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NASA Is a Tiny Bit Worried About Pirates


Who Would Kidnap a Space Telescope?
Marina Koren
NASA’s new space telescope has had a rough go. Name a problem, and this telescope meant to be the most powerful of its kind, a worthy successor to the famous Hubble hasfacedit: poor management, technical errors, budget overruns, schedule delays, and a pandemic. So, naturally, the people responsible for the telescope’s safety are now thinking about pirates.
Yes, pirates.
The topic came up at a recent meeting about NASA’s James Webb space telescope, named for a former administrator of the space agency. Later this year, the telescope will travel by ship to a launch site in South America, passing through the Panama Canal to reach French Guiana. Webb, with a mirror as tall as a two-story building and a protective shield the size of a tennis court, is too large for a plane. Its departure date will be kept secret, someone said at the meeting, to protect against pirates who might want to capture the pr ....

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Clouds of uncertainty: Scientists claim to have spotted signs of life on Venus but sceptics prevail


Clouds of uncertainty: Scientists claim to have spotted signs of life on Venus but sceptics prevail
Firstpost
10-02-2021
The New York Times
© Provided by Firstpost
Clouds of uncertainty: Scientists claim to have spotted signs of life on Venus but sceptics prevail
A team of astronomers made a blockbuster claim in the fall. They said they had discovered compelling evidence pointing to life floating in the clouds of Venus.
If true, that would be stunning. People have long gazed into the cosmos and wondered whether something is alive out there. For an affirmative answer to pop up on the planet in the orbit next to Earth’s would suggest that life is not rare in the universe, but commonplace. ....

United States , New Mexico , United Kingdom , Jane Greaves , Clara Sousa Silva , Bryan Butler , Ignas Snellen , Marthas Gilmore , Dirk Schulze Makuch , Firstpost Venus , Paul Byrne , Rocket Lab , Technical University Berlin , Leiden University , National Radio Astronomy Observatory In Socorro , Wesleyan University In Middletown , University Of Washington , National Radio Astronomy Observatory , European Space Agency , Carolina State University In Raleigh , California State Polytechnic University , Cardiff University In Wales , Firstpost Clouds , Cardiff University , Nature Astronomy , Image Credit ,

Clouds of uncertainty: Scientists claim to have spotted signs of life on Venus but sceptics prevail- Technology News, Firstpost


Clouds of uncertainty: Scientists claim to have spotted signs of life on Venus but sceptics prevail
Venus surface is a hellish place with temperatures well over 800 degrees Fahrenheit but it could ve been much more like Earth today, with oceans and a moderate climate
Feb 10, 2021 10:12:38 IST
A team of astronomers made a blockbuster claim in the fall. They said they had discovered compelling evidence pointing to life floating in the clouds of Venus.
If true, that would be stunning. People have long gazed into the cosmos and wondered whether something is alive out there. For an affirmative answer to pop up on the planet in the orbit next to Earth’s would suggest that life is not rare in the universe, but commonplace. ....

New York , United States , New Mexico , United Kingdom , Jane Greaves , Clara Sousa Silva , Bryan Butler , Marthas Gilmore , Ignas Snellen , Dirk Schulze Makuch , Paul Byrne , Rocket Lab , Technical University Berlin , Leiden University , National Radio Astronomy Observatory In Socorro , Wesleyan University In Middletown , New York Times , University Of Washington , National Radio Astronomy Observatory , European Space Agency , Carolina State University In Raleigh , California State Polytechnic University , Cardiff University In Wales , Cardiff University , Nature Astronomy , Image Credit ,

Life on Venus? The picture gets cloudier


Life on Venus? The picture gets cloudier
© Nachiket Deuskar
Life on Venus? The picture gets cloudier
A team of astronomers made a blockbuster claim in the fall. They said they had discovered compelling evidence pointing to life floating in the clouds of Venus.
If true, that would be stunning. People have long gazed into the cosmos and wondered whether something is alive out there. For an affirmative answer to pop up on the planet in the orbit next to Earth’s would suggest that life is not rare in the universe, but commonplace.
The astronomers, led by Jane Greaves of Cardiff University in Wales, could not see any microscopic Venusians with their telescopes on Earth. Rather, in a paper published in the journal Nature Astronomy, they reported the detection of a molecule called phosphine and said they could come up with no plausible explanation for how it could form there except as the waste product of microbes. ....

New York , United States , New Mexico , United Kingdom , Jane Greaves , Clara Sousa Silva , Bryan Butler , Ignas Snellen , Shannon Stirone , Kenneth Chang , Marthas Gilmore , Dirk Schulze Makuch , Paul Byrne , York Times Company , Rocket Lab , Technical University Berlin , Leiden University , National Radio Astronomy Observatory In Socorro , Wesleyan University In Middletown , University Of Washington , National Radio Astronomy Observatory , European Space Agency , Carolina State University In Raleigh , California State Polytechnic University , Cardiff University In Wales , Nachiket Deuskar Life ,

Life on Venus Claim Faces Strongest Challenge Yet


Scientific American
New studies knock down a controversial report observing phosphine in the planet’s atmosphere
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The swirling clouds of Venus, as seen by NASA’s Mariner 10 mission in 1974. Credit: NASA and JPL-Caltech
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Two papers have dealt a fresh blow to the idea that Venus’s atmosphere might contain phosphine gas a potential sign of life.
The claim that there is phosphine on Venus rocked planetary science last September, when researchers reported spotting the gas’s spectral signature in telescope data. If confirmed, the discovery could mean that organisms drifting among Venusian clouds are releasing the gas. Since then, several studies have challenged although not entirely debunked the report. ....

United States , United Kingdom , Jane Greaves , Alex Akins , Ignas Snellen , Andrew Lincowski , University Of Washington , University Of Cardiff , University Of Leiden , Propulsion Laboratory In Pasadena , Victoria Meadows , Astrophysical Journal Letters , James Clerk Maxwell Telescope , Atacama Large , Jet Propulsion Laboratory , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , ஜேன் கிரேவ்ஸ் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் வாஷிங்டன் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கார்டிஃப் , ப்ரொபல்ஶந் ஆய்வகம் இல் பசதென , விக்டோரியா புல்வெளிகள் , வானியற்பியல் இதழ் எழுத்துக்கள் , ஜேம்ஸ் குமாஸ்தா மேக்ஸ்வெல் தொலைநோக்கி , ஜெட் ப்ரொபல்ஶந் ஆய்வகம் ,