Charles Doxley is an electronics engineer at the NASA Glenn Research Center. His work for the avionics division includes working on a project that tests future space radios to make sure they are compatible with NASA’s spacecraft tracking and data relay satellite system. Doxley earned his Bachelor’s Degree in Mathematics from Albany State University in Albany, Georgia and a Master’s Degree from Tuskegee University in Tuskegee, Alabama.
Blog
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Welcome to Star City
ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen introduces us to Star City, near Moscow, where he is currently training for his mission to the International Space Station in 2015.
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Candy Chromatography – Sick Science! #178
Find out how it works here: http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/candy-chromatography
Want more experiments like this? Check out http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/product/naked-eggs-and-flying-potatoes
Sick Science™ is a trademark of Steve Spangler, inc.
© 2014 Steve Spangler Science all rights reserved
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Webb Telescope’s progress on This Week @NASA
NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden, Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland and Goddard Center Director Chris Scolese congratulated the Goddard team recently for progress in development of the James Webb Space Telescope. The telescope’s flight instruments and primary mirrors are being integrated at Goddard. JWST is the agency’s flagship science project and the most powerful space telescope ever built. Scheduled to launch in 2018, it will study every phase in the history of our universe, including the first luminous glows after the big bang and the evolution of our own solar system. Also, Crawler-Transporter test drive, Adapter ring complete, Engine test, Progress up, Progress down and more!
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Ariane 5 flight VA217 liftoff replay
The first Ariane 5 launch of 2014 lifted off from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana on its mission to place two telecommunications satellites, ABS-2 & Athena–Fidus, into their planned transfer orbits.
Credit: ESA / CNES / Arianespace
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Magic Color Changing Flower – Sick Science! #177
Get the Entire Kit Here: http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/magic-color-changing-flowers.html
White flowers are beautiful, and so are pink flowers, but what if you could have flowers that changed from white to pink and back again? That’s exactly what happens with the Magic Color Changing Flowers. The chemistry behind these magnificent flowers will boggle your mind and create stunning visuals that will have you, and your audience, wanting to repeat the process all day.
Science Behind this Experiment Here: http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/magic-color-changing-flower
Want more experiments like this? Check out http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/product/naked-eggs-and-flying-potatoes
Sick Science™ is a trademark of Steve Spangler, inc.
© 2014 Steve Spangler Science all rights reserved
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NASA Highlights James Webb Space Telescope Progress
NASA Administrator Charles Bolden and Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland participated in a news conference Feb. 3 at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., to discuss the status of the agency’s flagship science project, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Bolden and Mikulski congratulated the JWST team for the integration at Goddard of all the telescope’s flight instruments and primary mirrors.
The most powerful space telescope ever built, Webb will be the premiere observatory of the next decade, serving thousands of astronomers worldwide. It will study every phase in the history of our universe, including the first luminous glows after the big bang, the formation of solar systems capable of supporting life on planets similar to Earth, and the evolution of our own solar system.
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Astronaut Class in DC on This Week @NASA
NASA’s newest astronaut class was in Washington, DC recently, discussing the future of human exploration and STEM education at the annual White House State of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math address hosted by Presidential Science Advisor John Holdren. The astronaut candidates shared advice and insight with some students at that event and with more students at a Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum event that included a live conversation with the International Space Station crew. Also, Russian spacewalk, SLS sound test, LADEE mission extended, GPM briefing, and Day of Remembrance.
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ESA Euronews – Rosetta: The Comet Hunter Awakes
The exploits of comet-hunting spacecraft Rosetta are generating intense interest as it speeds towards a dramatic climax this autumn.
The craft will catch up with comet 67p/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, fly alongside, and put a lander on its surface. Throughout this fantastic voyage, Euronews will have special access to the engineers and scientists who are making it happen.
On 20th January Rosetta woke up from two and a half years of hibernation. It was a moment of extreme tension for everyone at ESA’s European Space Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany. Strained, nervous faces searched for a signal from a probe in deep space.
After some 45 minutes of anxiety the all-important first signal came through. The scientists burst into energetic applause.
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ESA Euronews: Rosetta prepara su cita con el cometa
Hace unos días, la sonda Rosetta se reactivó tras casi dos años y medio de hibernación. La comunidad científica del mundo entero estaba pendiente de la sala de control en el momento en el que Rosetta, tras reactivarse, enviaba su señal de confirmación.
A ocho cientos millones de kilómetros, en algún lugar del espacio, Rosetta se despertaba.
Este proceso tardó varias horas, a las 18:18 de la tarde, hora central europea, el equipo del Centro de Operaciones de la Agencia Espacial Europea, en Darmstadt, Alemania, estallaba de alegría.
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ESA Euronews: Rosetta lassú ébredése
Pár nappal ezelőtt az Európai Űrügynökség sikeresen felébresztette a hibernációból a Rosetta nevű műholdat, amely hamarosan egyedülálló küldetésre indul: leszállóegységet próbál ereszteni egy üstökös felszínére.
2014. január huszadikán a világ szeme az Európai Űrügynökség csapatára szegeződött, amint arra vártak, hogy az űreszköz válaszoljon.
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Thank you for helping us to wake up Rosetta!
Compilation of some of the 218 video entries and messages received as part of the “Wake up, Rosetta!” video shout-out contest.
http://www.esa.int/rosetta
http://www.facebook.com/rosettamissionCredits: ESA
#wakeuprosetta
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On board – ESA’s Newcomers Integration Programme
Newly hired ESA staff met for an information day at the European Astronaut Centre and were introduced to particular aspects of the ESA working culture.
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Earth from Space: Kilimanjaro
Earth from Space is presented by Kelsea Brennan-Wessels from the ESA Web-TV virtual studios. Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and the plains in southern Kenya are pictured in a false-colour image featured in the ninetieth edition.
See also http://www.esa.int/spaceinimages/Images/2014/01/Kilimanjaro_Tanzania to download the image.
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NASA Event Reflects on Accomplishments of Mars Rover
NASA will reflected on the work of Mars rover Opportunity during a news conference on Jan. 23.
Opportunity landed on the Red Planet Jan. 24, 2004, three weeks behind a twin rover named Spirit. Both rovers made important discoveries about wet environments that could have supported microbial life on ancient Mars. Spirit stopped communicating with Earth in 2010, but Opportunity is continuing to provide scientific results, and currently is investigating the rim of a crater 14 miles (22 kilometers) wide.
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Wrapper Worm – Sick Science! #175
SICK SCIENCE APPAREL NOW AVAILABLE! Click here: http://spanglersci.com/SickScienceApparel
You can have a ton of science fun with a straw. You can make it into a blow gun, using the properties of air, or it can double as a pipette when your lab has run out. But did you know you can perform some awesome hands-on science with the straw’s wrapper, too? It’s true. With the Wrapper Worm, we’ll reveal how to turn an ordinary straw wrapper into a growing worm!
Find out why this works here: http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/wrapper-worm
Want more experiments like this? Check out http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/product/naked-eggs-and-flying-potatoes
Sick Science™ is a trademark of Steve Spangler, inc.
© 2013 Steve Spangler Science all rights reserved
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Rosetta wakes up from deep space hibernation
Replay of Part 3 of the Rosetta wake-up media briefing at the ESA Operations Centre ESOC, in Darmstadt, Germany, on 20 January 2014.
Waiting for the signal from Rosetta. View inside the Mission Control Room at ESOC as the team waits for a first signal that Rosetta has successfully come out of deep space hibernation.
Rosetta was launched in 2004 and has since travelled around the Sun five times, picking up energy from Earth and Mars to line it up with its final destination: comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. For the coldest, loneliest leg of the mission, as Rosetta travelled out towards the orbit of Jupiter, the spacecraft was put into deep-space hibernation.
In 2014, Rosetta will complete its cruise towards the comet, rendezvousing with it in August, before putting its Philae lander onto the comet’s surface in November, as it begins its journey closer to the Sun.
The spacecraft’s internal alarm clock is set for 10:00 GMT (11:00 CET) on 20 January. Once it has warmed itself up, it should re-establish communication with Earth several hours later.
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Rosetta calls home
Video highlight showing receipt of signal from ESA’s Rosetta comet chaser after 31 months of deep-space hibernation. Teams at ESA’s operations centre in Darmstadt, Germany, leapt for joy as the signal was confirmed via NASA’s 70m tracking stations in California and Australia.
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ESOC Main Mission Control counts down to #wakeuprosetta
The clock inside ESOC’s Main Mission Control counts down to 10:00 GMT (11:00 CET) on 20 January 2014 – the moment when ESA’s Rosetta spacecraft was woken from a 31-month deep space hibernation.
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ESA Director General meets the media
ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain met with media at the traditional start-of-year briefing on the activities and challenges for 2014. Friday 17 January, ESA-HQ Daumesnil, Paris
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Chasing comets in space
Space missions have been chasing comets since the launch of the Giotto spacecraft in 1985. NASA’s Stardust mission flew through a comet’s tail in 2006 and brought a sample of dust back to Earth. Glycene was found in this sample, one of the four basic amino acids in our DNA. We can make a fake comet on Earth using a recipe of water ice, liquid nitrogen and fine carbon particles. By testing the fake comet and simulating the conditions of space, this will help scientists interpret data from ESA’s latest comet chaser – Rosetta. With ESA’s comet chaser Rosetta expectations are great : for the first time a probe will be flying alongside a comet and even placing a lander on its surface.
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Wake up sleeping satellite – #wakeuprosetta
Singer Tasmin Archer kindly sent this message to Europe’s ‘sleeping satellite’, ESA’s comet-chaser Rosetta. Thanks, Tasmin!
Tasmin Archer is the well-known British singer, whose song ‘Sleeping Satellite’ about the Apollo missions to the Moon was her first single released in 1992. The song went to Number 1 in the UK and Ireland singles charts, and also broke into the US, German and Australian music charts. The song has been covered by numerous artists, including Kim Wilde. Tasmin famously performed an acoustic version of Sleeping Satellite at the International Astronautical Congress Opening ceremony in Glasgow, September 2008 (see http://youtu.be/owYZOOIXUAs).
Video copyright: T. Archer
Sleeping Satellite written by: T. Archer, J. Beck, J. Hughes (courtesy Quiverdisc)
Video produced by tasminarcher.com -

Sinking Soda Surprise – Sick Science! #174
SICK SCIENCE APPAREL NOW AVAILABLE! Click here: http://spanglersci.com/SickScienceApparel
Purchase the DEMO TANK HERE! http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/sick-science/sinking-soda-surprise-experiment-e?utm_expid=4252983-2.wh9gwDeLQ7CBnKjRptctNA.3
See the full experiment at: http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/sinking-soda-surprise
Plug the drain, fill the sink with water, and take the plunge with Steve Spangler’s floating science challenge. We all know that certain things float in water while other things sink, but why? Do all heavy things sink? Why does a penny sink and an aircraft carrier float? Think you know the answers? Well, get ready for a few amazing surprises!
Want more experiments like this? Check out http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/product/naked-eggs-and-flying-potatoes
Sick Science™ is a trademark of Steve Spangler, inc.
© 2013 Steve Spangler Science all rights reserved
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The floodwaters of Mars
Travel across the dramatic flood plains of Mars to celebrate ten years of imaging the Red Planet with Mars Express
Ten years ago, on 14 January 2004, Mars Express took its very first images of Mars in colour and in 3D.
To mark the occasion, the team produced a fly-through movie of the ancient flood plain Kasei Valles. The movie is based on the 67-image mosaic released as part of the ten-years-since-launch celebrations in June 2013. See http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Mars_Express/The_floodwaters_of_Mars.
The scene spans 987 km in the north–south direction, 19–36°N, and 1550 km in the east–west direction (280–310°E). It covers 1.55 million square kilometres, an area equivalent to the size of Mongolia.
Kasei Valles is one of the largest outflow channel systems on Mars, created during dramatic flood events. From source to sink, it extends some 3000 km and descends 3 km.
Kasei Valles splits into two main branches that hug a broad island of fractured terrain — Sacra Mensa — rising 2 km above the channels that swerve around it. While weaker materials succumbed to the erosive power of the fast-flowing water, this hardier outcrop has stood the test of time.
Slightly further downstream, the flood waters did their best to erase the 100 km-wide Sharonov crater, crumpling its walls to the south. Around Sharonov many small streamlined islands form teardrop shapes rising from the riverbed as water swept around these natural obstacles.
The Planetary Science and Remote Sensing Group at Freie Universität Berlin produced the movie. The processing of the High Resolution Stereo Camera image data was carried out at the DLR German Aerospace Center.
Credit: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin (G. Neukum) / Music: Crabtambour
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Rosetta — the story so far
This short movie tells the story of Rosetta’s journey through the Solar System so far, through the voices of some of the many people involved in this exciting mission. ESA’s Rosetta spacecraft launched in March 2004 and has since been chasing down comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, where it will become the first space mission to orbit a comet, the first to attempt a landing on a comet’s surface, and the first to follow a comet as it swings around the Sun. In the last ten years Rosetta has made 3 flybys of Earth and 1 of Mars, and passed by and imaged asteroids Steins and Lutetia. Operating on solar energy alone, in June 2011 Rosetta was placed into deep space hibernation as it cruised nearly 800 million kilometres from the warmth of the Sun, close to the orbit of Jupiter. On 20 January, Rosetta will wake up at 673 million kilometres from the Sun and about 9 million km from the comet, ready for the next leg of its epic adventure.
Credits: ESA
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ISS Extended to 2024 on This Week @NASA
NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden and White House Science Advisor John Holdren, announced that the Obama administration is extending usage of the International Space Station to at least the year 2024. In his blog, Bolden noted that NASA is hopeful and optimistic that our ISS partners will join this extension effort and enable continuation of the groundbreaking research being conducted on the unique orbiting laboratory. Also, International Space Exploration Forum, Cygnus’ resupply flight, Super Bowl of Astronomy, 10 years roving Mars, TDRS-L Update and more!
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Timelapse film Soyuz flight VS06, with Gaia
Soyuz flight VS06, with the Gaia space observatory, lifted off from Europe’s Spaceport, French Guiana, on 19 December 2013. This timelapse movie shows Gaia sunshield deployment test, the transfer of the Soyuz from the assembly building to the launch pad and the lift off.
ESA–S. Corvaja, M. Pedoussaut, 2013
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Rosetta’s orbit around the comet
After a ten year journey through space, ESA’s Rosetta spacecraft will reach comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in August 2014. After catching up with the comet Rosetta will slightly overtake and enter orbit from the ‘front’ of the comet as both the spacecraft and 67P/CG move along their orbits around the Sun. Rosetta will carry out a complex series of manoeuvres to reduce the separation between the spacecraft and comet from around 100 km to 25-30 km. From this close orbit, detailed mapping will allow scientists to determine the landing site for the mission’s Philae lander. Immediately prior to the deployment of Philae in November, Rosetta will come to within just 2.5 km of the comet’s nucleus.
This animation is not to scale; Rosetta’s solar arrays span 32 m, and the comet is approximately 4 km wide.Credit: ESA — C. Carreau
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Chasing a comet
Rosetta’s journey from launch in March 2004 to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in August 2014, including 3 flybys of Earth and 1 of Mars. By January 2014 Rosetta is about 9 million kilometres from comet 67P/CG. By early May, Rosetta will be 2 million kilometres from the comet and at the end of May the spacecraft will execute a major rendezvous manoeuvre to line it up for orbit insertion at the start of August.
The comet and planets are not to scale.Credits: ESA — C. Carreau
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Oil and Water – Sick Science! #173
SICK SCIENCE APPAREL NOW AVAILABLE! Click here: http://spanglersci.com/SickScienceApparel
Find out how this works at: http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/oil-and-water
There’s something very important about oil that you need to know: oil doesn’t mix with water! That’s why oil spills in the ocean float on the surface and why throwing water on a grease fire is just going to make the fire worse. Now that you recognize that oil and water just don’t mix, let’s have some fun with them.
Want more experiments like this? Check out http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/product/naked-eggs-and-flying-potatoes
Sick Science™ is a trademark of Steve Spangler, inc.
© 2014 Steve Spangler Science all rights reserved
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#WakeUpRosetta — Wake up!
At 10:00 UTC on 20 January 2014, ESA’s comet-chasing Rosetta spacecraft will wake up from 31 months in deep space hibernation. Save the date and join the adventure — enter our #wakeuprosetta contest by adding your wake up shout video to the Rosetta Mission Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/rosettamission.
More details and competition rules: http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Rosetta/Wake_up_Rosetta
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ESA Euronews: Leszállni egy üstökösre
Az üstökösök évszázadok óta felcsigázták az emberek fantáziáját. Az Európai Űrügynökség Rosetta nevű missziója megkísérel műszereket eljuttatni egy üstökös felszínére.
Szénből, porból és vízjégből álló égitestek, amelyek a Naphoz közelítve annak fénye miatt csóvát fejlesztenek a maguk mögött húzott törmelékből. Több okból is érdekesek a tudomány számára, de a legizgalmasabb kérdés, hogy van-e közük a földi élet eredetéhez.
A Space üstökösvadász stábjának első útja Jénába, a türingiai tartományi csillagvizsgálóba vezet. A tudósok itt azon dolgoznak, hogy megállapítsák, mi maradt a darabjaira hullott ISON üstökösből. A gyanú az volt, hogy az égitest megsemmisült, de kérdéses volt, hogy a magnak maradtak-e látható darabkái. Azonban napfelkeltéig a tudósoknak nem sikerült megpillantaniuk az ISON maradványait.
Mindeközben Svájcban a berni egyetem kutatói vízjégből, folyékony nitrogénből és szénből mesterséges üstököst állítanak elő. Az így elkészült mintával vákuumkamrában kísérleteznek: arra kíváncsiak, milyen folyamatok mennek végbe egy üstökös felszínén.
Mindezek a kísérletek és megfigyelések csak előkészületek az igazi nagy dobásra: az Európai Űrközpont Rosetta fedőnevű missziója megkísérel műszereket eljuttatni egy üstökös felszínére, és onnan mintákat szállítani.
Ez azért tölti el lelkesedéssel a tudósokat, mert az utolsó hasonló akció, a NASA Csillagpor (Stardust) nevű küldetése meglepő eredményeket hozott. Akkor egy szondát reptettek át a Halley üstökös csóváján, és az így megszerzett minta glicint, egy fontos, DNS-alkotó aminosavat is tartalmazott. Tehát nem életet, de az élet egyik fontos alkotóelemét – ez pedig felveti az üstökösök szerepét a földi élet kialakulásában.
– A földi élethez meghatározott típusú, úgynevezett balkezes aminosavak szükségesek. A kémia elő tud állítani bal és jobbekezes aminosavakat is, de az élet ezek közül csak a balkezeseket használja és szeretnénk érteni, hogy miért – magyarázta az Euronews riporterének Hermann Böhnhardt, a Max Planck Intézet kutatója – Nem tudjuk, de szeretnénk tudni, hogy az üstökösökben található aminosavak jobb vagy balkezesek, mert ha balkezesek, akkor ez újabb arra utaló jel, hogy talán az élet, vagy legalábbis annak alkotóelemei az űrből kerültek a Földre.
A tudományos közösség abban reménykedik, hogy az üstökösöket érintő kérdések sokaságára kapnak választ 2014-ben, ha a Rosetta misszója sikerrel zárul.
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NASA Sends Out of This World New Year’s Greeting in Times Square
A New Year’s video greeting from Expedition 36 flight engineer Karen Nyberg, who returned from the International Space Station in November, and from three of the astronauts currently on board the space station: NASA’s Rick Mastracchio and Mike Hopkins, and Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
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Mysterious Water Suspension – Sick Science! #172
SICK SCIENCE APPAREL NOW AVAILABLE! Click here: http://spanglersci.com/SickScienceApparel
Find out how it works here! http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/water-screen
Want more experiments like this? Check out http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/product/naked-eggs-and-flying-potatoes
Sick Science™ is a trademark of Steve Spangler, inc.
© 2013 Steve Spangler Science all rights reserved
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Mars Express flyby as seen from Phobos (Animation)
On 29 December 2013, ESA’s Mars Express will make the closest flyby yet of the Red Planet’s moon Phobos, skimming past only 45 km above its surface.
As the spacecraft passes close to Phobos, it will be pulled slightly off course by the moon’s gravity, by a few tens of centimetres. This small deviation will be measured using the spacecraft’s radio signals, and then translated into measurements of gravity, mass and density at different locations on the moon.
This animation shows the flyby (speeded up) as if you were standing on Phobos, with Mars in the background and Mars Express sweeping out an arc above. Toward the end of the sequence, Mars Express disappears behind Mars and out of sight of Phobos.
Credit: ESA
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From Earth to Deep Space: NASA 2013 Highlights
NASA highlights its accomplishments in air and space for 2013.
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It Pays to Smile – Sick Science! #171
SICK SCIENCE APPAREL NOW AVAILABLE! Click here: http://spanglersci.com/SickScienceApparel
Find out why this happens at: http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/it-pays-to-smile
Want more experiments like this? Check out http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/product/naked-eggs-and-flying-potatoes
Sick Science™ is a trademark of Steve Spangler, inc.
© 2013 Steve Spangler Science all rights reserved
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Phobos 360
The innermost moon of Mars, Phobos, is seen here in full 360 degree glory. The images were taken by the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on ESA’s Mars Express at various times throughout the mission’s 10 years.
The moon’s parallel sets of grooves are perhaps the most striking feature, along with the giant 9 km-wide Stickney impact crater that dominates one face of the 27 x 22 x 18 km moon.
The origin of the moon’s grooves is a subject of much debate. One idea assumes that the crater chains are associated with impact events on the moon itself.
Another idea suggests they result from Phobos moving through streams of debris thrown up from impacts 6000 km away on the surface of Mars, with each ‘family’ of grooves corresponding to a different impact event.
Mars Express has imaged Phobos from a wide range of distances, but will make its closest flyby yet on 29 December 2013, at just 45 km above the moon.
Although this is too close to take images, gravity experiments will give insight into the interior structure of Phobos.
Credits: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin (G. Neukum)


