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Join us live on Thursday at 14:30 UTC to watch a webinar about the achievements and discoveries of NASA's latest rover mission as well as their implications for future research. In February 2021, NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover landed in Jezero crater…
A reminder that the Mars 2020 webinar starts in an hour.
Dr Jesse Tarnas (NASA, Jet Propulsion Laboratory) will cover the technological achievements and scientific discoveries of NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover Mission, as well as their implications for astrobiology, planetary science, and space exploration.
📺 Link to stream
Dr Jesse Tarnas (NASA, Jet Propulsion Laboratory) will cover the technological achievements and scientific discoveries of NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover Mission, as well as their implications for astrobiology, planetary science, and space exploration.
📺 Link to stream
The crew of Inspiration4 had an incredible first day in space! They’ve completed more than 20 orbits around planet Earth since liftoff and made full use of the Dragon cupola.
Twitter (Inspiration4)
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Twitter (Inspiration4)
@EverythingScience
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It’s the next best thing to being on Mars. Take a spin in 3D and even track Perseverance. Two interactive web experiences let you explore the Martian surface, as seen by cameras aboard the rover and orbiters flying overhead.
See Mars at your fingertips:
http://go.nasa.gov/39aPr7p
Twitter (NASAJPL)
@EverythingScience
See Mars at your fingertips:
http://go.nasa.gov/39aPr7p
Twitter (NASAJPL)
@EverythingScience
SpaceX Just Marked Another Huge Milestone in The History of Crewed Spaceflight
Article
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Article
@EverythingScience
ScienceAlert
SpaceX Just Marked Another Huge Milestone in The History of Crewed Spaceflight
Four SpaceX tourists returned to Earth safely on Saturday after spending three days in space, successfully concluding the first orbital mission in history with no professional astronauts on board.
There Could Be an Extremely Simple Reason Why Mars Isn't as Suitable For Life
Article
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Article
@EverythingScience
ScienceAlert
There Could Be an Extremely Simple Reason Why Mars Isn't as Suitable For Life
We often talk about the strong similarities between Earth and Mars, but it's the differences that are likely behind why one planet has life and the other doesn't – at least, no life we've found so far.
Webinar: Extraterrestrial Life
Are We the Sharpest Cookies in the Jar?
The search for extraterrestrial life is one of the most exciting frontiers in Astronomy. First tentative clues were identified close to Earth in the form of the weird interstellar object Oumuamua. Our civilization will mature once we find out who resides on our cosmic street by searching with our best telescopes for unusual electromagnetic flashes, industrial pollution of planetary atmospheres, artificial light or heat, artificial space debris or something completely unexpected. We might be a form of life as primitive and common in the cosmos as ants are in a kitchen. If so, we can learn a lot from others out there through the new frontier of "space archaeology".
📺 Join webinar (Starting in 20 minutes)
Brought to you by CERN Colloquium
Presented by Prof. Avi Loeb (Professor of Science at Harvard University)
@EverythingScience
Are We the Sharpest Cookies in the Jar?
The search for extraterrestrial life is one of the most exciting frontiers in Astronomy. First tentative clues were identified close to Earth in the form of the weird interstellar object Oumuamua. Our civilization will mature once we find out who resides on our cosmic street by searching with our best telescopes for unusual electromagnetic flashes, industrial pollution of planetary atmospheres, artificial light or heat, artificial space debris or something completely unexpected. We might be a form of life as primitive and common in the cosmos as ants are in a kitchen. If so, we can learn a lot from others out there through the new frontier of "space archaeology".
📺 Join webinar (Starting in 20 minutes)
Brought to you by CERN Colloquium
Presented by Prof. Avi Loeb (Professor of Science at Harvard University)
@EverythingScience