Conference Series llc Ltd takes the privilege to invite speakers, participants, students, delegates and exhibitors from across the globe to its premier 14 th International Conference on Agriculture & Horticulture (Agri 2019), to be held during August 15-16, 2019 in Rome, Italy.This revered conference will be focusing on the theme “The Global State of Agriculture”.
For those who contemplate the cosmos, 2019 already is shaping up to be a pretty spectacular year. 1, NASA's New Horizon's spacecraft, an object in the some 4 billion miles (6.4 billion kilometers) from Earth, and sent back pictures of a bizarre miniature world shaped like a bowling pin. In the days and months ahead, we'll be gazing in wonder at more images and other data from New Horizon, as it continues its exploration of that mysterious realm, which may contain secrets about the origin of the solar system. Not quite two days later, a Chinese probe, became the first spacecraft to ever land on the far side of the moon.But that was just the start. Here are some of the key events, from to space exploration milestones, that we can expect this year.
20-21: Total Lunar EclipseThis will occur when the moon will pass through Earth's umbra, the inside region of its shadow, over a five-hour period, reports. Moon gazers should watch for subtle shifts in brightness and hue as the eclipse progresses.
The eclipse will be a night event for people in North and South America and a morning event for people living in Europe and Africa. During the 62 minutes when the moon is dark, watch for a patch of light about 6 degrees to the East. That's the, a swarm of about 1,000 stars. February: Israeli and Indian Lunar LandingsSpaceIL, a nonprofit venture, an $88 million lunar probe aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. If successful, the mission would make Israel the fourth country to achieve a soft landing on the moon, after Russia, the U.S.
![2019 2019](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125634302/838013926.jpg)
The four-legged lander will weigh around 1,322 pounds (600 kilograms), the smallest spacecraft to land on the moon, and will.Another new country hoping to make it to the moon is India. The Indian Space Research Organization's probe, whose launch date has been delayed, also may be launched in February, according to. 'This is a big year for the moon,' explains, executive vice-president of the National Space Society, a nonprofit organization.
February: A Japanese Space Probe Will Collect Samples of An AsteroidThe Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's probe reached the near-earth asteroid Ryugu last year, and that sent back images of the surface. But between Feb. 23, the spacecraft itself from its position 12.4 miles (20 kilometers) above the asteroid's surface, and land on it in order to collect fragments of the asteroid that it eventually will transport back to Earth for study. These may provide clues about how the solar system was formed.
NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft, which is studying the asteroid Bennu, isn't scheduled to attempt a landing and sample gathering until 2020, according to. Manned Space Launches Scheduled to ResumeFor the first time in eight years, a space launch from U.S. Soil is scheduled to carry NASA astronauts into space aboard SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft to the International Space Station. (An unmanned test of the spacecraft, originally scheduled for Jan.
17, into February.) Boeing also is into space this year. July 2: Total Solar Eclipse in Southern HemisphereThis will be the first total solar eclipse since the, and in contrast to that event, that you'll have to to see ig. It'll happen near sunset on July 2, and the best locations for viewing will be in central Chile and Argentina, or from a ship in the Pacific Ocean. 12-13: Perseids Meteor Shower PeaksMeteor fanciers should plan on being out in the backyard on these nights, when the Perseids — debris from the comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle — flash across the sky. They got their name because they appear to originate from a spot in the sky near the constellation Perseus, according to the.
October-November: CHEOPS Probe Will Study ExoplanetsThe European Space Agency's ), scheduled for launch between Oct. 14, will be the first mission designed to measure light from planets orbiting stars outside our solar system. Skran thinks that exoplanet research could stimulate interest in human colonization. 'One of the things that dampened space exploration was when people realized that Venus was hell, and Mars was a desert,' he says.
'But it's becoming clear that there are a lot of planets out there, and a lot are Earth-like.' 13-14: Geminids Meteor Shower PeaksThis is the most spectacular event of the year for meteor watchers, with a strong shower of objects that are often bright. The moon will be 96 percent full that night, though, which may obscure the may obscure the show a bit.