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A screenshot from the game, StarBlox Inc.
10 m
Podcast
Space
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Space museum reaches for the stars with new Nintendo game

Profile picture for user Sonia Mendes
Sonia Mendes
Ingenium - Canada's Museums of Science and Innovation
Oct 17, 2019
Staff at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum helped launch StarBlox Inc., a new game for Nintendo Switch. Read more about the museum’s approach to making the game — and hear an audio clip from CBC’s All in a Day.
An image of the partial solar eclipse with the ISS
10 m
Article
Space
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The Multiple Views of the Total Solar Eclipse

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 24, 2017
The Total Solar Eclipse of 2017 that crossed the United States garnered international attention. Here in Canada we were treated to a beautiful partial solar eclipse, and the Canada Aviation and Space Museum attracted thousands of visitors to watch. Here NASA has published some of the ways the eclipse was watched, from the ground and from space. My favourite is the above picture because it has the Sun, which is 150 million kilometres away, the Moon, which is 400,000 kilometres away, and the
An image of the Boomerang Nebula.
8 m
Article
Space
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The Coldest Place in the Universe

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jul 25, 2017
The Boomerang Nebula is the coldest location in the known universe: it measures at roughly 2 degrees colder than empty space! This nebula is the result of the death of a red giant star, and the extreme temperature is caused by the rapid expansion of the nebula. According to thermodynamics, if you expand a gas you, cool a gas (just try using one of those compressed air cans for cleaning electronics). However, according to astronomers, a single star's death could not account for a strong enough
A close up view of a storm on the surface of Saturn, taken by the Cassini spacecraft.
7 m
Article
Space
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Cassini Makes its First Dive Between Saturn and its Rings

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
May 1, 2017
NASA's Cassini-Huygens mission has begun its final mission phase, making its first dive between the planet Saturn and its rings. It is the only craft to ever make that plunge. Check out some of the amazing images it took as it went through, including the north pole hexagonal vortex.
An artist's impression of space junk orbiting the Earth.
9 m
Article
Space
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What to do about Space Junk

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
Human's have been launching satellites into space since 1957, and now the current number of objects in orbit larger than 10 cm is about 23,000. The growing number poses a real threat to the future of space exploration. Humanity will need to solve this problem moving forward, and ideas are currently being discussed.

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