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Space News

Location American Space News for 17 July 2019
Watch Space Camp Launch Nearly 5,000 Model Rockets for Apollo 11 (and Seek a World Record) To celebrate the 50th anniversary of NASA's Apollo 11 launch to the moon Tuesday (July 16), the U.S. Space and Rocket Center launched nearly 5,000 model rockets.
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A unique, low-cost, and crowd-scream-sourced experiment has proven what all sci-fi movie fans know is true: In space, no one can hear you scream.” That line is the tag line from the famous 1979 movie Alien, of course. ...
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Spacecom's Amos-17 launching in August • OneWeb hits satellite testing milestones • Telebras cleared to issue new stock OneWeb says its first six satellites are all healthy and have each demonstrated live video streaming in 1080 resolution from low Earth orbit. SpaceNews.com
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Police arrest Hawaiian protesters trying to block telescope Police arrested elderly protesters, some using wheelchairs and canes, as they blocked a road Wednesday to Hawaii's highest peak to try to stop construction of a giant telescope on land some Native Hawaiians consider sacr...
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SpaceX Test-Fires 'Starhopper' Starship Prototype, Creates Big Fireball The Tuesday (July 16) test, which lasted approximately 5 seconds, seemed to be successful despite bright orange flames engulfing the vehicle after its single Raptor engine fired.
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The International Space Station is set to receive a few more crewmembers on Saturday followed by a new docking port next Tuesday....
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Op-ed | The next space age

Space News - 18 Jul 2019 00:00
Op-ed | The next space age Twenty-five years after Apollo 11, Arthur C. Clarke outlined for SpaceNews an exploration vision marked by reusable launch vehicles and space elevators. This piece first appeared in our July 18-24, 1994 issue. SpaceNews....
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SpaceX has revealed the cause of the accident that took place back in April, attributing it to a leak that took place just prior to the final tactic engine fire test. The post Crew Dragon Exploded Back in April Because o...
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Here's What We Thought We Knew About the Moon Before Apollo 11 Scientists had some major misconceptions about the moon before the Apollo missions.
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Here's What Neil Armstrong Saw As He Landed Apollo 11's Eagle on the Moon Now you can see what Neil Armstrong saw as he landed the Apollo 11 lunar module, known as the Eagle, on the surface of the moon on July 20, 1969.
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Michael Collins' Views on Apollo 11, From 60 Miles Up and 50 Years On Fifty years later, Michael Collins only has vague recollections of where he was when he first saw humans land on the moon.
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Momentus raises $25.5 million for in-space shuttle Momentus, an in-space transportation startup, has raised nearly $34 million in funding to date for its Vigoride and Vigoride Extended vehicles to move small satellites from one orbit to another. SpaceNews.com
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Earth's Shining Upper Atmosphere -- From the Apollo Era to the Present NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center:
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Flying the final approach to Tranquility Base

Phys.org - 17 Jul 2019 18:20
Flying the final approach to Tranquility Base As the Apollo 11 lunar module approached the Moon's surface for the first manned landing, commander Neil Armstrong switched off the autopilot and flew the spacecraft manually to a landing.
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Diamond shines its light on moon rocks from Apollo missions, Martian meteorites and Vesta Nearly 50 years after our first steps on the moon, samples from the Apollo missions, Mars and Vesta still have a lot to tell us about the formation of the planets and the Earth's volcanoes, and Diamond Light Source is he...
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Op-ed | What will be different next time we go to the moon Half a century after Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took their first "small steps," we're going back with all the wonders of 21st century technology, but this time, things will be different. SpaceNews.com
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What Artemis will teach us about living, working on the moon Humans have not had much of an opportunity to work on the moon. The 12 Apollo astronauts who got to explore its surface clocked in 80 hours in total of discovery time. From their brief encounters, and from extensive anal...
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Why the moon is such a cratered place

Phys.org - 17 Jul 2019 17:50
Why the moon is such a cratered place Look up on a clear night and you can see some circular formations on the face of our lunar neighbour. These are impact craters, circular depressions found on planetary surfaces.
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Opinion: Young Americans deserve a 21st-century moonshot to Mars "Hidden Figures" and "First Man" were arguably the most inspirational space-themed movies of the last several years. Both, though, had to reach back to the glory days of John Glenn and Neil Armstrong. The faces of my chi...
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New measurement of universe's expansion rate is 'stuck in the middle' A team of collaborators from Carnegie and the University of Chicago used red giant stars that were observed by the Hubble Space Telescope to make an entirely new measurement of how fast the universe is expanding, throwin...
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ESA confirms asteroid will miss Earth in 2019

Phys.org - 17 Jul 2019 16:06
ESA confirms asteroid will miss Earth in 2019 Asteroid 2006 QV89, a small object 20 to 50 metres in diameter, was in the news lately because of a very small, one-in-7000 chance of impact with Earth on 9 September 2019.
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ESA identifies demand for satellites around the moon Dozens of very different commercial and institutional missions to the moon are planned for the coming decades.
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