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Space News

Location American Space News for 18 November 2020
Virgin Galactic delays SpaceShipTwo test launch due to COVID restrictions The recent surge of COVID-19 infections has impelled Virgin Galactic to reschedule the third crewed test flight of its VSS Unity space plane, which had been targeted for Nov. 19-23.
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Earth's toughest bacteria can survive unprotected in space for at least a year A remarkable microbe named Deinococcus radiodurans (the name comes from the Greek deinos meaning terrible, kokkos meaning grain or berry, radius meaning radiation, and durare meaning surviving or withstanding) has surviv...
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ULA: Dream Chaser schedule slip not a setback to Vulcan certification ULA said the delay in Dream Chaser's first mission will not prevent Vulcan from getting certified on time for its first national security mission in 2022. SpaceNews
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What Brining Does to Your Holiday Turkey

Discover - 18 Nov 2020 23:05
A food scientist explains why soaking a turkey in a water and salt solution makes it juicier.
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Past Supernovae Could be Written Into Tree Rings

Universe Today - 18 Nov 2020 22:37
Past Supernovae Could be Written Into Tree Rings A new study by CU Boulder geoscientist Robert Brakenridge shows how nearby supernovae could have disrupted Earth's climate in the past The post Past Supernovae Could be Written Into Tree Rings appeared first on Universe ...
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FAA: Commercial space launch regulations 'in final coordination' The revised rules for commercial launch and reentry will be officially posted for public comment in the coming weeks, said Wayne Monteith, the FAA's associate administrator for commercial space transportation. SpaceNews
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Prospects for Life on Venus Fade--But Aren't Dead Yet

Scientific American - 18 Nov 2020 21:00
Prospects for Life on Venus Fade--But Aren't Dead Yet Debate continues over controversial report of phosphine in the planet’s atmosphere, as researchers re-analyze data and find a fainter signal --
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The Future is Here Again

Space News - 18 Nov 2020 20:58
The Future is Here Again Space has become a business, where companies big and small are investing billions of dollars. They are investing in cheaper and more reliable ways to go there and come back. In technologies to survive in places far from ...
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First Dream Chaser mission slips to 2022

Space News - 18 Nov 2020 19:48
First Dream Chaser mission slips to 2022 Sierra Nevada Corporation (SNC) says the first flight of its Dream Chaser spacecraft to the International Space Station is now planned for 2022 after development delays caused by the pandemic. SpaceNews
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Thousands of clay figures, equipped with real weapons, stand guard over the tomb of China's first emperor. How was this army for the afterlife built, and what was its significance?
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The 'Workspace of the future,' vizLab will unlock the secrets of the universe In a refurbished Southern California garage, Carnegie astrophysicists are creating the scientific, virtual reality-enabled workspace of the future where they will unlock the mysteries of the cosmos.
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Astronomers think they've seen a magnetar form for the first time; the collision of two neutron stars Astronomers have seen how two neutron stars created the brightest kilonova ever observed. The post Astronomers think they’ve seen a magnetar form for the first time; the collision of two neutron stars appeared first on...
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Spacewalking astronauts prep for 2021 arrival of Russian lab The International Space Station's two Russian astronauts began spacewalking work Wednesday to prepare for next year's arrival of a long-delayed lab, but had to scrap another chore because of a stubborn bolt.
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There's a Vast Microbial Ecosystem Underneath the Crater that Wiped Out the Dinosaurs How did life arise on Earth? How did it survive the Hadean eon, a time when repeated massive impacts excavated craters thousands of kilometres in diameter into the Earth’s surface? Those impacts turned the Earth into a...
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Ten times more hyper-luminous galaxies observed than stars can produce A team of astronomers led by SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research has observed 10 times more hyper-luminous galaxies in the infrared than stars can produce according to the models. If the theory is correct, it m...
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A record close shave: Asteroid 2020 VT4 just skimmed by Earth Wow. A low-flying space rock set a record last Friday (appropriately, the 13th), when 2020 VT4 passed just under 400 kilometers (250 miles) over the Southern Pacific.
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Swedish space instrument participates in the search for life around Jupiter The Swedish-led satellite instrument Particle Environment Package (PEP) will help researchers at the Swedish Institute of Space Physics (IRF) to understand how three of Jupiter's icy moons are affected by the particles a...
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Astronomers' success: Seven new cosmic masers

Phys.org - 18 Nov 2020 17:56
Astronomers' success: Seven new cosmic masers A group of astronomers from Toruń in Poland have successfully completed a survey of the Milky Way plane. They searched for gas clouds, where there was a maser reinforcement of the OH molecule. They saw seven new sources...
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NASA's Webb Completes Significant Testing Milestone for Deployable Tower NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center:
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ExoMars parachute testing moves forward

Phys.org - 18 Nov 2020 17:47
ExoMars parachute testing moves forward The parachute system that will help deliver the Rosalind Franklin ExoMars rover to Mars has completed the first full-scale high altitude drop test with redesigned elements following two unsuccessful tests last year. Para...
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Looking at solutions

ESA - 18 Nov 2020 17:37
Looking at solutions Image: What resembles a donut or the iris of an eye is actually a liquid cell illuminated from below. Part of the Chemo-Hydrodynamic Patterns and Instabilities (CHYPI) experiment that recently flew on the 73rd ESA parabo...
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Astroscale announces 2021 Soyuz launch of ELSA-d mission Astroscale plans to launch the first commercial active debris removal mission, End-of-Life Services by Astroscale-demonstration in March on a Soyuz rocket operated by GK Launch Services from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhst...
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