Sunday, February 6, 2011

Our moon, as you suppose too obvious - 21/12/2010 SpacePod

3 new ISS crew and make a really interesting way to look at our own moon. I'm Benjamin Higginbotham and this is your SpaceVidcast SpacePod to December 21, 2010. On Wednesday, December 15, 2010 raised a Russian Soyuz rocket from the launch of the next three crew members of the International Space Station ISS bound. Then, on Friday, 17 capsule docked with the ISS at 20:11 UT. A few hours later, the crew of the expedition opened the door wide and 26/27 of the invadersstation. The three person crew of Soyuz TMA-20, Dmitri Kon-drat-yev, Catherine Coleman and Paolo Nespoli represent the partner organizations of Roscosmos, NASA and the European Space Agency in the ISS program. While the US and Russia added more people to the Space Station, China launched a rocket to add more satellites to their upcoming GPS constellation this last Friday. A new satellite navigation and positioning network or Compass System was launched aboard a Long March 3A rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center at 20:20 UT. This is the 2nd of what will be 35 satellites providing both civilian and military GPS data to China. Being that we just saw a lunar eclipse, how about a new way to look at the moon? NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter or LRO is orbiting the moon creating the most precise and complete map to date of the moons complex surface. Originally launched to help scout out landing sites for the nearly defunct Constellation program, LRO remains in Lunar Orbit ...

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