In this interview, we talk to NASA's Scott Bolton about the Juno Mission to Jupiter.
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The Solar System's planets have varied and interesting atmospheres, ranging from incredibly thin exospheres to ones that could literally crush a person.
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Exactly 12 Years ago this week, NASA's now famous Spirit rover touched down on the Red Planet, starting a spectacular years long campaign of then unimaginable science adventures that ended up revolutionizing our understanding of Mars due to her totally unexpected longevity.
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Have you ever wished that there was an instruction manual for life? "Success Strategies from Women in STEM" aims to be that book for women in research – a 'portable mentor' to help individual researchers find their way.
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If you took a picture of the Sun every day, always at the same hour and from the same location, would the Sun appear in the same spot in the sky? This fine image, compiled by astrophotographer Giuseppe Petricca from Italy, proves the answer is no.
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In 1543, Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus revolutionized astronomy by proposing his heliocentric model of the Universe
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Now that SpaceX has successfully and safely demonstrated the upright recovery of their Falcon 9 booster that flew to the edge of space and back on Dec. 21 - in a historic first - the intertwined questions of how did it fare and what lies ahead for the intact first stage stands front and center.
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Watch Venus pass less than five arc minutes from Saturn on Saturday, January 9th in one of the closest conjunctions of two naked eye planets in 2016. The Moon will also pay the pair a visit this week, as comet US10 Catalina hovers near naked eye visibility in the dawn. It's a great way to kick off astronomy in 2016!
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Happy New Year 2016 from the International Space Station and Beyond! Behold Earth ! Courtesy of our Human and Robotic emissaries to the High Frontier we can ring in the New Year by reveling in gorgeous new views of our beautiful Home Planet taken from the space station and beyond.
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There are several space stories we're anticipating for 2016 but one story might appear -- to some -- to belong in the realm of science fiction: in the coming year Elon Musk will likely reveal his plans for colonizing Mars.
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NASA WALLOPS FLIGHT FACILITY, VA - Assembly and testing of a significantly upgraded version of Orbital ATK's commercially developed Antares rocket has kicked into high gear and is on target for rebirth - as the clock ticks down towards its 'Return to Flight' by approximately mid-2016 from a launch pad at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS) in Virginia, company managers told Universe Today during a recent up close visit to see the actual flight hardware.
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Pluto has been explored, and now the USPS has released new stamps to celebrate this accomplishment. And that's not all, more planets, the Moon and Star Trek?
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The planet Mercury has no moons, but why is that the case? The reason is due to a combination of its small size, orbit, and weak gravity.
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Still looking for the perfect calendar for 2016? Don't start the year without the new Year In Space Wall Calendar!
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Missions to Mars, Jupiter and asteroids are on tap in 2016. Back here on Earth, we may just see the first direct detection of gravitational waves, and some serious exoplanet and SETI hunts get underway... and could 2016 become the year of the heavy lift rocket? Here's the big space stories we're watching in 2016.
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Mountains are formed by geological and tectonic forces, resulting in massive formations that are amazing and awe-inspiring.
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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FL – Buildup of the first of Boeing's CST-100 Starliner crew spaceships is ramping up at the company's Commercial Crew and Cargo Processing Facility (C3PF) - the new spacecraft manufacturing facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center.
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Gravity is a fundamental force in our universe. And on the planets in our Solar System, it is dependent on the size, mass, and density of the body.
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As history closes in on 2015, assembly of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) reached a historic milestone as the installation of the primary mirrors onto the telescope structure reached the halfway point to completion and marks the final assembly phase of the colossal observatory.
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Comets, conjunctions, eclipses and more await astronomy fans worldwide in 2016, as well as a fine opposition of Mars and a rare transit of Mercury across the face of the Sun. Get ready for astronomy 2016! Camping out under dark skies. Image credit and copyright: Michelle Nixon/MNixon Photography
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Elon Musk's dream and ultimate goal of establishing a permanent human presence on the Red Planet in the form of "A City on Mars" took a gigantic step forward with the game changing rocket landing and recovery technology vividly demonstrated by his firm's Falcon 9 booster this past Monday, Dec. 21
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Just in time for the holidays, NASA's Curiosity rover is celebrating Christmas 2015 at a Red Planet Paradise - spectacular "Namib Dune." And she marked the occasion by snapping her first ever color self-portrait with the mast mounted high resolution Mastcam 34 mm camera.
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A nebula is a common feature of our universe, consisting of gas particles and dust which are closely associated with stars and planetary formation.
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NASA managers have just made the difficult but unavoidable decision to scrub the planned March 2016 launch of the InSight lander, the agency's next mission to Mars, by at least two years because of a vacuum leak that was just detected in the probes flawed seismometer instrument which cannot be fixed in time.
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"There and back again," said SpaceX CEO and founder Elon Musk after the amazing successful 'Return to Flight' launch of the firms Falcon 9 rocket and history making vertical return landing at Cape Canaveral, Fla, on Monday evening, Dec. 21.
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Like all stars, our Sun has a life-cycle that began with its birth (4.57 billion years ago) and will end in approximately 6 billion years.
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"The Falcon Has Landed!" gushed exuberant SpaceX officials following tonight's (Dec 21) history making ground landing of the firms spent Falcon 9 boost stage barely 10 minutes after if launched on a critical mission to deliver a constellation of communications satellites to Earth orbit.
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All is "GO" in the final hours of the countdown to leading up to tonight's, Dec. 21, the high stakes blastoff of an upgraded SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral on its 'Return to Flight' mission carrying a flock of commercial satellites to orbit that also features a breathtaking and history making flyback of the rockets first stage to a soft landing on the ground that could open a majestic era of Rocket Reusability - if all goes well.
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The waxing gibbous Moon will occult the bright star Aldebaran in the constellation of Taurus the Bull this Wednesday evening one more time in 2015. Observers across Europe and northern Asia will witness the event. Here's our guide to observing the occultation and more.
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A "significantly upgraded" SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket stands erect on the Florida space coast today, Sunday, Dec. 20, and is poised to make history Monday evening with a
spectacular nighttime blast off and daring first ever surface landing attempt of the boosters first stage at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, that could be accompanied by sonic booms - if all goes well.
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SpaceX CEO Elon Musk announced today (Dec. 19) that his company plans to launch an upgraded version of its Falcon 9 rocket on Sunday night, Dec. 20, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, for the first time since it failed in flight six months ago on a mission for NASA to the space station, after successfully completing a test of the rockets engines late Friday night.
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NASA has just received a significant boost in the agency's current budget after both chambers of Congress passed the $1.1 Trillion 2016 omnibus spending bill this morning, Friday, Dec. 18, which funds the US government through the remainder of the 2016 Fiscal Year.
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It's been 47 years since Apollo 8 captured the famous Earthrise photo. Now the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter's version is out. And it's spectacular.
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The Big Bang Theory explains how the Universe has evolved over last 13.8 billion years, starting from a singularity to its current size.
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Since we all certainly have Star Wars on the brain today (The Force Awakens opens tonight), let's take a look at a few recent space-related developments that hint of inspiration from the movies.
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Igneous rocks are formed from rising magma, make up the vast majority of the Earth's crust, and tell us a great deal about the Earth's mantle.
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What's the perfect holiday gift for any space fan? It's the 2016 version of the amazing Year in Space Wall Calendar, which is now available to order. Universe Today also has 5 copies to give away!
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Thanks to centuries of ongoing research, modern scientists have a very good understanding of how atoms work and what their individual parts are.
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The first British astronaut to blast off on a journey to the International Space Station (ISS) soared gloriously skyward early today, Dec 15, following the flawless launch of a Russian Soyuz capsule with his Russian/American crewmates from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
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We've featured the videos from
Kurzgesagt many times before here on Universe Today and they're always wonderful. Sometimes a terrific animation with adorable birds is worth a million words. In their latest video, they cover black holes, from birth to death, giving you an overview of these bizarre objects.
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Now is the time to catch binocular Comet C/2014 S2 PanSTARRS, as it tops +8 magnitude ahead of predictions this month and crosses circumpolar northern skies. Will this Christmas comet stay bright post-perihelion, rivaling other comets into early 2016?
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After many months of painstaking driving, NASA's Curiosity Mars rover has reached the edge of a massive field of spectacular rippled sand dunes located at the base of Mount Sharp that range up to two stories tall. And she has now begun humanity's first up-close investigation of currently active sand dunes anywhere beyond Earth.
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One of the biggest, most basic questions you can ask is: "why is there something and not nothing?" The reality is that we don't know the answer, we might never know the answer. Let's probe to the edge of what we can explain, and what ideas cosmologists have proposed to explain how we all got here.
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Mars is different from Earth in many ways, being rather cold and inhospitable. But interestingly, a day on Mars is very close to a day on Earth.
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Here are ten of the more interesting facts about the gas/ice giant known as Neptune. Some you may know, others may surprise you
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With NASA's Dawn spacecraft set to enter its final and lowest orbit around the dwarf planet Ceres, spectral measurements are enabling researchers to gradually unravel the nature of the numerous mysterious and intriguing bright spots recently discovered and now conclude that briny mixtures of ice and salts apparently reside just beneath certain patches of the pockmarked surface and that "water is sublimating" from the surface of an "active crater".
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