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Copernical Team

Thursday, 22 April 2021 13:24

Crew Dragon liftoff to orbit

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Crew Dragon liftoff to orbit Image: Crew Dragon liftoff to orbit
Thursday, 22 April 2021 13:24

Crew Dragon countdown to liftoff

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Crew Dragon countdown to liftoff Image: Crew Dragon countdown to liftoff
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Crew Dragon rendezvous and docking with the International Space Station Image: Crew Dragon rendezvous and docking with the International Space Station
Thursday, 22 April 2021 13:24

Crew Dragon countdown to the launchpad

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Crew Dragon countdown to the launchpad Image: Crew Dragon countdown to the launchpad
Thursday, 22 April 2021 15:58

NASA's Mars helicopter makes second flight

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NASA's Mars helicopter makes second flight
NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover acquired this image using its left Mastcam-Z camera. Mastcam-Z is a pair of cameras located high on the rover’s mast. This is one still frame from a sequence captured by the camera while taking video. This image was acquired on Apr. 22, 2021. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

NASA successfully carried out a second flight on Mars on Thursday of its mini helicopter Ingenuity, a 52-second sortie that saw it climb to a height of 16 feet (five meters).

"So far, the engineering telemetry we have received and analyzed tell us that the met expectations," said Bob Balaram, Ingenuity's chief engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in southern California.

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SpaceX aims for 3rd crew launch hour before Friday's sunrise
In this Wednesday, April 21, 2021 photo provided by NASA, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company's Crew Dragon spacecraft onboard sits on the launch pad at Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., at sunset. NASA astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur, European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Akihiko Hoshide are scheduled for a Friday launch.
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European Space Agency flight surgeon Adrianos Golemis, in Cape Canaveral, Florida
European Space Agency flight surgeon Adrianos Golemis, in Cape Canaveral, Florida

From muscle loss to radiation exposure and the psychological effects of confinement, spaceflight takes a toll on those lucky enough to experience it.

European Space Agency flight surgeon Adrianos Golemis, who is responsible for the health of astronaut Thomas Pesquet during the SpaceX Crew-2 mission, shared some insights on the field of medicine.

Q: What are the major health challenges of space?

A: If we talk about low Earth orbit where the ISS lies, you have almost so that takes its toll on your bones and your muscles.

Radiation is a major issue, because here on the ground we are protected by the magnetosphere (magnetic field) and by the atmosphere, but if we go beyond, this protection goes away.

And of course we should not forget we have things that we are just beginning to understand: for example eye pathology (disease), or () that some healthy astronauts develop.

Thursday, 22 April 2021 12:43

Catch comet R4 ATLAS as it nears Earth

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Catch comet R4 ATLAS as it nears Earth
Comet C/2020 R4 ATLAS from April 11th, 2021. Credit: Michael Jäger

Looking to do some springtime astronomy? With temperatures warming up in the northern hemisphere in April through May, galaxy season is upon us. At dusk, the area in the Bowl of Virgo asterism rising in the east is rife with clusters of galaxies that spill over into the adjacent constellations of Coma Berenices and Boötes…

But this May, keep an eye out for a fuzzball interloper that is not a galaxy: Comet C/2020 R4 ATLAS.

Discovered on the night of September 12, 2020, by the prolific automated Asteroid Terrestrial Impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) based in Haleakala (ALTAS-HKO) and Mauna Loa (ATLAS-MLO) Hawaii, R4 ATLAS has proven to be an over-achiever. In fact, it was never initially predicted to top +10th magnitude… until a surprise outburst in late December 2020 shot it up 100-fold in brightness, from +18th to +13th magnitude. As of writing this, it sits at about +8th magnitude "with a bullet," and may top out +7th magnitude this week.

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Mars’ changing habitability recorded by ancient dune fields in Gale crater
Credit: NASA

Understanding whether Mars was once able to support life has been a major driving force for Mars research over the past 50 years. To decipher the planet's ancient climate and habitability, researchers look to the rock record—a physical record of ancient surface processes which reflect the environment and the prevailing climate at the time the rocks were deposited.

In a new paper published in JGR: Planets, researchers on the NASA-JPL Mars Science Laboratory mission used the Curiosity rover to add another piece to the puzzle of Mars' ancient past by investigating a unit of rocks within Gale crater.

They found evidence of an ancient field preserved as a layer of rocks in Gale crater, which overlies that were deposited in a large lake. The rock remnants of the dune field are known today as the Stimson formation.

The findings help scientists understand surface and atmospheric processes—such as the direction the wind blew sand to form dunes—and potentially how Mars' climate evolved from an environment that potentially harbored microbial life, to an uninhabitable one.

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