The moon covers the sun to form a rare "ring of
fire" during a solar eclipse as seen from the city of Dindigul in India on Dec.
26.
Mars 2020 and 3 others launching in July
With Mars coming close in its orbit to Earth in 2020, July is a prime
launching time for an incredible four missions to the Red Planet.
NASA will launch its long-awaited Mars 2020 rover to explore possible sites
of ancient habitability, while the European Space Agency and Russia plan to do
the same with their ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover. The United Arab Emirates
plans its first mission, the Hope Mars Mission, which will launch from Japan.
China also plans a lander and a small rover for Mars.
India's first SSLV launch
The first launch of the Small Satellite Launch Vehicle, a new rocket from the
Indian Space Research Organisation, is expected sometime in early 2020.
The goal is to create a small launcher that can launch frequently and with
few people, to save on operations cost and complications. In 2020, it will
launch its first commercial mission with four Earth observation satellites for
BlackSky Global.
All SSLVs will lift off from the Satish Dhawan Space Center in Sriharikota,
India.
SpaceX Starlink, Falcon Heavy and Starship
SpaceX plans to kick off 2020 with another batch of its Starlink satellites,
which are meant to provide global connectivity in broadband. Starlink may
eventually comprise as many as 42,000 individual vehicles circling the
Earth.
SpaceX has said the vehicles are equipped with sensors to dodge collisions,
but observers still worry about orbital debris. The company is also planning to
coat the satellites in anti-reflective stuff to ease worries about this large
constellation interfering with astronomical observations.
In addition to Starlink and Crew Dragon, SpaceX has a two other ongoing
rocket programs. The company's heavy-lift Falcon Heavy, the most powerful rocket
in use today, may launch a mission for the U.S. Air Force in late 2020,
according to Spaceflight Now.
SpaceX is also expected to continue development work on its Starship Mk 3
prototype for deep-space missions.
China's Chang'e 5 moon sample-return mission
China's space agency is expected to launch its next moon mission, called
Chang'e-5, sometime in 2020.
The country wants to send a sample of the moon back to Earth for analysis,
following on to its highly successful Chang'e-4 mission that put a lander and a
rover safely on the far side of the moon. Its landing site is Mons Rümker, a
mountain nearby a large basaltic lunar area called Oceanus Procellarum. If
Chang'e-5 succeeds, it will be the first mission to bring back samples of the
moon since the last Apollo mission of 1972.
US Air Force's X-37B space plane
The U.S. Air Force is expected to, sometime in 2020, once again launch the
mysterious X-37B space plane (also known as the Orbital Test Vehicle).
This will be the sixth mission of the uncrewed vehicle, which can stay in
space for up to a year at a time to perform its secret work. In 2019, one of Air
Force's two known X-37 spacecraft returned to Earth after a record-breaking
780-day spaceflight. That's more than two years in space.
The Air Force usually discusses only the overall goals of the program,
because it classifies each payload: "Reusable spacecraft technologies for
America's future in space and operating experiments which can be returned to,
and examined, on Earth," states an X-37B fact sheet produced by the Air
Force.
Virgin Galactic
In 2019, Virgin Galactic launched its first test passenger into space. In
2020, the company is expected to begin launching space tourist flights with
paying passengers aboard.
Those flights, potentially slated for mid-year, will launch passengers from
Spaceport America in New Mexico, the home of Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo
fleet and its carrier aircraft WhiteKnightTwo. Virgin Galactic is offering
suborbital spaceflights for passengers at $250,000 per ticket.
Virgin Galactic currently has one SpaceShipTwo, the VSS Unity, and a single
carrier plane the VMS Eve. The company is building a second spacecraft now.
SpaceShipTwo vehicles can carry up to eight people, two pilots and six
passengers.
Blue Origin
Blue Origin, the private space company founded by Amazon billionaire Jeff
Bezos, launched three flights of its New Shepard spacecraft in 2019 - most
recently on Dec. 11 - and is on track to make the leap into human spaceflight in
2020.
The New Shepard spacecraft consists of a reusable booster and crew capsule
designed to fly up to six people, or the equivalent weight in experiments, to
suborbital space at a time. The booster launches and lands vertically, with the
capsule returning to a land-based landing under parachutes.
To date, Blue Origin has flown 12 New Shepard missions, with the last six
flying on the same booster and capsule. Ariane Cornell, director of Blue
Origin's astronaut and orbital sales, has said the company needs a "couple of
more" flights to be ready for crewed missions.
While Blue Origin has said it will fly passengers on suborbital trips, it has
not stated how much a seat will cost.
Virgin Orbit
Virgin Galactic isn't the only company expecting to make a space leap in
2020. Its sister company Virgin Orbit aims to begin orbital launches during the
year.
Virgin Orbit is a small-satellite launch company that aims to launch payloads
into orbit using LauncherOne. The rocket is an air-launched booster carried into
launch position by a modified Boeing 747 jumbo jet called Cosmic Girl.
In July 2019, Virgin Orbit successfully performed a drop test of its
LauncherOne rocket after a series of captive carry shakedown tests. The first
launch from Virgin Orbit is expected to take off from California's Mojave Air
and Space Port and launch from a position over the Pacific Ocean.
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