their friends will come to them and say, hey, I want to know more about this.
Oh, well, you've got to join the Planetary Society.
Oh, well, you have to join us for the Day of Action in Washington, D.C.
If you are excited about these things, become a member, become part of our organization,
support us, and support space exploration. I'm looking forward to being in the Capitol with you
this next year during the Day of Action. It'll be my first in-person Day of Action, so I'm going to
be right there with all of you. Oh, it's going to be so exciting. We had over 100 members here in DC in 2023. I hope to see 100 plus in 2024. And in addition to that,
we're working on some stuff you're going to want to stay tuned. So follow us on social media,
join the member community if you're not already in there, because you're going to hear some
awesome stuff happening in Congress, in DC, when it comes to space policy and planetary exploration. So stay tuned.
Can't wait to share. Thanks for joining me, Jack.
Thanks, Sarah.
I often find myself in total awe when I think about the impact that space advocates have had
on space exploration over the years. Your unwavering commitment to supporting the missions
and scientific goals that we all cherish has genuinely made a difference.
We've shaped and saved so many missions together.
And trust me, we're just getting started.
Thank you to everyone around the planet who advocated for space with us this year.
Now we'll look back on some of the science, missions, and moments from 2023 that you helped make a reality.
I'm super excited to have Ray Paoletto with us.
She's our Outstanding Director of Content and Engagement here at the Planetary Society.
And of course, we have the one and only Matt Kaplan. After 20 fantastic years of hosting
Planetary Radio, he's an absolute legend among us space fans. Let's look back on some of the
coolest things that we've learned and accomplished this year. Hey, Matt and Ray, thanks for joining me. What a pleasure. Hey, hey, so happy
to be here. The gang's all back together. It's nice to have you back on the show too, Matt. I'm
always so happy to see you. Thank you, Sarah. I appreciate that. It's good to be here and good
to see both of your smiling faces. We have a lot to talk about.
Sure do.
waiting for the Artemis 1 launch. And that officially actually went up in November. We weren't there to see it, but I feel like this year kind of marks this new age of lunar exploration,
and it feels really exciting to me. I think that's a very fair statement. I mean,
just look at all the activities, some of which I guess we're about to talk about.
But yeah, it's a very exciting time. It's actually pretty exciting all across the solar system.
Also, can I just like on a separate note, put in a request for a bonus episode of Planetary Radio one day where we just talk about our adventures at Artemis?
Because I feel like there were some fun B-sides to that that were never revealed.
And I think it would just be a good time.
Like Matt and I missing an exit and travel 50 minutes.
How many miles out of our way did we have to go?
Way too far.
Yeah, I was driving, folks, just so you know.
I still think that was my fault, but anyway, I digress.
We did have some great adventures, and you got to go on that adventure with the off-nominal crew, too, right?
So that was a whole thing.
Oh, yeah.
I love those guys.
They're the best.
But so Artemis 1 finally launched.
That all turned out spectacularly.
We're looking forward to the next launches of the Artemis program.
But we didn't just have moments for the United States going to space.
We also had the Fifth Nation join us in space.
We had India launch their Chandrayaan-3 moon mission, actually landed on the moon near
the South Pole.
That was such a cool
moment. And then shortly after that, the Japanese Space Agency's SLIM mission launched to the moon
too. So now we finally officially have five nations of the Earth landed on the moon. That
is such a cool moment. Yeah, yeah. Very exciting to see this become ever more international.
Yeah, we didn't just have cool moon missions launching this year.
We also had a really exciting mission from the European Space Agency going out to Jupiter. You
want to tell us about that, Ray? Yeah. So, I mean, it's still moon related, but maybe other moons of
other worlds, right? So, this year in April of 2023, we had the JUICE launch. So, Jupiter Icy
Moon Explorer. And JUICE is a very interesting mission.
It's going to explore three of Jupiter's Galilean moons.
So there's four total, but this one will just be focusing on Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.
Essentially, it'll be just spending some quality time with each of these worlds and learning more about them.
For example, we think there might be oceans beneath the surface of these moons.
So there are some juicy details to dive into. But what I do know about it so far is that JUICE
will be able to use radar to give us more detail on what's going on beneath the icy crust of these
moons than we've ever had, really. So I'm looking forward to seeing what it finds and how that could
be potentially tied to habitability. What's cool about it, too, is that while one of the moons got left out, Io,
the Juno mission is still in its extended mission at this point, getting closer and closer to that
moon, taking some really cool data. And I also learned earlier this year that Io might have had
a potential subsurface liquid water ocean or even on the surface that got completely blasted away by Jupiter. So the things we're learning about these moons,
absolutely wild, and I cannot wait to learn more. Those images coming back from Juno, from that
camera that almost didn't make it on the spacecraft, but was thrown in as sort of a bone to
we space geeks out here, has delivered terrific science. And most recently, those great
images of Io and the surface of Jupiter, it's just more proof that you're crazy if you don't
bring a camera along when you travel around the neighborhood. Really, though, I mean,
we just have to advocate for every camera all the time on every mission so we can see these things.
I was also thinking about how we're talking about the Galilean moons discovered, obviously,
by Galileo. And I think it's been 400 years, give or take, since that happened. And it's just wild
to think on the grand scale of time how much has happened from looking through a telescope to
actually sending a spacecraft that's dedicated to
uncovering what's going on beneath these moons. That is truly wild to think about.
I would love to just take one picture of Io, show it to Galileo and be like,
look, it was totally worth it.
He'd love it.
But this was also the year that we finally got samples back from the OSIRIS-REx mission that went out to asteroid Bennu.
You actually got to go and see that sample return, right, Ray?
Yeah, and I have to limit myself on how much I'm going to talk about it because there is so much to say.
It was one of the most moving experiences of my life.
I was at the sample drop back in September in Utah, actually, and it was just fantastic.
back in September in Utah, actually, and it was just fantastic. None of us, I mean, the press and the folks who were there, none of us actually got to see the moment when the sample capsule dropped
out of the sky because we were so far away and it was so teeny tiny by comparison. But we did see
the helicopter return it to the Army base where we were all watching. And just seeing that thing
fly through the air, the sample capsule was
absolutely exhilarating. It was such a rush of adrenaline that was probably at least in part due
to me being up since three in the morning that day. But regardless, I will cherish that moment
forever. I cannot wait to see what the sample analysis reveals. We've already learned the
samples from the asteroid Bennu, for example, contain carbon and water. So does that mean Bennu has the building blocks for
life as we know it? I guess we'll have to wait and find out. I bet you it does. And you know what
blew me away just a couple of days before we did this? Learning how absolutely lucky Dante Loretta,
the head of that mission, and everybody, all the rest of us were, because it could have ended in the last few seconds with that mistake that was made in wiring the mechanism that fired off the drogue chute.
So it didn't happen.
Thank the gods of the solar system that the main chute worked.
And we got that down in one piece.
Totally. Oh Oh my gosh.
They also had some technical difficulties trying to unscrew the thing.
Space is hard, but we're going to get those samples.
Yeah.
And I just wanted to bring up the Psyche launch. We're not going to go into super detail, but
I was so looking forward to that mission launch, not just because I want to know more about this this year as she approached launch,
hearing her just ecstatic feelings after she actually watched it launch was just,
it was a beautiful moment.
And now we get to see what actually happens.
Plus, I got to talk to one of the people who models craters on that asteroid by literally firing projectiles at other meteorites.
So that was a mission that I was
particularly connected to just because I got to meet so many people on the mission team.
I was talking with the wonderful Jim Bell, our past president of the Planetary Society.
He was at the office the other day. And I said, does anybody want to guess whether we're actually
once Psyche gets there, whether we're going to see metal or
is it going to be a big, you know, has it collected a lot of fluff like so many other asteroids? He
says, we don't know. That's why we have to go and look. It'd be funny if it was fluffy on the
outside, but because of things hitting the asteroid, we actually got little bits of metal
underneath. I just, I really want to know if the edges of these craters are as jagged and knife-like as they think they might be. Wouldn't that be cool? God, that's going to be
great. I sure hope so. It's like such a jiggly puff asteroid in a way. It's like it looks soft
and maybe fluffy or something, but it is metal. Okay. Do not mess with it.
We'll be right back with the rest of our look back at 2023 after this short break.
Greetings, Bill Nye here.
What a year it's been at the Planetary Society.
From advocating for missions that matter, to funding new technology,
to grants for planetary research and biology in space,
to sharing the wonder of space exploration with the world.
You made it all happen.
Many of the great scientific
missions we've dreamed of are happening, and it's thanks to your support. But we can't stop now,
because tomorrow's discoveries must begin today. With your help, we can keep our work going strong
into 2024 and continue to explore worlds, find life, and defend Earth. Plus, when you make a gift today,
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Your year-end contribution, especially when doubled,
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Visit planetary.org slash planetary fund. Thank you.
So we had some great launches, some great missions going out this year, but it was also a really big
year for human spaceflight. And I know that you are all in this, Matt. So what were some of your
favorite moments in human spaceflight this year? I love this stuff. But as I read the book by the Wienersmiths, Zach and Kelly, who you talked to recently,
because we're going to feature them, a conversation with them in the Planetary Society
member community book club.
And I'm reading their book, the terrific book, A City on Mars, about why we should go slow,
maybe, on putting people up there for a lot of good reasons. It
still was a heck of a year for human spaceflight. On May 25th, there were 20 people in space
simultaneously. Not for long because how many of them? Six were on Virgin Galactic's Unity
space plane. And so that was kind of a short ride. But if you look just
five days later, there were 17 people in low Earth orbit, six on the Chinese space station,
Tiangong. I love that that translates to Sky Palace. I wish we had applied that to the ISS.
And 11 people on the ISS, just truly amazing. And, you know, as we talk about all of this, India is moving forward toward putting its own citizens in space on its own rockets as part of its Gaganyaan program, which did this very successful abort test back in October.
Only the fourth nation ever to get this far
with a human spaceflight program. And they're hoping 2025 to actually send one of these up
with people on it. Europe is behind, I guess, because they know they can rely on other folks,
but they are testing this uncrewed space plane called SpaceRider, and it's an acronym, but don't ask me to
remember what it stands for. So they are making progress as well with a reusable.
There are disappointments though as well. Boeing Starliner. My goodness, I don't know what to say
about Boeing. They've had their troubles between the 737 and Starliner. We're now looking at least at April before what
was supposed to be concurrent with the SpaceX Dragon, before that makes it into orbit. And
they're going ahead with a human spaceflight, even though there were some minor problems still on the
last uncrewed flight, which happened in this year. In the meantime, Blue Origin is gosh knows when they're going to
launch their new Glenn rocket, which is supposed to be their answer, at least to the SpaceX Falcon
9. It keeps getting held back largely because of the engines, the BE-4 engine, which is not by
coincidence also what's holding up the ULA Vulcan rocket, because they're
both going to use these BE-4 engines from Blue Origin. And both of them, you know, we thought
we would see these launch before 2023, and it's still going to be at least next year before these
happen. I did want to say, though, that I did get to go to the Blue Origin rocket facility in
Florida when we went to go see the Artemis 1 launch or attempt to see the Artemis 1 launch.
And they are making some good progress. While we haven't seen an actual full rocket on a launch pad
launching, they are machining parts. They are putting together. I got to see it on the floor.
So I have hope. It just might take a little while. Elon Musk said an interesting thing the other day. He said, yeah, if there was a button I could push
to put Blue Origin out of business, he said, I wouldn't push it because competition is good for
us. He said, but maybe Jeff should put a little bit more time into that part of his empire.
Interesting advice from a guy who a lot of us would like to give advice to as well.
interesting advice from a guy who a lot of us would like to give advice to as well.
Speaking of SpaceX, though, I will say no more. But I will say something about Starship, super heavy booster flights. It was disappointing to see how many people in the general media
said that the second Starship booster test flight was not that successful. It really was.
It was. This is how SpaceX approaches stuff. I mean, look back to the beginnings of the development of, let's say,
the Atlas rocket by the US and others and failure after failure after failure. They're on number two
and they successfully launched both stages. They're talking now about the third flight, assuming it makes it into orbit, that they're actually going to test transfer of propellant.
They're going to move around some huge amount of liquid oxygen, which is a key part of preparing the Super Heavy and Starship to take humans to the moon in Artemis III.
As we know, Starship, the lunar lander version of it, is going to be needed.
That's what we're going to use to get human astronauts back down to the moon.
And maybe not in 2030.
Maybe that's going to get pushed back.
But they're making, in my opinion, amazing progress with that gigantic rocket, by far the biggest ever flown.
And yeah, I can't wait to see what happens.
They may be flying that third mission early in 2024, maybe in January, although Elon was
implying it might still happen this month.
Doesn't look like that's going to happen.
But there is so much exciting stuff happening.
You know, I got to go back to the Vulcan rocket one more time.
I thought we were going to get this great Christmas present.
It was going to launch on Christmas Eve with the astrobotic Peregrine 1 lander for the moon.
That's now probably not going to happen until January.
But still, it's coming.
Those engines, Sarah, that you saw them developing, it looks like they're working out.
Unfortunate, because we had such good luck launching JWST on Christmas a few years ago.
So, you know, it would have been a fun moment.
Yeah, yeah.
I tell you, though, that SpaceX Starship launch was actually kind of everything I was hoping for.
Like, from my perspective, it was really successful.
But also, I was in this fun place where I had made a bet that it was going to explode. So I was both right and wrong.
That's right.
Because I made it all the way up there. And then one of the most spectacular explosions I've ever
seen in space in my life. Don't you want to go to one of those launches? I mean, and just get your
body shaken by those engines. So was it 32 engines or 31? I forget. It's up there. It's just got to be an
absolutely overwhelming experience. I can't even imagine. The only launch that I've ever been to
was to see the DART launch, the Double Asteroid Redirect Test launch. And that was from Vandenberg
Space Force Base. I was miles away from that launch,
and I could still feel it rattling my bones.
Same with our Falcon Heavy for LightSail 2 and all the other stuff,
the less significant stuff that was on that rocket.
That's a big darn rocket, the Falcon Heavy,
and it's dwarfed by Starship Super Heavy.
Have you seen a launch in person yet, Ray?
No. My chance was when i went
to see artemis and didn't go off so this is my official ask i guess to go back and see a launch
you have my full support in in that being budgeted ray i think that's got to happen
just don't bring bruce with you bring bruce with you. It will not launch. Poor Bruce. I'll talk it up to the
powers that be, Matt. I'll ask them if I can go. Thanks. Hopefully next year, we've got a lot of
cool things to look forward to. So there's all kinds of cool stuff going on with human space
flight, but we've also learned a bunch of really beautiful things about our solar system this year.
You already brought up what happened with the OSIRIS-X sample return ray, but we also got to test some of the samples
from asteroid Ryugu. Absolutely. And the most exciting thing to come out of this, as far as
I'm concerned, is the discovery of organics in this space rock. It just appears, you know,
it used to be NASA's motto was follow the water. We were
going to find the water around the solar system and boy, did we find it. Sure seems like it could
have been follow the organics because it looks more and more like we are finding organics
everywhere we look, just like we have found water, whether it's frozen or not. And that's extremely exciting.
I mean, you were already talking a little bit about this and the fact that these are
the building blocks of life.
And so we are taking those additional steps in the search for life, which, of course,
has been a top priority of the Planetary Society since the creation of our
organization. And we'll be doing a lot with Search for Life in the coming months at the
Planetary Society as well. We've got some big plans. How wild is that, though? The first time
I heard that they found organic compounds in samples off of Earth, I was completely wowed. And at this point, if there aren't any
organics in those samples, I'm genuinely surprised. It seems like we're finding them everywhere we go.
Yeah. Imagine if Cassini, it was just too old technology, it found those simple organics when
it flew through those Enceladus plumes. who knows what else it might have found if it had had the kinds of spectrometers that we're now going to send out on Europa Clipper and Dragonfly.
We might find some really interesting stuff.
Even with our limited ability there, we still found evidence of hydrothermal vents.
We found the organic compounds.
We even found some evidence
of phosphorus and other things out there. So I don't know. We really need to go back and retest
these things because from where I'm sitting, there's a pretty good chance we might find some
prebiotic or even some small organisms in that moon if we look carefully enough,
if we can get beneath the ice. Thankfully, there's plumes. We'll find a way. I want to find a tuna skeleton. I want to find a tuna fossil that's been blown out of one
of the plumes. I want to find like a mantis shrimp or something like a nice, like colorful little
shrimp. See, I always think of the shrimp too, because i'm thinking about the hydrothermal vents we have here
on earth and all the entire biome that grew up around them but the shrimp are the ones i always
think about because they're they're see-through they don't have any pigmentation they don't even
have eyeballs because they don't need it it's so dark down there and those are the creatures that
i always think we're going to find an enceladus or something but one day we'll play this episode
back when we find the mantis shrimp in the plumes
and be like, they were right.
Because you know what?
Shrimp are survivors.
Shrimp are like hardy.
Them and like the tardigrades and the shrimp, that's where my bet is.
Haven't tasted tardigrades, but shrimp also delicious.
Delicious.
You've probably tasted tardigrades and not known it. Oh gosh, yeah. That's a terrifying thought.
But totally true.
I think another one of the really cool moments this year was actually
with the Lucy mission. That one went off. It's on its way to the Trojan asteroid
so it is like far, far from its target. We have a few more years, but
we did do a test flyby of an asteroid called Dinkanesh,
and that got so strange.
I did not see those results coming.
Oh my gosh.
It's one of my favorite plot twists of the year.
And it's really like two plot twists that happened.
So I'll back up for a second.
Lucy launched in 2021, but like you said, it's on its way to investigate the mysterious Trojan asteroids, of course.
And it took a little pit stop to check out a main belt asteroid named Dinkinesh, as you said, or Dinky, as it's being called online, which I just think is adorable.
Like you're saying space is full of surprises and it turns out that Dinky wasn't actually one asteroid.
Scientists realized it was actually two asteroids.
And so that obviously caused a lot of conversation to spark up online. But then there was another
twist to that. And it was later revealed that Dinky's moonlet actually had a satellite of its
own. So it was a contact binary, meaning the moon and its satellite were touching or
contacting each other. But TLDR, long story short, space is super cute sometimes. And sometimes what
you think is one asteroid is actually three dinkies. Every place we go, we get surprised.
Every place we go, every mission that we go on, every time we look at something new. It's one of the
great, wonderful, unbroken rules of space exploration. I was talking with some people
from the Lucy mission team recently about that flyby, and I asked them what they thought was the
formation history of Dinky and its moonlet. And they're not exactly sure yet,
but what they did suggest,
what Hal Levison suggested,
was that asteroids like this,
when they get spun up by radiation from the sun,
sometimes eject stuff out.
And this might explain why the two different lobes of this moonlet are about the same size.
They went off into space
and then glommed on to each other.
But like, all of that is speculation because we're only just beginning to
understand these systems.
So I cannot wait to see more of these asteroids and hopefully we'll get
surprised again.
I'm sure we will.
Oh yeah,
no doubt.
It will not be boring.
I can guarantee that.
Well,
let's see,
looking at our list.
I think the only thing we've got left in here is maybe Jupiter's moons.
This is a fun one, speaking of surprises, because when I was doing the research for this, I went in here thinking that Jupiter was still on top with the number of moons in its system.
And actually, I was mistaken because it seems that it was not widely reported that Saturn is actually back to claim
the throne. So that's a fun little tidbit that I was surprised to know about 15 minutes before this.
I actually have a t-shirt with Saturn and Earth. Earth is like walking the moon like a dog,
and Saturn has like just a bajillion moons on all these leashes looking very stressed out and that's
kind of how i think about it but you know you'd think that jupiter would have more moons because
of how massive it is and like just the gravitational pull for sure but i don't know i mean here's the
thing i think a little playful rivalry in space is always fun and I know that they're always neck and neck for having the highest number of moons, but I feel like I'm going to just say it.
I'm team Saturn in this one because I love Saturn's little weirdo moons.
Okay.
I love those little misfit buddies and I want to see more of them.
And it seems that the newest batch of moons that were added to Saturn were
irregular moons.
So they've got funky, eccentric orbits.
I don't know.
I just think there's something very endearing about that.
And I welcome more dumpling moons, as many as we can find, similar to Pan.
I'm going to stick with Team Jupiter.
I have been a fan forever.
And I'm going to say, big guy, you got the mass.
Come on, gather some more rocks.
Get in the game. It's collecting all of its extra friends in those Lagrange points. That's why we've
got so many Trojan Asperger's. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Lucy is going to be very busy.
It's funny. Of the bodies in the solar system, Ray, I feel like you have strong Daphnis energy,
like Saturn's moon,
the one that's going through the rings, just creating all those funky ripples, like
you're Daphnis. Can I add that to my LinkedIn? I feel like that's the nicest thing anyone's
ever told me. The propellers that Cassini saw in the rings, the so-called propellers,
God, there's weird dynamic stuff going on in those
rings. So yeah, I've got a nice spot in my heart for Saturn too. Yeah. And like, likewise, I mean,
how can you not love Jupiter? And it does do a good job protecting us from all those asteroids.
Shout out to Jupiter for that. That's something that we can't count out. That's a big deal.
Appreciate that. Can you imagine what life on Earth would be without Jupiter there to protect us? It's like
our, you know, like our older brother just been like, nah, leave my little kid sister alone.
Good for us. We very likely wouldn't be here talking about how much we admire Jupiter.
Because we wouldn't be here at all. Yeah.
That's an interesting point, right? As we're looking out to other star systems out there and all the exoplanets we've been discovering, and we're
what, 5,600 or so exoplanets we've discovered and confirmed at this point. I bet learning more about
these dynamics within our own solar system, knowing that Jupiter protects us might give us a
clue when we're looking at other star systems. If there's a
large planet out there with an interterrestrial planet, maybe they'll have a higher chance of
surviving just because that guy's there. And just, you know, kudos to all of the work being done to
reveal all these worlds around the solar system. I mean, I am ever so much older than either of you.
And so I do tell that story about
how when I was a kid, all the books said, not only are we probably unlikely to ever see another star
as more than a point of light, we will probably never be able to detect whether there are planets
around those other stars. So wrong, you early guys. It's just thrilling to see not just all
these thousands of worlds, but that we're actually learning about
the weather on some of them. And who knows, I'm still pulling for JWST to be able to,
you know, maybe do a little bit more to tell us what's in some of those atmospheres and
on that never ending search for organics, or at least for, you know, industrial pollution.
organics or at least for, you know, industrial pollution. We did, though, have JWST detect its first exoplanet this year. And at this point, we're already up to a place where they've found
potentially methane and carbon dioxide on an exoplanet out there. We're going to be talking
to that team in a couple episodes, so everybody listening can look forward to that. But I can't
even imagine what we're going to learn in the next year, what we're going to learn in the next decade.
And this is going to be a big moment for us at the Planetary Society because next year is our 45th anniversary.
So we've got a lot to celebrate.
We do.
And a lot to look forward to.
Well, thanks for joining me and going back through 2023.
It was a big year, and there's a lot of things we didn't get to cover.
And next year is going to be just as hectic of things we didn't get to cover and next year is
going to be just as hectic. So I'll bring you guys back on next year. We'll deconstruct it all.
Bring on the chaos. We'd love to see it.
New surprises. Always a pleasure, Sarah. Love to be back in front of the microphone with you.
Thanks so much, Sarah. This was great.
Working with everyone here at the Planetary Society is such a joy, I cannot even convey it.
When I tell you that my coworkers are some of the best humans I know, I'm not exaggerating.
It is an absolute privilege to get to work with them.
And of course, that includes the great Bruce Betts, our chief scientist here at the Planetary Society.
He's been with me for every show of my first year as host of Planetary Radio. Let's check in with him for what's up.
Happy almost new year, Bruce.
Happy almost new year to you as well.
I mean, I feel like my year was a little more bonkers than most other people's years. Like,
this was my first year as host of Planetary Radio, so it was a time for me.
How about you?
You had an exciting time.
Oh, I had a good time.
You know, mysterious leg injuries, surgeries, broken bones.
It was a good year.
But professionally, it was very good.
So that's good.
And nothing permanent, so it's all good.
It's all good.
Sorry, I didn't mean to whine.
I had a great year we can
just go with that edit if you want i'm just saying if anybody wants to send bruce some love
definitely send him some love i'm scared and warmed all at the same time
but i feel like this year was a cool moment to regroup like We had some big space launches. We saw the Psyche mission go up.
Some moments, OSIRIS-REx coming back down. But there are some missions that I'm really
looking forward to next year. What do you think are the biggest space missions that
we should all be excited about in 2024? Well, we've got Europa Clipper launching,
and that'll take years to get there but we'll get out and explore
Europa which is super super duper exciting with its subsurface ocean and
then the Japanese mission MMX that is headed off to visit both of Mars's moons
and sample at least one of them and return samples and we've got a
particularly excited it's planetary society because we have a project we
helped support planet back from honeybeeics that will be doing one of the sampling mechanisms.
It grew up and moved out of the testing phase and has real flight and everything.
And then we've got some number of new commercial so-called CLPS, because of the acronym,
missions going to the moon and landing on the moon.
And so that'll be an interesting experiment. We'll see some more places on the moon. I believe the Chinese are going back to the moon and landing on the moon. And so that'll be an interesting experiment.
We'll see some more places on the moon. I believe the Chinese are going back to the moon
again next year as well. Human land, theoretically, I think they're still launching Artemis 2 with
humans on SLS. So we'll see. But all sorts of good stuff. And, of course, ongoing, I like to remind people,
there's a bunch of stuff exploring the solar system right now.
There's a pile of spacecraft at Mars, a pile at the moon,
a bunch coming along to Venus, some there.
We've got stuff going to asteroids.
We've got a bunch of asteroid stuff going on,
including Lucy's bopping from one asteroid to another.
And Lucy gave us the surprise contact binary moodlet of a month or two ago.
Dinkin' Ash, that was awesome.
So anyway, what about you, Sarah?
I'm excited for the European Space Agency's HERA mission to launch because I...
Oh, thank you. I accidentally forgot that.
No, I want to see what the DART mission really did up close and personal.
I know they had to wait a little while for the debris to kind of clear so we could really get an assessment of what happened there.
But I'm really excited to see what Hera finds.
Yeah, no, that's great.
And it was originally planned to go at the same time as DART, but it didn't work out.
But fortunately, they were able to get a mission approved to go later.
And also the Italian CubeSat got some images of the actual impact. As you say, there was
debris everywhere. So it'll be good scientifically and excitedly to see what crater is actually left
in the moonlight. Yeah, those Lycia Cube shots were awesome. I mean, I didn't think I would be
so excited by us like blowing a new crater in a tiny asteroid somewhere.
Dude, how could that not excite me?
It's the first time we've attempted this.
It was super exciting.
I mean, it just, it feels mean.
Like, those asteroids didn't do anything to us.
You want to rethink that statement?
I mean, those particular asteroids didn't do anything.
But as a genre of space objects, they do some bad hoodoo, and that's part of it.
It's true.
That was what TART was all about, was trying to start testing our mechanisms for defending Earth from dangerous asteroid impacts.
So I'm excited also from that planetary defense standpoint.
It's something we try to do because if we don't do it, they will keep coming.
They'll get us.
Good stuff. What else you got?
I think the thing that it's not a space mission, but the moment that I'm most looking forward to
has got to be the total solar eclipse in April. Because this is going to be my first total solar
eclipse working with all of you. And we're going to be at the Eclipse- in texas and the what eclipse oh rama there's an eclipse you're such a troll
why yes i am yes april 8th and uh planetary society will have eclipse orama in texas and We'll have Eclipse-o-rama in Texas and look at totality. It's groovy.
My first solar eclipse was 2017.
Same.
And so it's as cool as you think it is.
I remember right after that eclipse, there was a moment we were all completely mind-blown
trying to think about how we were going to get to the next eclipse, which at the moment,
seven years seemed forever. And I remember us all making a pact. We're like, by the next time we're
under a total solar eclipse, like we will have accomplished our dreams. And that's like a big
claim, but I feel like I kind of nailed it. I'm going to be standing under that eclipse,
having accomplished a lot of my space dreams. And congratulations, that might feel different.
You know, they'll hit different.
Before we get into the random space fact, I just wanted to share a quick, huge thank
you to one of our listeners.
If you're out there right now, Bob Ware, I'm just telling you, I have the gift that you
sent to our office.
And I'm really appreciative. A few weeks ago, you may remember, we did a show with Simone Marquis about asteroids and cratering on metallic asteroids like Psyche.
And Bob wrote in with a question, which I sent to Simone.
He wrote back an answer.
And I fully thought that Bob was joking when he said in our member community that he was going to be sending me some chocolate.
But he did, in fact, send chocolate.
So I will be sharing that with our coworkers and with Simone.
So thanks for sending that.
The perfect thank you for all asteroid work.
Would have been a random thing to talk about today.
But now you've ruined it.
Mostly random space facts.
That wasn't very inspired.
I'm sorry.
But the fact is interesting.
We mentioned our little friend that we talked about earlier also ruining any randomness I had,
which is Dimorphos that got slammed into by the DART probe, the moon of Didymos.
Yes.
And so I wondered, what are the smallest and largest asteroids that we have visited with spacecraft?
Dimorphos wins for smallest.
There are some close competitors, like the Dinky, the new moonlet, which I forgot what they actually are naming it,
with the contact binary is actually a little bit larger.
And then we went all the way from – so Dimorphos would fit on the field of a stadium, basically.
You could stick it in the field.
People could sit on the seats and watch it just sit there and be an asteroid.
But if you want to think about the largest asteroid, which gets into a question whether
you count Ceres at all still as an asteroid or as a dwarf planet.
But let's look at Vesta, either the largest or second largest.
For Vesta, the equivalent of that stadium for Dimorphos, we'd need Iceland.
Wow.
So, yeah, Vesta is a little bigger than Iceland, particularly in one dimension.
So we got a stadium versus Iceland. That's what we
visited, which is pretty good analysis on the upper end of the spectrum, but there are much
smaller objects all the way down to the dust that hits the atmosphere, sand-sized particles.
There you go. There's a random thought of asteroid sizes we visited. I particularly
wondered what the smallest was, and it turns out it is dimorphous. but more to come. So exciting. We'll see who breaks the record.
Yeah. Well, there are missions. I know the Chinese are interested in the co-orbiting
objects that kind of co-orbit with the Earth, and those would be smaller.
Lucy's visiting some small objects, but I don't think they're going to be as small as Dimorphos. Unless, like Dimorphos, they find some binaries that have small moonlets.
I asked them about that, and they said most likely their main targets for the mission probably won't have such surprises
because they know a little bit more about what the shapes look like by watching the asteroids pass in front of stars.
So they've got a better idea there, whereas Dinkanesh was really surprising because it was kind of like a bonus flyby almost.
Yeah, they are very late in the process, full commitment to go to that.
All right, well, we'll see.
I have yet to see people go anywhere for the first time that I can recall and not be surprised by something,
even if it's small. Even the different asteroids all have something weird.
That's why we think it's cool. Exactly. I hope your 2024 surprises you in good ways, Bruce.
I was scared. I hope it surprises you. I hope your 2024 is magnificent, wonderful, and you continue to fulfill your space dreams and continue to play on the podcast radio show and have fun.
I plan for it.
Oscar Ancheros, and everybody got their look up the night sky and think about your upcoming
wonderful year and what role chips are going to play in that. And those can be
British chips or American chips, either use of the word, anywhere in the world. Thank you and good night.
We've reached the end of this week's episode of Planetary Radio and the end of 2023. But we'll be back next week slash next year with the absolutely bonkers results
from JWST about an exoplanet called K218b. It's got methane, it's got carbon dioxide,
and I tell you, it has dimethyl sulfide on that sub-Neptune. I can't think of a better way to
ring in the new year than biomarkers. Before we go, I want to say a massive thank you to literally every one of you.
You've made my first year as host of Planetary Radio so special.
Your messages, my gosh, they've been so heartwarming and inspiring.
I cherish every gift and handwritten note that you've sent to me.
You all remind me daily what a wonderful community we've built together.
And let's not forget all of the extraordinary moments at conventions and events that I've had
bumping into fellow Planetary Radio fans.
It's literally been the highlight of my year getting to meet some of you in person.
This year has been a whirlwind of learning and adventure.
I've grown so much, not just as a host, but as a space enthusiast, too.
It's been an absolute blast exploring the cosmos with you all.
Here's to 2024.
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Ad Astra. you