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17 Results:
An artist's impression of the interstellar asteroid 'Oumuamua.
10 m
Article
Space
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The Interstellar Asteroid

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Dec 7, 2017
There are almost one million asteroids and comets in our solar system. And every single one of them (we think) formed here, within our solar system, alongside the planets just over 4.5 billion years ago. However, in the summer months of 2017, an object not borne from the Solar System made a silent entrance, whipped around the Sun in September 2017, and started heading out again, never to return. This object, now named ‘Oumuamua, was the first asteroid discovered from outside the solar system
An artists impression of an exoplanet
6 m
Article
Space
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Planets like 'Tatooine' Could Still Be Habitable

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 28, 2017
The first exosolar planet (a planet orbiting a star other than the Sun) was discovered in 1995, and since then humans have found over 3600 planets outside of our solar system. Some of those found are orbiting not one star like we do, but two stars. For example, stars Kepler-35A and 35B orbit each other, but a planet Kepler-35b, orbits both of them. This is much more like the fantasy word Tatooine in the space epic Star Wars than our own planet Earth. In A New Hope, we see young Luke Skywalker
An example of computer code
5 m
Article
Space
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NASA has issued a challenge to the community

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 28, 2017
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has issued a challenge to its public: increase the efficiency of one of its high-level research software and win $55,000 USD. Many of us forget that NASA also works in aeronautics, not just space. In order to develop cutting edge air planes and other flight tech, NASA begins with simulating airflow using a Fortran code called FUN3D. However, FUN3D isn't able to keep up with some of the simulations its been given. As a result, NASA has
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

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
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
Blue swirls of phytoplankton in the Black Sea, imaged from space.
5 m
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Space
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Swirling Phytoplankton in the Black Sea

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 23, 2017
Around this time of year, the Black Sea blooms with a massive growth of phytoplankton. This particular species of phytoplankton known as coccolithophores, are plated with white calcium carbonate, making the bloom very easy to see from space. NASA's Aqua satellite gathered these data.
Saturn's moon Titan.
5 m
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Space
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Summer Arrives on Titan

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 23, 2017
The Cassini spacecraft took this image of the north pole of Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, in the near-infrared. The dark spots near the top of the image are Titan's massive polar lakes of methane. Also visible are white streaks of cloud. The Saturnian system has moved into summer solstice for the northern hemisphere, shedding more light on Titan's north pole.
Three moons of Saturn collected in one image: Atlas, Pan, Daphnis. These moons have large equatorial bulges.
3 m
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Space
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The Walnut-Shaped Moons of Saturn

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jul 7, 2017
The Cassini spacecraft has made some truly remarkable discoveries within the Saturnian system, where it has been orbiting for the last 13 years. One such discovery is of the walnut-shaped moons: Atlas, Daphnis, and Pan. These moons sport a prominent equatorial ridge pattern circumnavigating the moons (Saturn's moon Iapetus also as an equatorial feature, though not as prominent as these). The ridges are due to where the moons are located. They are all located in or very near to the ring system
A black and white image of a storm on the surface of Saturn, taken in an close approach by Cassini
5 m
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Space
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Cassini Dives Closest to Saturn's Atmosphere Ever

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 27, 2017
The NASA/ESA Cassini spacecraft completed its first of 22 dives between the planet Saturn and its ring system; no spacecraft has ever flown that trajectory before. During the pass by the rings, Cassini was out of radio contact. Upon regaining communications, Cassini sent back an image of Saturn, the closest of the planet ever taken. Cassini will continue to dive closer and closer to the atmosphere of Saturn until it ultimately burns up on September 15th, 2017.
The cygnus spacecraft approaches the International Space Station
2 m
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Space
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The Cygnus Capsule on Approach to the ISS

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 26, 2017
On Wednesday April 19, 2017, Orbital ATK's 7th resupply mission to the International Space Station (ISS) launched from Cape Canaveral. The Cygnus cargo module was launched atop an Atlas V rocket with over 7600 lbs of supplies and science equipment. Three days later, the module got close enough to the ISS for European Space Agency's (ESA) Thomas Presquet to take this image of the Cygnus capsule on approach. Just a bit later, Presquet and ISS Commader Peggy Whitson used CanadArm to secure the
NASA Astronaut Peggy Whitson floating in the Cupola
3 m
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Space
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Peggy Whitson: the USA Astronaut with the Most Flight Hours

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 24, 2017
NASA Astronaut Peggy Whitson has broken the record for cumulative time spent in space by a United States astronaut at 534 days, 2 hours, 49 minutes, and counting. When she returns to Earth in September 2017, she will have spent 650 days in space.
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