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This week, Jud and AJ unravel the recent discoveries of some of the key ingredients for life on Saturn's moon Enceladus and butt heads over whether this is conclusive evidence that aliens exist. They'll explain just how NASA uncovered these secrets within our very solar system and what finding signs of potential alien life could mean for humanity.Additional topics include: The Cassini Spacecraft, Jar Jar Binks, and what Big Soda doesn't want you to know.Click our linktree to support us on all socials!
On this episode, we have our Top 3 space news stories from May to mid-June - and they don't disappoint! All the other space articles we've been gathering will be available in the description here. Vast Space is ambitiously shooting for 2025 to launch their Haven-1 space station module into orbit and have a crew of 4 stay for 30 days in orbit. Who is helping them send their space station up? How is the station going to allow for life support? Artemis 2 will have alot of firsts, including the first person of color, the first woman, and first Canadian to orbit the Moon. But it will also be the first to use Lasers to send HD footage back to Earth and improve how much data can be sent thanks to the O2O technology. Saturn's Moon Enceladus is spewing water into space, but recently a paper was published that shows those plumes contain a key ingredient for the building blocks of life. The benefits from the Cassini Spacecraft continue to this day, and the find of phosphorus in the plumes opens our minds to more possibilities for life in the universe. And points us to a very likely place to look in our own Solar System. So email/DM us todayinspacepodcast@gmail.com / @todayinspacepod Twitter & Instagram / @todayinspace TikTok / /TodayInSpacePodcast on Facebook and let us know your Questions and Thoughts about the episode! SOURCES: https://amp -cnn-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2023/05/09/world/artemis-2-laser-communications-scn/index.html https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/05/vast-says-it-will-launch-its-first-space-station-in-2025-on-a-falcon-9/amp/ https://www.vastspace.com/updates/vast-selects-impulse-space-for-haven-1-space-station-propulsion?new=1 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-05987-9 -------------------------- Here's to building a fantastic future - and continued progress in Space (and humanity)! Spread Love, Spread Science Alex G. Orphanos Timestamps: 00:00 Intro to the podcast - NEW MERCH coming soon 03:16 Vast Space plans to launch a commercial Space Station by 2025 with Falcon 9 & send 4 Astronauts for 30 Days with Crew Dragon 09:49 Manscaped Ad 11:35 Artemis 2 to use LASERS to send HD footage back to Earth and push data comms into the future from radio 17:49 Enceladus is spewing Phosphorous from its underground oceans - another building block for life on a Moon in our Solar System Space News that didn't make out Top 3: https://rnasa.org/2023files/press2023.html https://exterrajsc.com/mars-sample-recovery-helicopters-to-be-designed-by-aerovironment/2023/05/08/ https://www.oodaloop.com/archive/2023/06/03/space-based-power-project-successfully-transmits-power-to-earth-for-first-time/ https://www.nasa.gov/feature/glenn/2023/3d-printed-rocket-launched-using-innovative-nasa-alloy https://interestingengineering.com/innovation/raising-orbit-by-186-miles-water-propulsion https://www-cnbc-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2023/05/17/virgin-orbit-17-million-bankruptcy-bid-for-aircraft-from-stratolaunch.html https://www-forbes-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.forbes.com/sites/gregautry/2023/05/27/lunar-orbital-congestion-ii-economic-and-strategic-drivers/amp/ https://www-cnbc-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2023/06/01/pentagon-awards-spacex-with-ukraine-contract-for-starlink-satellite-internet.html https://arstechnica-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/arstechnica.com/space/2023/06/boeing-stands-down-from-starliner-launch-to-address-recently-found-problems/amp/ https://www.space.com/mars-astronauts-suspended-animation-sound-waves? https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Human_and_Robotic_Exploration/Research/Flying_frying_in_microgravity https://exterrajsc.com/strategic-framework-for-space-diplomacy-released-by-state-department/2023/06/02/ We'd like to thank our sponsors: • Caldera Lab • Manscaped • AG3D Printing Follow us: @todayinspacepod on Instagram/Twitter @todayinspace on TikTok /TodayInSpacePodcast on Facebook Support the podcast: • Get 20% OFF at Caldera Lab - use code SPACE or go to calderalab.com/SPACE • Get 20% OFF @manscaped + Free Shipping with promo code SPACE at MANSCAPED.com! #ad #manscapedpod #sponsored • Buy a 3D printed gift from our shop - ag3dprinting.etsy.com • Get a free quote on your next 3D printing project at ag3d-printing.com • Donate at todayinspace.net #space #rocket #podcast #people #spacex #moon #science #3dprinting #nasa #tothemoon #spacetravel #spaceexploration #aerospace #spacetechnology #engineer #alien #stem #listenable #iss #alienlife #astronomy #astrophysics #starship #rocketpen
Welcome to another episode of The DNA Of Purpose Podcast.For those of you who have been following this podcast for quite some time, you would know that I have been on a mission since day one to unpack purpose from every perspective possible, and 87 episodes in I think it is fair to say that I have done exactly that. Nonetheless, there is one perspective that I have left uncharted until today and one of the reasons for that is because only a handful of human beings have had the privilege of seeing themselves and the world from space or more specifically from Saturn.Today, I am feeling incredibly honoured to interview not only a globally renowned planetary scientist but also an extraordinary human who through both trial and transformation has pathed the way for women all over the world to pursue careers in science and technology. She has worked alongside revolutionary scientists such as Carl Sagan, with whom she collaborated on the world-famous Pale Blue Dot image of Earth taken in 1990, and her name is synonymous with the planet Saturn and the travels thereof the Cassini spacecraft from 2004 to 2017. In 2012 she was named one of the 25 most influential people in space by Time magazine, and this is only one of many accolades.Her name is Carolyn Porco and she is an American planetary scientist who is renowned for exploring the outer Solar System, beginning with her imaging work on the Voyager missions to Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune in the 1980s. She also led the imaging science team on NASA’s Cassini mission in orbit around Saturn. This was a monumental moment for women in science and one for women of influence. The kind that ignites human progress.Carolyn was also the founder of The Day the Earth Smiled,a first-of-its-kind event held in 2013, during which the Cassini spacecraft slipped into Saturn's shadow and turned to image the planet, seven of its moons, its main rings -- and, in the background, our home planet, Earth, while people the world over celebrated. This image was not only a personal reprise of the original Pale Blue Dot, which she dedicated to her colleague Sagan [https://youtu.be/fzdkzkfGnko], but one that enabled all of humanity to see ourselves through the vastness of space, feel connected to each other and all of life on Earth, and appreciate the significance of our own existence and the place to which we belong.In today's conversation, Carolyn and I traverse through so many layers of understanding the universe from a scientific perspective but also understanding ourselves at a deeper level through the eyes of space. Carolyn is a scientist first, and thus honours her research as sacred, yet at the same time, her insights and wisdom are full of soul. And while it may seem obvious to think a woman who has spent a lifetime observing the wonder of space would be the first to advocate human inhabitants in space, the exact opposite is true. In her words when it comes to Earth, there is no planet B. We must care for our home.So without further delay, I am beyond privileged to introduce you to today's guests. The one and only Carolyn Porco.Social Media:Twitter - @carolynporcoFacebook: carolynporcoWebsites:http://carolynporco.comhttp://ciclops.orgIf you would like updates on upcoming episodes as they are released in addition to good news posts from the world of science and technology please follow along at our instagram page which @dnaofpurposepodcast or sign up to our newsletter at futurecrunch.com. You can also download our brand new E-book on the Great Transformation. https://futurecrun.ch/the-great-transformation-ebook
March 11, 2020: What Is Coronavirus (COVID19) | The Cassini Spacecraft
Everyday Einstein's Quick and Dirty Tips for Making Sense of Science
On September 15th, NASA will send the Cassini spacecraft hurtling toward Saturn at more than 70,000 miles per hour relative to the Earth. Cassini will continue its descent into the giant gas world until the spacecraft disintegrates in Saturn’s atmosphere and is thus destroyed, taking measurements and sending data back to Earth until the very end. Here are 6 reasons to celebrate Cassini as it goes out in a blaze of glory. Read the transcript at http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/node/11881 Check out all the Quick and Dirty Tips shows: www.quickanddirtytips.com/podcasts FOLLOW EVERYDAY EINSTEIN Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/qdteinstein Twitter: https://twitter.com/qdteinstein
The Cassini mission's epic 13-year exploration of Saturn is coming to a close.
In this episode of the Dudes and Beer Podcast host Christopher Jordan is joined by Steven Bishop, Julie Connally and special guest Christopher J. Oglesby of PrettyCoolArt.com to discuss recent scientific discoveries and their possible impact on humanity. What do the new announcements from NASA that information from the Cassini Spacecraft shows there is actually an ocean that could support life under the ice surface of Saturn's moon Enceladus mean to the future of space travel? Could this possibly be a stop on the way to intergalactic travel? What are some of the possibilities of life on the icy moon and other places in the universe…are we truly alone? What are some of the dangers and possible business opportunities regarding Space Junk? What will it take for man to finally travel among the stars? Will it take the adoption of new food sources that can be easily grown such as rabbits, rats and insects? How does artificial intelligence play into the equation of space travel and life on Earth as we know it? Are the new Sex-bots being released just the beginning of normalization of the average person to A.I. and are people going to accept or reject the concept? Will robots gain rights and be seen the same as people? Will we live in a dystopian future full of nano grey ooze? What will the ultimate fate of mankind be if robot overlords take over the Earth? These questions and more explored in this fascinating episode of the Dudes and Beer Podcast.
In this special first ever LIVE episode of Thinking Deeply with Dudes and Beer host Christopher Jordan sits down to discuss headlines in the Science news, from gravitational waves and cosmic noises being heard and recorded to the last look at the Saturn System by the Cassini Spacecraft and the new report revealing that evidence of people has been found in America that is confirmed to be 130,000 years old...how does this change science as we know It? These questions and more in this volume of Thinking Deeply with Dudes and Beer
Dr. Marcia Burton stops by the show to talk about radio waves from Saturn, as measured by the Cassini Spacecraft. We listen to some audio clips, and she explains why it is so difficult to measure the length of Saturn’s day.
Dr. Linda Spilker discusses the Cassini Spacecraft; what it looks like, what it has discovered, and plans for the conclusion of the mission.
NASA is celebrating an amazing decade of discoveries around Saturn as the Cassini Spacecraft turns ten.
The Cassini Spacecraft turns ten years old: celebrating an amazing decade around Saturn.