Serendipity, a super-Jupiter, and saving VIPER


The science community is rallying to save VIPER. Following NASA’s announcement of its intent to cancel the VIPER mission to the Moon’s south pole, The Planetary Society helped circulate a letter signed by 1,000 individuals from the lunar and planetary science community to more than 200 key congressional staffers. The letter urges Congress to intervene, emphasizing the importance of VIPER for future lunar exploration and scientific discovery. Pictured: An artist’s impression showing NASA’s VIPER rover moving down a ramp of Astrobotic’s Griffin lander. Image credit: Astrobotic.

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Advocacy works, and VERITAS is proof of that. In late 2022, NASA’s VERITAS mission to study Venus was defunded. Thanks to the help of space advocates — like Planetary Society members — the mission is now back on. Darby Dyar, the deputy principal investigator for VERITAS, joins this week’s Planetary Radio to share the story.

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Why does Jupiter spin so fast? The Solar System’s largest planet rotates roughly once every nine hours and 50 minutes — extremely quickly for such a large object. Earth, in comparison, rotates at a relatively sedate 23 hours and 56 minutes. Why this is the case can tell us a lot about not only the Solar System but worlds around other stars, too.

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Our online member community is gearing up for the August book club meeting. This month, members read “Still As Bright: An Illuminating History of the Moon, from Antiquity to Tomorrow” by Christopher Cokinos. The author will join members in a virtual Q&A on Aug. 1 at 6:00 p.m. PT to discuss the book, his personal immersion in all things lunar, and how our natural satellite is enmeshed throughout human culture and history. Not yet a Planetary Society member? Join today!



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