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Space News

Location American Space News for 24 October 2017
Franco-German relationships key for strong Europe in space The relationships between France and Germany are key for the success of Europe in the increasingly competitive global space sector, Jean Pascal Le Franc, the French space agency CNES's director of programming, internatio...
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Stronger tests of Einstein's theory of general relativity with binary neutron stars Einstein's theory of general relativity has withstood 100 years of experimental scrutiny. However, these tests do not constrain how well the very strong gravitational fields produced by merging neutron stars obey this th...
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Turkish court gives 13 life sentences to 2016 coup participants that attacked Turksat Thirteen out of seventeen people accused by Turkey's government of attempting to cut off Turksat's satellite communications during last year's coup attempt have received "aggravated life sentences" for their actions, Tur...
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NASA Awards Multiple Construction Contracts

NASA Breaking news - 24 Oct 2017 23:35
NASA Awards Multiple Construction Contracts NASA has awarded 24 Multiple Award Construction Contract Two (MACC-II) contracts to 20 small businesses and four under full and open competition to large firms for general construction services at NASA's Stennis Space Ce...
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Hosts: Fraser Cain (universetoday.com / @fcain) Dr. Paul M. Sutter (pmsutter.com / @PaulMattSutter) Dr. Kimberly Cartier (KimberlyCartier.org / @AstroKimCartier ) Dr. Morgan Rehnberg (MorganRehnberg.com / @MorganRehnberg...
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You Can Now Use Google Maps to Explore the Solar System

Universe Today - 24 Oct 2017 22:42
You Can Now Use Google Maps to Explore the Solar System Thanks to the over 500,000 pictures taken by the Cassini mission, Google Maps has created a mapping tool that allows users to virtually explore the Solar System. The post You Can Now Use Google Maps to Explore the Solar ...
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Carnival of Space #532

Universe Today - 24 Oct 2017 22:28
It’s that time again! This week's Carnival of Space is hosted by Pamela Hoffman at the Everyday Spacer blog.
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Satlets: crazy idea or ingenious concept? This week's test on ISS will offer clues On Oct. 25, astronauts onboard the International Space Station plan to link NovaWurks' spacecraft building blocks in the first on-orbit test of a radically new approach to satellite design and manufacturing. SpaceNews.co...
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"The first exomoons that we find will be large - maybe Mars- or even Earth-sized - and therefore intrinsically more likely to be habitable than small moons," said René Heller, at the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics i...
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Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown and, Oxford University's Nick Bostrom, one of the world's leading philosophers, believes that within the next 50 or 100 years, an AI might know more than the entire population of the planet...
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India Gears Up for Second Moon Mission

Scientific American - 24 Oct 2017 20:00
India Gears Up for Second Moon Mission The Chandrayaan-2 orbiter, lander and rover will track how lunar dust might scupper settlement --
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Mobile upgrade

ESA - 24 Oct 2017 19:30
Mobile upgrade Human spaceflight and robotic exploration image of the week: ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli checking his hands-free aid
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Spots on supergiant star drive spirals in stellar wind A Canadian-led international team of astronomers recently discovered that spots on the surface of a supergiant star are driving huge spiral structures in its stellar wind. Their results are published in a recent edition ...
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Q&A | Airbus' Oliver Juckenhöfel gung-ho on Deep Space Gateway Airbus, as Juckenhöfel sees it, would be an indispensable contributor to the Deep Space Gateway, assuming it moves from concept to a bona fide program with European Space Agency involvement. SpaceNews.com
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Juno probe discovers surprising activity in Jupiter's interior NASA's Juno spacecraft has plumbed the depths of Jupiter, revealing that the planet's famous bands of swirling winds extend thousands of kilometres down. The work is the sharpest glimpse yet into Jupiter's interior.
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Coated mirrors achieve record-setting far ultraviolet reflectance levels In 2016, scientists at Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) produced mirrors with the highest reflectance ever reported in the farultraviolet (FUV) spectral range (100-200 nm). To develop these mirrors, the team developed ...
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Project Blue and the quest to photograph exoplanets The world's collective imagination to answer the age-old question, "Are we alone," has been reignited now that we understand exoplanets - planets in orbit around stars other than Earth's Sun - are not uncommon. There's a...
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Solar-Sail Technology Gets Its Day in the Sun

Scientific American - 24 Oct 2017 17:00
Solar-Sail Technology Gets Its Day in the Sun The privately funded LightSail 2 spacecraft will make a test flight in Earth orbit --
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Formation of magma oceans on exoplanet

Phys.org - 24 Oct 2017 16:54
Formation of magma oceans on exoplanet Induction heating can completely change the energy budget of an exoplanet and even melt its interior. In a study published by Nature Astronomy an international team led by the Space Research Institute of the Austrian Aca...
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Thruster for Mars mission breaks records

Phys.org - 24 Oct 2017 16:40
Thruster for Mars mission breaks records An advanced space engine in the running to propel humans to Mars has broken the records for operating current, power and thrust for a device of its kind, known as a Hall thruster.
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Image: The grace of Saturn

Phys.org - 24 Oct 2017 16:00
Image: The grace of Saturn Saturn's graceful lanes of orbiting ice--its iconic rings--wind their way around the planet to pass beyond the horizon in this view from NASA's Cassini spacecraft. And diminutive Pandora, scarcely larger than a pixel her...
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Astronomers observe unusual outburst activity of binary star AG Draconis European astronomers have spotted an unusual outburst activity of a binary star system known as AG Draconis. New observations reveal that the recent changes of brightness of this star are slightly different than the chan...
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