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Deep Down in Ocean Worlds, it's Difficult to Tell Where the Oceans End and the Rock Begins

By Evan Gough - June 29, 2020 07:26 PM UTC | Planetary Science
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More Evidence that Europa's Oceans Could be Habitable

By Evan Gough - June 29, 2020 05:09 PM UTC | Astrobiology
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Astronaut Drops a Mirror During a Spacewalk. Now There's Another Piece of Space Junk

By Nancy Atkinson - June 29, 2020 03:40 PM UTC | Space Exploration
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The Bare Minimum Number of Martian Settlers? 110

By Evan Gough - June 29, 2020 12:44 PM UTC | Space Exploration
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Canada is Going to be Building Canadarm3 for the Artemis Missions

By Nancy Atkinson - June 29, 2020 12:31 PM UTC | Missions
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A Simulation of Sunsets on Other Worlds: From Venus to Titan

By Matthew Williams - June 27, 2020 05:22 PM UTC | Exoplanets
A new tool from NASA Goddard allows us to witness what a sunset would look like on other bodies in the Solar System, from Venus to Uranus.
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Learning to Live Sustainably on the Red Planet: Habitat Mars

By Matthew Williams - June 26, 2020 10:58 PM UTC | Space Exploration
As the only Mars analog environment in the Southern hemisphere, Habitat Marte is conducting research that will allow humans to live on Mars someday
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Do We Now Understand Why the Moon's Near and Far Sides Look So Dramatically Different?

By Evan Gough - June 26, 2020 06:03 PM UTC | Planetary Science
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Weekly Space Hangout: June 24, 2020 — Elizabeth Howell & Nicholas Booth, The Search for Life on Mars

By nancygraz - June 26, 2020 03:34 PM UTC | Astrobiology
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NASA Changes its Mind. It Will be Using Previously Flown Crew Dragons and Falcon 9

By Matthew Williams - June 26, 2020 03:15 PM UTC | Missions
NASA has announced that starting next year, SpaceX will be able to reuse its Crew Dragon spacecraft and Falcon 9 boosters to send astronauts to the ISS.
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Another Collection of Newly Forming Planetary Systems. This Time from the Gemini Planet Imager

By Evan Gough - June 26, 2020 01:46 PM UTC | Exoplanets
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How an Advanced Civilization Could Exploit a Black Hole for Nearly Limitless Energy

By Evan Gough - June 25, 2020 04:49 PM UTC | Black Holes
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Last Year's Total Solar Eclipse on Earth, Seen From the Moon

By Evan Gough - June 25, 2020 12:36 PM UTC | Planetary Science
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Curiosity Sees Earth and Venus in the Night Skies on Mars

By Andy Tomaswick - June 25, 2020 08:00 AM UTC | Planetary Science
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Calculate the Number of Alien Civilizations in the Milky Way for Yourself.

By Matthew Williams - June 24, 2020 10:48 PM UTC | Astrobiology
A new online tool created by a team of physicists allows users to calculate how many alien civilization could be out there for themselves!
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Amazing View of How Dust Storms Grow on Mars

By Evan Gough - June 24, 2020 08:12 PM UTC | Planetary Science
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New Hubble Photos of Planetary Nebulae

By Evan Gough - June 24, 2020 05:21 PM UTC | Stars
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Astronomers Just Detected Either the Least Massive Black Hole, or a Strange and Massive Neutron Star

By Brian Koberlein - June 24, 2020 04:04 PM UTC | Black Holes
Somewhere around 2.5 solar masses is the line between black holes and neutron stars. Now we've found an object right on the edge.
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Pluto and Other Kuiper Belt Objects Started Out With Water Oceans, and Have Been Slowly Freezing Solid for Billions of Years

By Evan Gough - June 23, 2020 09:10 PM UTC | Planetary Science
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Another Starship Test Ends in an Explosion (Intentionally This Time)

By Matthew Williams - June 23, 2020 07:57 PM UTC | Space Exploration
At their Boca Chica test facility, SpaceX tested another Starship prototype (SN7) to the point of failure, which resulted in another explosive release of cryogenic liquid nitrogen.
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There's no evidence that dark matter interacts with any other force but gravity

By Paul Sutter - June 23, 2020 07:57 PM UTC | Physics
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Planets Form in Just a Few Hundred Thousand Years

By Evan Gough - June 23, 2020 04:42 PM UTC | Exoplanets
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A Repeating Fast Radio Burst Has Been Found. It Flares for 4 Days and then Remains Silent for 12 Days

By Brian Koberlein - June 23, 2020 12:37 PM UTC | Extragalactic
Five hundred million light-years from Earth, there is a deeply unusual object. It is radio silent for 12 days, then erupts in bright radio bursts. We still aren't sure what the object is.
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Comet U6 Lemmon Brightens in July

By David Dickinson - June 23, 2020 12:22 PM UTC | Solar Astronomy
Comet U6 Lemmon promises to be a fine binocular object at dusk.
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If You Could See in X-rays, This is What the Universe Would Look Like

By Nancy Atkinson - June 23, 2020 12:15 PM UTC | Extragalactic
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Antares is a supergiant star that would fill the Solar System beyond Mars, but its atmosphere is 12 times bigger than that

By Paul Sutter - June 22, 2020 07:26 PM UTC | Stars
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A New Search for Evidence of Technological Civilizations in the Milky Way

By Matthew Williams - June 22, 2020 05:35 PM UTC | Milky Way
Scientists from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and University of Rochester have come together (with NASA funding) to launch a new search for advanced alien life!
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Quasars are the Biggest Particle Accelerators in the Universe

By Evan Gough - June 22, 2020 05:29 PM UTC | Physics
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There are Features on Titan That Really Look Like Volcanic Craters

By Matthew Williams - June 21, 2020 05:35 PM UTC | Planetary Science
A new study supported by the Cassini mission shows how the northern polar region of Titan could still be experiencing volcanic activity.
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Planets With Large Oceans are Probably Common in the Milky Way

By Matthew Williams - June 20, 2020 11:27 PM UTC | Exoplanets
A new study by a team of NASA scientists indicates that "ocean worlds," like those in our Solar System, could be very common in our Universe.
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Astronomers Estimate There Are 6 Billion Earth-Like Planets in the Milky Way

By Evan Gough - June 19, 2020 07:31 PM UTC | Exoplanets
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NASA Thinks it's Time to Return to Neptune With its Trident Mission

By Evan Gough - June 19, 2020 04:18 PM UTC | Missions
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Japanese Dark Matter Detector is Seeing a "Surprising Excess of Events"

By Brian Koberlein - June 19, 2020 03:44 PM UTC | Physics
A search for dark matter has found an extra signal in their data that could point toward proof of dark matter.
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Weekly Space Hangout: June 17, 2020 — Dana Backman, Director of NASA Airborne Astronomy Ambassadors

By nancygraz - June 18, 2020 05:33 PM UTC | Site News
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ExoMars Sees the Martian Atmosphere Glowing Green

By Matthew Williams - June 18, 2020 04:44 PM UTC | Planetary Science
ExoMars' Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) recently spotted a green glow in Mars' atmosphere, which is similar to what Earth's atmosphere experiences.
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Catch a Solstice 'Ring of Fire' Annular Solar Eclipse Over Africa and Asia This Weekend

By David Dickinson - June 18, 2020 01:09 PM UTC | Solar Astronomy
Ready for the first solar eclipse of the year? This weekend sees one of the top draw astronomical events for 2020, with an annular solar eclipse spanning eastern Africa and Southern Asia on Sunday, June 21st.
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Searching for the End of the Universe's "Dark Age"

By Matthew Williams - June 17, 2020 07:18 PM UTC | Cosmology
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Why Pulsars Are So Bright

By Evan Gough - June 17, 2020 04:22 PM UTC | Stars
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What Does it Mean to Be a Space Architect?

By Matthew Williams - June 17, 2020 01:32 PM UTC | Space Exploration
In a recent article, space architect Anastasia Prosina explores the concept of space architecture and how it will play a major role in humanity's future.
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Book Review: Atlas of Solar Eclipses 2020 to 2045

By David Dickinson - June 17, 2020 09:34 AM UTC | Solar Astronomy
Anyone who has stood in the shadow of the Moon during totality knows the thrill of a total solar eclipse. There's great new atlas for planning your next great eclipse-chasing adventure, the Atlas of Solar Eclipses 2020 to 2045 by eclipse-chaser and cartographer Michael Zeiler and Michael E. Bakich is an indispensable resource.
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Virgin Orbit's first air-launched rocket launch fails

By Andy Tomaswick - June 17, 2020 12:22 AM UTC | Space Exploration
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Pulsars Confirm One of Einstein's Best Ideas, That Freefall Really Feels Like You're Experiencing a Lack of Gravity

By Matthew Williams - June 16, 2020 08:14 PM UTC | Physics
A team of European researchers observed a pulsar with two orbiting white dwarfs to confirm Einstein's "most fortunate thought."
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Barred Spiral Galaxy NGC 2608, Surrounded by Many Many Other Galaxies

By Evan Gough - June 16, 2020 07:14 PM UTC | Extragalactic
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Newborn Exoplanets can be Completely Stripped of Their Atmosphere by Stars

By Evan Gough - June 16, 2020 06:33 PM UTC | Exoplanets
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Spacecraft was able to measure how long neutrons last before they decay

By Paul Sutter - June 16, 2020 05:47 PM UTC | Physics
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Tiny Cubesat Detects an Exoplanet

By Matthew Williams - June 16, 2020 05:36 PM UTC | Exoplanets
A team of MIT researchers have observed a Super-Earth using a CubeSat, making it the smallest satellite to study an exoplanet.
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New Estimate Calculates There Could be 30 Intelligent Civilizations Communicating Across the Milky Way

By Nancy Atkinson - June 16, 2020 02:38 PM UTC | Milky Way
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New Pictures of Phobos, Seen in the Infrared

By Evan Gough - June 16, 2020 01:20 PM UTC | Planetary Science
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Space Dust Delivered Water to Vesta, Could it Have Done the Same for Earth?

By Evan Gough - June 15, 2020 07:23 PM UTC | Planetary Science
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Hilarious Supercut of Astronauts Falling on the Moon

By Nancy Atkinson - June 15, 2020 05:06 PM UTC | Space Exploration
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