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New Limits on Gravitational Waves From the Big Bang |
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Written by Site Admin
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Friday, 21 August 2009 |
 Artists concept of graviational waves. Credit: NASA The only way to know what the Universe was like at the moment of the Big Bang requires analysis of gravitational waves created when the Universe began. Scientists working with the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) say their initial investigations of these gravitiation waves have turned up nothing. But that's a good thing. Not detecting the waves provides constraints about the initial conditions of the universe, and narrows the field of where we actually do need to look in order to find them. |
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LRO, Chandrayaan-1 Team Up For Unique Search for Water Ice |
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Written by Nancy Atkinson
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Friday, 21 August 2009 |
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NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and India's Chandrayaan-1 will team up on August 20 to perform a Bi-Static radar experiment to search for water ice in a crater on the Moon's north pole. Both spacecraft will be in close proximity approximately 200 km above the lunar surface, and both are equipped with radar instruments. The two instruments will look at the same location from different angles, with Chandrayaan-1's radar transmitting a signal which will be reflected off the interior of Erlanger crater, and then be picked up by LRO. Scientists will compare the signal that bounces straight back to Chandrayaan with the signal that bounces at a slight angle to LRO to garner unique information, particularly about any water ice that may be present inside the crater. Both spacecraft are equipped with a NASA Miniature Radio Frequency (RF) instrument that functions as a Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), known as Mini-SAR on Chandrayaan-1 and Mini-RF on LRO. |
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Weather Looks Good for Tuesday Shuttle Launch |
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Written by Tariq Malik
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Friday, 21 August 2009 |
| Weather Looks Good for Tuesday Shuttle Launch By Tariq Malik Managing Editor posted: 21 August 2009 11:31 am ET | The weather looks promising for NASA's planned predawn Tuesday launch of the space shuttle Discovery and seven astronauts bound for the International Space Station. NASA test director Steve Payne said Discovery currently has a 70 percent chance of launching spaceward Tuesday morning at 1:36 a.m. EDT (0536 GMT) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida and lighting up the dark morning sky. "It should be a spectacular launch," Payne said today in a mission briefing at the spaceport in Cape Canaveral, Fla. "I'm hoping we put on a good show for you." |
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