Cyber Monday augmented reality globe deals: Kids can explore Mars and Earth – Livescience.com

Finding a gift that will excite the faces of young children this holiday season is a wonderful feeling, and its all the better when its a gift they can learn from while playing. This Cyber Monday augmented reality deal is a great example of that, and you can find PlayShifius Orboot Earth on sale for only $38.19 at Amazon right now.

This augmented reality globe offers a classic Earth exploring toy, but with new interactive functions through a smartphone that turns a simple globe into a magical new interactive experience. Whats more, PlayShifu offers a Mars edition of this exciting augmented reality toy so you can learn as much about the Red Planet as you can about our home. If you're a Prime member you can save $11 at Amazon.

Dont miss out on even more fun and educational science toy deals in our Cyber Monday National Geographic science kit deals.

The PlayShifu Orboot Earth augmented reality globe is an exciting learning toy for kids ages 4 to 10. By scanning the globe with the companion app on a smartphone or tablet, you can unlock a fascinating array of features that teach you about this amazing planet of ours. The app will show you animal facts with fun illustrations, play music, tell stories and offer up some fun quizzes as well.

There are over 400 highlights and more than 1,000 world facts across categories that include animals, monuments and cuisines of the world. Kids can learn about the food chain, some of the Wonders of the World and go on global scavenger hunts for hidden treasures.

The Mars edition of PlayShifus globes offers a similar range of functionality, but with more of a space exploration spin. Find the locations of famous Mars landing missions, the spacecraft used to get there and what discoveries they found. This globe is aimed at kids ages 6 to 12, so a little more advanced than the Earth version.

The apps for these globes are available on a wide range of smart devices and can be downloaded from the Apple App Store or Googles Play Store.

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Cyber Monday augmented reality globe deals: Kids can explore Mars and Earth - Livescience.com

Mars and Neptune Redefine Success, by Holiday Mathis – Creators Syndicate

One definition of success is being the most like you that you can possibly be. Another definition is losing yourself to the flow as you merge with your endeavor. There's no right way to be successful, only more or less-fitting ways. Under the auspicious trine of Mars and Neptune, many will embody success first and define it after the fact.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You still get a little nervous at showtime, but you've worked pretty hard on your skills, and if they don't meet the task in some way, you can trust that you'll find the solution as you go.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You don't really try to bring out the best in people; it just happens because of how you see them. You're expecting people to be good, fun and interesting... and they will not disappoint, at least not while they are around you!

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Limbo may be a fun game but it's not a fun position and is undesirable as a destination. So, a decision must be made. Either way, it's going to be better than the uncertainty of wondering which way to go.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Like an artist who steps back to behold a work in progress from a distance, you begin to see the shape of your life. You're objective. What you observe with fresh eyes will inspire you.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You don't mind dialing your energy to match that of others, but if you too often have to adapt yourself so as not to outshine anyone, it's time to consider whether you may thrive in another kind of environment.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). It's hard to get things done when so many compete for your attention, but the good that comes out of it is that you will be inspired to create your own environment.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Your intuition is a mysterious visitor, often showing up in full force and without warning. Your intuition won't be commanded or controlled but it can be invited and will come more often when you delight in its presence.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You support the best in others and give assistance without creating dependencies. Your sincerity will not be assessed by what you do for people; it's made apparent by what you don't do. Boundaries are love.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You're open to new life events, but you're not waiting for them. Sign up for an activity or go deeper into an interest. It will give you the sense of coming back to yourself, followed by the realization you're better than ever.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). A relationship will get more comfortable for you because you communicate well. You don't blame others for your feelings. You share strategically, helpfully and selflessly.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Would you rather have $1 now or $2 in a week? Various forms of this question will arise with today's theme of the short term vs. the long game.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You can avoid known stress-inducers, steer clear of annoyances and sidestep foreseeable complications, but the more controlled things are, the less alive they will seem. There's a happy medium to hit here.

TODAY'S BIRTHDAY (Nov. 29). Relationships are your treasures. You've a talent for choosing the ones that will both fortify and utilize you. Mutual needs get met once you figure out what they are. Have patience. In the professional realm, you'll meet a deadline, save the day, rise in the ranks and have a season of rulership. Capricorn and Pisces adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 6, 3, 33, 30 and 5

COSMIC QUESTION: "What is the responsibility of a person to stay married even after they don't want to be? Should a Sagittarius stay married to a Cancer? We have been married 30 years. We are both in our 60s, and I don't know if he's going to find another mate, to be honest. But I could care less if I find one. I'm just tired of being married."

People find new partners at every age. Your concern over whether or not your husband can find a new partner touches on something at the core of this decision. What do we owe each other in relationships? You're more concerned for his relationship status than for your own. Maybe it's because you feel you give more to the relationship and in not having that responsibility anymore, you would be gaining something, freeing up energy to give back to yourself, while your Cancer husband (born to the sign of domesticity and deeply attached to his home life) would be losing something, namely all that you give to the relationship. His loss of you might be harmful to his health and well-being, and yet how much of that is your responsibility? Isn't your first responsibility to yourself and living your best life? For Sagittarius, the "best life" includes adventure. Could you do this and still be married? These are the questions to explore, and only you can answer them.

CELEBRITY PROFILES: Off the heels of the hit series "Mom," Anna Faris is gearing up for "Summer Madness," a comedy about rival twins. The spirited Sagittarius was born when the moon was in Pisces, an ideal placement for an artist despite, or perhaps because of, the intense empathy and sensitivity of the astrological aspect. Saturn in Leo suggests that show business is a primary source for life lessons.

Write Holiday Mathis at HolidayMathis.com.

Photo credit: MiraCosic at Pixabay

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Mars and Neptune Redefine Success, by Holiday Mathis - Creators Syndicate

Health risks of space tourism: Is it responsible to send humans to Mars? | TheHill – The Hill

About 60 years ago, humans acquired the technological ability to travel to space. By now, science fiction franchises like Star Trek inspired entrepreneurs such as Jeff BezosJeffrey (Jeff) Preston BezosHealth risks of space tourism: Is it responsible to send humans to Mars? Michael Strahan headed for space aboard next Blue Origin flight Why science and religion come together when discussing extraterrestrial life MORE to translate their wealth into enterprises of space tourism. Bezos recently expressed the desire to send 1 trillion humans into space in the distant future, because Earth will not be able to accommodate all of them. Unfortunately, humans were not selected by Darwinian evolution to survive for long periods of time in space.

The hazards from energetic particles have been known since the early days of space exploration. On Earth, humans are protected from these charged particles, which originate from the Sun and our Milky Way galaxy. Earth is shielded by its magnetic field and atmosphere. Mars has no magnetic field or atmosphere to shield humans from the damage caused by cosmic radiation.

Human astronauts outside the Earths magnetic womb get zapped by solar energetic particles, mostly during sporadic solar flares that last from minutes to hours. Such flares are prominent when the sun is active, namely during solar maxima in its 11-year cycle of surface activity. The most energetic solar particles can be deadly. Humans have a better chance of survival on Mars when the Sun is least active, namely during solar minima.

But even if humans avoid the radiation from the Sun, there is an additional risk from Galactic cosmic rays. During a space journey that lasts more than three years, these Galactic particles would be life-threatening as well. The potential cumulative effects from space radiation must be studied thoroughly before sending humans for missions that last more than a few years. Protection could potentially be offered in deep caves under the Lunar or Martian surface.

Our solar system receives only a fraction of the Galactic cosmic rays, thanks to magnetic shielding by the so-called heliosphere, located at a hundred times the Earth-Sun separation, where the Solar wind meets the interstellar medium. The heliosphere was traversed by NASAs Voyager 1 space craft in 2012 and by Voyager 2 in 2018. The instruments onboard these missions revealed that the heliosphere blocks about three-fourths of the galactic cosmic rays.

As of now, scientists are unable to forecast reliably the levels of Galactic cosmic radiation throughout the solar system. The very region that shields the galactic radiation is the one that is least understood.

Space missions, such as Voyager, New Horizons, Interstellar Boundary Explorer and Cassini-Huygens, revealed the frontal extent of the heliosphere and the incoming stream of hydrogen atoms from the galaxy, but the fundamental features of the heliosphere remain unknown. In particular, the global shape and distribution of cosmic radiation are uncertain.

Before sending humans to long space journeys, more resources should be allocated to studying the radiation filtered by the heliosphere. Better understanding of our own environment will also help us forecast whether life exists on Earth-like planets around other stars.

Some habitable planets are protected from energetic particles by their atmosphere and magnetic field, as well as by the analog of our heliosphere, labeled astrosphere for other stars. We currently know very little about astrospheres in general. Studies of the heliosphere would help us understand the critical mechanisms that controls the properties and shielding of energetic particles that pose a threat to extraterrestrial life.

The human body is fragile. Humans cannot safely venture to long journeys beyond our immediate vicinity near Earth. Before sending human-astronauts to long expeditions we must ensure that we are not sending them to their death. Ahead of dreaming about a large human population on Mars, as advocated by Elon Musk, we must understand the radiation environment throughout the solar system.

A safe bet, for the time being, is to send our technological kids, in the form of robots like the Perseverance rover or futuristic AI-astronauts. Artificially-made hardware is manufactured to be far more resilient to damage by energetic particles than the human body. And we should be proud of launching our technological products to space as we are of sending our biological kids to explore the world.

Merav Opher is a professor in the Astronomy Department at Boston University. She is currently the William Bentinck-Smith fellowat the Harvard Radcliffe Institute. She is the leading SHIELD, a NASA DRIVE Science as principal investigator. SHIELD is a multi-institutional effort with more than 45 leading scientists across a dozen institutions. She was the chair-elect of the APS Topical Group in Plasma Astrophysics; member of the Decadal Survey in Space Physics of Solar and Heliospheric Panel and the last three NASA Heliophysics Mission Senior Review Panels.

Avi Loeb is a professor of science at Harvard University, head of the Galileo Project, founding director of Harvard University's - Black Hole Initiative, director of the Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and the former chair of the astronomy department at Harvard University from 2011-2020. He chairs the advisory board for the Breakthrough Starshot project and is a former member of the Presidents Council of Advisors on Science and Technology and a former chair of the Board on Physics and Astronomy of the National Academies. He is the bestselling author of Extraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth and a co-author of the textbook Life in the Cosmos.

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Health risks of space tourism: Is it responsible to send humans to Mars? | TheHill - The Hill

When will SpaceX Starship SN20 launch and go to the Moon, Mars?… – The Sun

SPACEX is building a spacecraft that billionaire CEO Elon Musk says will one day take people to the Moon and Mars.

It's called Starship, and the California rocket firm's latest prototype, SN20, is due for launch soon as part of the craft's first orbital test flight.

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SpaceX has said that SN20 will be its first Starship prototype to reach space. Previous versions have performed short "hops" of up to 10 km (6 miles).

Lifting off atop SpaceX's huge deep-space rocket booster, Super Heavy, the 165-foot-tall (50 meters) spacecraft is expected to fly in early 2022.

The precise timing of the liftoff is unclear, as SpaceX still isn't cleared to fly the craft from its Starbase launch site in south Texas.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is still conducting an environmental assessment of Starbase.

A draft assessment has been filed and the FAA has collected public comments on the document, but the final report has not yet been released.

In the meantime, SpaceX is conducting tests of SN20 on the ground to ensure it's ready for liftoff.

On November 12, the vehicle engaged in a static test a brief firing up of its six Raptor engines while the vehicle remained stationary on the ground.

"Good static fire with all six engines!" Musk tweetedshortly after the test.

So far, SpaceX has named its Starship prototypes in numerical order. The SN stands for Starship serial Number.

SN8, for instance, was the eighth prototype, while SN9 was the ninth and so on.

However, the company apparently broke with this trend for the naming of SN20. The last spacecraft was dubbed SN15, meaning numbers 16 to 19 were skipped.

The jump is because SN20 is what Musk calls Starship's "next major technology revolution".

Unlike previous prototypes, it's capable of orbital flight and is loaded with six raptor engines, instead of three.

The upgrade required a reset of the naming to scheme to differentiate this line of Starships from the last.

Expect the next big advancement to start with SN30, and the one after that to begin at SN40, and so on.

The spacecraft hasn't even reached orbit yet, meaning its first flight to the Moon or Mars if it ever gets there is a long way off.

Starship will play a key role in Nasa's Artemis programme, which aims to establish a long-term presence on the Moon.

In April 2021, the space agency awarded Nasa a $2.9billion contract to develop Starship into a lander capable of touching down on the lunar surface.

Nasa aims to land astronauts on the Moon later this decade.

SpaceX has also announced plans to fly the vehicle around the Moon in 2023 on a flight boarded by the Japanese online retail billionaire Yusaku Maezawa.

Plans for the spacecraft's first trip to Mars will depend on the success of these flights. Musk has said he can get Starship to the red planet in the 2030s.

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In other news, Apple has announced that it will let customersfix their own iPhonesfor the first time starting next year.

The UK is fighting anepidemic of hack attackstargeting consumers and businesses, according to officials.

NASA hasslammed Russiaafter a missile it fired into one of its own satellites forced the space station to perform an emergency swerve.

And, a 75-year-old Brithas toldof his anger after scammers on WhatsApp fooled him into sending them hundreds of pounds.

We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online Tech & Science team? Email us at tech@the-sun.co.uk

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When will SpaceX Starship SN20 launch and go to the Moon, Mars?... - The Sun

Mars Hill Theatre Arts and SART Present Two Holiday Productions – WKYK

The Mars Hill University Department of Theatre Arts and the Southern Appalachian Repertory Theatre (SART) will present two co-produced events for the 2021 holiday season: A Southern Appalachian Christmas Concert and A Christmas Carol. Both productions will be presented in-person at Owen Theatre on the university campus, and A Christmas Carol also will be available in an on-demand online format.

A Southern Appalachian Christmas Concert is Saturday, December 4, at 7:30 p.m., and Sunday, December 5, at 2 p.m. It will feature professional performers alongside the MHU theatre arts performance ensemble, Showstoppers. This fundraiser concert is pay-what-you-can at the door, benefiting both the theatre arts department and SARTs programming.

In-person performances of A Christmas Carol will be December 9-19, and virtual performances will be available on-demand from December 20-26. Based on the classic tale by Charles Dickens, these performances are a new adaptation of the beloved classic adapted by Dwight Chiles. The productions will be directed by Dominic Michael Aquilino and will feature Michael Lilly in the role of Ebenezer Scrooge.

All patrons in Owen Theatre will be required to wear a mask upon entering the facility and for the duration of the production.

Tickets for A Christmas Carol are available atwww.sartplays.com. Standard seats are $28, premium seats are $32, and the virtual pass is $25. For more information, contact the SART box office at (828) 689-1232 orsart@mhu.edu.

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Mars Hill Theatre Arts and SART Present Two Holiday Productions - WKYK

Space-themed board game Terraforming Mars and its expansion sets are now on sale for Black Friday – Space.com

Snag up a popular spacefaring game and five of its expansion boards now on sale and get savings as high as 33% this week ahead of Black Friday.

The objective of Terraforming Mars is written in the game's name. One to five players can compete with one another to gain the most points towards raising the habitability of the Red Planet for future human visitors. Players gain points by raising Mars' temperature, the planet's oxygen level and by creating and expanding oceans.

The game features several card categories that allow the players some control about their play level of difficulty. Project cards stimulate the imagination by tasking players to do things like introduce plant life and build cities, and there are more than 200 different projects to complete.

The Terraforming Mars Board Game is now on sale at Amazon for $49.85, which is 29% off its usual retail price.

Terraforming Mars is an upgradable game, too. One of the unique characteristics of Terraforming Mars are its tiles, which players can place across the board illustration of the Red Planet. One available upgrade lets players add a higher visual element to their game.

Known as the Big Box, this upgrade comes with 90 special tiles to dress up the game, including a set of 3D terrain tiles. Big Box also serves as a storage solution for the main game and its expansions (which are also on sale this week).

Terraforming Mars: Big Box is now available for $121.30 at Amazon, which is a 19% savings off its retail price of $149.99.

Once you are ready for an expansion kit, there are many to choose from.

One option is Prelude, which allows players to move through the backstory of the corporations that terraform Mars. This kit offers about 90 to 120 minutes of average playtime, according to the manufacturer Stronghold Games. And just like the original game, it is intended for ages 12 and older.

Another expansion board option takes players to the other side of the Red Planet. The Terraforming Hellas & Elysium: The Other Side of Mars Expansion Board consists of a double-sided game board. Each side represents two new areas of Mars for gameplay: they include the opposite side of Mars' equator and the south polar region of the planet. This expansion kit is now 30% off its retail price, selling for $29.18 at Walmart.

Terraforming Mars Turmoil is one of the highest-rated expansions. This set is suitable for experts of the original game. It comes with a new card type called global events, which features things like dust storms and riots, plus new project cards too. You can now save 15% on this expansion, available for $29.54 at Amazon.

The Venus Next expansion kit takes the game to Earth's other celestial neighbor. Players can work to build flying cities, reduce Venus' greenhouse effect, or introduce life to the planet. Like the original game, this expansion is recommended for ages 12 and up and offers about 90- to 120-minute play. Terraforming Mars: Venus Next is now 17% off on Walmart, available now for $24.95.

One extension of the Terraforming Mars is Ares Expedition, a standalone game inspired by the original that features faster gameplay. Ares Expedition is also on sale for Black Friday, now $39.99 on Walmart (originally $49.99).

Be sure to check out Space.com'sBlack Friday space deals, or our guide to thebest Black Friday space board game deals.

Today's best Terraforming Mars deals

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Space-themed board game Terraforming Mars and its expansion sets are now on sale for Black Friday - Space.com

2018 Madison High graduate Ty Snelson focused on here and now amid potential NFL buzz – Asheville Citizen-Times

MARS HILL - Though Mars Hill University's football coach Tim Clifton has been coaching for 29 years, he doesn't remember a more celebrated hometown player than tight end Ty Snelson.

Snelson, a 2018 Madison High graduate who was awarded first-team all-conference honorsin November, is a senior in the classroom and a junior on the football field.

The tight end led the Southern Atlantic Conference in touchdown receptions with nine and was ninth in the conference in yards per game with 49.5.

For all his success though, his coach said his character is just as special as what he does on the field.

"He is a great character kid," Clifton said. "Not only is he a good player, not only is he a good student, but he is a great character. That's the kind of guy you want to be successful."

At 6-foot-2, 245 pounds, Snelson is a nightmare matchup for opposing defenses, as his size and speed makes him extremely versatile. NFL teams are taking notice of his talents, too.

He was interviewed by NFL Draft Diamonds and said a number of pro teams have contacted him about potentially working out for them.

"When you start playing when you're 4 or 5 years old, I think (making the NFL is) everybody's goal," he said. "It's definitely something that anybody dreams of. I'm just trying to take it week by week and keep working, and we'll see what happens. It's definitely a surreal feeling. If I get an opportunity, I think that would be a great thing. But I'm also going through nursing school, and exploring opportunities that way too."

With one year of eligibility remaining, Snelson is focused on returning in 2022-23 after his team lost its last game Nov. 13 and was eliminated from playoff contention.

More: Mars Hill coach Tim Clifton reflects on team's 8-3 season: 'We had a really good year'

"We pretty much accomplished everything we wanted to, except for that last game," he said. "It was definitely a heartbreak. It really took a toll on everybody. Ithink everybody is taking it as a slap in the face. We do have a lot of people returning. (In the 2019-20 season) we had the mentality of we really loved being around each other and trusted each other, and that was a really big thing.

"The mentality going into next year is we just have to work harder than we did last year. We've got to get everybody going. We've got to get some young guys up and going. It's going to be a grind, but we're going to have to love it."

Snelson, a nursing major, said he stays busy working as a CNA at Elderberry Health Care, a transitional rehabilitation, skilled nursing and assisted living care facility in Marshall. As if that wasn't time-consuming enough, Snelson said he also operates a landscaping business.

"In the summer I normally get up around 6 (a.m.)," he said. "I would lift and condition for 2-2.5 hours, and work on some ball skills, just depending on what the day entailed. Then, I'd go to work around 9 a.m. and work till 4 p.m."

When he's not grinding in the weight room, at work or school or honing his craft as a pass catcher, Snelson said he likes spending time outdoors.

"With what little free time I get, I definitely like to go home and see my family," he said. "I'm an avid outdoorsman. I like to hunt. I like to fish. Anything outdoors I like to do - hike, go home and see my family, and get in the woods. That's what I love to do."

The SAC's 2021-22 leader in touchdown receptions said he's already established goals for next season, both for himself - on and off the field - and the team.

"I would say a goal would be to make all-conference," he said. "But the biggest goal, especially for me and probably for the team, is to win the conference. If it's possibleand I have a good year, I'd like to be an All-American. That's a very big goal. But shoot for the stars, and if you come up short, you're up there at least."

Snelson, whose fastest 40-yard-dash is 4.59 seconds, inherited his athletic genes from his parents - Lisa Gahagan, the school system's assistant superintendent, and Mark Snelson, the county commissioners' board chair.

Snelson said Gahagan and his aunt, Gahagan's sister, played basketball together at MHU, while Mark Snelson was a standout baseball player.

Snelson said like his mother, his first love was basketball, too.

"I think when I was maybe 3, or whenever I started walking, I started dribbling a basketball," he said. "That was my first true love. And then I started playing football when I was 5 or 6. That's kind of when it all shifted."

The 2018 Madison High grad played football, basketball, track and field and one year of baseball while in high school. He credited his parents and his grandparents for their near-perfect attendance records at his countless sporting events, dating to his childhood.

"My mom and dad have always been super supportive of me in my career," he said. "My grandparents - they haven't missed a game. Ever. Football, basketball or baseball. Neither have my parents. They never missed a meet or a game, anything."

Snelson said he wished to recognize his community for their never-ending love, too.

"They've supported me all the way up from youth league up until now. So, I want to thank them for the support, and thank my family for the support, for sure. Lastly, I want to thank all my coaches and my teachers growing up. I owe them a big, big 'thank you' for their support."

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2018 Madison High graduate Ty Snelson focused on here and now amid potential NFL buzz - Asheville Citizen-Times

Review: Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paaks Evening With Silk Sonic should be an album of the year contender – The Spokesman-Review

On Nov. 12, multiple Grammy Award winners Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paak combined their talents as Silk Sonic for the nine-track album An Evening With Silk Sonic, a work with a nostalgic 1970s feel full of harmonies, strong vocals and diverse, incredibly smart production that constantly captivates.

The collaboration produced the first music Mars has released since 2019 while .Paak has been rising in the industry, including a Best Melodic Rap Performance Grammy win for his 2020 song Lockdown.

The return of Mars fully includes the charming, extravagant role he usually plays, in particular the Las Vegas theme that his album 24K Magic embodies and here in 777. But the return also brings back the more somber singer the world was introduced to during the early 2010s, especially in the soulful track Put on a Smile.

.Paaks specialties have continued, perfectly fitting the album with a voice that embodies the sound of R&B. Among the lyrics are the consistent themes of classic Hollywood luxury and glamour, with mentions of Rolexes, mansions and Bentleys, mixing with the soul and funk of the times.

But at its core, the album mostly tackles love, lust and failed romances on both sides of the spectrum: heartbreak and exasperation. When not along those lines, the lyrics are about the image Mars and .Paak portray with every Silk Sonic appearance: the top button undone suits, sunglasses, cash-filled and smooth player personality that can come across as cocky.

But the music is here to bring emotions and moods of all kinds, including confidence. Overall, this isnt an album to look into too deeply, and this isnt the place to find hidden meanings and analogies, but its not trying to be that.

An Evening With Silk Sonic knows what it is, a fun, repeatable, easy on the ears collection of soul and R&B songs that fit modern-day radio beautifully. The album wouldnt have three of the hottest singles of the year Leave the Door Open, Skate and Smokin Out the Window if it didnt.

The orchestra brilliantly uses tremolos and long bows that usually introduce and end songs as well as carry the harmonies along while the toe-tapping percussion and horns drive the pieces forward. The bass shines frequently with funk and grooviness, while the guitar kind of gets put to the backburner until strong, enthralling riffs in Blast Off and After Last Night.

Vocally, Mars and .Paak are equally factored into the album, leaving two unique vocals that makes sure the listener doesnt get tired of either of their strong suits. Its difficult to beat Mars in any vocal competition, and he starts right where he left off. His talent gets to shine with high notes, runs, falsettos and the powerful chest voice that never cease to amaze.

But .Paak isnt left in the dust. His voice brings the funk of the 1970s to life, and the slight rasp is to die for. A different kind of vocal is brought by funk legend Bootsy Collins, who has a perfect narration that transports the listener to the nostalgia of the album. But the addicting harmonies are the touch that I absolutely cant get out of my head.

Theres rarely a single vocal for very long in the best way possible with the lead vocals weaving around the harmonies of every song. They flow with the tracks and bring a smoothness to the album that keeps the listener hooked, whether with a laid-back feel or adding to the energy, especially in Smokin Out the Window.

Back in March when Leave the Door Open and a Grammy performance (that I prefer over the official track) perfectly introduced the world to Silk Sonic by encapsulating the soulful R&B sound filled with harmonies and smooth verses, I was not at all prepared for what was to come.

The next single, the ever so groovy Skate, brought the summer feel, and the most recent single, Smokin Out the Window, brings the energy, pizzazz and catchiness that have made it my favorite track. Two other album highlights include 777 and Put on a Smile, both solid contenders for a single.

An Evening With Silk Sonic doesnt have many negatives besides the fact that its too short; in fact, its a very strong contender for album of the year. But an album nod wasnt in the cards Tuesday; the duo earned four Grammy nominations for record of the year, song of the year, best R&B song and best R&B performance.

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Review: Bruno Mars and Anderson .Paaks Evening With Silk Sonic should be an album of the year contender - The Spokesman-Review

Conceptual artist Kid Rock soars to Mars on a giant middle finger – The A.V. Club

Last time we checked in on Kid Rockthe heir to a car dealership empire who reinvented himself two decades ago as a trailer park kid who rockshe was assuring us that his gay friends were totally cool with him casually throwing around homophobic slurs. Five months later, in an apparent bid to remind everyone of his alleged solidarity with the queer community, the conceptual artist straddled a gigantic penis-shaped middle finger rocket and blasted himself so hard into the air that he now resides on the planet Mars.

Or, at least, that seems to be the general gist of Kid Rocks new music video for a song called Dont Tell Me How To Live, which is about people who dont like it when other people ask them to please stop confusing ideas like patriotism and independence with blind contrarianism. Also, to please stop using homophobic slurs.

Based around the hook (and title) of a 2016 single from the Southern rock (by way of Canada) band, Monster Truck, who appear to be a Jet-meets-Lynyrd Skynyrd situation, Dont Tell Me How To Live ascends to levels of self-parody not seen since Insane Clown Posses Miracles. In fact, its so willfully, preposterously ignorant that even Weird Al chimed in to assure everyone that this was not his doing.

Kiss my ass, then you can suck a dick, rasps Kid Rock before reminding us that Aint nothing changed here, I still dont give a fuck. And yet, he subsequently ponders what the fucks up with all the backlash? before reminding us snowflakes that, as you may have already guessed, aint nobody gonna tell him how to live.

The rest of the song, of course, is a predictable grab bag of soundbites overheard at the local Outback Steakhouse on a Wednesday night: a nation of pussies is our next generation, every opinion has a millennial offended, along with repeated extolling of Constitutional Amendments One and, more fervently, Two.

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Visually, theres the aforementioned image of a winged Kid Rock waving a gun around atop his giant, phallic middle finger as it kid rock-its into the upper atmosphere, alongside churches, pit bulls, bikers, an anonymous dive bar filled with all manner of good ol (white) boys. Rock does his trademark hop-around dance moves that make it seem like hes suffering from severe bouts of athletes foot in both cowboy boots.

Dont Tell Me How To Live seems destined for much-memed infamy in the coming weeks, which of course only pours additional moonshine atop Kid Rocks strategically constructed garbage fire of a career. And yet, we cant help but cover something this egregiously bada song thats destined to be yet another barn-burner for Kid Rocks primary fan base of Nazi face tattoo having men that smack cops in the face with colostomy bags at Mr. Rocks Big Ass Honky-Tonk & Rock n Roll Steakhouse.

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Conceptual artist Kid Rock soars to Mars on a giant middle finger - The A.V. Club

Mars Facts | Temperature, Surface, Information, History …

Key Facts & Summary

Mars has been observed by many different cultures from around the world since hundreds of years. Because of this it is impossible to credit anyone with its discovery, Mars being easily visible with the naked eye.

Observations date back to ancient Egyptian astronomers in the 2nd millennium BCE while Chinese records about the motions of Mars appeared before the founding of the Zhou Dynasty in 1045 BCE.

Detailed observations were made even by the Babylonians who developed arithmetic techniques to predict the future position of the planet while the ancient Greeks developed a geocentric model to explain the planets motions.

To the ancient Romans, the planet Mars was symbolic of blood and war, the equivalent of the Greek god of war Aries. In the 16th century, Nicolaus Copernicus proposed a heliocentric model for the Solar System in which the planets follow circular orbits around the Sun.

Johannes Kepler revised this creation, yielding an elliptic orbit for Mars that more accurately fitted the observational data. In 1610, Galileo Galilei first observed Mars with a telescope and within a century, astronomers discovered several features of Mars and determined the planets rotational period and axial tilt.

The idea of life on Mars started a long time ago, and in a way this helped fuel the drive for searching it upon Mars. Since 1877 onward, it was mistakenly thought that water was found on Mars and later the idea of life became popularized among the public.

Percival Lowell believed he could see a network of canals on Mars but they were proved to be optical illusions. Since then, many more details about the planet were gathered both exciting and disappointing, and the presence of todays robots on the planet are a testament of the will of the people who wish to finally find a trace of life on Mars, even if it means finding evidence of past life.

It is hypothesized that the Solar System formed from a giant rotating ball of gas and dust known as the pre-solar nebula. Much of it formed the Sun while more of its dust went on and merged to create the first proto-planets. Mars was one of these planets and after the gravity pulled enough swirling gas and dust, it became the fourth planet from the Sun.

Mars is about 227.9 million km / 141.6 million mi or 1.5 AU away from the Sun. It takes sunlight about 13 minutes to reach Mars. The diameter of Mars is 6.779 km or 4.212 mi, slightly more than half the size of Earth.

In a way, its diameter is about the width of the continent of Africa. Marss mass is 6.42 x 1023kilograms, about 10 times less thanEarth and avolumeof 1.6318 x 10 km (163 billion cubic kilometers) which is the equivalent of 0.151 Earths. Its entire surface area is similar to that of all the Earths continents combined

One rotation/day on Mars is completed within 24.6 hours while a whole trip around the Sun or year, is completed within 669.6 days.

Mars has a relatively pronouncedorbital eccentricityof about 0.09. Of the seven other planets in the Solar System, onlyMercuryhas a larger orbital eccentricity. It is known that in the past, Mars had a much more circular orbit. At one point, 1.35million Earth years ago, Mars had an eccentricity of roughly 0.002, much less than that of Earth today.

It is believed that the closest distance between Earth and Mars will continue to mildly decrease for the next 25.000 years.

Marss axis of rotation is tilted 25.2 degrees similar to Earth which has an axial tilt of 23.4 degrees. It has seasons though they last longer than on Earth since Mars takes longer to orbit the Sun. The seasons vary in length due to Marss elliptical, egg-shaped orbit around the Sun.

It is estimated that Mars has a dense core with a radius between 930-1.300 miles / 1.500 2.100 kilometers. It is made up primarily of iron and nickel with about 16-17% sulfur. The iron sulfide core is thought to be twice as rich in lighter elements then Earths core.

The core is surrounded by a silicate mantle which formed many tectonic plates and volcanic features on the planet that now appear to be dormant.

Besides silicon and oxygen, the most abundant elements in Martian crust are iron, magnesium, aluminum, calcium and potassium, an average thickness of the planets crust has been estimated to be about 50 km / 31 mi, with a maximum thickness of 125 km / 78 mi. In comparison, Earths average crust is about 40 km / 25 mi.

It is estimated that Mars lost its magnetosphere around 4 billion years ago. A possible reason for this is because of numerous asteroid strikes and the solar wind interacting directly with the Martian ionosphere, lowering the atmospheric density by stripping away atoms from the outer layer.

The atmosphere of Mars consists of about 96% carbon dioxide, 1.93% argon and 1.89% nitrogen, along with traces of oxygen and water. It is quite dusty. Recently methane has also been detected in the atmosphere, values of which indicate an active source of gas that should be present be it biological or non-biological.

If Mars had an Earth-like orbit, its seasons would be similar to Earth's because itsaxial tiltis similar to Earth's. Spring in the northern hemisphere (autumn in the southern) is the longest season lasting 194 days. Autumn in the northern hemisphere (spring in the southern) is the shortest at 142 days. Northern winter (southern summer) lasts 154 days while northern summer (southern winter) lasts 178 days.

On average, thetemperatureonMarsis about -80 degrees Fahrenheit / -60 degrees Celsius. In winter, near the polestemperaturescan get down to -195 degrees F / -125 degrees C. Mars has the largestdust stormsin the Solar System, reaching speeds of over 160km/h (100mph). These can vary from a storm over a small area, to gigantic storms that cover the entire planet. They tend to occur when Mars is closest to the Sun, increasing global temperature.

Though it is often referred to as the Red Planet, Mars actually has many colors. At the surface colors such as brown, gold and tan are present. Its surface is the same size as Earths dry lands combined, even though it is two times smaller.

Mars has many evidences of a watery past, with ancient river valley networks, deltas and lakebeds, as well as rocks and minerals on the surface that could only have formed in liquid water. Some features suggest that Mars experienced huge floods about 3.5 billion years ago.

Though liquid water cannot exist on the surface of Mars due to low atmospheric pressure, which is less than 1% that of Earths, except for short periods, the volume of water ice caps appear to be made largely out of water with a volume of water ice enough to cover, if melted, the entire planetary surface to a depth of 11 meters or 36 ft.

There are landforms visible that strongly suggest that liquid water has existed on the planets surface like hematite concretions (image above), or the Maadim Vallis, a valley of about 700 km / 430 mi thought to have been carved by flowing water long ago.

Near the northern polar cap is the 81.4 km / 50.6 mi wide Korolev Crater, where it was found to be filled with about 2.200 cubic km / 530 mi of water ice.

There are two permanent polar ice caps on Mars. During winter, the poles lay in continuous darkness and causing depositions of 25-30% of the atmosphere into slabs of carbon dioxide dry ice.

When they are exposed again to sunlight the carbon dioxide sublimates and sometimes create water-ice clouds. Both polar caps consist primarily of water ice, about 70%.

The dichotomy of Martian topography is striking, northern plains flattened by lava flows contrast with the southern highlands, pitted and cratered by ancient impacts.

Mars is scarred by a number of impact craters: a total of 43,000 craters with a diameter of 5km (3.1mi) or greater have been found. The largest confirmed of these is theHellas impact basin, a lightalbedo featureclearly visible from Earth.

The volcano Olympus Mons, is an extinct volcano in the vast upland region Tharsis, which contains several other large volcanoes. Olympus Mons is however the greatest, in fact it is the largest volcanoe detected in the entire Solar System, it has about three times the height of Mount Everest.

The large canyon,Valles Marinerisalso known as Agathadaemon in the old canal maps, has a length of 4,000km (2,500mi) and a depth of up to 7km (4.3mi). The length of Valles Marineris is equivalent to the length of Europe and extends across one-fifth the circumference of Mars. By comparison, theGrand Canyon is only 446km (277mi) long and nearly 2km (1.2mi) deep. Valles Marineris was formed due to the swelling of theTharsisarea, which caused the crust in the area of Valles Marineris to collapse.

It is 10 times longer and 10 times wider than the Grand Canyon. Mars also has sand on its surface, made up from basaltic rock, thus having a grey color.

When the wind blows, dunes are created including series of parallel ridges in crater floors, also horseshoe-shaped dunes are created. Mars also has dust devils, towering vortices of wind similar to tornadoes. When the dust devils blow the red dust around on the greyish basaltic plains, they can leave behind complex and beautiful curlicues.

Mars actually has avalanches. Cliffs towering above the surface that hold different materials can be dislodged in the spring when carbon dioxide thaws, creating tremendous cascades of rock and dust.

Mars has only 2 known moons named Phobos and Deimos after the horses that pulled the chariot of the god of war Mars. They are very small though, Phobos has a diameter of about 25 km or 15.5 mi, while Deimos just 15 km or 9.3 mi. They look very much like asteroids and it is strongly believed that they have been captured by Mars gravity from the nearby asteroid belt.

Phobos orbits Mars only 6.000 km or 3.728 mi over the surface, moving so rapidly in its orbit that it orbits faster than Mars rotates. Tides from Mars are also altering its orbit, slowly lowering Phobos closer and closer to the surface. It is believed that in a few million years Phobos will drop low enough that it will actually enter the atmosphere and impact the surface.

On June 7, 2018, NASA announced that theCuriosityrover had discoveredorganic compoundsin sedimentary rocks dating to three billion years old, indicating that some of the building blocks for life were present.

In July 2018, scientists reported the discovery of a sub-glacial lake on Mars, the first known stable body of water on the planet. It sits 1.5km (0.9mi) below the surface at the base of thesouthern polar ice capand is about 20km (12mi) wide. Out of all the planets in the Solar System, Mars appears to have the highest change of having life forms but still the conditions are harsh enough that nothing should be able to survive there, perhaps only beneath the surface.

Still, regardless of its habitability now, Mars was definitely once a planet filled with oceans and the right conditions of life. Most people would be happy if we could only find evidence of life that may have existed on the Red Planet.

Future astrobiology missions are planned, including theMars 2020andRosalind Franklinrovers. They have the mission to take soil samples and return them to Earth for further analysis. If we look into Marss history, it is one of the most actively observed planets in the Solar System and chances are it will remain so for a long time.

There are many plans for Mars, including terraforming and sending people on it, but it remains to be seen, hopes are high and missions continue.

- Mars is the most intensely studied planet with observations dating back to 4.000 years ago.

- It is about 50% farther from the Sun than Earth.

- Perhaps second only to Venus when it comes to visits, Mars has been visited over 16 times over about 39 attempts with the first successful mission happening in 1965 with the Mariner 4 spacecraft flyby.

- If you weigh 100kg on Earth, on Mars your weight would be 38kg.

- Mars is the outermost terrestrial planet, outside Earths orbit.

- Theoretically, Mars is populated by robots since we sent so many there.

- Mars has captured our imagination so much, that it has spanned countless adaptations on TV, literature and it may as well be the most popular planet after Earth.

- On Mars the Sun appears about half the size as it does on Earth.

- Pieces of Mars have fallen to Earth. Scientists have found tiny traces of Martian atmosphere within meteorites violently ejected from Mars, then orbiting the solar system amongst galactic debris for millions of years, before crash landing on Earth.

- A year on Mars is almost twice as long as a year on Earth.

- It would take more than six Mars to fill the volume of Earth.

- Almost 7 million Mars can fit in the Sun.

- The Mars One project hopes to colonize the Red Planet, beginning in 2022.

[1.] Wikipedia

[2.] NASA

[1.] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/02/OSIRIS_Mars_true_color.jpg

[2.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliocentrism#/media/File:Heliocentric.jpg

[3.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mars,_Earth_size_comparison.jpg

[4.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Marsorbitsolarsystem.gif

[5.] https://sites.google.com/site/missiontomarsatvssec/home/mission-background-briefing-students/earth-vs-mars/structure-of-the-earth

[6.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:USGS-MarsMap-sim3292-20140714-crop.png

[7.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Spirit_Mars_Silica_April_20_2007.jpg

[8.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Nasa_mars_opportunity_rock_water_150_eng_02mar04.jpg

[9.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma%27adim_Vallis

[10.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Perspective_view_of_Korolev_crater.jpg

[11.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Martian_north_polar_cap.jpg

[12.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PIA23304-Mars-ImpactCrater-Sep2016-Feb2019.jpg

[13.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Olympus_Mons_alt.jpg

[14.] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valles_Marineris#/media/File:Mars_Valles_Marineris.jpeg

[15.] https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/05/mars-ice-age/484541/

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Mars Facts | Temperature, Surface, Information, History ...

Live this week: Watch the 2021 International Mars Society Convention online – Space.com

Update for Oct. 17: The video feed above has been updated for Day 4 of the 2021 International Mars Society Convention.

The 24th Annual International Mars Society Convention begins Thursday (Oct. 14), and you can watch the whole thing online for free.

The Mars Society, a space advocacy group supporting the human exploration of Mars, will have virtual panels online between Thursday (Oct. 14) and Sunday (Oct. 17). Register here for your ticket (including an optional donation) and check out the full schedule at this link.

"The four-day online forum will bring together leading scientists, government policymakers, commercial space executives, and space advocates to discuss the latest scientific and technological developments and challenges related to the human and robotic exploration of Mars and the eventual human settlement of the Red Planet," the Mars Society said in a statement.

Presentations will take place over Zoom, while attendees and presenters can network over platforms including mobile app event platform Attendify, chat and collaboration tool Slack, and virtual networking and social virtual reality platform AltspaceVR by Microsoft.

Related: Behold! The 1st panorama of Mars from the Perseverance rover

According to the Mars Society, here are some of the highlights attendees can look forward to:

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow uson Twitter @Spacedotcomand on Facebook.

Correction: The Mars Society sent updated information to its initial press release indicating that the organization is now using AltspaceVR. The article has been updated to reflect this information.

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Live this week: Watch the 2021 International Mars Society Convention online - Space.com

Mars opposition 2020: How to see the red planet shine …

Mars will bright and beautiful in the October 2020 night sky.

October 2020 is all about the glory of Mars as the glimmering red planet puts on a show in the night sky. We passed Mars' close approach to Earth on Oct. 6 and now we can look forward to Mars being in opposition Tuesday night.

Mars has a reputation as the "red" planet, but its color in the night sky is a little more on the Halloween side of the spectrum. It appears as a bright orange-red dot to the naked eye, like a little spot of glittering rust.

From the lab to your inbox. Get the latest science stories from CNET every week.

Mars' distinctive color is one clue you've found it in the dark. Look to the eastern sky to catch it rising at night. This is a great time for viewing the planet, partly because spotting it is so simple. It should be visible for most of the night.As NASA says, "Simply go outside and look up and, depending on your local weather and lighting conditions, you should be able to see Mars."

Check out our list of stargazing apps if you want some extra help with locating the planet.

When Mars and the sun line up with Earth in the middle, the red planet is said to be in opposition. This is a perfect time to track Mars' movement across the sky. It will rise in the east as the sun goes down, move across the sky and then set in the west as the sun comes up.

NASA describes opposition as"effectively a 'full' Mars." Tuesday, Oct. 13 is the time to enjoy opposition. You'll have to wait over two years for it to happen again.

The Virtual Telescope Project, which brings us live feeds of celestial events, will stream a Mars opposition viewing starting at 1 p.m. PT. on Oct. 13. It's a perfect way to enjoy the action without weather worries. For people in the US, it will give you a preview of what to look for after sundown.

The project expects this to be "the best observing conditions since July 2018."

"The racetrack model of planetary orbits explains why. Earth and Mars are like runners on a track. Earth is on the inside, Mars is on the outside,"NASA said in its What's Up blog for October. "Every 26 months, speedy Earth catches up to slower Mars and laps it. Opposition occurs just as Earth takes the lead."

Mars isn't the only show-off in the sky for October. You can alsolook forward to a rare Halloween blue moonwhen our lunar neighbor is full on Oct. 31. It's not spooky; it's boo-tiful.

Tuesday, Oct. 6 marked the close approach of Mars to Earth, but this entire month is still a good time to grab a telescope and get a little better look. Give a wave to NASA's Perseverance rover while you're at it. The vehicle is on track to reach the planet in February 2021.

NASA shared an artist's view of the Tuesday, Oct. 6 close approach compared with the last time it snuggled up in July 2018. The apparent sizes look very similar. This year, Mars had a minimum distance of 38.6 million miles (62 million kilometers), which is about 3 million miles farther away than in 2018.

This artist's view shows the apparent sizes of Mars during close approaches in 2018 and 2020.

Close approach may be over, but the planet is still plenty bright in the night, so get out and take a gander, or tune into the Virtual Telescope Project's live feed from the comfort of your computer.

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Mars opposition 2020: How to see the red planet shine ...

Inside the Experiment to Create Mars on Earth – Smithsonian

When Cassandra Klos wasgrowing up in rural New Hampshire, it was easy to see the stars. She traced the constellations with her finger and imagined how it would feel to travel among them. As a college art student, she launched a photo project about Betty and Barney Hill, a New Hampshire couple who claimed to have been abducted by aliens.

Then Klos went on her first mission to Mars.

To be clear, no earthling has actually set foot on the red planet. NASA is hoping to send a crew there in the 2030s, as is China, and the private company SpaceX is working to establish a permanent Martian presence with starships ferrying humans back and forth to Earth. We dont want to be one of those single-planet species, SpaceX founder Elon Musk said in April, outlining the companys ambitions. We want to be a multi-planet species.

First, though, theres some figuring out to do. Designing the right spacecraft and living spaces is part of the challenge. There are also prosaic, but important, questions. How will people shower with a limited supply of water? What will it take to grow fresh greens to supplement the steady diet of dehydrated food? And with civilians from different backgrounds living together in close quarters, will Martian habitats end up resembling the set of Jean-Paul Sartres play No Exit, where hell is other people?

The two-week mission Klos joined in 2015 was designed to explore those kinds of questions. It took place at the Mars Desert Research Station in Utah, four hours south of Salt Lake City, but everyone spoke and acted as though they were actually on Mars. A group of six people lived in a two-story cylindrical building. The commander, a former member of the Army National Guard, kept the participants on a strict schedule of fixing electrical systems, taking inventory, tidying up the facilities and sampling the soil. Everyone was assigned a special role: Klos was to prepare reports to share with the public. The health safety officer kept tabs on the crews well-being, and the engineer monitored levels of carbon dioxide and solar power.

Before stepping outside in a spacesuit, Klos and the others had to get permission from mission control back on Earth (actually a coordinator stationed in a nearby town). That person would send information about the winds and weather, and determine how long each person could stay outside the base. Sometimes dust storms rolled in, cutting off the solar power supply just as they would on Mars. Klos was allowed to bathe only once a week, using a couple of buckets of water. She was enchanted.

This is not performance art, says Klos. These are real scientific endeavors. Sometimes people make the critique that were role-playing too much. But the goal is to really live the way people are going to live on Mars so scientists can figure out how to make it work when we get there.

There are about a dozen such habitats around the globe, hosting simulations that run anywhere from two weeks to a full year. One of these is run by NASAs Human Research Program at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. But other facilities are funded by private organizations. The Mars Society, established by Brooklyn-born aerospace engineer Robert Zubrin, operates the habitat in Utah, where Klos returned for another mission in 2017, and another in the Canadian Arctic. Klos also took part in a mission at the Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation, or HI-SEAS. The facility is run by the International MoonBase Alliance, a group founded by the Dutch entrepreneur Henk Rogers.

HI-SEAS is located on Hawaiis big island at 8,200 feet above sea level, on top of the active volcano Mauna Loa. NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center is collaborating with the facility to gather information about volcanic caves and the microbes that live in those Mars-like conditions. HI-SEAS is also studying the limitations of doing that kind of work while wearing heavy spacesuits. Its hard enough for astronauts to hold a screwdriver in a gloved hand while repairing the International Space Station, but if people are going to be clambering on Martian rocks looking for microbes, theyll need the right gear.

The missions are open to people who have no background in science, engineering or astronaut training. After all, the goal is to send ordinary folks into space, so its worth finding out whether ordinary folks can coexist in Mars-like conditions here on Earth. Each two-story habitat at a simulation facility has usable floor space of only about 1,200 square feetthe size of two small apartments stacked on top of each otherwhich isnt much room for six people who cant just breeze out for a walk around the block.

To get a spot on a Mars or Moon simulation, you have to propose a project that the leaders believe is useful. One recent HI-SEAS participant focused on 3-D printing, looking at ways to create bricks out of volcanic rock. Another studied hydrogen fuel cells. Yet another tried out different methods for growing hydroponic lettuce. Many projects focus on psychological research, looking at how various foods, exercises and smells influence peoples moods while theyre crammed together in a pressurized capsule.

Preparations for Mars may prove to have benefits for life on Earth. Earlier research for space travel paved the way for medical advances such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The data were gathering now about surviving on solar power, conserving water and growing plants in arid conditions could be useful here at home as our climate changes.

The director of HI-SEAS, the 32-year-old astrobiologist Michaela Musilova, says she makes an effort to assemble diverse crews, using the internet to recruit teachers, journalists and artists like Klos. On a mission Musilova led in the fall of 2020, she ended up with crew members who supported opposing candidates in the November presidential election. That made for very interesting dynamics, she says. But Musilova says her teams are most innovative when their members come from different backgrounds. The range of perspectives is great for problem-solving, and the variety of personal stories can help combat boredom. And people who are eager to spend time on Mars, simulated or otherwise, tend to have certain things in common, including a willingness to live with strangers in close quarters and an enthusiasm for future space explorations.

We all have our quirks, Musilova says. Were all going to make mistakes and annoy other people. But when someone is having a bad day, we go out of our way to cheer them up. When someone is being a pain in the ass, were able to have some empathy. If living together on Mars can make us into better versions of ourselves, that might be the greatest breakthrough of all.

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Inside the Experiment to Create Mars on Earth - Smithsonian

Mars transit in Libra 2021: Need to restore balance in relationships – Hindustan Times

In Vedic astrology, the transit of Mars is considered to be a significant phenomenon. Mars is the Chief Executing Officer (CEO) of the zodiac. Its power lies not so much in thinking, but executing things at breakneck speed. It is the catalyst that connects the static with the dynamic. In whichever zodiac sign it moves into, it brings about a strong sense of action and non-nonsense attitude relating to the aspects of life indicated by the particular zodiac sign as well as the signs that the planet influences.

On October 22, Mars will be moving from Virgo to Libra sign and will stay there till early hours of December 5. In Virgo, Mars was in the sign of its enemy, Mercury, while Libra is ruled by Venus, which shares a neutral relationship with the red planet. Libra is zodiacs natural sign of love, relationship and marriage. It is the sign of pleasure, balance, harmony and shows our desire to be appreciated and loved by others. Being a fiery planet, Mars presence in this sign will ignite our deep-seated emotions relating to love and affection, which, if not met, can become a bone of contention with those whom we love dearly. Whether we like it or not, we will be forced to exercise our decision-making skills to achieve what we desire.

The coming together of the two strong and enthusiastic elements indicates the perfect time to bring about balance in relationships and bring a much-needed spark to get things back on track when it comes to personal life.

Impact on zodiac signs

The transit is particularly favourable for Aries, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Libra and Sagittarius signs. Here, Mars constructive energy will be at display which will lead to all-round prosperity. Relations with spouse and romantic partner will improve and bosses will be happy at workplace.

Three zodiac signs that need to be watchful in relationships are Taurus, Scorpio and Pisces. Mars transit in Libra activates the destructive energy of Mars for these signs which can lead to friction and disengagement.

Virgos need to be watchful about their words and choose them carefully else they can land in trouble. Capricornians will find it easy to execute pending work and will experience a new-found momentum in their life. Aquarians can plan to travel and look at restoring and improving their relationship with their siblings.

Neeraj Dhankher

(Corporate Astrologer, Founder - Astro Zindagi)

Email:info@astrozindagi.in, neeraj@astrozindagi.in

Url:www.astrozindagi.in

Contact: Noida: +919910094779

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Mars transit in Libra 2021: Need to restore balance in relationships - Hindustan Times

Thousands of tiny ice needles may explain mysterious stone patterns on Earth and Mars – Livescience.com

Some of the most breathtaking zen garden patterns on the planet owe their existence to an unlikely artist: thousands of tiny "ice needles." From swirls to circles to orderly rows, each delicate design is created when similarly-sized stones clump together across a landscape.

New research published Oct. 5 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences documents, for the first time, how ice needles create intricate patterns of stone in various landscapes. As ice needles freeze, they nudge small rocks to one side or another. Over time, the rocks become concentrated in one area, forming a design. The work confirms more than a century's worth of scientific speculation about the relationship between ice needles and stone patterns, said study coauthor Bernard Hallet, a geologist at the University of Washington. And it might shed light on the origins of an even more mysterious set of patterns ones found on Mars.

Related: Snowflake gallery: no two alike, of course

Ice needles form when there is an imbalance between the temperature of moist soil and the temperature of the air. At night, certain types of dirt "exhale", contracting with the drop in temperature. Simultaneously, water in the soil is drawn upward by capillary action, the molecules of water sticking to the sides of very narrow pores in the ground. But as this water rises and hits the frosty air, it turns to ice, freezing into a crystalline needle-like shape.

"Sometimes they are very striking," Hallet told Live Science. "And theyre quite common." If youve ever walked over "crunchy" ground early in the morning, youve probably crushed some ice needles without realizing it.

For a long time, scientists associated these tiny ice sculptures with the intricate patterns of lines and swirls that sometimes appear on pebbly ground, like the striped landscapes around Hawaii's volcanoes.

What they didnt know was exactly how ice was able to trace these designs without any intervention from living things. So they started investigating.

The researchers covered a flat 1 by 1 foot (.4 meter) square of soil with uniformly small, regularly spaced stones. Then they ran the patch through 30 freeze-thaw cycles, allowing ice needles to form and melt away. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the rising and falling needles pushed the pebbles to one side, driven by tiny environmental imbalances, such as the landscape's slope. Because a pile of stones is heavier than a single pebble, ice needles aren't able to push the stones once they reach a high enough concentration. By the end of their experiments, the team noticed zen garden-like patterns beginning to form: stones on one side, and bare ground on the other.

"So this tendency for stones to move toward stony domains is a very, very strong one," said Hallet. Stones on flat ground tended to form loops and swirls, while stones on a gentle slope tended to organize into rows.

Not all soil is porous enough to form ice needles; generally, soils high in silt or organic matter work best, according to research published in the journal Arctic and Alpine Research. Similarly, not all climates will produce needle ice. It will only form in areas where the ground is moist and the air cools down rapidly.

Experts believe that a subtler version of this cycle may be behind the patterns on Mars examined by NASAs Curiosity rover. While the Martian atmosphere is very low in water, the Red Planets soil does show some evidence of tiny ice crystals, according to NASAs Kennedy Space Center. As this dirt heats up, it expands slightly, only to shrink again as it cools.

Though this process is much less dramatic than ice needles pushing aside stones, it can still cause tiny pebbles and dust to shift over time. On Earth, Hallet said, the fine patterns from such minute soil expansions and contractions might go unnoticed. But on Mars, "because theres so little going on except for the wind, we see these features."

Sadly though, science is yet to discover any Martian ice needles.

Originally published on Live Science.

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Thousands of tiny ice needles may explain mysterious stone patterns on Earth and Mars - Livescience.com

University of Regina team hoping to help send humans to Mars with new airlock prototype – CTV News

REGINA -

A team from the University of Regina, known as Celestial Labs, has created a national award-winning airlock prototype that they hope will allow humans to visit Mars in the future.

An airlock is a bridge between two environments that need to stay separate, Anwit Adhikari, the division head for structure and design at Celestial Labs, said. An airlock is essentially a small room that is attached outside the spacecraft so if youre trying to exit into the void of space or Mars, youd first enter [the airlock] and the doors would close, then youd open the other door an go outside, therefore keeping the atmosphere isolated.

The team had to consider a number of factors when building a structure for Mars. Those include, but are not limited to, a structure immune to radiation, wind loads, gravity, temperature and pressure.

This will be one of the first operational Martian airlock [prototypes] in Canadas history if we do it right, Adhikari said. I never thought we would get this far.

They also had to ensure the airlock would be safe for use on Mars.

Previous airlocks would just be inflatables because there was no gravity. Astronauts could essentially float outside, he said. Because Mars has a non negligible gravity, and astronauts will be walking in there, it needs to have a structure that can hold the shape of the airlock.

He said this airlock also has an electronic system that is as simple as possible because of radiation levels.

Finally, the fabric used for the airlock has to stand up to the environment. Mylar and aerogel are used for insulation purposes. The polymer being used to give the airlock structure inside is still private information to the team.

Celestial Labs first started working on the prototype in 2018, when the University of British Columbia announced a national competition to see which school could design and build the best airlock for Mars.

This was taken in light of the consideration the Elon Musk is planning to do a man mission to Mars in the next few years, Adhikari said.

The competition had two phases. The first was held in 2019 and was focused on design. In 2021, phase two focused on a built prototype. Celestial Labs from the University of Regina won both.

Im just really proud that a small group from an underdog university can beat all the big shots of the University of Waterloo and the University of Toronto, Samuel Reddekop, the chief of electronics design with Celestial Labs, said.

The team originally set out just to win the competition, but because of their years of work and success, their sights are now set even higher.

Because we designed the airlock with real constraints in mind, somewhere along the line we thought maybe this is a technology that the industry could appreciate or find use for, Adhikari said.

Within the next few months, the team will complete the prototype. They then plan to present it to industry professionals.

We dont expect that the whole airlock will be used by the industry, but we are hopeful that certain subsystems that we worked on for three years now will be applicable to certain aspects, he said. The most optimistic target would be that it would actually be used in Mars. We will work as hard as we can to get there, but in the event that that doesnt happen, we are hoping it will find some use in earth-like terrestrial applications.

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University of Regina team hoping to help send humans to Mars with new airlock prototype - CTV News

Sols 3272-3273: Emerging From the Shadows… NASA’s Mars Exploration Program – NASA Mars Exploration

The triangular shaped rock in the immediate foreground contains the crushed nodule targets Helmsdale Boulder Beds and the Crovie bedrock target. In the background, the slope is covered with grey float blocks similar to those being imaged by Mastcam. The pediment-capping rock is at the top of the image, just right of centre. This image was taken by Front Hazard Avoidance Camera (Front Hazcam) onboard NASA's Mars rover Curiosity on Sol 3270. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech. Download image

Curiosity went into hibernation for a few weeks, executing only routine environmental and radiation monitoring activities, while the Sun was positioned between us and Mars (conjunction). Today is our first day planning since Mars has emerged from behind the sun. Curiosity is healthy after her rest, and we wasted no time planning a multitude of science activities.

Prior to conjunction, Curiosity drove away from the Maria Gordon drill site to an area nearby that contained large (~6-7 cm across) resistant nodules (Helmsdale Boulder Beds). We deliberately drove over the nodules to crush them and expose their fresh interiors for examination by a number of the science instruments. The team is interested in determining the chemistry of the nodules relative to the flat bedrock. Why are they resistant? How does their composition compare to other nodules previously encountered, and what might this tell us about fluids that were present in these rocks? The workspace imaging that came down confirmed that we had successfully broken some of the nodules, such that we were able to make several observations just before conjunction. But we were not able to use the arm mounted APXS and MAHLI instruments; we did not want the arm left out over conjunction.

Today, we took advantage of pre-planning prior to conjunction to acquire APXS chemistry and MAHLI images on the crushed Helmsdale Boulder Beds. MAHLI will also image another fresh-looking nodule, Goose Stone. These observations will be complemented with ChemCam LIBS measurements and Mastcam images on the same crushed Helmsdale Boulder Beds target and the Crovie bedrock target. Looking further afield, Curiosity will image resistant, pediment-capping rock in the distance with ChemCam RMI and Mastcam. The pediment is a gently sloping surface that appears to cut across the underlying rocks that we are currently driving over. Mastcam will also image some grey float rocks that may be derived from those pediment-capping rocks.

We will also uplink several environmental observations including Mastcam images to detect changes in the unconsolidated sediment and wind activity while Curiosity has been parked in the same location for the last few weeks. Atmospheric observations are also planned to look for dust devils and to measure the opacity of the atmosphere.

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Sols 3272-3273: Emerging From the Shadows... NASA's Mars Exploration Program - NASA Mars Exploration

U of R team hoping to help bring humans to Mars with new airlock prototype – CTV News

REGINA -

A team from the University of Regina, known as Celestial Labs, has created a national award-winning airlock prototype that they hope will allow humans to visit Mars in the future.

An airlock is a bridge between two environments that need to stay separate, Anwit Adhikari, the division head for structure and design at Celestial Labs, said. An airlock is essentially a small room that is attached outside the spacecraft so if youre trying to exit into the void of space or Mars, youd first enter [the airlock] and the doors would close, then youd open the other door an go outside, therefore keeping the atmosphere isolated.

The team had to consider a number of factors when building a structure for Mars. Those include, but are not limited to, a structure immune to radiation, wind loads, gravity, temperature and pressure.

This will be one of the first operational Martian airlock [prototypes] in Canadas history if we do it right, Adhikari said. I never thought we would get this far.

They also had to ensure the airlock would be safe for use on Mars.

Previous airlocks would just be inflatables because there was no gravity. Astronauts could essentially float outside, he said. Because Mars has a non negligible gravity, and astronauts will be walking in there, it needs to have a structure that can hold the shape of the airlock.

He said this airlock also has an electronic system that is as simple as possible because of radiation levels.

Finally, the fabric used for the airlock has to stand up to the environment. Mylar and aerogel are used for insulation purposes. The polymer being used to give the airlock structure inside is still private information to the team.

Celestial Labs first started working on the prototype in 2018, when the University of British Columbia announced a national competition to see which school could design and build the best airlock for Mars.

This was taken in light of the consideration the Elon Musk is planning to do a man mission to Mars in the next few years, Adhikari said.

The competition had two phases. The first was held in 2019 and was focused on design. In 2021, phase two focused on a built prototype. Celestial Labs from the University of Regina won both.

Im just really proud that a small group from an underdog university can beat all the big shots of the University of Waterloo and the University of Toronto, Samuel Reddekop, the chief of electronics design with Celestial Labs, said.

The team originally set out just to win the competition, but because of their years of work and success, their sights are now set even higher.

Because we designed the airlock with real constraints in mind, somewhere along the line we thought maybe this is a technology that the industry could appreciate or find use for, Adhikari said.

Within the next few months, the team will complete the prototype. They then plan to present it to industry professionals.

We dont expect that the whole airlock will be used by the industry, but we are hopeful that certain subsystems that we worked on for three years now will be applicable to certain aspects, he said. The most optimistic target would be that it would actually be used in Mars. We will work as hard as we can to get there, but in the event that that doesnt happen, we are hoping it will find some use in earth-like terrestrial applications.

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U of R team hoping to help bring humans to Mars with new airlock prototype - CTV News

Smokey Robinson and Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds Honored with Appearances from Bruno Mars, Demi Lovato, Boyz II Men, Charlie Wilson and More at…

LAS VEGAS, Oct. 18, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Keep Memory Alive's 25th annual Power of Love gala at Resorts World Las Vegas on Oct. 16 brought top talent Anthony Anderson, Tori Kelly, Kenny Loggins, Demi Lovato, Bruno Mars, Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis, Jr., AJ McLean, Wanya Morris and Shawn Stockman from Boyz II Men, Jordin Sparks and Charlie Wilson together to honor legendary musicians Smokey Robinson and Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds and raise crucial funds and awareness for Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health.

Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds and Demi Lovato at Keep Memory Alive's 25th annual Power of Love gala. Credit Denise Truscello, Contributor, Getty Images for Keep Memory Alive

Also in attendance were "Bar Rescue" star Jon Taffer, jeweler Steven Lagos, Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis and Patrn Spirits Co. Founder John Paul DeJoria.

Paying tribute to Edmonds' massive library of penned songs, Boyz II Men opened the show with a medley of "Water Runs Dry," "I'll Make Love to You" and "End of the Road," before Mars presented the award to Edmonds, calling him his mentor and hero. He shared advice Edmonds had given him for any time he's recording in the studio, to "make sure there's love in it." Keep Memory Alive Founder and Chairman Larry Ruvo thanked Edmonds for his dedicated support of Keep Memory Alive throughout the years.

Edmonds shared his personal tie to Keep Memory Alive, saying, "My mother was losing her memory in her last years and there's nothing more painful than to watch someone you love not remember you." He thanked Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health for the support and counsel and for "not just working to keep her memory alive, but to keep all of our memories alive." Boyz II Men returned to the stage with Lovato and McLean to perform a spectacular rendition of "Change the World."

After the lively performances, Anderson took the stage to present Robinson with his award. Dressed in a maroon floral print suit jacket, Robinson thanked guests and the performers, saying, "It's an incredible feeling to be up here tonight with my really good friends, most of whom I haven't seen in a long time." He shared his personal experience of dementia, remembering Bobby Rogers of The Miracles, "We were born on the same day in the same hospital and sang together for 12 years. Every year on our birthday, we would call each other. He passed away several years ago, and I called him the year he passed, and he had no idea who I was. It's a horrible disease." He expressed his appreciation for Keep Memory Alive, ending with a shout out to Babyface, saying "I am flattered and honored you are my brother."

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His tribute included performances of his many hits including "Who's Loving You" by Kelly, "Shop Around" by Loggins, "My Guy" by Sparks and "Cruisin'" by McCoo & Davis, Jr. to the delight of the audience. Wilson and Robinson duetted "All My Love," while fans cheered "Uncle Charlie." Robinson continued solo with "Being With You" and "Tracks of My Tears" before the entire cast rejoined him for "Get Ready" to close out the show.

Earlier in the evening, CEO & Chairman of Genting Berhad and developer of Resorts World K.T. Lim received a standing ovation when receiving the Keep Memory Alive Community Leadership award from Ruvo and Keep Memory Alive Vice Chairwoman and Co-Founder Camille Ruvo, who said, "Your avalanche of support from the beginning is because of the care you have given to us, and has allowed us to provide much needed resources for the caregivers who take care of the patients 24/7."

Chefs Wolfgang Puck and Bobby Flay prepared exquisite cuisine paired with wines from Southern Glazer's Wine and Spirits, followed by a showstopping dessert display from the Resorts World Las Vegas pastry team that featured a pineapple lychee bonbon, ube waffle basket and more. Flay posted to his Instagram that he was honored to be a part of the event and cook alongside his culinary idol, Puck.

Guests bid on exceptional experiences and items during the silent and live auctions including a private dinner with Jon Bon Jovi in East Hampton, an opportunity to announce the Las Vegas Raiders live draft pick alongside Mark Davis at the 2022 NFL Draft and a day of playing chess with Andrea Bocelli followed by attending one of his concerts.

The evening generated the majority of annual revenue for Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health to provide service, care and resources for patients and their caregivers in the fight against neurodegenerative disorders including Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and Huntington's diseases; multiple system atrophy; frontotemporal dementia and related disorders; multiple sclerosis and more.

For additional information visit keepmemoryalive.org. Follow Keep Memory Alive on Instagram @ccnevadakma, Twitter @ccnevadakma and facebook.com/ccnevadakma.

About Keep Memory Alive:Keep Memory Alive, whose mission is to provide enhanced treatment and ultimately cures for patients and their families suffering from neurocognitive disorders, raises awareness and funds in support of Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health. By supporting Keep Memory Alive and its fight against neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, Huntington's, Parkinson's, ALS and memory disorders of all kinds, we can ensure progress towards better treatments and ultimately cures will occur in Las Vegas. For additional information, call (702) 263-9797 or visit keepmemoryalive.org.

About the Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health:Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health, which opened in 2009, provides expert diagnosis and treatment for individuals and families living with Alzheimer's disease, Lewy body, frontotemporal and other dementias; Parkinson's and Huntington's disease, multiple system atrophy and other movement disorders; and multiple sclerosis. With locations in Cleveland, OH; Weston, Florida and headquarters in Las Vegas, Nevada, the center offers a continuum of care with no-cost opportunities for the community to participate in education and research, including disease prevention studies and clinical trials of promising new medications. An integrated entity, Keep Memory Alive, raises funds exclusively in support of the Nevada location. clevelandclinic.org/Nevada.

For photos and b-roll, please CLICK HEREMedia ContactsCarrie Giverson | Dawn Britt321563@email4pr.com 702.472.7692

AJ McLean, Smokey Robinson, Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds, Charlie Wilson, Kenny Loggins at Keep Memory Alive's 25th annual Power of Love gala.Photo credit Denise Truscello, Contributor, Getty Images for Keep Memory Alive

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Smokey Robinson and Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds Honored with Appearances from Bruno Mars, Demi Lovato, Boyz II Men, Charlie Wilson and More at...

This Atomic Clock Will Transform Deep Space Exploration – WIRED

James Camparo of the Aerospace Corporation thinks the drift of their clock is exceptionally low. These on-orbit frequency stability results are very encouraging for the technology, even though the clock did not operate in its optimal settings while in space, says Camparo, who holds a doctorate in chemical physics and was not involved in the study. He anticipates that during the next phase of the mission, the JPL team will achieve even lower frequency variations, further improving the clocks performance.

This kind of precision timing will be needed for future deep space missions. Currently, navigation in space actually requires all of the decisions to be made on Earth. Ground navigators bounce radio signals to a spacecraft and back, and ultraprecise clocks can time how long the round trip takes. This measurement is used to calculate information about position, speed, and direction, and a final signal is sent back to the space vessel with commands on how to adjust course.

But the time it takes to send messages back and forth is a real limitation. For objects near the moon, the two-way trip only takes a couple of seconds, Ely says. But as you travel further out, the time required quickly becomes inefficient: near Mars, the round trip time is about 40 minutes, and near Jupiter, this increases to about an hour and a half. By the time you travel all the way out to the current location of the Voyager, a satellite exploring interstellar space, he says, it can take days. Far out into the cosmos, it would be impractical and unsafe to rely on this method, especially if the craft was carrying people. (Currently, uncrewed missions, like the Perseverance rovers landing on Mars, rely on automated systems for navigation decisions that have to be made on short timescales.)

The solution, the JPL team says, is to equip the spacecraft with its own atomic clock and eliminate the need for ground-based calculations. The craft will always need to receive an initial signal from Earth, in order to measure its position and direction from a constant point of reference. But there would be no need to bounce a signal back, because the subsequent navigation calculations could be done in real time onboard.

Until now, this was impossible. Atomic clocks used to navigate from the ground are too bigthe size of refrigeratorsand current space clocks arent accurate enough to rely on. The JPL teams version is the first one thats both small enough to fit on a spacecraft and stable enough for one-way navigation to become a reality.

It may prove useful for ground travel too. On Earth, we use GPS, a network of satellites carrying atomic clocks that help us navigate on the surface. But according to Ely, these clocks arent nearly as stabletheir drift needs to be corrected at least twice a day to ensure a constant stream of accurate information for everyone on Earth. If you had a more stable clock that had less drift, you could decrease that kind of overhead, says Ely. In the future, he also imagines that a large population of humans or robots on the moon or Mars will need to have their own tracking infrastructure; a GPS-like constellation of satellites, equipped with tiny atomic clocks, could accomplish this.

Camparo agrees, and says the device could even be configured to use on ground stations on Mars or the moon. Its worth noting that when we consider space-system timekeeping, we often focus on the atomic clocks carried by the spacecraft, he says. However, for any constellation of satellites, there has to be a better clock at the satellite systems ground station, since this is how scientists monitor the accuracy of clocks in space.

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This Atomic Clock Will Transform Deep Space Exploration - WIRED