An enormous space telescope. I was writing about this sort of thing four decades ago, and it’s finally on the verge of fruition.
Category Archives: Space Science
Perseverance
Congratulations to JPL on another successful landing. Bob Zimmerman has the latest.
Mars Perseverance
Bob Zimmerman has an analysis of the landing ellipse next month.
Arecibo
…we hardly knew ye.
We went up to see it when Patricia was working in San Juan. It was quite impressive, but I wonder if there were maintenance issues? Perhaps they should have replaced the cables before they started to weaken?
Phosphine
This may be a sign of life in the Venerian clouds, but not necessarily.
I do think that Venus gets far too little attention. Maybe this will spur more action in that regard.
[Wednesday-afternoon update]
This is a six-year-old article, but it’s relevant. Seeing what it looks like at the one-bar level of the atmosphere should be a high priority.
[Bumped]
[Sunday-afternoon update]
Bob Zubrin: Let’s explore the Venerian atmosphere with solar balloons.
[Bumped]
“Follow The Science”
…is not a strategy.
Like Joe Biden.
[Afternoon update]
Related, sort of: The alien red planet and the scientific method.
A Mission To Venus
A private one. All is proceeding as I have foreseen.
I hope they have a good camera to see if it’s beautiful clouds, or just gray.
Ceres
It’s geologically active, and may have an underground ocean.
Ceres is underrated. It should be considered a planet.
A New Era For Space
I haven’t had time to read it yet, but the White House has released a new document from the National Space Council.
A Younger Moon
I’ve never thought it looked a day over four billion years old, myself.
[Afternoon update]
Link is fixed.