The Chronicle

Mars mission impacts

Our city could play role in race

- TOBI LOFTUS Tobi.Loftus@thechronic­le.com.au

TOOWOOMBA could play a vital role in humanity’s mission to Mars.

At the weekend Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who was in Washington DC meeting US President Donald Trump, announced the Federal Government would contribute $150 million through to Australian Space Agency to working with NASA on the upcoming Artemis mission to Mars.

The University of Southern Queensland’s Institute of Advanced Engineerin­g and Space Science executive director Professor Peter Schubel said there was a new space race happening at the moment, and Toowoomba was well poised to be a part of it.

“USQ’s Mount Kent Observator­y is the only dedicated observator­y in the Southern Hemisphere for NASA’s TESS Mission and for space debris monitoring,” he said.

“With regards to space debris monitoring, for any launches we must have an understand­ing of what you have to punch through in terms of avoiding debris.”

Prof Schubel said the university had also invested in a static rocket testing and manufactur­ing, with a facility being planned for Helidon.

“We’re still waiting for planning permission on those, but a site has been identified and we’re just going through the process with the Department of State Developmen­t and local council to ensure we have all the certificat­ions in place,” he said. “The rocket static test facility is not a launch facility, but it is allowing us to test rockets, to proof them, before they go to launch. There’ll also be a rocket manufactur­ing facility.”

Mr Schubel said there were three stages to the testing and manufactur­ing facility. The first will investigat­e rockets with up to 200 kilonewton­s of thrust, enough to get a satellite and payload into geostation­ary orbit. The next two stages will look at much larger, more complex rockets and the fuels they require. He said space exploratio­n and research was important as the technology developed through it filtered down into everyday life, such as GPS.

Photo: Tobi Loftus

 ??  ?? THE FINAL FRONTIER: The Milky Way as seen from the Darling Downs.
THE FINAL FRONTIER: The Milky Way as seen from the Darling Downs.

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