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Why NASA report is significant - and what it means for search for extraterrestrial life

Sky News Thursday, 14 September 2023
If you believe there are UFOs skimming over rooftops, or alien remains stored in secret storerooms in the New Mexico desert, today's NASA briefing wasn't for you.
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Astronomers Witness Merger of 2 Black Holes From the 'Cosmic Dawn' [Video]

Astronomers Witness Merger of 2 Black Holes From the 'Cosmic Dawn'

Astronomers Witness , Merger of 2 Black Holes, From the 'Cosmic Dawn'. 'The Independent' reports that NASA's Webb Space Telescope has made the most distant detection of merging black holes. . Two gigantic black holes and the galaxies that they stood at the center of merged together just 740 million years after the universe was formed in the Big Bang. One of the black holes is a staggering 50 million times larger than our Sun, and the other is believed to be a similar gigantic size. . Astronomers have long wondered how supermassive black holes are so big. . Lead author Hannah Ubler of the University of Cambridge says the findings suggest that mergers like this ancient example show how black holes are able to grow so rapidly. According to Ubler, the latest Webb discovery also suggests that black holes have been merging since the "cosmic dawn.". Massive black holes have been shaping the evolution of galaxies from the very beginning, Hannah Ubler, lead author from the University of Cambridge, via 'The Independent'. In 2021, NASA launched Webb, intended to replace the Hubble Space Telescope. Webb is the largest and most powerful observatory ever launched into space. . The joint U.S.-European project surveys the universe from a vantage point located about 1 million miles away from Earth.

Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories    Duration: 01:31Published
Contractor Warns of Potential Catastrophe if NASA Goes Ahead With Scheduled Launch [Video]

Contractor Warns of Potential Catastrophe if NASA Goes Ahead With Scheduled Launch

Contractor Warns of , Potential Catastrophe if NASA , Goes Ahead With Scheduled Launch. IEN reports that a NASA contractor has publicly urged the space agency to reconsider an upcoming launch, warning it could end in disaster. The news comes after the initial launch of Boeing's Starliner was scrapped as the result of a leaky valve just last week. . The news comes after the initial launch of Boeing's Starliner was scrapped as the result of a leaky valve just last week. . NASA has plans to attempt another launch later this week. . ValveTech produces valves and other components for both aerospace and military applications. ValveTech produces valves and other components for both aerospace and military applications. The company issued a press release warning that a second launch attempt could end in catastrophe. . The statement from ValveTech President Erin Faville called for NASA to re-double safety checks and protocols. . The failed launch last week would have been the first human space flight for Boeing but was scrubbed after a faulty valve was discovered. . The Associated Press reported that the fluttering oxygen pressure-relief valve on United Launch Alliance’s Atlas rocket may have exceeded its 200,000 lifetime cycles. . The ValveTech statement questions how NASA, Aerojet and Boeing could have... . ... "qualified this valve for the mission without proper supporting data or previous history or legacy information.". According to ValveTech, this , "goes against aerospace-industry qualification protocols established by NASA."

Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories    Duration: 01:31Published
'Initiate our scrub and recycle operation': Boeing abandons Starliner launch [Video]

'Initiate our scrub and recycle operation': Boeing abandons Starliner launch

Boeing called off its first astronaut launch, ferrying two NASA test pilots to the International Space Station, because of a valve problem on its Starliner capsule. But if engineers find a solution quickly, another countdown could be expected in the next 24-hours.

Credit: euronews (in English)    Duration: 00:37Published
Boeing expected to launch its first crewed Starliner capsule to the International Space Station [Video]

Boeing expected to launch its first crewed Starliner capsule to the International Space Station

Boeing’s new Starliner capsule will launch NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams to the International Space Station on May 6.

Credit: euronews (in English)    Duration: 01:29Published
NASA Reestablishes Connection With Distant Voyager 1 Space Probe [Video]

NASA Reestablishes Connection With Distant Voyager 1 Space Probe

NASA Reestablishes , Connection With Distant , Voyager 1 Space Probe. The news comes after engineers at the agency worked for months attempting to fix the 46-year-old probe. In December, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) said that the probe, now a staggering 15 billion miles away from Earth, was transmitting gibberish code. . On April 23, the JPL announced that the team was once again receiving usable data from the spacecraft. Currently, the probe is only transmitting data regarding the status of the ship's engineering systems. The next step is to enable the spacecraft to begin returning science data again, JPL statement, via 'The Guardian'. 'The Guardian' reports that Voyager 1 has been in operation for nearly half a century after launching in 1977 with the goal of studying Jupiter and Saturn. In August of 2012, Voyager crossed into interstellar space, becoming the first human-made object to leave the solar system. The probe is currently traveling at a staggering 36,800 miles per hour through space. NASA plans to collect data from the two Voyager spacecraft for a few more years, but the space agency expects to lose contact with the probes within the next decade

Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories    Duration: 01:30Published

New Mexico New Mexico U.S. state

Biden Administration to Invest $8.5 Billion in Intel’s Computer Chip Plants [Video]

Biden Administration to Invest $8.5 Billion in Intel’s Computer Chip Plants

Biden Administration to Invest $8.5 Billion , in Intel’s Computer Chip Plants. Biden Administration to Invest $8.5 Billion , in Intel’s Computer Chip Plants. In addition to $8.5 billion in direct funding, $11 billion will be provided in loans. The money will come from the CHIPS and Science Act. The funds will go toward "computer chip plants in Arizona, Ohio, New Mexico and Oregon," CBS News reports. . According to Intel, the new funding and other investments will create a total of 30,000 jobs in manufacturing and construction. According to Intel, the new funding and other investments will create a total of 30,000 jobs in manufacturing and construction. The deal will help the U.S. to produce 20% of the most advanced computer chips in the world by 2030, according to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. Failure is not an option — leading-edge chips are the core of our innovation system, especially when it comes to advances in artificial intelligence and our military systems, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, on a call with reporters. We can't just design chips. We have to make them in America, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, on a call with reporters. Biden's funding announcement comes amid a heated presidential campaign. Administration officials want to get chip technology funding "out the door as quickly as possible so that the Biden campaign can point to concrete progress on one of the White House's signature programs," analysts say. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger called the CHIPS Act "the most critical industrial policy legislation since World War II.". We think of this as a defining moment for the United States, the semiconductor industry and for Intel, Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, via statement

Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories    Duration: 01:31Published

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