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Space News

Location American Space News for 8 May 2019
Upcoming gravitational-wave observatories both on Earth and in space could soon help solve some of the greatest mysteries in science.
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Algae 'Bioreactor' on Space Station Could Make Oxygen, Food for Astronauts Astronauts on the International Space Station will begin testing an innovative algae-powered bioreactor to assess its feasibility for future long-duration space missions.
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Even If We Can Stop a Dangerous Asteroid, Being Human May Mean We Don't Succeed To err is human, and that saying doesn't magically become moot just because the stakes are high.
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Boeing to introduce flat satellite antenna to bring high-speed broadband to military aircraft The target market for the phased array antenna are militarized Boeing jets like the Navy's P-8 surveillance aircraft and the KC-46 aerial refueling tanker. SpaceNews.com
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SpaceX to Launch 'Dozens' of Starlink Satellites Next Week, More to Follow SpaceX's first launch to carry a large number of Starlink broadband satellites is scheduled for May 15, according to a company executive.
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The Aral Sea Drying Out. This NASA Time-Lapse Video Shows It from Space The ongoing collapse of the Aral Sea ecosystem, located between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, shows up clearly in a video provided by NASA.
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Congressional report: Space Force would cost billions more than DoD estimated CBO: A space service under the Air Force would add up to $1.3 billion a year in costs SpaceNews.com
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OneWeb, Intellian partner on terminals • Telesat demos LEO backhaul • Atlas to provide grounds comms for PlanetiQ constellation OneWeb has partnered with antenna maker Intellian to provide communications terminals for its low Earth orbit broadband constellation. SpaceNews.com
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Whirling 'Collapsar' Stars Gave Universe Its Gold Most of the universe's gold, uranium and other heavy elements are generated from rapidly whirling collapsing stars, a new study finds.
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'Agile software' to replace troubled JMS

Space News - 8 May 2019 22:36
'Agile software' to replace troubled JMS A troubled effort by the Air Force Space Command to modernize the system that tracks and catalogs space objects is pivoting in a new direction. SpaceNews.com
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Ancient Neutron-Star Crash Made Enough Gold and Uranium to Fill Earth's Oceans Enough gold, uranium and other heavy elements about equal in mass to all of Earth's oceans likely came to the solar system from the collision of two neutron stars billions of years ago.
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Japan's First Private Rocket Flies to Space

Universe Today - 8 May 2019 21:16
Have you heard of Interstellar Technologies? They’re the latest private company to launch their own rocket into space. They’re a Japanese company, and like other private space companies, their stated goal is to lower...
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New Clues About How Ancient Galaxies Lit up the Universe NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope:
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Watch Egyptian Desert Transform As Crop Circles Sprout in Time-Lapse Video A new time-lapse video shows hundreds of dark crop circles springing up in the Egyptian desert. It uses a series of satellite images dating back to 1998.
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NASA Is Developing 'Soft Robots' to Help Explore Other Worlds Think robots are all square corners and rigid parts? Think again. Two interns at NASA are part of a larger group working on "soft robots" that could be used for exploring worlds beyond Earth.
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Jets and winds from galaxy cores appear to share a common cause Astronomers have a rough understanding of how galaxies emit jets from their cores. Galaxy cores also blow out winds of ionized gas, for which researchers lack a general explanation. SRON astronomers have now found a corr...
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Image: Anchor antenna

Phys.org - 8 May 2019 17:46
Image: Anchor antenna This patch antenna under test at ESA's technical heart is designed to maintain a radio link between the two satellites making up the Proba-3 mission, allowing the pair to fly in formation to maintain an artificial eclips...
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Exobiology in a box

Phys.org - 8 May 2019 15:42
Exobiology in a box The International Space Station is the platform to study a variety of fields without gravity getting in the way. A new experiment is furthering the Station's capabilities for investigating exobiology, or the study of lif...
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Explosions of universe's first stars spewed powerful jets Several hundred million years after the Big Bang, the very first stars flared into the universe as massively bright accumulations of hydrogen and helium gas. Within the cores of these first stars, extreme, thermonuclear ...
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Scientists investigate dwarf planet's ring

Phys.org - 8 May 2019 15:39
Scientists investigate dwarf planet's ring Discovered in 2004, Haumea is a dwarf planet located beyond Pluto's orbit in a region of the solar system called the Kuiper Belt. Pluto was demoted from the category of fully fledged planets in 2006 because of the discov...
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Tissue chip headed to International Space Station for osteoarthritis study On May 4, a National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)-supported tissue-chip system with direct clinical applications to health conditions here on Earth was launched on the SpaceX CRS 17/Falcon 9 rocket...
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GEO smallsats emerging as a best-of-both-worlds approach When Swedish broadband service provider Ovzon began shopping around for a small communications satellite that would work in geostationary orbit, the designs that satellite manufacturers trotted out weren't exactly "small...
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