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Confused malcontents swilling Chardonnay while awaiting the Zombie Apocalypse.
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Latest 9/2/21 by Di (amina046)
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Latest Mar-1 by OSarge (AKA Finkle) (mahjong54)
2/12/20
The $2.2 billion Solar Orbiter will join NASA's Parker Solar Probe, launched 18 months ago, in coming perilously close to the Sun to unveil its secrets.
Read more from ABC News3/23/20
A comet called Atlas is currently heading toward the sun, and it just might put on a really good show in a couple of months. Discovered last December by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert system in Hawaii (thus the name ATLAS for the comet), the comet has been growing much brighter than experts had predicted. If it manages to hold its shape as it moves nearer to the sun, it could grow...
Read more from phys.org4/6/20
Di (amina046) said:A comet called Atlas is currently heading toward the sun, and it just might put on a really good show in a couple of months. Discovered last December by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert system in Hawaii (thus the name ATLAS for the comet), the comet has been growing much brighter than experts had predicted. If it manages to hold its shape as it moves nearer to the sun, it could grow...
Comet's trajectory in the sky with 7-day markers. Credit: Tomruen/CC BY-SA 4.0/Wikimedia Commons
MARCH 23, 2020 - A comet called Atlas is currently heading toward the sun, and it just might put on a really good show in a couple of months. Discovered last December by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert system in Hawaii (thus the name C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) for the comet), the comet has been growing much brighter than experts had predicted. If it manages to hold its shape as it moves nearer to the sun, it could grow brighter than Venus.
4/12/20
NASA astronauts expect a tough return to such a drastically changed world next week, after more than half a year at the International Space Station.
Read more from ABC News4/12/20
I wanted to fly, I wanted to be an astronaut, even now, reading your post, I feel a deep down, gut sadness that I did not. I was raised around jets, from our back yard could hear those engines roaring as they were being tested. Our little farm was under direct flight path from the air force base where dad was a jet mechanic and he would identify each plane as it flew overhead. Many years later, I was privileged to be part of the team that manufactured the SSME (Space Shuttle Main Engines). My husband, our son and I were all involved in the space program in different capacities.
Sorry again for TMI - one of your esteemed contributors would jeer at my "earth shattering news", but I would go now if I could.
4/13/20
That sounds fantastic!
Were you there for any of the launches?
4/13/20
Unfortunately, no. However, my office was just down the hall from the VP of Manufacturing, and we used to watch the launches (and control room) in real time in his conference room. We had an entirely different view than what was shown on TV. There was a real feeling of pride watching our engines lift those shuttles. Our hearts were in our throats every time until the boosters were jettisoned though. Those boosters were basically giant bombs and every person in that shuttle was in enormous danger until they fell away - remember Challenger?
4/14/20
I do. Were you there watching on that day?
And I'm sure there was one since.