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China'sDeep Blue Aerospace, held a livestream to open up ticket sales for their suborbital flights to space which they say sold out in 20 minutes. India's cabinet has announced a new venture capital fund for the space sector. NASA's SpaceX Crew-8 mission successfully returns to Earth, concluding a nearly eight-month science mission, and more. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our weekly intelligence roundup, Signals and Space, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow T-Minus on LinkedIn and Instagram. T-Minus Guest Elysia Segal from NASASpaceflight.com brings us the Space Traffic Report. Selected Reading Chinese space tourism set for 2027 take-off with aerospace firm offering US$210,000 seats- South China Morning Post' China's first reusable, returnable satellite delivers payloads - CGTN Space industry welcomes Cabinet approval of Rs 1,000 crore venture fund - India Today Back on Earth: NASA's SpaceX Crew-8 Mission Splashes Down Off Florida NASA Releases Economic Impact Report for Fiscal Year 2023 L3Harris Technologies Reports Strong Third Quarter 2024 Results, Increases 2024 Guidance | Business Wire NASA Funds Open-Source Software Underpinning Scientific Innovation SERA Opens Up Space Exploration and Scientific Research to the World T-Minus Crew Survey We want to hear from you! Please complete our 4 question survey. It'll help us get better and deliver you the most mission-critical space intel every day. Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at space@n2k.com to request more info. Want to join us for an interview? Please send your pitch to space-editor@n2k.com and include your name, affiliation, and topic proposal. T-Minus is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week we've invited JPL's Chief Engineer Emeritus, Rob Manning, back to discuss Mars exploration and, in particular, Mars Sample Return. As we discussed in episode 107, that project is in a bit of trouble. Rob was the Chief Engineer of every Mars rover up through Perseverance and the overall Chief Engineer on Perseverance, and he has some unique insights on how we have explored Mars, why it matters, and what the future holds... especially with regard to returning samples to Earth. Join us! Headlines: NASA held a press conference to explain the latest delays with Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, which stem from issues with a helium leak and concerns about the reaction control thrusters that could lead to a loss of redundancy during reentry The European Space Agency's Euclid Space Telescope returned its first science images, providing stunning new views of galaxies never seen in such detail before to help unlock the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy Main Topic - Mars Exploration and Sample Return: Rob Manning recounts his extensive experience with Mars exploration at JPL, from the Sojourner rover and Pathfinder lander in the 90s to the currently operating Curiosity and Perseverance rovers Curiosity confirmed the past presence of water on Mars, while Perseverance is collecting carefully selected rock samples to eventually be returned to Earth The Mars Sample Return mission would bring pristine samples back to Earth for in-depth study, but is an extremely complex and costly endeavor facing budget challenges and potential delays Rob explains why returning samples is so critical - context is key and current meteorite samples have been altered by their journey to Earth, whereas carefully selected samples could reveal much more about Mars' history and potential for life Challenges for Mars Sample Return include the large size of the lander, the need for new parachute and guidance technologies, and planetary protection requirements to prevent contaminating Earth NASA currently has no plans for additional Mars missions beyond sample return, and faces a potential loss of institutional knowledge as a "quiet period" approaches, highlighting the need to maintain momentum in Mars exploration Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Rob Manning Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
This week we've invited JPL's Chief Engineer Emeritus, Rob Manning, back to discuss Mars exploration and, in particular, Mars Sample Return. As we discussed in episode 107, that project is in a bit of trouble. Rob was the Chief Engineer of every Mars rover up through Perseverance and the overall Chief Engineer on Perseverance, and he has some unique insights on how we have explored Mars, why it matters, and what the future holds... especially with regard to returning samples to Earth. Join us! Headlines: NASA held a press conference to explain the latest delays with Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, which stem from issues with a helium leak and concerns about the reaction control thrusters that could lead to a loss of redundancy during reentry The European Space Agency's Euclid Space Telescope returned its first science images, providing stunning new views of galaxies never seen in such detail before to help unlock the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy Main Topic - Mars Exploration and Sample Return: Rob Manning recounts his extensive experience with Mars exploration at JPL, from the Sojourner rover and Pathfinder lander in the 90s to the currently operating Curiosity and Perseverance rovers Curiosity confirmed the past presence of water on Mars, while Perseverance is collecting carefully selected rock samples to eventually be returned to Earth The Mars Sample Return mission would bring pristine samples back to Earth for in-depth study, but is an extremely complex and costly endeavor facing budget challenges and potential delays Rob explains why returning samples is so critical - context is key and current meteorite samples have been altered by their journey to Earth, whereas carefully selected samples could reveal much more about Mars' history and potential for life Challenges for Mars Sample Return include the large size of the lander, the need for new parachute and guidance technologies, and planetary protection requirements to prevent contaminating Earth NASA currently has no plans for additional Mars missions beyond sample return, and faces a potential loss of institutional knowledge as a "quiet period" approaches, highlighting the need to maintain momentum in Mars exploration Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Rob Manning Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
This week we've invited JPL's Chief Engineer Emeritus, Rob Manning, back to discuss Mars exploration and, in particular, Mars Sample Return. As we discussed in episode 107, that project is in a bit of trouble. Rob was the Chief Engineer of every Mars rover up through Perseverance and the overall Chief Engineer on Perseverance, and he has some unique insights on how we have explored Mars, why it matters, and what the future holds... especially with regard to returning samples to Earth. Join us! Headlines: NASA held a press conference to explain the latest delays with Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, which stem from issues with a helium leak and concerns about the reaction control thrusters that could lead to a loss of redundancy during reentry The European Space Agency's Euclid Space Telescope returned its first science images, providing stunning new views of galaxies never seen in such detail before to help unlock the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy Main Topic - Mars Exploration and Sample Return: Rob Manning recounts his extensive experience with Mars exploration at JPL, from the Sojourner rover and Pathfinder lander in the 90s to the currently operating Curiosity and Perseverance rovers Curiosity confirmed the past presence of water on Mars, while Perseverance is collecting carefully selected rock samples to eventually be returned to Earth The Mars Sample Return mission would bring pristine samples back to Earth for in-depth study, but is an extremely complex and costly endeavor facing budget challenges and potential delays Rob explains why returning samples is so critical - context is key and current meteorite samples have been altered by their journey to Earth, whereas carefully selected samples could reveal much more about Mars' history and potential for life Challenges for Mars Sample Return include the large size of the lander, the need for new parachute and guidance technologies, and planetary protection requirements to prevent contaminating Earth NASA currently has no plans for additional Mars missions beyond sample return, and faces a potential loss of institutional knowledge as a "quiet period" approaches, highlighting the need to maintain momentum in Mars exploration Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Rob Manning Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
This week we've invited JPL's Chief Engineer Emeritus, Rob Manning, back to discuss Mars exploration and, in particular, Mars Sample Return. As we discussed in episode 107, that project is in a bit of trouble. Rob was the Chief Engineer of every Mars rover up through Perseverance and the overall Chief Engineer on Perseverance, and he has some unique insights on how we have explored Mars, why it matters, and what the future holds... especially with regard to returning samples to Earth. Join us! Headlines: NASA held a press conference to explain the latest delays with Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, which stem from issues with a helium leak and concerns about the reaction control thrusters that could lead to a loss of redundancy during reentry The European Space Agency's Euclid Space Telescope returned its first science images, providing stunning new views of galaxies never seen in such detail before to help unlock the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy Main Topic - Mars Exploration and Sample Return: Rob Manning recounts his extensive experience with Mars exploration at JPL, from the Sojourner rover and Pathfinder lander in the 90s to the currently operating Curiosity and Perseverance rovers Curiosity confirmed the past presence of water on Mars, while Perseverance is collecting carefully selected rock samples to eventually be returned to Earth The Mars Sample Return mission would bring pristine samples back to Earth for in-depth study, but is an extremely complex and costly endeavor facing budget challenges and potential delays Rob explains why returning samples is so critical - context is key and current meteorite samples have been altered by their journey to Earth, whereas carefully selected samples could reveal much more about Mars' history and potential for life Challenges for Mars Sample Return include the large size of the lander, the need for new parachute and guidance technologies, and planetary protection requirements to prevent contaminating Earth NASA currently has no plans for additional Mars missions beyond sample return, and faces a potential loss of institutional knowledge as a "quiet period" approaches, highlighting the need to maintain momentum in Mars exploration Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Rob Manning Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
After being insulted, writing down your feelings on paper then getting rid of it reduces anger | ScienceDaily NASA's Voyager 1 Resumes Sending Engineering Updates to Earth NASA's OSIRIS-REx Asteroid Sample Is Already Rewriting Solar System History | Scientific American X-ray survey bolsters prevailing theory of universe's expansion | Science China Green-Lights Mass Production of Autonomous Flying Taxis Precise Measurement of Hydrogen's Energy Levels Saturn's moon Enceladus top target for ESA Most massive stellar black hole in our galaxy found | ScienceDaily Can animals count? | ScienceDaily What Makes Tiny Tardigrades Nearly Radiation Proof Andrianos Golemis to Become the First Ever Greek Astronaut - GreekReporter.com Aftershow: H Disney ανακαλύπτει ξανά τα κανάλια! Επικοινωνία: notatop10.fm/contact
North Carolina officials had to activate emergency robocalls to correct voting misinformation from a radio station serving a western part of the state. AP's Lisa Dwyer reports.
Step into the realm beyond Earth as NASA and IBM unveil the open source of a groundbreaking geospatial AI model on Hugging Face. Join this episode for an in-depth exploration of the model's capabilities, the collaborative journey between NASA and IBM, and the transformative impact on geospatial intelligence.
Welcome to Part 2 of our interview with father and daughter team Franklin Chang-Diaz, NASA astronaut and founder of the Ad Astra Rocket Company™, and Miranda Chang, Ad Astra's Global Communications Director. We pick up where we left off, with a focus on fathers working with their children! Host Charles Liu shares how much he loves doing The LIUniverse with his co-host and son Allen, while Franklin talks about how important Miranda is to the running of Ad Astra. Then it's on to our next question, from Ebony, who asks, “Do you believe that traveling to space can find ways to fix the problem with climate change?” Franklin begins by reminding us that we would not be aware of climate change if we were not exploring space. And then he describes how the life support system on spaceship Earth is in need of a great deal of maintenance and repair, how at some point there will be more humans than can survive on it, and how he worries that we will damage our environment to the point that our civilization won't be healthy enough to explore space and then we will be doomed. In Costa Rica, Ad Astra is working to transition the country to a green, hydrogen economy. Using solar and wind energy, they generate hydrogen from water, to power their fleet of hydrogen-powered vehicles and fuel cell electric buses. Miranda points out that Costa Rica's electric grid is already nearly 100% renewable, making it a perfect based for doing test projects like these with the goal of reducing carbon. Miranda discusses ways to make the economy of space more sustainable, too, and describes the fuel efficiency of the VX-200 VASIMIR engine (Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket), their new high-power, electric in-space propulsion system that will have a thirteen-year lifespan. Chuck asks Franklin how me made the transition from astronaut to environmentalist. Franklin explains how the Overview Effect impacted him, and how he came back from space with a tremendous awareness of our environmental problem. Charles brings up the differences between the Gaia Hypothesis and the Medea Hypothesis, which says the Earth may be out to get us and will be fine without us. Somehow, the conversation leads to “The Inner Light” – one of the most beloved episodes of Star Trek The Next Generation, which had tremendous but differing impacts on Franklin and Charles. In the episode, a civilization ignores climate change to the point where it is too late for them to do anything except memorialize their lives and their fate. Miranda talks about the unifying impact of space exploration, and the necessary realization we must reach if we are to survive that we are one species all in this together. Finally, we turn to VASIMIR. Chuck wants to know how it will change our lives, and Franklin likens it to the trucking business that sprung up after WWII because of the availability of diesel engines. As of right now, he explains that we don't have an equivalent for space: “We still fly to space in cannonballs.” What we want, he says, is powered flight over longer periods of time, which VASIMIR makes possible, changing the entire economics of space and enabling humans and the private sector to engage in sustained activity in space. Franklin explains how VASIMIR may someday reduce the time from the Moon to Mars from 8 months to 2 months or less and catalyze the next period of humanity's expansion into our solar system. In fact, it turns out that the engine Andy Weir used in his book The Martian was based on VASIMIR! To find out more about Ad Astra, visit their website, www.adastrarocket.com, or follow them on social media at @adastrarocket on YouTube, Instagram and Twitter, and @asastrarocketcompany on Facebook and LinkedIn. We hope you enjoy this episode of The LIUniverse, and, if you do, please support us on Patreon. Credits for Images Used in this Episode: – Apollo 17's Blue Marble photo of the Earth – NASA, Public Domain – Crew of STS-60, first launch with US and Russian spacefarers – NASA, Public Domain – Aurora from the ISS – NASA, Public Domain #TheLIUniverse #CharlesLiu #AllenLiu #SciencePodcast #AstronomyPodcast #FranklinChangDiaz #MirandaChang #NASA #VASOMIR #AdAstra #ionpropulsion #rockets #SpaceShuttle #HydrogenPoweredVehicles #FuelCell #ElectricBuses #OverviewEffect #StarTrekTheNextGeneration #TheInnerLight #STS60 #Cosmonauts #Astronauts #climatechange
This is a special episode that falls outside of our regular release schedule about NASA, its current budget and upcoming projects. Discussions will include cost of development, historical achievements and funding, opinions, A brief breakdown of the federal governments budget allocations, and the future impact of developed technology as a result from space exploration. Further Reading: https://airandspace.si.edu/explore/stories/alan-shepard#:~:text=U.S.%20Navy%20test%20pilot%20Alan,%2C%2015-minute%20suborbital%20flight. https://airandspace.si.edu/explore/stories/alan-shepard#:~:text=U.S.%20Navy%20test%20pilot%20Alan,%2C%2015-minute%20suborbital%20flight. https://www.nasa.gov/technology-transfer-spinoffs/ https://spinoff.nasa.gov/From_Space_to_Your_Face https://www.axios.com/2021/12/07/nasa-private-spaceflight-plans https://www.nasa.gov/value-of-nasa/#:~:text=Dollars%20spent%20for%20space%20exploration,support%20disaster%20response%2C%20and%20more. https://www.nasa.gov/specials/60counting/future.html https://www.usaspending.gov/explorer/budget_function Music Credits: https://uppbeat.io/t/monument-music/majestic-whispersLicense code: ARFFJMTHSUXAKE4EMusic from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/moire/space-rangerLicense code: GCF4WEVVTYQBJHZM
The Black Knight satellite is a spacecraft of extraterrestrial origin orbiting the Earth NASA is covering up its existence and origin.Or at least that's what Roger and 1000's of other people think. Find out by listening to this week's episode!------------------------------------------------Bonus Patreon Episode Every Week:Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/unexplainedlegends------------------------------------------------Send Your Spooky Stories to:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unexplainedlegendsEmail: unexplainedlegends@gmail.com------------------------------------------------Find Denis:Denis Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denislen3dDenis Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/denislen3d------------------------------------------------Find Roger:Roger Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rogerocomedyRoger Twitter: https://twitter.com/rogerosullivan------------------------------------------------ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
TO WATCH ALL CONSPIRACY CONVERSATIONS -www.conspiracyconversation.comTO WATCH ALL FLYOVER CONTENT: www.theflyoverapp.com WATCH PART 1 with Dave: https://rumble.com/v2l4bxo-conspiracy-conversations-ep-4-with-david-whited-flat-earth-dave-weiss.html WATCH PART 2 with Dave: https://rumble.com/v39bsm8-have-we-ever-been-to-the-moon-conspiracy-conversations-ep-18-with-david-whi.html Dave Weiss Link to app: https://qrco.de/bbizVAYouTube Channel -https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClWTBNGnjXEZOtEwEp9BGTg/videosA Playlist of Flat Earth Dave's recent interviews:https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEzivhxtxgbvSQjsk4yoBOcWDxMUUkGLxYouTube Channel: Deep Inside The Rabbit Hole (DITRH)https://www.youtube.com/c/DITRH/videosThe Flat Earth Podcasthttps://www.youtube.com/c/TheFlatEarthPodcast/videosFlat Earth Dave's Contact info / Social Media Profiles:web - FlatEarthDave.com OR TheFlatEarthPodcast.comTwitter - theFEPodcastInstagram - theFlatEarthPodcastFacebook - https://facebook.com/theflatearthpodcast/SPONSORS FOR TODAY'S VIDEO► ReAwaken America- text the word EVENTS to 40509(Message and data rates may apply. Terms/privacy: 40509-info.com)► Kirk Elliott PHD - http://FlyoverGold.com ► My Pillow - https://MyPillow.com/Flyover► Z-Stack - https://flyoverhealth.com ► Dr. Jason Dean (BraveTV) - https://parakiller.com ► Patriot Mobile - www.patriotmobile.com/flyoverWant to help spread the Wake Up • Speak Up • Show Up -https://shop.flyoverconservatives.com/-------------------------------------------Follow our Social Media so we can be best friends
It was an ordinary late afternoon in the early 1980s, when something incredible happened to a rural family in Eastern Canada. As they looked out the windows of their home, they observed a massive, triangle-shaped object hovering motionless in the sky, in a sighting that would forever change their lives. This week on The Micah Hanks Program, we interview a witness to these events, whose incredible recollections offer a unique perspective on the ongoing eerie appearances of large, triangular UAP over the decades. The story doesn't end here... become an X Subscriber and get access to even more weekly content and monthly specials. Want to advertise/sponsor The Micah Hanks Program? We have partnered with the fine folks at Gumball to handle our advertising/sponsorship requests. If you would like to advertise with The Micah Hanks Program, all you have to do is click the link below to get started: Gumball: Advertise with The Micah Hanks Program Show Notes Below are links to stories and other content featured in this episode: NEWS: OSIRIS-REx Mission Achieves Historic Milestone with Successful Delivery of Asteroid Samples to Earth NASA's OSIRIS-REx lands samples of asteroid Bennu to Earth after historic 4-billion-mile journey NASA's Mars Sample Return mission may never fly US exploring potential space force hotline with China Scientists Estimate When Humans Could Become Extinct ChatGPT can now hear, see and speak as OpenAI gives the chatbot its most humanlike update BECOME AN X SUBSCRIBER AND GET EVEN MORE GREAT PODCASTS AND MONTHLY SPECIALS FROM MICAH HANKS. Sign up today and get access to the entire back catalog of The Micah Hanks Program, as well as “classic” episodes of The Gralien Report Podcast, weekly “additional editions” of the subscriber-only X Podcast, the monthly Enigmas specials, and much more. Like us on Facebook Follow @MicahHanks on Twitter Keep up with Micah and his work at micahhanks.com.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
*Dangerous asteroid on its way to Earth NASA says an asteroid on an orbit that takes it close to Earth will almost certainly miss the planet despite some predictions of doom and gloom. *Asteroid impacts on the Moon are mirrored on Earth Scientists have discovered that asteroid impacts on the Moon millions of years ago coincided precisely with some of the largest meteorite impacts on Earth including the KT boundary event impactor which wiped out all the non-avian dinosaurs 66 million years ago. *Rocket Lab launches its second Electron from the US Rocket Lab has successfully launched its second Electron mission from its new launch complex 2 at NASA's Wallops Island Flight Facility on the Virginian mid Atlantic coast. *The Science Report 30 years of satellite observation data showing the rate of sea level rise is increasing. Swabs taken from the Wuhan wet markets confirmed COVID-19 present but doesn't rule out the Lab. Study shows the average gentleman's most prized attribute is getting bigger! Skeptics guide to legal action by the TGA This week's talent includes: Professor Alexander Nemchin, from Curtin University CERN Atlas Detector Physics Co-ordinator Pamela Ferrari And our regular guests: Alex Zaharov-Reutt from iTWire.com Tim Mendham from Australian Skeptics Jonathan Nally the editor of Australian Sky and Telescope Magazine Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you… To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts. For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://bitesz.com Your support is needed... SpaceTime is an independently produced podcast (we are not funded by any government grants, big organisations or companies), and we're working towards becoming a completely listener supported show...meaning we can do away with the commercials and sponsors. We figure the time can be much better spent on researching and producing stories for you, rather than having to chase sponsors to help us pay the bills. That's where you come in....help us reach our first 1,000 subscribers...at that level the show becomes financially viable, and bills can be paid without us breaking into a sweat every month. Every little bit helps...even if you could contribute just $1 per month. It all adds up. By signing up and becoming a supporter at the $5 or more level, you get immediate access to over 350 commercial-free, triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. You also receive all new episodes on a Monday rather than having to wait the week out. Subscribe via Supercast (you get a month's free trial to see if it's really for you or not) ... and share in the rewards. Details at Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ Details at https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com or www.bitesz.com
#livetalkshow #entertainmentvideo #trendingnews The Rants of Izzo Show! Random, comedic and politically incorrect! Every night for one hour, two talented radio hosts: Dominick Izzo and Common Sense Ashley come together to deliver a unique stream of consciousness for their loyal and growing audience. Those easily offended need not apply. Mature audiences only. Dominick Izzo is a retired police officer, former political candidate, author and Warrior for Christ. His mission is healing police community relations and modeling the oath he swore when wearing the badge. Izzo believes his greatest service is to God and in serving his community he is living the calling that he was made for. Common Sense Ashley is a California free thinker, former political candidate and current business owner. Her strength is communicating the blaring hypocrisies that divide us and unite those willing to step away from ego. Ashley knows that common sense is subjective but basic human needs are similar.
#livetalkshow #entertainmentvideo #trendingnews The Rants of Izzo Show! Random, comedic and politically incorrect! Every night for one hour, two talented radio hosts: Dominick Izzo and Common Sense Ashley come together to deliver a unique stream of consciousness for their loyal and growing audience. Those easily offended need not apply. Mature audiences only. Dominick Izzo is a retired police officer, former political candidate, author and Warrior for Christ. His mission is healing police community relations and modeling the oath he swore when wearing the badge. Izzo believes his greatest service is to God and in serving his community he is living the calling that he was made for. Common Sense Ashley is a California free thinker, former political candidate and current business owner. Her strength is communicating the blaring hypocrisies that divide us and unite those willing to step away from ego. Ashley knows that common sense is subjective but basic human needs are similar.
This week, we have a new segment called Blurt on Society, where we will chat about any topic that affects us or the general public, or any topical news here or abroad. Next we will talk Science. This week we hear all about NASA trying to deflect an asteroid. And we also learn about synthetic milk.And to round off the show, let's get comfortable with Nature Calls and chat about the weird and wonderful world of animals.Let's get on with the show Wencee and Kegsta.More: thenewblurt.substack.comBlurt on SocietyLavish, large homes, known as McMansions are booming in Melbourne →Melbourne's most popular streets: Meet the McMansion boulevards of lockdown dreamsSociety wastes a lot of fresh food. What can we do about it? We could change food expiration date labels →Why ‘best before' food labelling is not best for the planet or your budgetScienceNear-Earth Objects (NEO) could slam into Earth. NASA has plans to deflect them away from Earth →NASA will crash a $488 million spacecraft into an asteroid. Here's whyWould you drink milk created in a lab? →'Synthetic milk' made without cows may be coming to supermarket shelves near youNature CallsKangaroos are wild animals, not domesticated. Why would you keep them as pets? →‘They will get you in a headlock': Australians warned off pet kangaroos after second death in 100 yearsWhy do humans talk and other primates don't? It's all to do with a missing piece of tissue in humans →Why humans have more voice control than any other primatesFollow us on our socials:YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCI6sah68y5GKhtD-uE4W-FAFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/blurtstar/Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/blurtstar/Twitter - @BlurtNew This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thenewblurt.substack.com
Riker, Worf, and Data become trapped in a recreation of "The Royale" a hotel featured in an Earth novel of the same name written in the 21st century. But why is this novel, with its cliché setting and characters, being played out in the frozen layers of a gas giant planet surrounded by debris from an ancient Earth NASA spacecraft!? Ruthie and Matthew talk about which fictional worlds they would most want to be trapped in and those they would definitely NOT want to be trapped in.
Riker, Worf, and Data become trapped in a recreation of "The Royale" a hotel featured in an Earth novel of the same name written in the 21st century. But why is this novel, with its cliché setting and characters, being played out in the frozen layers of a gas giant planet surrounded by debris from an ancient Earth NASA spacecraft!? Ruthie and Matthew talk about which fictional worlds they would most want to be trapped in and those they would definitely NOT want to be trapped in.
Tired of all the ho-hum news stories? Tired of news cycles built to crush you like an enemy and see you driven before the corporate press? Fret no longer, Top Ten Talks brings you our new show The Technical Foutch Podcast! Our hosts Adam, Chris, & Junior dive into the most ridiculous news stories that you may have not heard and the media are guaranteed to miss. This week Technical Foutch brings you: Drunk Stripping, Birthday Lawsuit, Florida Luggage, Two Beavers One Stone, Hot Noodle Dog & the World's Greatest Mugshot! Got a wild story you want to share with the guys? Drop us a line at: technicalfoutchpodcast@gmail.com
You can find "Our true history" on tiktok and Youtube with videos, this audio is taken from a live chat between myself and the tiktok viewers. Subject can cover everything from Aliens, Ghosts, Bigfoot, Covid and so much more. These live chats are on Spotify and other podcast sites or you can just listen to them on YouTube. Don't forget to watch the actual videos I do, also on Youtube. I hope you like these as much as I enjoy talking about these subjects.
This episode is all about outer space. Join the conversation by adding your thoughts in the comments below! Episode Shout-out to Environmental Conscience, POPULAR SCIENCE, Aging Faster in Space to Age Better on Earth | NASA, 10 Longest Time Periods Spent in Space | Largest.org, Mario Kart™ 8 Deluxe for Nintendo Switch™ – Official Site, Music Intro/Outro: “Thoughts” by Killah Smilez Music Outro: “Explained” by Killah Smilez Make sure you check out the Killah Smilez song on Amazon Catch the music video by Killah Smilez HERE ----more---- Get our book HERE Check out our NEW course on the Law of Attraction HERE Want to share the episode? Please share the episode on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest, TikTok, and Soundcloud Don't forget to subscribe to WokeNFree on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeartRadio, and Google Play Do you want to join the show as a guest on an upcoming episode? Contact us HERE Don't forget to submit a scenario to us for SCENARIO TIME! SCENARIO TIME: How would you respond to these scenarios in SCENARIO TIME? Let's chat HERE! Have you reviewed our show yet? Pick your platform of choice HERE Do you want to start a podcast? We are here to HELP! Schedule a FREE strategy session with us HERE This post contains affiliate links. That means if you click on a link and buy something, WokeNFree will earn a small commission from the advertiser at no additional cost to you.
Já fomos à Lua e agora andamos a preparar tudo para levar o homem a Marte. Passamos a vida a descobrir planetas e a estudar como será a vida por lá. Desde sempre imaginámos seres verdes de grandes olhos (e talvez antenas) como os habitantes de outros mundos. E até enviámos um disco com todos os sons e imagens da Terra na esperança de algum extraterrestre o apanhar. Porque será que temos tanta vontade de aventurar-nos por essa galáxia fora? A Joana Marques e o Vitor Cardoso propõem algumas razões; e fazem-nos viajar ‘para o infinito e mais além' apenas com o poder do som.REFERÊNCIAS E LINKS ÚTEIS:TOI 700: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2020/nasa-planet-hunter-finds-its-1st-earth-size-habitablezone-world/Primeira AlunagemKarl PopperEnrico FermiYuri GagarinProxima Centauri: https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/exoplanet-catalog/7167/proxima-centauri-b/Fred HoyleDisco de Ouro da Voyager: Disco de 12 polegadas com uma variedade de sons e imagens para revelar a diversidade da vida na Terra. Foi enviado para o espaço nas sondas Voyager 1 e Voyager 2 em 1977.Carl Sagan, Murmurs of Earth:NASA, Golden record sounds:Uma história verdadeira, Luciano de Samostata (séc II) https://digitalis-dsp.uc.pt/jspui/bitstream/10316.2/9727/6/Luciano_II.pdfSomnium, Johannes Kepler (1608)O Homem na Lua, Francis Godwin (1638)História Cómica dos Estados e Impérios da Lua, Cyrano de Bergerac (1657)Os primeiros homens na Lua, H. G. WellsA Guerra dos Mundos, H. G. WellsContacto, Carl Sagan2001 Odisseia no espaçoBIOSJOANA MARQUES Nasceu em Lisboa (1986). Toda a gente sabe que os nativos do signo Virgem são fadados para o sucesso. Infelizmente Joana é Capricórnio e não percebe nada de astrologia. Quando era mais pequena queria ser pintora, felizmente mudou de ideias, já que o talento que tem agora para pintar é o mesmo que tinha aos seis anos, quando desejava ser a nova Paula Rêgo. Quando começou a aprender a escrever percebeu que o “foturo paçaria pur aí”, depois aprendeu que se escrevia “futuro passaria por aí” e nunca mais ninguém a parou. Começou a trabalhar como guionista em 2007, chegou à rádio em 2012, à maternidade em 2016 e 2020, e espera demorar muito a chegar à reforma. Gosta de viver cada dia como se fosse o primeiro, e observar o mundo como se tivesse acabado de cá aterrar.VÍTOR CARDOSO é Físico Teórico no CENTRA, professor Catedrático e Presidente do Departamento de Física do Instituto Superior Técnico. Os seus interesses de investigação incidem sobre astrofísica e gravitação, em particular a física do espaço-tempo curvos, ondas gravitacionais e buracos negros. É autor de um livro e de cerca de 200 artigos em revistas internacionais. A sua investigação foi distinguida duas vezes pelo European Research Council. Foi condecorado com a Ordem de Santiago D'Espada (2015). É líder do GWverse, um consórcio internacional de mais de 30 países e centenas de cientistas, que estuda as ondas gravitacionais e buracos negros. É membro fundador da Sociedade Portuguesa de Relatividade e Gravitação.
Show Opens with discussions on the following topics: Elon Musk Kills it on SNL, Funny Memes of Bill & Melinda Gates Divorce, Huge Chinese Rocket falls to Earth & NASA is harder on China then Biden, Hackers hit Colonial Pipeline and gas lines plague the South East, Medina Spirit, Winner of the Kentucky Derby, fails Drug Test, & Job numbers out and seems people are sitting home enjoying their government pay check The News is a Joke "Customer beating man with gun at bar accidentally kills own relative", "Porn, alcohol were part of student sleepovers at lunch lady’s house", "NYC Spanish teacher in trouble for sucking companion’s nipple during Zoom class", "Woman says she caught boyfriend cheating when he accidentally sent video instead of photo", & 'Sperminator' who's close to fathering 100 children says 'don't focus on me' Thanks For Listening!
In recent days, the Department of Defense Office of the Inspector General has announced the launch of a formal evaluation into The Pentagon and its actions regarding “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena” or UAP. “We may revise the objective as the evaluation proceeds, and we will consider suggestions from management for additional or revised objectives," the memorandum states. Joining us to discuss this is Tim McMillan, who along with MJ Banias broke the story at The Debrief, a news site co-founded by Micah with this pair of UFO reporters. We discuss the Pentagon's UAP Problem, the significance of its forthcoming evaluation, and much more in the ongoing saga of the U.S. government's studies of UFOs this week on The Micah Hanks Program. The story doesn't end here... become an X Subscriber and get access to even more weekly content and monthly specials. Enjoy The Micah Hanks Program? Check out Micah's other podcasts here. Want to advertise/sponsor The Micah Hanks Program? We have partnered with the fine folks at Gumball to handle our advertising/sponsorship requests. If you would like to advertise with The Micah Hanks Program, all you have to do is click the link below to get started: Gumball: Advertise with The Micah Hanks Program Coronavirus Charities If you are able, please consider supporting the following charities that are offering relief for those affected by the coronavirus pandemic. Visit our Coronavirus Charities Page to learn more. Show Notes Below are links to stories and other content featured in this episode: 'Extraordinary Discovery': Archaeologists Find Neanderthal Remains In Cave Near Rome Hominins Originated in Africa from Ape Ancestors Unlike Any Living Species, Study Suggests 'Living Fossil' Thought Extinct For 273 Million Years Found Thriving on Ocean Floor China's out-of-control rocket lands on Earth NASA blasts China as out of control rocket crashes near Maldives China blames the US for hyping fears of uncontrolled rocket reentry as space race heats up Pentagon watchdog opens new probe into military's handling of UFOs Inspector General Launching Evaluation into The Pentagon's Actions With UFOs The Intelligence Brief - The DoD and Unidentified Aerial Phenomena: A New Evaluation The US Military Takes UFOs Seriously. Why doesn’t Silicon Valley or Academia? X Subscriber Sign-Up BECOME AN X SUBSCRIBER AND GET EVEN MORE GREAT PODCASTS AND MONTHLY SPECIALS FROM MICAH HANKS. Sign up today and get access to the entire back catalog of The Micah Hanks Program, as well as “classic” episodes of The Gralien Report Podcast, weekly “additional editions” of the subscriber-only X Podcast, the monthly Enigmas specials, and much more. Like us on Facebook Follow @MicahHanks on Twitter
If you had the chance, would you leave the planet Earth and never return? It sounds to some like the deal of a lifetime, but to others not so much. Nobody can deny the wonders of our universe and having the chance to explore them, but at what cost? In this episode of the Reddit Asks Us Podcast, I sit down with Hunter Viczko and we discuss a question from r/AskReddit "Would you leave earth and never come back?" We had a great conversation try to figure out if it was an adventure worth taking, or if we were better off staying at home. New episodes every Tuesday @7 CST Follow @redditasksuspodcast on instagram and Tik Tok to watch clips, receive updates on guests and new episodes! Hope everyone enjoys! Sources: https://www.mars-one.com › faqWhy should we go to Mars? - A Mission to Mars - Mars One https://www.nasa.gov › goddard › 9...Web resultsNine Reasons We're Grateful to Live on Earth | NASA
Hey Eavesdroppers, this week we are joined by the host of The Flat Earth Podcast - David Weiss. We had a ball with Dave (pun intended), it was great fun. Strap yourselves in eavesdroppers... You can find The Flat Earth Podcast on all good platforms. Daves YouTube channel is here... https://www.youtube.com/c/DITRH/videos Topics mentioned... Flat Earth, Antarctica, Antarctic Treaty, Flight Paths, NASA, Heliocentric, Sunset, Stars, Neil DeGrasse Tyson, The Blue Marble, Composites, International Space Station, Space, Pluto, National Boyancy Lab, Jupiter, Felix Baumgartner, Space Tourism, The Firmament, Lunar Eclipse, Moonlight, Moon Landing, Circumnavigation, Seasons, Evolution, Intelligent Design, etc ... After we spoke with Dave we did the usual housekeeping and covered some Covid News (with a little technical gremlin at the start). Producer Credits for Ep 166: Gav Scott, Steven Andrew, Scuba 284, John Isaacs, Phil Skinz, Steph Johnson, Nomae NosNoj, ArmageddonFeast, Tamborista 2020, Full Metal Keto AF and Anonymous. Message us here....follow, like, subscribe and share. (comments, corrections, future topics etc). We read out iTunes reviews if you leave them. Get your newly launched Merch from The Amish Loot Chest Email Twitter Facebook Instagram YouTube Find out how to become a Producer here... Become a Producer! The Amish Inquisition is 100% supported by YOU. NO Ads, NO Sponsorship, NO Paywalls. We really don't want to suckle at the teat of some faceless corporate overlord. But that is only avoidable with your help! Join your fellow producers by donating to The Amish Inquisition via the PayPal button on our website, simply donate whatever you think the show is worth to you. If you find the podcast valuable, please consider returning some value to us and help keep the show free and honest.
A NASA spacecraft is experiencing its own close encounter with an extra-terrestrial object. Scientists hope to bring material from an asteroid back to earth to help them find out more about the origins of the universe. - Asteroidilta tuodut näytteet voivat auttaa tutkimustyöstä unversumin alkuperän selvittämiseksi
WanderLearn promises to explore travel and technology. So let's travel through our solar system with a NASA astrophysicist! About six months ago, Underknown's What If channel hired me to interview two prominent NASA astrophysicists. They wanted to find out what would happen if Earth became one of Jupiter's moons. I'm unsure why they wanted to know that since Underknown had already produced a video that answered that topic, but I adore astronomy, so I was happy to visit my old stomping ground: the NASA Ames Research Center. Underknown said that this was urgent, so I did everything I could to interview two top astrophysicists with almost no warning. Unfortunately, six months later, they still haven't released the video I shot. I knew they would only use a snippet of what I filmed, but still. Nada. And it's not because I shot a crappy video. Underknown hired me a couple of months later for another project, so I couldn't have screwed things up too badly the first time. I feel terrible that these two astrophysicists complied with my last second request and I haven't had anything to show them. Five months ago, I shared the audio and video podcast with my Patrons. It's an exclusive group, so I figured that Underknown wouldn't notice or care. I never planned to share it on the WanderLearn podcast. However, now that Underknown has done nothing with the content for 6 months, I think it's time that the general public enjoys this conversation. I'm doing this as a public service. I'm not taking any ads for this episode. My voice wasn't supposed to appear in the final cut, so that's why my voice rarely appears, and, when it does, it's distant. This episode features Jack Lissauer. Dr. Lissauer is a Space Scientist who has worked at NASA Ames for 30 years. Currently, he is in the Planetary Systems Branch, Space Science and Astrobiology Division, NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, CA. He was a Co-Investigator on the Kepler Mission and the TESS Mission. He's won a dozen awards. I asked him to describe what would happen if our planet orbited Jupiter. Specifically: Can you explain what extreme tidal forces in space are? How would extreme tidal forces affect Earth? Can they cause earthquakes and tsunamis? What is the weather like on Jupiter’s moon Io? How long are days on Io? If Earth were hypothetically a moon of Jupiter, how would it be affected? Questions about Venus What is the surface and atmosphere of Venus like? How are Earth and Venus similar? Would it be possible to terraform a planet in our solar system? Which planet (or moon) would be the most viable? What would it take to terraform Venus? More info You can post comments, ask questions, and sign up for my newsletter at http://wanderlearn.com. If you like this podcast, subscribe and share! On social media, my username is always ftapon. Follow me on: https://facebook.com/ftapon https://twitter.com/ftapon https://instagram.com/ftapon https://youtube.com/user/ftapon https://pinterest.com/ftapon https://tumblr.com/ftapon My Patrons sponsored this show! Claim your monthly reward by becoming a patron at http://Patreon.com/FTapon Rewards start at just $2/month! The best reward is the $25 reward, which entitles you to $300 of gifts for the holidays! It's the best win-win reward out there! If you prefer to do a one-time contribution, you can send it to my PayPal at FT@FrancisTapon.com If you prefer giving me Bitcoin, then please send BTC to my tip jar: 3EiSBC2bv2bYtYEXAKTkgqZohjF27DGjnV
سهیل کتاب (هیچکس مثل تو مال اینجا نیست) از میراندا جولای را معرفی می کند بررسی فیلم (La Grande Bouffe ( The Big Feast با سپهر سراییان یگانه خدامی و معرفی سریال (This is US) بخش تازه ای از مزامیر داوود با محسن بوالحسنی به همراه صدای شما همراهان پادکلاب لیست موسیقی های این اپیزود: 1: Fire (Barns Courtney) 2: Sodio ( Danna Paola) 3: Zombie ( The Cranberries) 4: The Voice of Earth (NASA) مدت زمان: ۶۹ دقیقه زمان انتشار: ۲۷ فروردین ۱۳۹۹
A 6th grade science teacher, a field trip to the Cosmosphere, lots of hard work, several advanced degrees, and a NASA internship has all been a influential part of Dr. Sarah Wallace’s journey. Dr. Sarah Wallace has always been in love with space, and through her work at NASA, she’s found her calling. As a microbiologist, Sarah serves as the principal investigator for the Biomolecule Sequencer, allowing DNA to be sequenced in space on board the International Space Station. Talking to Sarah is like talking to your best friend, if your best friend happens to be a super-smart, yet down-to-Earth NASA microbiologist! Beth and Sarah energetically enjoy discussing: The Kansas Cosmosphere and how it fostered the joy and inspiration for Sarah to understand space How we are all just walking bacteria… What it’s like to see her experiments be flown on the International Space Station, including the first ever DNA sequencer in space! AND, having a space wedding. Not just a space-themed wedding, I mean, a serious space nerd let’s-take-this-all-the-way SPACE wedding. Short of actually having it IN space. About Dr. Sarah: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FaEqVYw7O3g Taken from adafruit.com: Dr. Sarah Wallace is currently is the NASA Microbiologist and Principal Investigator for the Genes in Space-3 Project aboard the International Space Station (ISS). She works at the NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Dr. Wallace conducts research to understand how the environment in space alters the behavior of microbes and runs her tests aboard the ISS. This will help us to one day identify microbes in-flight. The recent Biomolecule Sequencer (MinION) that Wallace worked on, showed that DNA sequencing in space is possible. BONUS SHOW NOTES & QUOTES: On being a female in microbiology: “I had a pretty even split of females and males in my graduate classes, and at my lab here at NASA, we have TONS of female scientists, and it’s really exciting! I have several female colleagues that started with me right out of their undergrad or Ph. D. programs and have blossomed into become these phenomenal scientists! I feel like things are really opening up for anyone who is qualified and passionate, and it’s no longer a stereotypical ‘man’s world’. I got to meet with some of the women from the Apollo mission, and most of them were assistants. Now, females are running the divisions and the directorates, and females leading as subject matter experts in all disciplines. It’s really great to see how big that change has been since Apollo. Sarah attended Wichita State and loved microbiology, and molecular biology. Determined to find a graduate program that had both, Sarah found the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. The NASA connection and fellowships in the life sciences through NASA allowed Sarah to conduct most of her research at the NASA Johnson Space Center for her Ph.D. dissertation. “It’s been a rewarding path, steppingstones often presented themselves to me, AND, I worked REALLY hard to make that happen. I was laser focused to get to NASA.” About Being a Part of the Team to Put the First DNA Sequencer on Station: “If you just stop and think about it, something that’s very complex on Earth, sequencing DNA, has become commonplace in space! We have DNA sequencing in space! We have been sequencing DNA on board ISS since 2016. To date, we’ve done about 30 sequencing runs with about 6 different astronauts. Why that’s important: it’s been not only an incredible achievement, and there are SO many applications… from my area we monitor the station (air and water microbes) and we have no way to do that unless we bring the samples back to Earth, which does not set us up very well as we try to move away from low-Earth orbit and not be dependent on sample return. My team developed a method where we could go all the way from sample to answer not only to fly the sequencer, but we developed all the preparation methods to take a swab of anything really and sequence the microbial DNA from that swab. The things we find are common and they are the same things we find in your room. ISS is incredibly clean. About What’s Next: “I have colleagues who are interested in getting in the human health domain. We know humans are changing in response to spaceflight. The hows and whys and what’s really going on are not widely known, so this technology can be very powerful in helping us understand this better. Based on an astronaut’s genetic makeup, there could be a “eat this, do this kind of exercise” monitoring to understand if they are responding favorably or poorly to the recommendations (based on the sequencing) and really get into a precision medicine type approach. This (sequencing technology) is definitely something that I see moving into a doctor’s office for everyone’s benefit. On DNA and RNA sequencing and epigenetics- “Yes, there’s absolutely ways that we ourselves are regulating what genes are turned on or off through these mechanisms, HOW that’s happening and to what responses are the types of questions that we are looking to answer right now.” On What Happens When Girls Get to Meet Sarah (as a Doctor, as a Scientist, as a NASA researcher for Station): “It’s surreal.” Between all of the amazing opportunities I’ve had since we launched the sequencer in 2016 until now, I’ve had more people ask for my autograph and to take selfies with me.. it’s like, ‘what is happening? I’m just a nerd!’ It’s incredible and it makes me feel so good. NASA has a video series called, “What’s on Board?” and I was fortunate to talk about the DNA sequencer. There was a young girl in the audience interested in science journalism, and she came up to me after the program and said to me, ‘You are NOT what I expected a NASA scientist to be!’ It made me feel really good because obviously I connected with her.” What’s On the Horizon: “I look forward to when we can address those opportunities with cutting edge technologies, making sure we’re making the environment safe for the crew, and then using these technologies to learn more about what happens to life in space. We are at the cusp of this really exciting time where we know things change, but we don’t really understand the hows and the whys and the next decade is really going to start to shine light into these answers, and I’m excited to see NASA using these technologies to understand what’s happening in space with cellular life.” MORE!!!! On International Space Station DNA Sequencing: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/news/dna_sequencing https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/news/biomolecule_sequencer KIDS! Students! Check out Genes in Space- YOUR opportunity to fly an experiment in SPACE: https://www.genesinspace.org/ If you've ever wondered how astronauts might survive a deep-space mission or how we might use biology to transform new worlds, Genes in Space is for you: Propose an experiment that utilizes molecular biology capabilities aboard the ISS, specifically polymerase chain reaction (PCR) Test your hypothesis in the ultimate lab: The International Space Station
Deliverance ministry is still a mystery for many in the body of Christ. Alexander Pagani shares fundamental and advanced deliverance ministry concepts so you can cast out devils with confidence.
Thank you for making me part of your daily routine, I appreciate your time and your ears! I'm still fighting a cold, so apologies for sounding pretty rough in today's episode. Still, I've got a daily podcast to run, so on with the podcast! I'd love if you could share this podcast with someone who enjoys space, so for your weekend homework, pick a friend, send them the link, and let me know if you refer someone to the podcast. I'd appreciate it! If you could do me a favor and leave a review for the podcast, I'd appreciate it! If you take a screenshot of your review and send it to @johnmulnix, pretty much anywhere on the Internet, I will send you a Space Shot sticker and a thank you! Be cool like Elisabeth and score a sweet sticker :D You can send me questions and connect with me on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter, by clicking one of the links below. Facebook (https://m.facebook.com/thespaceshot/) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/johnmulnix/) Twitter (https://twitter.com/johnmulnix) I've also got a call in number that I'm going to be testing here soon, so keep an eye out for that! Thanks to everyone that's subscribed to the podcast. If you could do me a favor and leave a review for the podcast, I'd appreciate it! If you take a screenshot of your review and send it to @johnmulnix, pretty much anywhere on the Internet, I will send you a Space Shot sticker and a thank you! Episode Links: Falcon 9 launch to wait until after Atlas 5 mission- Jeff Foust (http://spacenews.com/falcon-9-launch-to-wait-until-after-atlas-5-mission/) Soyuz With Expedition 54 Trio Aboard Returns to Earth- NASA (https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/soyuz-with-expedition-54-trio-aboard-returns-to-earth) Discoverer 1- NASA (https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/spacecraftDisplay.do?id=1959-002A) Now You See It: 25 Years Since the Mysterious Mission of STS-36 (Part 1) (http://www.americaspace.com/2015/02/28/now-you-see-it-25-years-since-the-mysterious-mission-of-sts-36-part-1/) Now You Don't: 25 Years Since the Mysterious Mission of STS-36 (Part 2) (http://www.americaspace.com/2015/03/01/now-you-dont-25-years-since-the-mysterious-mission-of-sts-36-part-2/)
If you could do me a favor and leave a review for the podcast, I'd appreciate it! If you take a screenshot of your review and send it to @johnmulnix, pretty much anywhere on the Internet, I will send you a Space Shot sticker and a thank you! If you have questions, send them to @johnmulnix on Twitter or Instagram. I've also got a call in number that I'm going to be testing here soon, so keep an eye out for that! Connect with me on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, just click the links below. Facebook (https://m.facebook.com/thespaceshot/) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/johnmulnix/) Twitter (https://twitter.com/johnmulnix) Thanks to everyone that's subscribed to the podcast. If you could do me a favor and leave a review for the podcast, I'd appreciate it! If you take a screenshot of your review and send it to @johnmulnix, pretty much anywhere on the Internet, I will send you a Space Shot sticker and a thank you! Episode Links: Venera 1 (https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/masterCatalog.do?sc=1961-003A) HALCA- Archived JAXA Page (https://web.archive.org/web/20050702014650/http://www.isas.ac.jp/e/enterp/missions/halca/techno.shtml) HALCA- NASA Information Page (https://science.nasa.gov/missions/halca) *Budget Links: * Budget Documents, Strategic Plans and Performance Reports- NASA.gov (https://www.nasa.gov/news/budget/index.html) Here's a cool video with more about the WFIRST telescope. I hope this mission still gets launched. WFIRST: The Best of Both Worlds- YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbJpVHMV1m4) Here are some takeaways from today's NASA budget proposal- Jason Davis, Planetary.org (http://planetary.org/blogs/jason-davis/2018/20180212-wh-proposed-19-budget.html) NASA Invests in Concept Development for Missions to Comet, Saturn Moon Titan (https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-invests-in-concept-development-for-missions-to-comet-saturn-moon-titan) Here are the links to the EPIC Camera that has had a proposed cut under the FY 2019 budget request. DSCOVR EPIC Camera (https://epic.gsfc.nasa.gov/) From a Million Miles Away, NASA Camera Shows Moon Crossing Face of Earth- NASA.gov (https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/from-a-million-miles-away-nasa-camera-shows-moon-crossing-face-of-earth)
Happy Sunday everyone! This week has been jam-packed. I hope you enjoyed my New Horizons interview the past two episodes. Shoot me a message with your thoughts. Thanks to everyone that's subscribed to the podcast. If you could do me a favor and leave a review for the podcast, I'd appreciate it! If you take a screenshot of your review and send it to @johnmulnix, pretty much anywhere on the Internet, I will send you a Space Shot sticker and a thank you! Connect with me on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, just click the links below. Facebook (https://m.facebook.com/thespaceshot/) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/johnmulnix/) Twitter (https://twitter.com/johnmulnix) Thanks to everyone that's subscribed to the podcast. If you could do me a favor and leave a review for the podcast, I'd appreciate it! If you take a screenshot of your review and send it to @johnmulnix, pretty much anywhere on the Internet, I will send you a Space Shot sticker and a thank you! Episode Links: STS-82 NASA (https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/archives/sts-82.html) Hubble Servicing Missions Overview (https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/servicing/index.html) Scientists and engineers push for servicing and assembly of future space observatories- Jeff Foust- SpaceNews.com (http://spacenews.com/scientists-and-engineers-push-for-servicing-and-assembly-of-future-space-observatories/) STS-99 (https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/archives/sts-99.html) Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/fs20093087) Shuttle Radar Topography Information (https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2009/3087/) SDO- Solar Dynamics Observatory (https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/) SpaceX DSCOVR Launch (http://www.spacex.com/news/2015/02/11/spacex-launches-dscovr-satellite-deep-space-orbit) DSCOVR Mission Page (https://www.nesdis.noaa.gov/content/dscovr-deep-space-climate-observatory) DSCOVR EPIC Camera (https://epic.gsfc.nasa.gov/) From a Million Miles Away, NASA Camera Shows Moon Crossing Face of Earth- NASA.gov (https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/from-a-million-miles-away-nasa-camera-shows-moon-crossing-face-of-earth)
What is the Moon? The Moon installation touring the UK that inspired this episode (Museum of the Moon) (https://my-moon.org) Awesome simulated view of the Moon over 1 month (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libration#/media/File:Lunar_libration_with_phase_Oct_2007_450px.gif) Why do people say the Moon is made of cheese? (Mental Floss) (http://mentalfloss.com/article/53107/why-do-people-say-moon-made-cheese) Five myths about the Moon (EarthSky) (http://earthsky.org/space/five-myths-about-the-moon) Man in the Moon (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_in_the_Moon) Ancient Greek astronomy (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_astronomy) Eratosthenes measurement of the Earth's circumference (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eratosthenes#Measurement_of_the_Earth.27s_circumference) Aristarchus's 3rd-century BCE calculations on the relative sizes of the Sun, Earth & Moon (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_astronomy#/media/File:Aristarchus_working.jpg) The lunar calendar (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_calendar) The Celtic year (Living Myths) (http://www.livingmyths.com/Celticyear.htm) The death & life of the 13-month calendar (City Lab) (http://www.citylab.com/work/2014/12/the-world-almost-had-a-13-month-calendar/383610/) What causes the seasons? The Earth's tilt, which is theorised to be caused by a cosmic crash that created the Moon (NASA) (https://spaceplace.nasa.gov/seasons/en/) La Luna, Belinda Carlisle (YouTube) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1RergWOAFoc) "A moon is an object that orbits a planet or something else that is not a star. Besides planets, moons can circle dwarf planets, large asteroids, & other bodies" (National Geographic) (http://www.nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/moon/) The Moon (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon) Earth's moon (NASA) (https://moon.nasa.gov/about.cfm) Origins of 'luna' (Online Etymology Dictionary) (http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=luna) List of natural satellites, i.e. all the moons in our solar system (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_natural_satellites) Our solar system: Moons (NASA) (https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/solarsystem/moons) Origin of the Moon (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_the_Moon) Lunar rocks & soils from Apollo missions (NASA) (https://curator.jsc.nasa.gov/lunar/) What the Moon tells us about Earth (EarthSky) (http://earthsky.org/space/what-the-moon-can-tell-us-about-earth) The Moon does have some tectonic activity & 'moonquakes', but it's much less than on Earth (NASA) (https://www.nasa.gov/pdf/180577main_ETM.Moon.Anomalies.pdf) Moonquakes (NASA) (https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2006/15mar_moonquakes) "The tides in the oceans occur primarily because of the gravitational force of the Moon & secondarily the Sun's tidal force. Tidal forces stretch the Earth in the direction of the tide-producing body" (HyperPhysics) (http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Astro/tidfrict.html) Io & tidal heating: This young lady just won a science scholarship from Cards Against Humanity for this great video (YouTube) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OG1WRh-LvvE) They've found ice in permanently shadowed polar craters on the Moon, but not liquid water (SETI) (https://www.seti.org/faq#csc22) Why is the Moon so scarred with craters? (NASA) (https://spaceplace.nasa.gov/craters/en/) "The South Pole-Aitken basin is a huge impact crater on the far side of the Moon. Roughly 2,500 km in diameter & 13 km deep" (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Pole–Aitken_basin) Thank you Moon: GIF of the path of an asteroid's orbit that came in close contact with Earth in 2003 & will return in 2032 (9gag) (https://9gag.com/gag/a1AK5E6/gif-of-the-path-of-orbit-of-an-asteroid-that-came-in-close-contact-with-earth-in-2003-and-will-return-in-2032) The Manicouagan crater: One of the oldest known impact craters & the largest 'visible' impact crater on Earth (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manicouagan_crater) A view of the Manicouagan crater from the space station (Twitter, Chris Hadfield) (https://twitter.com/Cmdr_Hadfield/status/844596180302643200) Is there an atmosphere on the Moon? (NASA) (https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LADEE/news/lunar-atmosphere.html) Regolith (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regolith) Lunar soil (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_soil) Gravitation of the Moon (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitation_of_the_Moon) "The gravitational field of the Moon has been measured through tracking the Doppler shift of radio signals emitted by orbiting spacecraft" (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon#Gravitational_field) Does the Moon orbit the Sun or the Earth? (Wired) (https://www.wired.com/2012/12/does-the-moon-orbit-the-sun-or-the-earth/) Barycentre: "The center of mass of two or more bodies that are orbiting each other, or the point around which they both orbit" (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barycenter) Lagrange points: Parking places in space (Space.com) (http://www.space.com/30302-lagrange-points.html) Sizing up the moons of the solar system (University of Michigan, Jason Maguran) (https://www.umich.edu/~lowbrows/reflections/2008/jmaguran.1.html) Team solves the origin of the Moon's 'mascons' mystery (Phys.org) (https://phys.org/news/2013-05-team-moon-mascons-mystery.html) What colour is the Moon? (Universe Today) (https://www.universetoday.com/19626/color-of-the-moon/) Astronomical albedo (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albedo#Astronomical_albedo) Lunar & solar eclipses (NASA) (https://spaceplace.nasa.gov/eclipses/en/) Why is the Moon exactly the same apparent size from Earth as the Sun? (Astronomy Magazine) (http://www.astronomy.com/magazine/ask-astro/2000/10/why-is-the-moon-exactly-the-same-apparent-size-from-earth-as-the-sun-surely-this-cannot-be-just-coincidence-the-odds-against-such-a-perfect-match-are-enormous) Footage of the diamond ring effect from a total solar eclipse (Business Insider, Australia) (https://www.businessinsider.com.au/video-of-fridays-solar-eclipse-2015-2015-3) The Sun's corona is its outer atmosphere (NASA) (https://solarscience.msfc.nasa.gov/corona.shtml) The next solar & lunar eclipses (TimeAndDate) (https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/list.html) Manned missions to the Moon: Will NASA or others return to the surface? (ABC, Australia) (http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-04-05/manned-moon-mission-nasa-esa-china-looking-to-return/8397068) Does a full moon really trigger strange behaviour? (Scientific American) (https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/lunacy-and-the-full-moon/) It's just a phase: The supermoon won't drive you mad (LiveScience) (http://www.livescience.com/7899-moon-myths-truth-lunar-effects.html) Extraterrestrial real estate (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestrial_real_estate) "Earth's oldest, most recognised celestial real estate agency" (Lunar Land) (https://www.lunarland.com) Origins of 'lunatic' (Online Etymology Dictionary) (http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=lunatic) The United Nations Outer Space Treaty (UN Office for Outer Space Affairs) (http://www.unoosa.org/oosa/en/ourwork/spacelaw/treaties/introouterspacetreaty.html) Notable claims by people who think they own the Moon & other exraterrestrial real estate (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestrial_real_estate#Notable_claims) Geosynchronous orbits & the Bogotá Declaration of 1976 (Wikipedia) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraterrestrial_real_estate#Geosynchronous_orbits) Strange Attractor went to the Moon in 2016 for a backyard film festival
What's outside our solar system? Where does the solar system end? (ABC, Australia) Where in the universe is Voyager? The surprising showdown over where our solar system ends (TIME) What defines the boundary of the solar system? (NASA) Live tracking: Where are the Voyager probes now? (NASA) Voyager 1 is travelling at ~17 km/second (Wikipedia) It's believed that Voyager 1 is either in interstellar space or pretty close to it (the heliopause) - that's the furthest we've sent anything (Wikipedia) In about 30,000 years, Voyager 1 will have passed through the Oort Cloud & in 40,000 years it will pass within 1.6 light-years of the star Gliese 445 (Wikipedia) The infamous 'pale blue dot': Earth as seen by Voyager 1 from 6 billion km (Wikipedia) What is the heliopause? (Encyclopaedia Britannica) What is the heliopause? (Southwest Research Institute) The heliosphere: A proper sciencey paper (Max-Planck-Institut für Aeronomie) What is the Kuiper Belt? A belt of icy bodies beyond Neptune (Cosmos, Swinburne University) What is the Oort Cloud? A hypothesised belt of icy bodies in the far reaches of the solar system (Cosmos, Swinburne University) Voyager 1 & 2 spacecraft flight paths (The Planets Today, Vimeo) Could the Voyager, Pioneer & New Horizons probes eventually be caught by the gravity of another star & start orbiting that star? (Quora) What is a galaxy? (NASA) Galaxies & how they're formed (NASA) The Milky Way galaxy (NASA) Hubble's high-definition panoramic view of the Andromeda galaxy (NASA) All about the Andromeda galaxy (EarthSky) Elliptical galaxy facts & definition (Space.com) Spiral galaxy facts & definition (Space.com) Estimates on how many solar systems & galaxies there might be in the universe (University of Cambridge) How many solar systems are in our galaxy? (NASA) Do all stars have solar systems? (Dept. of Physics, University of Illinois) How did our solar system form? (HubbleSite) Are we really all made of stardust? Yep (Phys.org) How are stars formed? (Science, How Stuff Works) Population I stars (younger) tend to be in the discs of spiral galaxies & made of heavier elements (Hyperphysics, Georgia State University) Population II stars (older) tend to be in globular clusters & the nucleus of galaxies & made of lighter elements (Hyperphysics, Georgia State University) Main sequence stars on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (Hyperphysics, Georgia State University) Interactive Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (Las Cumbres Observatory) Black holes come in 3 varieties: Stellar, supermassive & intermediate (Space.com) Into a black hole: A lecture transcript from Prof. Hawking (Stephen Hawking) Journey into a black hole (HubbleSite) The escape velocity for Earth is ~25,000 miles/hour or 40,000 km/hour (Wolfram Alpha) A list of escape velocities for the planets, moons, sun & solar system (Wikipedia) A list of the gravity values for all the planets compared with Earth (NASA) Definition of massive: "Having relatively high mass" (The Free Dictionary) How do black holes work? (Science, How Stuff Works) Black hole jets can influence star formation in galaxies by dispersing & heating interstellar gas (Phys.org) What happens when 2 black holes collide? You get gravitational waves like the one LIGO detected in 2015 (LIGO) Exoplanets are planets outside our solar system (Space.com) How long does it take for a star to ignite at birth? Not long, but the first photons of light may not escape for thousands of years (Reddit) First sun, then planets: The formation & evolution of the solar system (Wikipedia) Solar system formation (Windows 2 the Universe) What's the difference between comets & asteroids? (EarthSky) What is an orbit? (NASA) A list of solar system objects by orbit (Wikipedia) There are >8,000 artifical objects orbiting Earth (National Geographic) How can one say that gravity is a very weak force, when all the planets & stars are rotating around due to gravity only? (Quora) How can galaxies collide if the universe is expanding? (ABC, Australia) What is a galaxy cluster? A group of hundreds to thousands of galaxies, believed to be the largest gravitationally-bound structures in the universe (Wikipedia) What fuel does Voyager 1 use? (Slate) Live tracking: Where is Halley's comet now? (The Sky Live) What is Halley's comet (& its tail) made of? (Wikipedia) Halley's comet completes an elliptical orbit around the sun every ~76 years (Wikipedia) The difference between meteoroids, meteors & meteorites (Meteorites Australia) What causes a shooting star? (Wonderopolis) How do you shield astronauts & satellites from deadly micrometeorites? (Smithsonian) How does the space station avoid meteors? (Reddit) Where are you from? Send us a postcard! Strange Attractor, c/ PO Box 9, Fitzroy, VIC 3065, Australia Corrections Johnny meant 'elliptical' galaxies, not globular (Cosmos, Swinburne University) A globular cluster is a spherical collection of stars that orbits a galactic core as a satellite (Wikipedia) To go into orbit, a body must still reach escape velocity, but it must be directed away from a planet & then it follows a curved path (Wikipedia) Cheeky review? (If we may be so bold) It'd be amazing if you gave us a short review...it'll make us easier to find in iTunes: Click here for instructions. You're the best! We owe you a free hug and/or a glass of wine from our cellar Click to subscribe in iTunes
A quick tour of our solar system Limits of Humanity: The observable universe goes on for light years & we'll only ever see 0.00000000001% of it (Kurzgesagt, Devour) Powers of Ten: The classic video from 1977 that explains the scale of space (YouTube) Riding Light: Travel with a beam of light in real time through our solar system (Vimeo, Alphonse Swinehart) A beautiful planet (IMAX) The Total Perspective Vortex: The machine from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy that makes you feel so insignificant it will crush your soul (Hitchhiker Wiki) We need different types of telescopes to 'see' the different types of waves in the universe: radio, infrared, visible, X-ray, gamma (NASA) Telescope to seek Earthlike planet in Alpha Centauri system (The New York Times) The BoldlyGo Institute: Private space exploration (Boldy Go) Pluto is 7.5 billion km from Earth (Space.com) Live tracking: Where is Halley's comet now? (The Sky Live) Live tracking: Where are the Voyager probes now? (NASA) Voyager 1 is travelling at about 17 km per second (Wikipedia) It's believed that Voyager 1 is either in interstellar space or pretty close to it - that's the furthest we've sent anything (Wikipedia) NASA's 'eyes': Cool website where you can track all sorts of space things (NASA) The Deep Space Network: Live tracking of probes & stuff by telescopes on Earth (NASA) In about 30,000 years, Voyager 1 will have passed through the Oort Cloud & in 40,000 years it will pass within 1.6 light-years of the star Gliese 445 (Wikipedia) What is the Kuiper Belt? A belt of icy bodies beyond Neptune (Cosmos, Swinburne University) What is the Oort Cloud? A hypothesised belt of icy bodies in the far reaches of the solar system (Cosmos, Swinburne University) It would take about 6 months to drive to the Moon at 95 km/hour (Science Focus) Apollo 11 took 3 days, 3 hours & 49 minutes to reach the Moon (Reference.com) What if Apollo 11 failed? President Nixon had a speech ready (Space.com) A moon is any natural satellite orbiting another body - planets, dwarf planets, asteroids & Kuiper Belt objects can all have moons (Encyclopaedia Britannica) Earth's moon's name is the Moon (caps M), it's also sometimes called 'Luna' (Wikipedia) Earth potentially has 18,000 moons, depending on your definition (Space.com) A star is a big exploding ball of gas - the Sun (caps S) is the name of Earth's star (Qualitative Reasoning Group, Northwestern University) When to capitalise the 'E' on Earth (Grammarist) The 'controversial' 2006 definition of a planet states: "a planet is a body that orbits the Sun, is massive enough for its own gravity to make it round & has 'cleared its neighbourhood' of smaller objects around its orbit" (Wikipedia) Pluto was stripped of its planet status in 2006 (New Scientist) Formation & evolution of the solar system (Wikipedia) How are planets formed? (Phys.org) Planets form in zones: The terrestrial (rocky) planets closer to the sun & the jovian (gassy) planets further out (LASP, University of Colorado) Order of the 8 planets in our solar system (Space.com) How was the Earth formed? (Space.com) What is a gravity well? (Qualitative Reasoning Group, Northwestern University) Where did Earth get its water? (Cosmos) Where did Earth's water come from? (livescience) What is the Goldilocks Zone & why does it matter in the search for ET? (ABC, Australia) What is Neptune made of? It's an icy, slushy, gassy planet with a rocky core (Space.com) Basics of orbital mechanics (NASA) What are Kepler's Laws? They describe the motion of planets across the sky (HyperPhysics, Georgia State University) An exoplanet is a planet that orbits a star other than our Sun (Wikipedia) 5 ways to find an exoplanet (NASA) If Planet 9 is out there, it tilts our solar system (The New York Times) What is Jupiter made of? It's very gassy, mostly hydrogen & helium, & we don't know if it has a solid core (Space.com) The Juno probe aims to unlock the secrets of Jupiter - it's currently orbiting & will crash into it in February 2018 (NASA) Juno has had a glitch, but is mostly ok (The New York Times) What is Mercury made of? It's a dense little nugget with a neglible atmosphere (Space.com) What is Venus made of? It's a hot, rocky planet (Space.com) Was Venus the first habitable planet in our solar system? (The Guardian) Venus spins very slowly, in the wrong direction (The New York Times) "Venus's climate is strongly driven by the most powerful greenhouse effect found in the solar system" (European Space Agency) Carbon dioxide absorbs & re-emits infrared radiation (Center for Science Education) Predator's infrared vision (YouTube) What is Mars made of? It's very dusty & rocky, with a thin atmosphere (Space.com) NASA confirms evidence that liquid water flows on today's Mars (NASA) They reckon Mars was warm & wet about 4 billion years ago (NASA) Exploration of Mercury: We've only sent 2 probes, 1 in 1973 & 2004, but there's another set to launch in 2017 called 'BepiColombo' (Wikipedia) List of solar system probes: We've been busy (Wikipedia) How the atmosphere affects our planet (Softpedia) The gas giants (Wikipedia) What is Saturn made of? It's pretty gassy, mostly hydrogen & helium (Space.com) How long do footprints last on the Moon? Potentially as long as the Moon (Space.com) Origin of Jupiter & Saturn: New theories on formation of gas giants (The Daily Galaxy) The case for Saturn being able to float on water (Universe Today) The case against Saturn being able to float on water (Wired) Planets & dwarf planets can have moons, & there are currently 182 identified in our solar system (Wikipedia) Mecury & Venus don't have moons (Windows 2 The Universe) Mars' moons are Phobos & Deimos; Jupiter has 67 moons, including the 4 that Galileo discovered; Saturn has 62; Uranus has 27; Neptune has 14, NB: Some moons are still awaiting official 'moon status' confirmation (NASA) Galileo made his own telescope & discovered 4 of Jupiter's moons in 1610, which got him into trouble with the Catholic Church (BBC) Saturn has some very cool moons, including the beautiful Enceladus with its icy gesyers (Space.com) Our moon is pretty big by moon standards (Windows 2 The Universe) How the Moon formed: Violent cosmic crash theory gets double boost (Space.com) Our solar system gets pretty chilly out past Mars (NASA) What might the sun look like from other planets? (Futurism) NASA's 'Pluto Time' shows how bright it is on dwarf planet (Space.com) Pluto may have clouds (The New York Times) Chemical properties of methane (Wikipedia) Methane is quite common in the outer solar system (University of Oregon) Ceres is a dwarf planet (Wikipedia) Charon is the largest of the 5 known moons of the dwarf planet, Pluto (Wikipedia) Pluto's unusual orbit (Smithsonian) You need a telescope to see Pluto (EarthSky) The hypothetical planet, Vulcan (Wikipedia) Gravity Probe A helped figure out relativity (Wikipedia) Gravity Probe B helped figure out the curvature of space-time near Earth (Wikipedia) Why did we land on a comet? (Mental Floss) Røde microphones Corrections Woops! Lucy did bad maths: Light would travel a little over 1 billion km in 1 hour, not 65 billion km...so not as far as Pluto (Wolfram Alpha) Apparently we may have photographed an exoplanet: This is the first photo of a candidate 1,200 light-years away (Science Alert) More than 1,300 Earth's would fit inside Jupiter (NASA) Cheeky review? (If we may be so bold) It'd be amazing if you gave us a short review...it'll make us easier to find in iTunes: Click here for instructions. You're the best! We owe you a free hug and/or a glass of wine from our cellar Where are you from? Send us a postcard! Strange Attractor, c/ PO Box 9, Fitzroy, VIC 3065, Australia Click to subscribe in iTunes
Astronomers Help Focus Research in the Search for Another Earth: NASA in Silicon Valley Podcast
I take a lot of flak on this one, but I have done my homework. For a quick introduction, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmFTgeK7U6U I also recommend: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5i_iDyUTCg I then refer you to: http://bit.ly/1OGfioT (see books below also). Original video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZP8QfiE9sxo The post Flat earth, NASA and the Qur’an appeared first on QuraniteCast.
The show where the listeners have a voice is back at a NEW TIME Sunday's at **12 Noon** Join #HolliewoodAndFriends(Hollie Wood, Venor and Miss Juddy) Live Sundays at 12 Noon ET. as they give you the latest #HotInTheBlogs topics as only they can! SUNDAY 8/2: #TeamMeek or #TeamDrake ALSO: Legionnaires outbreak in NY. Cecil the Lion A new Earth? NASA's latest discovery. Hollie Wood's Bday Weekend. and a whole lot MORE! Also #WhatBlowsMine (where you, the listener can call in and tell the world what's that one thing that just gets under your skin) Tune in live Sunday afternoon at 12pm ET! You can call 646-716-8544 just to listen or press 1 when you hear a topic you want to chime in about, we'll bring you on live. ______________________________________ Are you an artist? Do you know an artist? Submit music to the be played on the show holliewoodandfriendsradio@gmail.com FOR BUSINESS INQUIRIES: hamptonblu@gmail.com
The show where the listeners have a voice is back at a NEW TIME Sunday's at **12 Noon** Join #HolliewoodAndFriends (Hollie Wood, Venor and Miss Juddy) Live Sundays at 12 Noon ET. as they give you the latest #HotInTheBlogs topics as only they can! SUNDAY 7/26: #WhatHappenedToSandraBland? ALSO: Meek Mill vs. DrakeTaylor Swift vs. Nicki MinajBirdman accused of being behind murder plot on Lil Wayne.A new Earth? NASA's latest discovery. and a whole lot MORE! Also #WhatBlowsMine (where you, the listener can call in and tell the world what's that one thing that just gets under your skin) Tune in live Sunday afternoon at 12pm ET! You can call 646-716-8544 just to listen or press 1 when you hear a topic you want to chime in about, we'll bring you on live. ______________________________________ Are you an artist? Do you know an artist? Submit music to the be played on the show holliewoodandfriendsradio@gmail.com
Can we create a next generation battery that transforms space travel AND life on Earth? NASA thinks so.
Can we create a next generation battery that transforms space travel AND life on Earth? NASA thinks so