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Written by Sonja Alexander - NASA Washington & Dewayne Washington - Goddard Space Flight Center
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Thursday, 19 March 2009 20:44 |
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NASA Celebrates Sun-Earth Day With Illuminating Webcast PASADENA, Calif. . NASA scientists will reveal new information and images about our sun and its influence on Earth and the solar system for Sun-Earth Day, recognized each year in conjunction with the spring equinox. The highlight of this year's celebration is a webcast for students and teachers around the world, beginning at 10 a.m. PDT (1 p.m. EDT), Friday, March 20. This year's theme, "Our Sun, Yours to Discover," celebrates the International Year of Astronomy and emphasizes daytime astronomy. During the live, interactive event, participants from around the world and NASA scientists will share new discoveries and visualizations about our sun. Participating students will have the opportunity to demonstrate personally designed sundials, while others will be monitoring the sun and preparing their own space weather forecast.
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Written by Guy Webster - JPL
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Wednesday, 18 March 2009 16:05 |
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| One Mars Rover Sees a Distant Goal; The Other Takes a New Route PASADENA, Calif. -- On a plain that stretches for miles in every direction, the panoramic camera on NASA's Mars rover Opportunity has caught a first glimpse on the horizon of the uplifted rim of the big crater that has been Opportunity's long-term destination for six months. Opportunity's twin, Spirit, also has a challenging destination, and last week switched to a different route for making progress. Endeavour Crater, 22 kilometers (14 miles) in diameter, is still 12 kilometers (7 miles) away from Opportunity as the crow flies, and at least 30 percent farther away on routes mapped for evading hazards on the plain. Opportunity has already driven about 3.2 kilometers (2 miles) since it climbed out of Victoria Crater last August after two years of studying Victoria, which is less than one-twentieth the size of Endeavour. |
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Written by Whitney Clavin - JPL
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Wednesday, 18 March 2009 10:44 |
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| Hearts of Galaxies Close in for Cosmic Train Wreck PASADENA, Calif. -- A new image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope offers a rare view of an imminent collision between the cores of two merging galaxies, each powered by a black hole with millions of times the mass of the sun. The galactic cores are in a single, tangled galaxy called NGC 6240, located 400-million light years away in the constellation Ophiuchus. Millions of years ago, each core was the dense center of its own galaxy before the two galaxies collided and ripped each other apart. Now, these cores are approaching each other at tremendous speeds and preparing for the final cataclysmic collision. They will crash into each other in a few million years, a relatively short period on a galactic timescale. |
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Written by Whitney Clavin - JPL & Ray Villard - Space Telescope Science Institute
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Wednesday, 18 March 2009 10:45 |
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| Quadruple Saturn Moon Transit Snapped by Hubble PASADENA, Calif. -- On Feb. 24, 2009, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope took a photo of four moons of Saturn passing in front of their parent planet. The pictures were taken by the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2, developed and built by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. In the new view, the giant orange moon Titan casts a large shadow onto Saturn's north polar hood. Below Titan, near the ring plane and to the left, is the moon Mimas, casting a much smaller shadow onto Saturn's equatorial cloud tops. Farther to the left, and off Saturn's disk, are the bright moons Dione and the fainter Enceladus. |
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Written by United Press International
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Wednesday, 21 January 2009 13:30 |
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NASA extends spacesuit contract WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says it has approved an $86 million, one-year spacesuit contract option. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the extension of the cost-plus-award-fee contract extension awarded Hamilton Sundstrand Space Systems International of Windsor Locks, Conn., is for spacesuits used on the space shuttles and the International Space Station. |
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