Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Google Alert - Science

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Science
Daily update June 14, 2022
NEWS
Space.com
France is the most recent signatory to the Artemis Accords, NASA's international agreement to establish best practices for ongoing cooperation on moon exploration. The signing took place June 7 and adds to a quickly growing ...
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Space.com
It was initially spotted by two ground-based surveys, the Polish-led Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE) which mostly uses the Las Campanas Observatory in Chile, and the Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics (MOA) project at the Mount John ...
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Space.com
The launch of SpaceX's next cargo mission has been pushed back at least two more weeks, to no earlier than July 11. The mission, called CRS-25, will send a robotic SpaceX Dragon capsule toward the International Space Station atop a Falcon 9 rocket.
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Space.com
Europe's galaxy-mapping Gaia mission recorded the sound of starquakes that ripple through stellar surfaces like tsunamis and change stars' shape in a way that can be detected from space around Earth. The recording ...
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Space.com
As summer nears, thoughts of fresh berries for strawberry shortcake are usually in order, but June is also blessed with what Native American cultures have nicknamed the Full Strawberry Moon, and this year is extra special as it will also be designated ...
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CNN
(CNN) For the first time, the Hubble Space Telescope has detected a lone object drifting through our Milky Way galaxy -- the invisible, ghostly remains of a once radiant star. When stars ...
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BBC News
Europe's Gaia telescope dropped its latest batch of data on Monday as it seeks to assemble the largest catalogue of light sources in the sky. It is becoming a discovery machine like no other. Stars, asteroids and distant, bright galaxies - anything ...
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CNET
Somewhere across the universe, a magnetic field shrieked. Two stars -- created by the same stellar nursery, yet birthed on opposite ends -- appear to have found each other. But when these stars aligned, there were no angels crooning or futures falling ...
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Phys.Org
From a zoomed out, distant view, star-forming cloud L483 appears normal. But when a Northwestern University-led team of astrophysicists zoomed in closer and closer, things became weirder and weirder. As the researchers peered closer into the cloud, ...
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CNN
(CNN) Strange and unexpected tsunami-like starquakes -- movements on stars' crusts similar to earthquakes we experience on our planet -- have been revealed by the European Space Agency's Gaia space observatory.
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