Hosted by Cstar1|Galaxies & More!
We keep our star talk down to earth! Beginning stargazers, professional astronomers, armchair astronauts and the cosmologically curious are all invited to join us. Galaxies Astronomy Club was founded in 1994.
1573 messages in 259 discussions
Latest 3/17/19 by Cstar1
3552 messages in 831 discussions
177 messages in 23 discussions
9988 messages in 6757 discussions
2442 messages in 1637 discussions
183 messages in 110 discussions
684 messages in 442 discussions
1328 messages in 338 discussions
1471 messages in 1135 discussions
847 messages in 486 discussions
373 messages in 246 discussions
4108 messages in 2606 discussions
455 messages in 115 discussions
3006 messages in 2166 discussions
656 messages in 148 discussions
428 messages in 402 discussions
11/25/16
Stakes are high for #ExoMars next week. Disappointing to see the rover 'dumbed down' by losing autonomous navigation https://t.co/LtDobdCAMr
— Jonathan Amos (@BBCAmos) November 25, 2016
11/28/16
NASA has uncovered a vast underground supply of water ice that may, someday, be an oasis for future Mars explorers. https://t.co/wzJeIbspsI
— Discovery (@Discovery) November 29, 2016
12/2/16
It's kind of astonishing that humans can build machines that show us what solar eclipses look like on other planets. https://t.co/XFXb0tV5FM
— Dr. John Barentine (@JohnBarentine) December 1, 2016
#Curiosity watched #Phobos pass across the Sun on sol 369, shooting one photo per second. This animation runs about 10 times natural speed. pic.twitter.com/OquZ5ktQX5
— Domenico Calia (@CaliaDomenico) November 30, 2016
12/10/16
New ultraviolet images from NASA show that Mars' atmosphere lights up at night! https://t.co/6Shji0gaVE
— Discovery (@Discovery) December 10, 2016
12/21/16
this discussion is featured in today's Delphi Community Daily News! http://forums.delphiforums.com/news1/messages/?msg=1991.1
1/9/17
Dusty day on Mars yesterday. 7:49 in the morning, local time. https://t.co/tVo7kR7mng pic.twitter.com/rnxPv6wyQG
— RidingWithRobots (@ridingrobots) January 10, 2017
1/10/17
This is what the Earth and our moon look like from Mars. Thanks to the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for this new image! pic.twitter.com/jCmVMtB8HS
— Science Channel (@ScienceChannel) January 10, 2017
1/14/17
#Space: the spiraling, sculpted ice of the north #polar cap of #Marshttps://t.co/ErBqOjQXmI by @ridingrobots pic.twitter.com/MWdxfvhe6x
— Maxime Duprez (@maximaxoo) January 13, 2017
1/17/17
I think this ice may be dry ice or frozen carbon dioxide since Mars atmosphere is 98% CO2. Do not know if Rover found anything different. If I remember my chem, dry ice forms at -90° F. Or so. The polar temps are beyond cold, lol. Downright frigid.