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Space News

Location American Space News for 28 July 2021
Rocket tanks of carbon fibre reinforced plastic proven possible Future rockets could fly with tanks made of lightweight carbon fibre reinforced plastic thanks to ground-breaking research carried out within ESA's Future Launchers Preparatory Programme.
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Rocket tanks of carbon-fiber-reinforced plastic are proven possible Future rockets could fly with tanks made of lightweight carbon fiber reinforced plastic thanks to ground-breaking research carried out within ESA's Future Launchers Preparatory Program.
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A New Plan to Search for Extraterrestrial Artifacts at Earth and Across the Solar System Professor Avi Loeb has announced a new project that will search for 'Oumuamua-like objects in our Solar System, which could be artifacts of extraterrestrial spacecraft The post A New Plan to Search for Extraterrestrial A...
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Space Force sees 'advantages and opportunities' in nuclear-powered space missions Space vehicles powered by small nuclear reactors could be used for military missions in deep space, the vice chief of the U.S. Space Force said July 28. SpaceNews
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No life will survive the death of the sun -- but new life could be born after, new research suggests When Earth's sun grows into a red giant 5 billion years from now, solar wind will shred our planet's magnetic field to bits.
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China launches classified satellites, tests landing nose cone with parachute China sent three Yaogan 30 series satellites into orbit and used the launch to test controlling the rocket's falling nose cone with a parachute.
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R3-IoT gets funding for satellite-enabled sensor connectivity solutions Scottish startup R3-IoT is expanding to North America after raising early funds for connecting sensors and devices with satellite-enabled solutions. SpaceNews
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A hot and dry Jupiter: SPIRou reveals the atmosphere of the exoplanet Tau Boötis b Using the SPIRou spectropolarimeter on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope in Hawaii, a team led by Stefan Pelletier, a PhD student at Université de Montréal's Institute for Research on Exoplanets (iREx), studied the at...
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How do 'Tatooine' planets survive with 2 suns?

SPACE.com - 28 Jul 2021 18:30
How do 'Tatooine' planets survive with 2 suns? It's hard for an exoplanet to keep itself together in the neighborhood of two parent stars.
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Scientists capture most-detailed radio image of Andromeda galaxy to date Scientists have published a new, detailed radio image of the Andromeda galaxy--the Milky Way's sister galaxy--which will allow them to identify and study the regions of Andromeda where new stars are born.
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First detection of light from behind a black hole Watching X-rays flung out into the universe by the supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy 800 million light-years away, Stanford University astrophysicist Dan Wilkins noticed an intriguing pattern. He observed...
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XMM-Newton sees light echo from behind a black hole Image: For the first time, astronomers have seen light coming from behind a black hole. Using ESA's XMM-Newton and NASA's NuSTAR space telescopes, an international team of scientists led by Dan Wilkins of Stanford Univer...
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Black holes warp the universe into a grotesque hall of mirrors If you were to place a galaxy behind the black hole and then look off to the side, you'd see a distorted image of the galaxy. Here's why.
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Magnetic fields implicated in the mysterious midlife crisis of stars Middle-aged stars can experience their own kind of midlife crisis, experiencing dramatic breaks in their activity and rotation rates at about the same age as our Sun, according to new research published today in Monthly ...
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Upgrades to NASA's space communications infrastructure pave the way to higher data rates The ability to transmit and receive data is crucial in space exploration. Spacecraft need robust networking capabilities to send data--including large files like photos and videos--captured by onboard instruments to Eart...
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Magnetic 'balding' of black holes saves general relativity prediction Black holes aren't what they eat. Einstein's general relativity predicts that no matter what a black hole consumes, its external properties depend only on its mass, rotation and electric charge. All other details about i...
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Will AI leave human astronomers in the stardust? Machine learning is coming for astronomy. But that doesn't mean astronomers and citizen scientists are obsolete. In fact, it may mean exactly the opposite.
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NASA Celebrates National Intern Day 2021

NASA Breaking news - 28 Jul 2021 15:48
NASA Celebrates National Intern Day 2021 NASA will host a variety of events and interactive opportunities celebrating the agency's interns and their contributions to its missions in recognition of National Intern Day, held this year on Thursday, July 29.
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Rocket Lab will launch a US Space Force experimental satellite Thursday: Watch live The U.S. Space Force plans to launch an experimental research and development satellite to low Earth orbit early tomorrow (July 29), and you can watch the action live.
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First test of Europe's new space brain

Phys.org - 28 Jul 2021 15:30
First test of Europe's new space brain ESA has successfully operated a spacecraft with Europe's next-generation mission control system for the first time. The powerful software, named the "European Ground System--Common Core' (EGS-CC), will be the 'brain' of ...
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Balloon Mission May Also Work to Detect Quakes on Venus

Universe Today - 28 Jul 2021 15:28
Balloon Mission May Also Work to Detect Quakes on Venus An opportunity in 2019 lays the groundwork for balloon-borne detectors on Venus, working to unravel a key mystery. The post Balloon Mission May Also Work to Detect Quakes on Venus appeared first on Universe Today.
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This is how you get Tatooines. Binary Star Planet Formation One of the less appreciated aspects of George Lucas' vision for Star Wars was that he predicted the existence of planets in binary star systems years before we saw even the first exoplanet. Now a team from the University...
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