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Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 164

Nov 29, 2023

ESA’s Cheops mission uncovers rare star system 100 light-years away

Posted by in categories: evolution, space

The European Space Agency (ESA) has a number of missions ongoing to discover and study exoplanets, which are planets outside of our solar system.

One of those missions, Cheops (CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite), has uncovered a rare star system that lies around 100 light-years away.

It’s an important find because it can tell us about the formation and evolution of the planetary system, according to ESA.

Nov 29, 2023

A gamma-ray pulsar milestone inspires innovative astrophysics and applications

Posted by in categories: energy, physics, space

The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), in conjunction with the international Fermi Large Area Telescope Collaboration, announce the discovery of nearly 300 gamma ray pulsars in the publication of their Third Catalog of Gamma Ray Pulsars. This milestone comes 15 years after the launch of Fermi in 2008 when there were fewer than ten known gamma-ray pulsars.

“Work on this important catalog has been going on in our group for years,” said Paul Ray, Ph.D., head of the High Energy Astrophysics and Applications Section at NRL. “Our scientists and postdocs have been able to both discover and analyze the timing behavior and spectra of many of these newfound pulsars as part of our quest to further our understanding of these exotic stars that we are able to use as cosmic clocks.”

Pulsars are formed when have burned through their fuel supply and become unable to resist the inward pull of their own gravity. This results in the star collapsing into a dense, spinning, magnetized neutron star. Their spinning magnetic fields send out beams of gamma rays, the most energetic form of light. As these beams sweep across the Earth, the highly sensitive Fermi gamma-ray telescope can observe their periodic energy pulses. With more than 15 years of data, Fermi has transformed the field of research.

Nov 29, 2023

Mars horizon captured in new image: “No Mars spacecraft has ever had this kind of view before”

Posted by in category: space

NASA revealed multiple new panoramic images of clouds and dust in Mars’ skies and one of its two tiny moons taken by the spacecraft last May. They were captured by the Odyssey’s camera, called the Thermal Emission Imaging System, or THEMIS.

The rare images were taken from an altitude of about 250 miles, the same altitude at which the International Space Station flies above Earth, according to NASA.

“If there were astronauts in orbit over Mars, this is the perspective they would have,” said Jonathon Hill, the operations lead of THEMIS. “No Mars spacecraft has ever had this kind of view before.”

Nov 29, 2023

This cylindrical module could be first home of astronauts on the Moon

Posted by in categories: habitats, space

Thales Alenia Space is working on the creation of a lunar module called the Multi-Purpose Habitat (MPH).


Thales Alenia Space.

NASA is actively seeking technological solutions to construct a safe haven for future astronauts as well as investigate the feasibility of long-term settlements.

Nov 29, 2023

The Interplanetary War

Posted by in categories: military, space

Space Warfare concepts from science fiction often involve war between planets, and we will discuss the science of that, and war inside a fully colonized solar system or Dyson Swarm.

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Nov 29, 2023

New UK funding for space technology projects

Posted by in categories: climatology, government, space

The Enabling Technologies Programme (ETP) provides opportunities for the UK space sector to accelerate the development of leading-edge technologies that could be used to tackle global problems and benefit the work of space organisations internationally.

The total government funding is £4 million — made up of £3.2 million from the UK Space Agency with £800,000 contributed by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI).

The projects from academia and industry explore how space can be used more efficiently for purposes such as weather prediction, climate-change monitoring, and space debris removal through methods of propulsion, sterilisation, in-orbit servicing, imaging, and more.

Nov 28, 2023

8 Alternative Spaceflight Concepts That Could Take us to The Stars

Posted by in category: space

Humanity has sent probes to other planets, to their moons, and even into interstellar space, but we have yet to reach another star system.

Nov 28, 2023

‘Decommissioning’ ISS to cost a billion dollars, NASA says

Posted by in category: space

The retirement of the space station could be ‘the biggest project ever embarked upon in human history.’


Gremlin / iStock.

In Jan 2022, NASA announced plans to wind down the ISS and released a statement about the transition plan. The Biden-Harris Administration has committed to extending the operations of the International Space Station until 2030, the space agency reported.

Nov 28, 2023

Scientists simulate exoplanet haze in lab to decode alien worlds

Posted by in categories: chemistry, space

The scientists were able to recreate conditions that favor the generation of hazy skies on extraterrestrial planets, in laboratory settings.


Roberto Molar Candanosa/Johns Hopkins University.

This makes it challenging to ascertain the chemical compositions of some exoplanets due to their opaque atmospheres, often obscured by clouds or haze.

Nov 27, 2023

As the ISS turns 25, a look back at the space laboratory’s legacy

Posted by in categories: education, space

The ISS just celebrated its 25th anniversary — soon, the station will be hanging up its boots.

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