Astronauts accidentally lose a shield in space
It is a fragment of the space walk (EVA #38) made in 2017 by NASA astronaut, Peggy Whitson and NASA astronaut, Shane Kimbrough outside the International Space Station. The interesting thing about this spacewalk is that Peggy Whitson accidentally dropped an anti-debris shield that turned into space debris (oh, the irony) all of this was documented by the GoPro action camera that Whitson carried.
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NASA | Radio Telescopes Capture Best-Ever Snapshot of a Black Hole's Jet
Centaurus A is a giant elliptical active galaxy 12 million light years away. Radio and X-ray images reveal features associated with jets emanating from near the galaxy's central supermassive black hole, which has a mass of 55 million suns. Now, the TANAMI project has provided the best-ever view of these jets. In the radio image of the galaxy's core, the black hole is invisible but the jets show in great detail. Features as small as 15 light-days across can be resolved. The powerful jets feed vast lobes of radio-emitting gas that reach far beyond the visible galaxy.
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NASA | Earth at Night
In daylight our big blue marble is all land, oceans and clouds. But the night - is electric.
This view of Earth at night is a cloud-free view from space as acquired by the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership Satellite (Suomi NPP). A joint program by NASA and NOAA, Suomi NPP captured this nighttime image by the satellite's Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS). The day-night band on VIIRS detects light in a range of wavelengths from green to near infrared and uses filtering techniques to observe signals such as city lights, gas flares, and wildfires. This new image is a composite of data acquired over nine days in April and thirteen days in October 2012. It took 312 satellite orbits and 2.5 terabytes of data to get a clear shot of every parcel of land surface.
This video uses the Earth at night view created by NASA's Earth Observatory with data processed by NOAA's National Geophysical Data Center and combined with a version of the Earth Observatory's Blue Marble: Next Generation.
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March 4 2022 Moon Crash - view from different location
A rocket part that's been careering around space for years is set to collide with the moon on Friday, and it will be the first time a chunk of space junk has unintentionally slammed into the lunar surface.
However, the orbiter's mission team is assessing whether observations can be made of any changes to the lunar environment associated with the impact and later identify the crater formed by the impact.
"This unique event presents an exciting research opportunity," NASA said in an emailed statement.
"Following the impact, the mission march 4 2022 moon crash can use its cameras to identify the impact site, comparing older images to images taken after the impact. The rocket crashing into the moon search for the impact crater will be challenging and might take weeks to months."
India's Chandrayaan-2 orbiter may also be able to locate the rocket crashing into the moon impact crater, which could be up to 65 feet (20 meters) in diameter, Gray said.
It will be far from the only crater on the march 4 2022 moon crash, which rocket crashing into the moon has no protective atmosphere. This means impact craters occur naturally when it's march 4 2022 moon crash march 4 2022 moon crash
There is a possibility of biocontamination at the rocket crashing into the moon crash site, since rocket parts aren't sterile when launched, said David Rothery, a professor of planetary geosciences at The Open University in the United Kingdom.
"Most microbes will have died but rocket crashing into the moon maybe not all. They're probably not going to march 4 2022 moon crash reproduce but it's a very small risk," he said.
Unclear origin
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The origin of the rocket part is unclear. Gray had initially identified it as the SpaceX Falcon rocket stage that launched the US Deep rocket crashing into the moon Space Climate Observatory, or DSCOVR, in 2015 but later said he'd gotten that wrong a march 4 2022 moon crashng into the moon Affairs denied the booster was from its Chang'e-5 moon mission, saying rocket crashing into the moon that march 4 2022 moon crash the rocket in question burned up on reentry to Earth's atmosphere.
This is the space graveyard where the International Space Station will be buried
This is the space graveyard rocket crashing into the moon where the International Space Station will be buried
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No agencies systematically track space debris so far away from Earth, and the confusion over the origin of the rocket stage has underscored the need for official agencies to monitor march 4 2022 moon crash deep-space junk more closely, rather than relying on the limited resources of private individuals and academics.
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However, experts say rocket crashing into the moon that the bigger challenge is the space debris in low-Earth orbit, an area where it can collide with functioning satellites, create more junk and threaten human life on crewed spacecraft.
There are at least 26,000 rocket crashing into the moon pieces of space junk orbiting Earth that are the size of a softball or larger and could destroy a satellite rocket crashing into the moon on impact; over 500,000 objects the size of a marble -- big enough to cause damage to spacecraft or satellites; and over 100 million pieces the size of a grain of salt, rocket crashing into the moon tiny debris that could nonetheless puncture a spacesuit, according to a NASA report issued last year.
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How Sun And Planets Sound In Our Solar System
How Different Planets And The Sun Sound In Our Solar System And Universe | Sound of the Universe | Sound Of Space | Sound Of Solar System | Sounds Of Planets
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The View from Space - Earth's Countries and Coastlines
These high-res time-lapse sequences captured by astronauts aboard the International Space Station give us a beautiful and clear view of some well-known coastlines and countries around the world. Get a good look at England, France, Italy, Egypt, Algeria, Tunisia, Greece, the island of Crete, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, the United States, Mexico, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Cuba, and more. We've attempted to show as many countries as we would, but inevitably we've left many out. Please write to the the astronaut photography office at NASA's Johnson Space Center to request inclusion in this amazing series of sequences.
Introduction to Heliophysics
This short overview for NASA's Heliophysics division explains how NASA studies the sun -- and more importantly, how it affects our daily lives.
Space Weather and Earth's Aurora
Aurora are colorful lights in the night time sky primarily appearing in Earth's polar regions. But what causes them? The culprit behind aurora is our own Sun and the solar plasma that is ejected during a magnetic event like a flare or a coronal mass ejection. This plasma travels outward along with the solar wind and when it encounters Earth's magnetic field, it travels down the field lines that connect at the poles. Atoms in the plasma interacts with atoms in Earth's upper atmosphere. This reaction produces the colorful lights we call aurora.
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Real Images From Jupiter: What NASA Really Saw There
NASA's Juno spacecraft has completed 10 years in space in August 2021. The Juno space probe was launched to orbit Jupiter and unravel the secrets of the gas giant and the early solar system. Sending a spacecraft to Jupiter is one of the most challenging tasks given the planet's enormous gravity and background radiation.
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Babies At The Zoo Very FUNNY
LAUGH TRIGGER will bring you the cutest, happiest and funniest videos on the internet
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