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EverythingScience
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NASA shared their first photos of the Artemis I launch
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Artemis I riding a column of fire from two solid rocket boosters and four RS-25 engines on its way to the Moon

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Liftoff of Artemis I to the Moon
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Incredible views of booster separation from one of the tracking cameras at Patrick Space Force Base!

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Solid rocket booster separation and burnout as the SLS core stage continues toward delivering Orion to orbit.

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Orion Separation

The human-rated crew capsule is on the way to the moon after a seemingly picture-perfect launch on the maiden flight of NASA’s Space Launch System moon rocket.

🌐SpaceflightNow
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This is the view of Earth via Orion right now! 🤯
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NASA is sharing amazing views right now from the Orion capsule on its way to the Moon
🌐Watch Live

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SLS Artemis I heads moonward
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"This is a whole new chapter in astronomy."

Webb researchers found 2 early galaxies, one of which may contain the most distant starlight ever seen. These 2 unexpectedly bright galaxies could fundamentally alter what we know about the very first stars.

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Want a closer look? These two galaxies are thought to have existed 350 & 450 million years after the big bang (left to right). Unlike our Milky Way, these first galaxies are small and compact, with spherical or disk shapes rather than grand spirals.

‍This discovery suggests that stars might have started forming earlier than expected, perhaps as soon as 100 million years after the big bang. Follow-up observations with Webb’s spectrographs will confirm the distances of these 2 galaxies & help us learn more.

#Webb
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Why Don't We Shoot Nuclear Waste Into Space?

Here in the Kurzgesagt labs we test very important ideas to see what happens when you blow things up or play with black holes. Many of you suggested that we look into an idea that sounds reasonable: Shooting nuclear waste into space. It is one of those concepts that seems like an easy fix for one of the main problems with nuclear energy. But it turns out this idea is not just bad but horribly bad and it gets worse the longer you think about it.

🌐 Video (Kurzgesagt)
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Cosmic chocolate pralines? General neutron star structure revealed

The study of the sound speed has revealed that heavy neutron stars have a stiff mantle and a soft core, while light neutron stars have a soft mantle and a stiff core—much like different chocolate pralines.

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TIMELAPSE OF THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE - 13.8 Billion Years in 10 Minutes (1080p)

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It can be difficult to fathom how long 13.8 billion years is. The more you watch this video, the more it sinks in just how stunningly old the universe is, and how magnificently tiny we humans are in the grand scheme. I hope seeing this experiment in humility makes you ponder the vast, unwitnessed ages that have passed before we came along, and the brevity of our existence in comparison.

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TIMELAPSE OF THE FUTURE: A Journey to the End of Time (1080p)

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How's it all gonna end? This experience takes us on a journey to the end of time, trillions of years into the future, to discover what the fate of our planet and our universe may ultimately be.

We start in 2019 and travel exponentially through time, witnessing the future of Earth, the death of the sun, the end of all stars, proton decay, zombie galaxies, possible future civilizations, exploding black holes, the effects of dark energy, alternate universes, the final fate of the cosmos - to name a few.

This is a picture of the future as painted by modern science- a picture that will surely evolve over time as we dig for more clues to how our story will unfold. Much of the science is very recent and new puzzle pieces are still waiting to be found.

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Wormholes May Already Have Been Detected, Physicists Say

Hypothetical bridges connecting distant regions of space (and time) could more or less look like garden variety black holes, meaning it's possible these mythical beasts of physics have already been seen.

Thankfully however, if a new model proposed by a small team of physicists from Sofia University in Bulgaria is accurate, there could still be a way to tell them apart.

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