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| Solar Orbiter spacecraft takes its closest look at the sun The daring European mission (with contribution from NASA), will look at the sun from a distance of "only" 30 million miles (48.3 million km) on Saturday morning at 7:50 a.m. EDT (1150 GMT). Doing that, the probe is set to break its own previous record for ... | |
| Solar Orbiter swings by the sun to unravel its mysteries The spacecraft will come within 31 million miles (50 million kilometers) of the sun, less than one-third the distance between the star and Earth. This will take Solar Orbiter inside the orbit of Mercury, the closest planet to the sun. | |
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| Driftwood Outdoors: Time in nature improves mental health Nature is healing. It doesn't matter if you climb the tallest mountain, go for a stroll on a trail in a local park, cast a lure to fish in a farm pond or simply sit on a bench and listen to birds chirp. The power of nature will bring your blood ... | |
| James Webb's MIRI instrument has both a heater and a cooler The long process of getting the James Webb Space Telescope ready for science operations continues, with the ongoing alignment of three of its instruments. Webb recently reached the major milestone of aligning its mirrors with its NIRCam instrument, ... | |
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| Goss: Morning planets race eastward Our morning sky presents a good demonstration that the planets do indeed move, and that they all don't move at the same rate, nor always in the same direction. The planetary trio of Venus, Mars, and Saturn end March and begin April by putting on a ... | |
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| New vortical Sun waves detected with unexplained speed These waves move in the opposite direction to the rotation of the sun, three times faster than what should be allowed by hydrodynamics alone. Curiously, they also resemble a similar type of mysterious wave found in Earth's oceans: Rossby waves. | |
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