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Space News

Location American Space News for 18 May 2016
Full-scale production of plutonium-238 still years away The United States has begun manufacturing nuclear spacecraft fuel for the first time in a generation, but full production of the stuff is still seven years or so away. SpaceNews.com
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Mark and Scott Kelly Joining 'Crew' of Astronauts with Schools Named for Them On Thursday (May 19), Pleasantdale Elementary School will be formally renamed in honor of Mark and Scott Kelly, former NASA astronauts who attended the school while growing up in West Orange, New Jersey.
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COMSATCOM Pathfinder funds withheld in Senate draft defense bill A defense authorization bill that cleared a U.S. Senate panel last week would prohibit the Air Force from spending $30 million this year to experiment with new ways of buying commercial satellite communications bandwidth...
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Video: Spacewalk to catwalk

Phys.org - 18 May 2016 11:37
ESA and the Science Museum in London are working with five leading fashion schools around Europe to design clothes for the space age with their 'Couture in Orbit' project.
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The Earth's albedo, or reflectance, is a fundamental atmospheric parameter having deep implications for temperature and climate change. For that reason, experiments have been performed to monitor it over the past two dec...
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A new wave of Cubesats was shot into space today for a wide variety of Earth observations and communications research. The crew also explored life science and worked on high-flying plumbing tasks....
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30 km Wide Asteroid Impacted Australia 3.4 Billion Years Ago New evidence found in northwestern Australia suggests that a massive asteroid, 20 to 30 kilometres in diameter, struck Earth about 3.5 billion years ago. This impact would have dwarfed anything experienced by humans, and...
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Stellar mystery deepens

Phys.org - 18 May 2016 21:37
Stellar mystery deepens Using recent advancements in Australian telescope technology, a Monash University-led research team has made an unexpected discovery that a large group of stars are dying prematurely, challenging our accepted view of ste...
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Maritime microsat derailed by sanctions back on track for launch The Canadian government will put a maritime monitoring microsatellite into orbit in June on an Indian rocket, two years after it scuttled an earlier launch because of its sanctions against Russia. SpaceNews.com
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Friendly Giants Have Cozy Habitable Zones Too

Universe Today - 18 May 2016 20:45
Friendly Giants Have Cozy Habitable Zones Too It is an well-known fact that all stars have a lifespan. This begins with their formation, then continues through their Main Sequence phase (which constitutes the majority of their life) before ending in death. In most c...
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Stellar cannibalism transforms star into brown dwarf

e! Science News - 18 May 2016 20:37
Astronomers have detected a sub-stellar object that used to be a star, after being consumed by its white dwarf companion.
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NASA Invites Media, Social Media to June Deep Space Rocket Booster Test Media and social media followers are invited to watch as NASA tests the largest, most powerful booster in the world for the agency's new deep space rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS), on June 28 at Orbital ATK Aerospa...
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Jupiter blasted by 6.5 fireball impacts per year on average Jupiter is hit by an average of 6.5 objects per year that create impacts large enough to be visible from Earth, according to preliminary results from a worldwide campaign by amateur astronomers to observe the giant plane...
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DigitalGlobe: No clarity on 2013 request to NOAA to sell high-res imagery DigitalGlobe leaders say they are still waiting on approval from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to sell higher-resolution infrared imagery data from their Worldview-3 satellite nearly three years aft...
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NRO planning shift to smaller satellites, new ground system ORLANDO, Florida – The director of the National Reconnaissance Office, which builds and operates the country's spy satellites, said May 18 that the intelligence agency, known for its gigantic satellites, intends to inc...
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Send Astronauts to Mars to Find Evidence of Life, NASA's Top Scientist Says The chances are good that microbial life existed on Mars long ago, and sending astronauts to the Red Planet is the best way to find the evidence, NASA Chief Scientist Ellen Stofan said.
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Can We Talk to E.T.? Workshop Mulls Alien Intelligence Scientists are gathering in Puerto Rico today (May 18) to discuss the many forms alien intelligence could take, during a daylong workshop called "The Intelligence of SETI: Cognition and Communication in Extraterrestrial ...
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Elementary School Built Cubesat Launched From Space Station | Video St. Thomas More Cathedral School students built the STMSat-1 cubesat to photograph Earth and transmit the imagery to remote ground stations in the United States.
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NASA super pressure balloon begins globetrotting journey NASA successfully launched a super pressure balloon (SPB) from Wanaka Airport, New Zealand, at 11:35 a.m. Tuesday, May 17, 2016 (7:35 p.m. EDT Monday, May 16, 2016) on a potentially record-breaking, around-the-world test...
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Imagine if we sent up a visible signal that could eventually be seen across the entire universe. Imagine if another civilization did the same. Photonics advances allow us to be seen across the universe, with major implic...
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I love optical illusions, especially ones that really twist your brain around. I saw one recently that really had me going for a minute. And it's not so much the illusion itself that really gets me, but my own brain's re...
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Mystery of Martian Methane Deepens

Scientific American - 18 May 2016 16:45
Mystery of Martian Methane Deepens After two years on the Red Planet, NASA's Curiosity rover rules out a seasonal explanation for an observed methane spike --
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