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Space News

Location American Space News for 16 March 2021

How To Get Rid Of Old Space Station Batteries

SpaceRef - 16 Mar 2021 17:44
An external pallet packed with old nickel-hydrogen batteries is pictured shortly after mission controllers in Houston commanded the Canadarm2 robotic arm to release it into space....
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Spring skywatching: Big Dipper and a 'big' little moon reign in the night sky this month To those who did not head outside to spend time outdoors with the "mighty hunter" and his retinue during January and February because it was simply too cold, the next few weeks should offer more pleasant observing condit...
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US Air Force says it will test bizarre 'hypersonic' weapon this month At some point in the next few weeks, the U.S. plans to fire an extreme, hypersonic weapon. The question remains: What's the point?
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Congressional Democrats urge Biden to cut defense spending A March 16 letter signed by 50 House Democrats urges President Joe Biden to reduce the Pentagon's budget to pay for other activities. SpaceNews
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U.S. Space Force would support commercial services to remove orbital debris Gen. David Thompson said it would make sense for the government to pay companies to clean up space junk if such services existed. SpaceNews
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Russia's Soyuz 2 sports new look inspired by first cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin's rocket For the first time in years, Russia's Soyuz-2 launch vehicle will lift off with a new look, inspired by the rocket that put the world's first human into space.
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LCO Scientists Use Supernovae to Make a New Measurement of the Hubble Constant Las Cumbres Observatory:
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Satellite operators want a seat at the table in space security discussions Companies that operate commercial satellites should participate in the growing conversation about rules of behavior in space, a Eutelsat executive said March 16. SpaceNews
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It Turns Out That the World's Oldest Impact Crater Isn't an Impact Crater In early 2012, an international research team surveying parts of South-Western Greenland announced that they had discovered the oldest impact crater ever discovered on Earth, estimated at 3.3 billion years old. Now, new ...
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Do Supermassive Black Holes Come From Supermassive Stars? The gargantuan supermassive black holes at the center of seemingly every galaxy are among the most fascinating and extreme objects known to modern astronomy and cosmology. With masses well in excess of millions, and some...
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Photo Release: Unrivaled View of Galaxy Messier 106 NOIRLab Press Releases:
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Mars may hide oceans of water beneath its crust, study finds Oceans' worth of water may remain buried in the crust of Mars, and not lost to space as previously long thought, a new study finds.
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Cosmic lens reveals faint radio galaxy

Phys.org - 16 Mar 2021 19:53
Cosmic lens reveals faint radio galaxy Radio telescopes are the world's most sensitive radio receivers, capable of finding extremely faint wisps of radio emission coming from objects at the farthest reaches of the universe. Recently, a team of astronomers use...
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Is there life on Mars today and where?

Phys.org - 16 Mar 2021 19:46
Is there life on Mars today and where? In a comment published today in Nature Astronomy, Dr. Nathalie Cabrol, Director of the Carl Sagan Center for Research at the SETI Institute, challenges assumptions about the possibility of modern life on Mars held by man...
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Ancient light illuminates matter that fuels galaxy formation Using light from the Big Bang, an international team led by Cornell University and the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has begun to unveil the material which fuels galaxy formation.
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Researcher theorizes worlds with underground oceans support, conceal life One of the most profound discoveries in planetary science over the past 25 years is that worlds with oceans beneath layers of rock and ice are common in our solar system. Such worlds include the icy satellites of the gia...
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New footprints from the Gaia-sausage-enceladus merger event Looking up at the starry sky, the deep Universe appears quiet and mysterious. It is hard to imagine that the ancient dwarf galaxy Enceladus violently collided and was torn apart by our own Milky Way Galaxy, leaving behin...
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The mouth of the Mississippi River, emptying into the Gulf of Mexico south of New Orleans, Louisiana, is pictured from the International Space Station as it orbited 262 miles above....
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Dynamic Dunes On Mars

SpaceRef - 16 Mar 2021 17:41
At first glance this captivating scene peering through wispy clouds and down onto a dune field is reminiscent of a satellite view of one of Earth's deserts, but this is in fact a beautiful landscape on Mars....
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Loft Orbital purchases satellite antennas from Anywaves Loft Orbital is buying antennas for an upcoming mission from French provider Anywaves, a deal the companies see as a sign of a growing European ecosystem of space startups. SpaceNews
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Keeping up with Thomas

ESA - 16 Mar 2021 17:16
Keeping up with Thomas Image: ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet will serve as commander of the International Space Station towards the end of his second mission, called Alpha, currently slated to begin on 22 April this year. The announcement was ma...
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China to construct commercial spaceport to support booming space industry China is to establish a commercial spaceport in the coming years to support the rapid growth of private space activities in the country. SpaceNews
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