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Page 3 - நாசா கோடார்ட் இடம் விமானம் மையம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

NASA s Goddard Space Flight Center set to launch next-gen telescope in October

NASA s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland is expecting to launch the James Webb Space Telescope on Oct. 31. This is how it will look once it is deployed. (Adriana Manrique Gutierrez, NASA animator) By LOGAN H. ARNESON Capital News Service Washington Bureau NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland is planning to put a new deep-space telescope into operation in October. The James Webb Space Telescope will replace the Hubble Telescope and have greater capabilities to see farther into the universe than was previously possible. Goddard began the telescope project in 1996 and originally aimed to launch it into space in 2007. But the complex instrument ran into design and technical issues, prolonging final development by over a decade.

Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation (ICE) Satellite 2 - Aerospace Technology

Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation (ICE) Satellite 2 Share Launch DateSeptember 2018 Launch SiteVandenberg Air Force Base, California, US LifespanThree years Expand ICESat-2 is launched in September 2018. Credit: Nasa. The ICESat-2 spacecraft will feature the ATLAS instrument, which will measure ice-sheet topography, sea-ice freeboard, cloud and atmospheric properties, as well as global vegetation. Credit: Nasa GSFC. ICESat-2 will be launched using the Delta II rocket. ICESat-2 is expected to be launched in September 2018. The Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite 2 (ICESat-2) was developed by the Nasa Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) to gather altimetry data of the Earth’s surface to evaluate polar ice changes and global vegetation biomass.

How Covid gave the world a lesson in tackling air pollution

By Katrina Krämer2021-04-15T08:30:00+01:00 ‘A 7% drop – we’ve never seen this since world war two,’ says Corinne Le Quéré, professor of climate change science at the University of East Anglia, UK. Le Quéré is talking about an unprecedented global decrease in carbon emissions in modern times, the result of the coronavirus pandemic. 1 The data Le Quéré and other atmospheric scientists have gathered over the last year are both shocking and insightful. They show a world that was profoundly altered by a virus that has killed more than 2.5 million people to date, while giving a glimpse of what a future with cleaner air might look like – one that could save many lives.

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