Mars mission impacts
Our city could play role in race
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