Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Google Alert - Science

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Daily update September 28, 2022
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Space.com
NASA's DART spacecraft didn't nudge its target asteroid toward Earth, but there might be other space rocks of a similar size on a collision course with our planet — and that's why DART's mission is so important. DART smashed into the 525-foot-wide (160 ...
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Space.com
Participants in today's briefing include: Janet Petro, center director, Kennedy Space Center; Jim Free, associate administrator, Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate, NASA Headquarters. "NASA used the latest information ...
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Space.com
The robot dog concept is called LEAP, or Legged Exploration of the Aristarchus Plateau; Aristarchus is one of the moon's regions that the European Space Agency or ESA (which is funding the project) hopes to explore before too long.
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CNN
Sign up for CNN's Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more. CNN —. A dazzling spiral galaxy located 29 million light-years from Earth appears in "unprecedented detail" ...
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Mashable
While most folks were sitting down for supper, NASA tried to move a space mountain. Beyond sight for backyard stargazers, a spacecraft the size of a vending machine self-destructed by ramming into a harmless asteroid shortly after 7 p.m. ET Monday.
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Phys.Org
Astronomers have hailed the early footage of the first time humanity has deliberately smashed a spacecraft into an asteroid. The asteroid is flying through space in the grainy black and white video, when suddenly a massive cloud of debris sprays out in ...
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EurekAlert
Without altering the genetic code in the DNA, epigenetic modifications can change how genes are expressed, affecting an organism's health and development. The once radical idea that such changes in gene expression can be inherited now has ...
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CNET
DART's mission was simple: crash into a large asteroid so scientists can see whether that impact nudges the space rock ever so slightly. If so, perhaps a future asteroid on a collision course with Earth can be staved off with a similar spacecraft suicide ...
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Christian Science Monitor
The galactic slam occurred at a harmless asteroid 7 million miles away, with the spacecraft named DART plowing into the space rock at 14,000 mph. Scientists expected the impact to carve out a crater, hurl streams of rocks and dirt into space, and, most ...
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The Seattle Times
NASA's DART spacecraft was not able to take pictures of the very moment it slammed into an asteroid on Monday at more than 14,000 mph. Or the aftermath. But telescopes on Earth, 7 million miles away, were watching. The images they recorded revealed a ...
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