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Copernical Team
Roscosmos is delaying the launch of the replacement Soyuz for crew return
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Blue Origin unveils "Blue Alchemist" a technology that turns Moon dust into solar cells
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Four classes of planetary systems
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Team Aims To Find Earth 2.0
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NASA's IMAP spacecraft completes mission critical design review, moves closer to 2025 launch

NASA's Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) spacecraft has completed the Mission Critical Design Review and is on track to meet its scheduled 2025 launch. Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) is managing the payload office, providing the scientific instrument Compact Dual Ion Composition Experiment (CoDICE) and is participating on other instrument teams for the mission, which will study the interaction between the solar wind and the interstellar medium as well as the fundamental processes of particle acceleration in space.
The roar and crackle of Artemis 1
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When the Artemis 1 mission was launched by NASA's Space Launch System, SLS, in November, it became the world's most powerful rocket, exceeding the thrust of the previous record holder, Saturn, by 13%. With liftoff came a loud roar heard miles away.
In JASA Express Letters, researchers from Brigham Young University and Rollins College in Florida reported noise measurements during the launch at different locations around Kennedy Space Center.
The data collected can be used to validate existing noise prediction models, which are needed to protect equipment as well as the surrounding environment and community. These data will be useful as more powerful lift vehicles, including the SLS series, are developed.
"We hope these early results will help prevent the spread of possible misinformation, as happened with the Saturn 5," author Kent Gee said. "Numerous websites and discussion forums suggested sound levels that were far too high, with inaccurate reports of the Saturn 5's sound waves melting concrete and causing grass fires.
Minuteman III test launch showcases readiness of U.S. nuclear force's safe, effective deterrent
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Tracking ocean microplastics from space
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FCC greenlights Amazon's Project Kuiper to deploy 3,236 satellites in LEO
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Rumors swirl about balloons, UFOs as officials stay mum
