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Satellite view of the Juan de Fuca strait.
8 m
Article
Aviation
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Fog in the Strait of Juan de Fuca

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jun 14, 2017
The Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) aboard NASA's GOES-16 satellite captured multiple images of fog rolling into the Juan de Fuca strait. The high-resolution nature of GEOS-16 allows researchers to see small-scale weather features such as "bow shock waves" within the fog travelling down the strait.
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

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
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.
Bioluminescent fungi on a branch
7 m
Article
Sciences
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A Fun-gi to the Science of Bioluminescence

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 28, 2017
A group of scientists have discovered what causes fungi to glow in the dark. It turns out that it is a very similar process to what fireflies and angler fish use. Another case of convergent evolution, the idea that unrelated organisms can evolve to have similar characteristics.
The Recluse spider
7 m
Article
Sciences
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Recluse Spiders Have an Interesting Way of Spinning their Web

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 28, 2017
The recluse spider has a very different way of spinning its web. Arachnologists (yes... that's a real profession) from Chile have taken high speed videos of the recluse spider spinning its web to reveal that the spider can create the web entirely automatically, without the help of its legs or having to attach the web to something and pull. Check out the videos attached to the article, they're weird and awesome.
An image of a mastadon thigh bone
10 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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When Did the First Humans Move onto North America?

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 27, 2017
Scientists have re-examined Mastadon bones found in the San Diego area in 1992. They find the bones to be over 100,000 years old. Moreover, the bones appear to have been broken by humans. This means that modern humans may have travelled to North America fare earlier than is commonly accepted, which is about 15,000 years ago.
False colour images indicating where icebergs have gouged the sea floor.
8 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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Iceberg 'Doodles' Trace Climate History

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 26, 2017
Here's some interesting #sciArt for ya. These great gouge marks are left behind when a large iceberg drags across the bottom of the seabed. A large collection of these images has just been published, with the help of 250 scientists from 20 different countries. By gathering this high-resolution atlas of the seafloor, scientists can better determine how the climate is changing.
An artist's impression of the new Space Launch System.
8 m
Article
Space
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The First Space Launch System Flight will Probably be Delayed

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Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 26, 2017
NASA is in the middle of developing a new heavy-lift rocket, that will be used to get humans beyond low Earth orbit to places like the Moon and Mars. The last time NASA was in full scale development mode was in the late 1970s and early 1980s for the beginning of the Shuttle program. According to some investigations on the part of the Planetary Society, it looks like NASA's going to miss their launch date of Nov 2018.
An artist's impression of the Cassini spacecraft in the foreground and Saturn in the background.
8 m
Article
Space
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The Beginning of the End for Cassini

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
A short description of the upcoming Grand Finale of the Cassini Spacecraft. Over the next 5 months, Cassini will make 22 plunges between Saturn's rings and the planet itself. No craft has ever been that close. During this final phase, Cassini will make close up measurements of the rings for the first time, image the planet's cloud-tops in unprecedented detail, and even answer long-standing questions like: how fast does Saturn actually rotate? It's going to be a very interesting 5 months.
Image of Phobos
10 m
Article
Space
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MMX - Martian Moons eXploration

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Apr 21, 2017
In early April 2017, the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS), a division of the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), announced a new robotic explorer to be launched towards Mars in 2024: the Martian Moons Exploration (MMX). The goal is not to observe the red planet, but its two moons: Phobos and Deimos. These two moons (about 25 km wide) are just a fraction the size of Earth's Moon (about 3400 km wide), and their origins are still disputed. Maybe Phobos and Deimos were
An artist's impression of space junk orbiting the Earth.
9 m
Article
Space
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What to do about Space Junk

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
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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