Artemis: Nasa readies giant Moon rocket for maiden flight please log in to view this image Jonathan Amos Science correspondent @BBCAmoson Twitter Published 6 hours ago Share Related Topics Artemis please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,NASA Image caption, The Space Launch System is a new rocket for a new era of lunar exploration The American space agency Nasa has rolled out its giant new Moon rocket to prepare it for a maiden flight. Known as the Space Launch System (SLS), the vehicle was moved to Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida ahead of the expected lift-off on 29 August. The debut outing is a test with no crew aboard, but future missions will send astronauts back to the lunar surface for the first time in over 50 years. The near 100m-tall (328ft) SLS rode an immense tractor to the pad. It started moving from its assembly building at Kennedy just before 22:00 on Tuesday, local time, and had completed the 6.7km (4.2 miles) journey by just after sunrise on Wednesday morning. A guide to Nasa's giant SLS rocket Nasa chooses SpaceX to build Moon lander Nasa picks astronauts for new Moon missions please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,NASA Image caption, No humans are aboard, but sensor-laden mannequins will record conditions during the mission This is a key moment for Nasa, which will celebrate in December the half-century anniversary of Apollo 17, the very last human landing on the Moon. The agency has vowed to return with its new Artemis programme, using technology that befits the modern era (Artemis was Greek god Apollo's twin sister and goddess of the Moon). Nasa sees a return to the Moon as a way to prepare to go to Mars with astronauts sometime in the 2030s or soon after. The SLS will have 15% more thrust off the pad than Apollo's Saturn V rockets. This extra power, combined with further enhancements, will allow the vehicle to not only send astronauts far beyond Earth but, additionally, so much equipment and cargo that those crews could stay away for extended periods. please log in to view this image The crew capsule, also, is a step up in capability. Called Orion, it is much more spacious, being a metre wider, at 5m (16.5ft), than the historic command modules of the 1960s and 70s. "To all of us that gaze up at the Moon, dreaming of the day humankind returns to the lunar surface - folks, we're here! We are going back. And that journey, our journey, begins with Artemis 1," said Nasa Administrator Bill Nelson. "The first crewed launch, Artemis 2, is two years from now in 2024. We're hoping that the first landing, Artemis 3, will be in 2025," he told BBC News. Nasa has promised that this third mission will witness the first woman to put her boots down on the Moon's surface. please log in to view this image Once the SLS arrives at its launch pad, engineers will have just over a week and a half to get the vehicle ready for flight. Three possible launch opportunities exist at the end of the month, starting with Monday 29 August. If technical issues or inclement weather prevent the rocket from getting off Earth on this date, a further attempt can be made on Friday 2 September, and, failing that, on Monday 5 September. The scope of the mission is to send Orion looping around the back of the Moon before bringing it home for a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off California. A major objective of the test fight is to check the heatshield on the capsule can survive the heat of re-entry into Earth's atmosphere. please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,ESA Image caption, Artwork: The conical Orion capsule is pushed through space by the European Service Module A key partner on the upcoming mission is Europe. It is providing the propulsion module that sits on the back of Orion, pushing it through space. "More than 10 countries in Europe have been working on this European Space Agency (Esa) contribution. It's a hugely important moment for us," explained Siân Cleaver from aerospace manufacturer Airbus. "The European Service Module is not just a payload, it's not just a piece of equipment - it's a really critical element because Orion can't get to the Moon without us." Europe hopes its contribution to this and future SLS/Orion missions will eventually see a European national get to be part of a lunar surface crew at some point. For now, it will have to cheer on the British animated character Shaun the Sheep. A puppet used in the stop-motion TV films has been placed in the Orion capsule, complete with an Esa badge and Union flag on its overalls. please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,NASA Image caption, Last man on the Moon: Gene Cernan commanded the Apollo 17 mission in December 1972 While Nasa is developing the SLS, the American rocket entrepreneur Elon Musk is preparing an even larger vehicle at his R&D facility in Texas. He calls his giant rocket the Starship, and it will play a role in future Artemis missions by linking up with Orion to get astronauts down to the surface of the Moon. Like SLS, Starship has yet to have a maiden flight. Unlike SLS, Starship has been designed to be totally reusable and ought therefore to be considerably cheaper to operate. A recent assessment from the Office of Inspector General, which audits Nasa programmes, found that the first four SLS missions would each cost more than $4bn to execute - a sum of money that was described as "unsustainable". The agency said changes made to the way it contracts industry would bring down future production costs significantly. please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,ESA Image caption, Shaun the Sheep will ride around the Moon
Mystery of half-billion year old creature with no anus solved By Victoria Gill Science correspondent, BBC News Published 1 hour ago Share please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL Image caption, Powerful X-ray scanning techniques revealed the 1mm creature in exquisite detail Scientists say they have solved an evolutionary mystery involving a 500 million-year-old microscopic, spiny creature with a mouth but no anus. When it was discovered in 2017, it was reported that the tiny fossil of this sack-like marine beast could be humans' earliest-known ancestor. The ancient animal, Saccorhytus coronarius, was tentatively placed into a group called the deuterostomes. These are the primitive ancestors of vertebrates - including humans. A new study now suggests Saccorhytus should be put into an entirely different group of animals. A team of researchers in China and the UK carried out a very detailed X-ray analysis of the creature, and concluded that it belongs to a group called the ecdysozoans - ancestors of spiders and insects. One source of this evolutionary confusion was the animal's lack of an anus. Emily Carlisle, a researcher who studied Saccorhytus in detail, explained to BBC Radio 4's Inside Science: "It's a bit confusing - [most] ecdysozoans have an anus, so why didn't this one?" One "intriguing option", she said, is that an even earlier ancestor of this whole group did not have an anus, and that Saccorhytus evolved after that. "It could be that it lost it during its own evolution - perhaps it didn't need one because it could just sit in one spot with one opening for everything." The main reason though, for the "repositioning" of Saccorhytus on the Cambrian tree of life is that, on the initial examination, holes that surrounded its mouth were interpreted as pores for gills - a primitive feature of deuterostomes. When scientists looked in more detail - using powerful X-rays to examine the 1mm creature closely - they realised that these were actually the base of spines that had snapped off. Scientists studying these fossils try to place each animals on a tree of life - much like a family tree - enabling them to build a picture to understand where they came from and how they evolved. "Saccorhytus would have lived in the oceans - in the sediment with its spines holding it in place," explained Ms Carlisle, who is based at the University of Bristol. "It would, we think, have just sat there - in a very strange environment with lots of animals that would have looked like some creatures alive today, but a lot that looked completely alien." please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY Image caption, Artist’s reconstruction of Saccorhytus coronarius, based on the original fossil finds. The actual creature was probably no more than a millimetre in size The rocks containing these Cambrian fossils are still being studied. "There's so much we can still learn about its environment," Ms Carlisle added. "The more I study palaeontology, the more I realise how much is missing. In terms of this creature and the world it lived in, we're really just scratching the surface." please log in to view this image IMAGE SOURCE,UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL Image caption, Saccorhytus was a spiky sack-like creature with a mouth, but no anus