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Space News

Location American Space News for 12 December 2022

Life on Proxima b Is Not Having a Good Time

Universe Today - 12 Dec 2022 03:28
Life on Proxima b Is Not Having a Good Time The nearest known exoplanet to Earth, the planet orbiting Proxima Centauri, experiences some pretty nasty space weather from its parent star. But previous work on the space weather of Proxima relied on a lot of assumptio...
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Webb Completes its First About 13 billion years ago, the stars in the Universe’s earliest galaxies sent photons out into space. Some of those photons ended their epic journey on the James Webb Space Telescope’s gold-plated, beryllium mirrors...
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Space station solutions for Artemis missions to the moon and beyond Getting a spacecraft to the moon or Mars is quite literally rocket science. While rocket science helps deliver the spacecraft to the moon, other areas of science are needed to sustain life and enable activities during tr...
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ThinkOrbital designing platform for in-space manufacturing, debris removal ThinkOrbital, a space infrastructure startup, is designing an orbital platform aimed at commercial businesses, military and government agencies that want to manufacture products in orbit or recycle debris. The post Think...
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Supernova algorithm classifies 1,000 dying stars without error A newly developed algorithm is helping astronomers search through massive amounts of data from Zwicky Transient Facility categorizing powerful cosmic explosions called supernovas.
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Technical issue likely to blame for Iranian news channel outage, says Eutelsat A technical issue likely knocked Iran's Press TV temporarily off the air last week, Eutelsat said as the French satellite operator calls on partners to stop broadcasting the news channel to comply with European sanctions...
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Pesky 'leap second' will be abolished by 2035

SPACE.com - 13 Dec 2022 00:00
Pesky 'leap second' will be abolished by 2035 An international group of experts has voted to retire the leap second by 2035.
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Video: MTG-I1 launch sequence

Phys.org - 12 Dec 2022 23:44
Video: MTG-I1 launch sequence The animation shows the full launch sequence for the first Meteosat Third Generation Imager (MTG-I1) satellite. MTG-I1 launches on an Ariane 5 rocket from Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana.
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Black Holes Shouldn't be Able to Merge, but Dozens of Mergers Have Been Detected. How Do They Do It? Who knows what lurks in the hearts of some globular clusters? Astronomers using a collection of gravitational wave observatories found evidence of collections of smaller black holes dancing together as binaries in the he...
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Elusive intergalactic light from orphaned stars studied for 1st time Astronomers have for the first time studied the elusive faint glow emanated by stars that have been ripped from their homes and now exist as cosmic orphans between galaxies.
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Supercomputer climate model is so accurate it predicts the weather patterns seen in the 'blue marble' image of Earth The "blue marble" was one of the most iconic pictures of the Apollo era. Taken by the astronauts of Apollo 17 on their return trip from the moon, the first fully illuminated image of the Earth taken by a person captured ...
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To fight climate change, we could block the sun: A lightweight solar sail could make it feasible Can we build an enormous umbrella to dim the sun? Such a feat would be a megaproject on a scale like no other. It would take at least 400 dedicated rocket launches a year, for ten years (There have been 172 rocket launch...
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NASA confident in SpaceX after raucous Twitter takeover by Elon Musk: report NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said SpaceX CEO Gwynne Shotwell was reassuring during a recent conversation.
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'Unexpected' space traveler defies theories about origin of solar system Researchers from Western have shown that a fireball that originated at the edge of the solar system was likely made of rock, not ice, challenging long-held beliefs about how the solar system was formed.
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Arrakhis: The tiny satellite aiming to reveal what dark matter is made of The European Space Agency (ESA) recently announced a new mission of its science program: a small telescope orbiting the Earth dubbed Arrakhis. But although its name is inspired by the sci-fi novel Dune, it will not be lo...
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Save $61.95 on this Celestron 70AZ telescope kit this holiday If you're looking to bag a bargain this holiday season, then saving over $60 on this Celestron 70AZ telescope kit could be right for you.
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Square-km scope shows African astronomers bright future African astronomers point to a golden age of astronomy on the continent as work starts in South Africa on the world's biggest telescope.
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Tiny satellite tests autonomy in space

Phys.org - 12 Dec 2022 21:11
Tiny satellite tests autonomy in space In May 2022, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched the Transporter-5 mission into orbit. The mission contained a collection of micro and nanosatellites from both industry and government, including one from MIT Lincoln Labora...
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NASA's TV coverage of Artemis I recovery included 'hat tip' to Apollo There was something familiar about the hat Derrol Nail wore as he described NASA's Orion spacecraft splashing down from the moon. Not by accident, his ballcap evoked images of Apollo astronauts.
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UK-led robotic sky scanner reveals its first galactic fingerprint A major telescope upgrade has peered through to the distant universe to reveal the spectra of a pair of galaxies 280 million light years away from Earth.
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A Black Hole has been Burping for 100 Million Years

Universe Today - 12 Dec 2022 20:44
A Black Hole has been Burping for 100 Million Years Black holes are gluttonous behemoths that lurk in the center of galaxies. Almost everybody knows that nothing can escape them, not even light. So when anything made of simple matter gets too close, whether a planet, a st...
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Franco-US satellite set for unprecedented survey of Earth's water A Franco-US satellite is due for launch this week on a mission to survey with unprecedented accuracy nearly all water on Earth's surface for the first time and help scientists investigate its impact on Earth's climate.
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