Pretty cool gif. I never got my CRS-7 patch, by the way, even though we were promised by a high-up that we would.
recent article at yahoo said a flat worm that lived in space came back and grew 2 heads, twice... apparently thats so rare it doesn't bode well for people in space, the genetic mutations will turn us into a new species if we survive a long trip
in other news, they think the asteroid Psyche contains a treasure larger than anything we have here. They think its the exposed core of a larger object that got ripped open, the miners who get there first will have hit the motherlode
I've been wondering about this. I really don't like the thought of going underground. Wouldn't it be possible to make some kind of concrete or just pile martian soil on an inner structure to make radiation safe martian buildings? Would presumably just need a good inner membrane. And for the layer of soil to be pretty thick I guess. I would really hope it's possible to have at least some amount of windows too. One thing making mars safer, much like on the ISS, is that the planet itself shields it 50% of the time.Mars itself isn't quite safe place from radiation point of view, too. But at least there are more options, like going underground.
A few were distributed and I am pretty sure you can find some online at inflated prices. I want one but not that bad - and it wouldn't have my employee number on it either.Can you buy the patch somewhere even though you didn't get it? Maybe a knock off, if you have to? Or is that just not "the same"
That's amazing about NZ. I had no idea. Apparently they launch from the Mahia peninsula. I had to look up where that is too, it's on the north island. Would have never guessed NZ was up to stuff like this
from the above article said:Humankind's chance to catch a glimpse of the mysterious object might come fairly soon once construction of the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope is completed. Run by a consortium that includes the UA and scheduled for first light in 2020, the instrument will take unprecedented, real-time surveys of the sky, night after night.
"We expect LSST to bring the number of observed KBOs from currently about 2000 to 40,000," Malhotra said. "There are a lot more KBOs out there—we just have not seen them yet. Some of them are too far and dim even for LSST to spot, but because the telescope will cover the sky much more comprehensively than current surveys, it should be able to detect this object, if it's out there."
https://phys.org/news/2017-06-unseen-planetary-mass-warped-kuiper.html
another planet nine... and its distorting the orbits of objects in the Kuiper Belt
its doing more than that I think, its why the planets are off kilter too...