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NYT > Space & Cosmos
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Space X Rocket Heads to Space Station
If the cargo capsule makes it to the space station, it would be the first commercial, rather than government-operated, spacecraft to dock at the space station.
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Big Day for Elon Musk, a Space Entrepreneur Who Promises More
The launch of the rocket ship built by his company, SpaceX, is the latest achievement by Elon Musk.
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SpaceX Is Set to Send Its Rocket to the Space Station
A private company?s test flight will carry 15 student experiments onboard, including one involving winemaking.
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Contracts Help Private Sector Edge Deeper Into Space
A planned launching this weekend, if successful, would be a victory for private companies trying to make their mark in space.
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Asteroid Vesta Provides Hints of How Earth Came Together
Vesta, the second-largest asteroid in our solar system, has planetlike features but fails the gravitational bully test for full status, says a report in Friday?s issue of the journal Science.
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A California Desert Town on the Way Up ... to Space
Entrepreneurs and small aerospace companies based at an air and space port in California are among those thought to be leading the next phase of space exploration.
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?Supermoon,? Obscured by Clouds, Left Plenty to See
Those in New York City looking to take photographs of the so-called supermoon had to make do with other amusements under a cloudy sky on Saturday night.
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City Room: For the Space Shuttle Enterprise, a Strange New World
Enterprise, the prototype for the space shuttles, flew over the New York City area, riding atop a specially equipped 747 jet, before landing at Kennedy International Airport.
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Observatory: Volcanic Activity Played Role in Mars? Valleys, Study Suggests
High-resolution images of the Athabasca Valles near the Martian equator reveal coiling spiral patterns that closely resemble lava flows on the Big Island of Hawaii.
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In Pursuit of Riches, and Travelers? Supplies, in the Asteroid Belt
A company has plans to mine asteroids that zip close by Earth, both to provide supplies for future interplanetary travelers and to bring back precious metals.
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Space Shuttle Enterprise?s Trip to J.F.K. Is Delayed
Plans to transport the shuttle prototype Enterprise to Kennedy International Airport were postponed beyond Monday because of a forecast of incompatible weather conditions.
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Smithsonian Welcomes Discovery to Space Collection
NASA turned over space shuttle Discovery on Thursday to the Smithsonian Institution, the first in its orbiter fleet to be transferred to a U.S. museum.
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Anticipating Space Shuttle?s Arrival, Old Warplanes Ship Out
Three vintage warplanes were moved from the aircraft carrier Intrepid to make room for the arrival of the shuttle prototype Enterprise, which will arrive in New York.
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The Lede Blog: Discovery Shuttle Makes Final Flight
Before being permanently brought down to Earth, the space shuttle Discovery hitched a final ride to its new home at the Smithsonian on the back of a 747.
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For North Korea, Failure As Learning Opportunity
Major setbacks are a normal part of rocket programs and can produce crucial information, scientists say.
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Antiques: Female Astronauts? Memorabilia for Sale at Auctions
Space-exploration auctions, including memorabilia of female astronauts, will be held by Bonhams in New York, Heritage Auctions in Dallas and Regency-Superior in St. Louis.
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High in Chilean Desert, a Huge Astronomy Project
High in the Chilean desert, scientists have installed one of the world?s largest ground-based astronomical projects to look for clues to the origins of the universe.
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Observatory: New Insight on Moon?s Origins
Lunar samples show the Moon has an identical titanium composition to Earth, throwing doubt on a hypothesis that it was created when an object the size of Mars collided with Earth.
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Out There: The Trouble With Neutrinos That Outpaced Einstein?s Theory
A new experiment clocked in neutrinos at the speed of light, and not faster, and scientists say that if the particle were faster, there would be no credible model to explain the phenomenon.
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Space Station Crew Scrambles as Debris Passes Nearby
The crew of seven astronauts took refuge in spacecraft capable of returning them to Earth after NASA detected the debris.
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Space Lab Contest Picks Zebra Spiders and Antifungal Bacteria
Experiments about the effects of microgravity on zebra spiders and another on whether a fungus-killing bacterium could become more lethal will be conducted on the International Space Station.
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In Search for Alien Life, Researchers Enlist Human Minds
With new Web-based software called SETILive, an army of independent citizen-scientists are being recruited to detect unusual signals in space.
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Out There: Cosmologists Try to Explain a Universe Springing From Nothing
The cosmologist Lawrence Krauss joins a chorus of scientists trying to explain how the universe could be born from, if not nothing, something close to it.
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Astronauts? Eyeballs Are Deformed by Long Missions in Space
Astronauts? eyeballs are deformed by long missions in space, a study finds.
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North Korea Says It Will Launch Satellite Into Orbit
The United States warned on Friday that a launch would scuttle a recent agreement with North Korea, intensifying diplomatic and military tensions surrounding the North?s nuclear weapons program.
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Life on Mars? Funds for NASA to Find the Answer Fade
Two ambitious missions that NASA had hoped to launch to Mars, in 2016 and 2018, will be canceled.
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Higgs Boson May Be Indicated in New Data
Physicists say they have found a bump in their data that might be the Higgs boson, a hypothesized particle that is responsible for endowing other elementary particles with mass.
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Solar Bursts Spray Earth, With More to Come
Bursts of light and particles like the ones that hit the Earth?s magnetic field on Thursday will soon become a common occurrence.
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Observatory: GJ1214b, New Planet in Milky Way, Revels in Steam and Ice
Astronomers have discovered a new planet in our galaxy whose atmosphere is mostly water, though none of it is liquid.
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Neutrinos? Speed in Question Because of Technical Problems, CERN Says
CERN says that depending on how the equipment flaws swayed data reported last year, the ghostly subatomic particles may not be faster than the speed of light after all ? or they may be even faster than previously reported.
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For Space Mess, Scientists Seek Celestial Broom
A group has warned that extraterrestrial clutter has reached a point where, if nothing was done, a cascade of collisions would eventually make low-Earth orbit unusable.
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Life Out There | The Cost of Dreams: SETI Research Is Revived - Life Out There
Operating on money and equipment scrounged from the public and from Silicon Valley millionaires, a band of astronomers recently restarted the search for extraterrestrial intelligence.
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Space Shuttle Enterprise Arrives in New York
Space Shuttle Enterprise arrived in New York, riding piggyback on a modified jumbo jet. Its trip included flyovers over parts of the city and landmarks before it landed at its temporary home, Kennedy Airport.
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N.Y./Region: Space Shuttle Arrives in New York
The space shuttle enterprise was delivered to New York and given a grand entrance.
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Where No Museum Has Gone Before
A sneak peek at the exhibition ?Beyond Planet Earth: The Future of Space Exploration,? at the American Museum of Natural History.
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Endeavour?s Final Flight
On May 16, the shuttle Endeavour rose slowly on a pillar of fire, picking up speed and eventually disappearing from view as it stabbed through a layer of clouds on its way to orbit.
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A Shuttle Town?s Glory Days
The launching of the space shuttle Endeavor is expected to be one of the biggest ever, jamming the roads in Titusville, Cape Canaveral and other nearby Florida towns.
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The First Close-Ups of Mercury
NASA?s Messenger spacecraft sent back the first of what is expected to be 75,000 photographs during a yearlong investigation of Mercury.
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An Inflatable Space Station
In four years, a small company called Bigelow Aerospace is to launch a private space station that will be leased to governments, companies and perhaps space tourists.
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