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Space News

Location American Space News for 18 December 2013
The week before Christmas will be full of spacewalk preparations for Expedition 38 as they get ready to remove and replace a malfunctioning pump aboard the International Space Station. NASA astronauts Rick Mastracchio an...
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Winter Solstice: The Sun Stands Still on Saturday This coming Saturday (Dec. 21) marks one of the four major way stations on the Earth's annual journey around the sun. It will be the winter solstice in the Northern Hemisphere, and the summer solstice for folks in the so...
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Final James Webb Space Telescope mirrors arrive at NASA The final three of 18 primary mirrors for NASA's James Webb Space Telescope arrived at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., for integration prior to a scheduled launch in 2018.
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A fierce critic of China, Wolf will have spent 34 years on the Hill by the time he steps down.
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Fireball Burns Bright As The Moon Over Tennessee | Video A piece of an asteroid likely from the asteroid belt burned up over Tennessee December 17th. The object was around 20 inches across and weighing approximately 400 lbs.
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The nearby star Fomalhaut A hosts the most famous planetary system outside our own solar system, containing both an exoplanet and a spectacular ring of comets....
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Astronomers affiliated with the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS) have discovered two of the brightest and most distant supernovae ever recorded, 10 billion light-years away and a hundred times more luminous than a normal s...
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Is the Solar System Really a Vortex?

Universe Today - 18 Dec 2013 22:07
The short answer? No. Not in the way that a popular animated gif insinuates, at least. If you’re even a casual space fan you may have seen a viral gif animation showing our solar system traveling through space, the mot...
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Powerful ancient explosions explain new class of supernovae Astronomers affiliated with the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS) have discovered two of the brightest and most distant supernovae ever recorded, 10 billion light-years away and a hundred times more luminous than a normal s...
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For Our Future in Space, China Must Aim Further Than the Moon (Op-Ed) Had the momentum of the 1960s been maintained over the next 40 years, there would be footprints on Mars by now. But after Apollo, the political impetus for manned spaceflight was lost.
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Scientists, start your engines. The next few weeks will see a flurry of proposals come for the European Space Agency’s first rover mission on the Red Planet in 2018. The ExoMars mission will see a lander and rover touc...
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Moon's Newest Crater Revealed in Crash-Site Photo When a space rock slammed into the moon earlier this year, it tore a huge new hole in the already pockmarked lunar surface. New images from a NASA spacecraft reveal that this crater stretches 59 feet (18 meters) across.
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DARPA Robotics Challenge: 8 Tricky Tasks

SPACE.com - 18 Dec 2013 20:23
DARPA Robotics Challenge: 8 Tricky Tasks This week, 17 teams and their robot creations will descend on Florida to compete in an ambitious robotics competition. The contest is designed to foster the development of robots that could one day work alongside humans.
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It's all in your head: NASA investigates techniques for measuring intracranial pressure Do you ever turn your world upside down by standing on your head? After a few minutes you might feel some pressure in your face and around your skull. This is because headstands invert the body's blood flow, pushing more...
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'Chorus Waves' Accelerate Electrons in Earth's Radiation Belts, New Study Suggests Waves in the plasma trailing behind Earth are responsible for making the northern lights dance in the sky, but according to new research, they also create another cosmic wonder.
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Scientists solve a decades-old mystery in the Earth's upper atmosphere New research published in the journal Nature resolves decades of scientific controversy over the origin of the extremely energetic particles known as ultra-relativistic electrons in the Earth's near-space environment and...
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This Week's Planetary Radio: Reporting Big News from AGU

Planetary Society - 18 Dec 2013 19:43
Major revelations about our solar system at last week's AGU conference came from near and far. Emily Lakdawalla and Casey Dreier share a few, while Bill Nye salutes China's Chang'e 3 lunar lander and rover.
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Space History Photo: Robert Springer Dons EMU for Training An astronaut prepares for STS-38 by training underwater for EVAs.
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Massive stars mark out Milky Way's 'missing' arms

e! Science News - 18 Dec 2013 19:32
A 12-year study of massive stars has reaffirmed that our Galaxy has four spiral arms, following years of debate sparked by images taken by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope that only showed two arms.
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An Updated Mars Exploration Family Portrait

Planetary Society - 18 Dec 2013 19:16
No description available
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Space Shuttle Shuffle: Houston's Mock Orbiter Moved for New 2015 Attraction Space shuttle Independence has a new parking spot. Space Center Houston's full-size space shuttle replica embarked on a short trip on Tuesday (Dec. 17) as it was moved from its outdoor display location of more than a yea...
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What Is The Big Rip?

Universe Today - 18 Dec 2013 18:32
Dr. Thad Szabo is a professor of physics and astronomy at Cerritos College. He’s also a regular contributor to many of our projects, like the Virtual Star Party and the Weekly Space Hangout. Thad has an encyclopedic kn...
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