Posts Tagged jaxa
Sparkling
Posted by Danielle in News & Happenings on June 16, 2010
This video of spacecraft Hayabusa’s reentry is the most beautiful thing I’ve seen in a long, long time. It’s one minute of your day, and it’s VERY MUCH worth watching.
A group of astronomers from NASA, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and other organizations had a front row seat to observe the Hayabusa spacecraft’s fiery plunge into Earth’s atmosphere. The team flew aboard NASA’s DC-8 airborne laboratory, packed with cameras and other imaging instruments, to capture the high-speed re-entry over an unpopulated area of central Australia on June 13, 2010. The Japanese spacecraft completed its seven-year, 1.25 billion mile journey to return a sample of the asteroid Itokawa.
Kaguya, End-of-Life
Posted by Danielle in Picspam, Special Events on June 22, 2009
When the Kaguya (SELENE) probe impacted the lunar surface on June 10th, it broadcast images in HD up to the final moments of the craft. JAXA has release those images on the Kaguya site, and here they are for your viewing pleasure, in order:
…at which point, this happened:
Kaguya
Posted by Danielle in Special Events on June 10, 2009
All good things come to an end, it seems, and so goes the Kaguya (SELENE) probe, put into lunar orbit by JAXA (the Japanese space agency) in October 2007. In addition to many practical detectors, Kaguya also carried two HD cameras, resulting in some staggering video footage. Kaguya will impact the Moon’s surface today — a great mission comes to an end.










This blog celebrates space exploration, human spaceflight and the heavens, through
My name is Danielle Signor, and I am a space cadet. 









