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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
    VIRGO
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    VIRGO
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    TOUCHDOWN CONFIRMED!!!
    VIRGO
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    Space in Images - 2016 - 09 - Comet from 1.2 km – narrow-angle camera
    http://www.esa.int/spaceinimages/Images/2016/09/Comet_from_1.2_km_narrow-angle_camera

    VIRGO
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    VIRGO
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    Last descending maneuver...

    VIRGO
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    OMG moment - waiting for the telemetry. Silence in Control Room...

    VIRGO
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    VIRGO
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    Touchdown location:

    VIRGO
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    VIRGO
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    Není cesty z5... :)

    Povel na kolizní kurz odeslán.



    Povel na kolizní kurz zpětně potvrzen.

    VIRGO
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    Saturn’s moon Dione harbors a subsurface ocean
    http://www.astro.oma.be/en/saturns-moon-dione-harbors-a-subsurface-ocean/

    A subsurface ocean lies deep within Saturn’s moon Dione, according to new data from the Cassini mission to Saturn. Two other moons of Saturn,
    Titan and Enceladus, are already known to hide global oceans beneath their icy crusts, but a new study suggests an ocean exists on Dione as well.

    In this study, researchers of the Royal Observatory of Belgium show gravity data from recent Cassini flybys can be explained if Dione’s crust floats
    on an ocean located 100 kilometers below the surface. The ocean is several tens of kilometers deep and surrounds a large rocky core. Seen from within,
    Dione is very similar to its smaller but more famous neighbor Enceladus, whose south polar region spurts huge jets of water vapor into space. Dione seems
    to be quiet now, but its broken surface bears witness of a more tumultuous past. The study is published online this week in Geophysical Research Letters.
    VIRGO
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    A comet’s life – a new sonification of RPC data | Rosetta - ESA's comet chaser
    http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/29/a-comets-life-a-new-sonification-from-rosettas-rpc-data/

    Tagirijus | Free Listening on SoundCloud
    https://soundcloud.com/tagirijus

    VIRGO
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    Space in Images - 2016 - 09 - 20 hours to go
    http://www.esa.int/spaceinimages/Images/2016/09/20_hours_to_go

    VIRGO
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    The rotation period of 67P had changed during Rosetta Mission From 12h 24m 14s to 12h 3m 18s.
    ESA Science & Technology: Comet rotation period
    http://sci.esa.int/rosetta/58367-comet-rotation-period/

    VIRGO
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    APOD: 2016 September 29 - Five Hundred Meter Aperture Spherical Telescope
    http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap160929.html

    VIRGO
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    SwRI's Alice spectrograph completes ESA mission to comet 67P
    http://phys.org/news/2016-09-swri-alice-spectrograph-esa-mission.html

    After a two-year orbital tour around comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, ESA's Rosetta spacecraft—carrying Southwest Research Institute's
    Alice ultraviolet spectrograph—will end its mission this week on Sept. 30. Rosetta is the first spacecraft to orbit and escort a comet,
    and Alice, developed and operated for NASA, is the first instrument to obtain far-ultraviolet observations at a comet.

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    Our home spiral arm in the Milky Way is less wimpy than thought | New Scientist
    https://www.newscientist.com/...456-our-home-spiral-arm-in-the-milky-way-is-less-wimpy-than-thought/

    It’s tricky to map an entire galaxy when you live in one of its arms. But astronomers have made the clearest map yet of the Milky Way –
    and it turns out that the arm that hosts our solar system is even bigger than previously thought.

    The idea that the Milky Way is a spiral was first proposed more than 150 years ago, but we only started identifying its limbs in the 1950s.
    Details about the galaxy’s exact structure are still hotly debated, such as the number of arms, their length and the size of the bar of hot
    gas and dust that stretches across its middle.

    The star-filled arms are densely packed with gas and dust, where new stars are born. That dust can obscure stars we use to measure distances,
    complicating the mapping process.

    Two of the arms, called Perseus and Scutum-Centaurus, are larger and filled with more stars, while the Sagittarius and Outer arms have fewer
    stars but just as much gas. The solar system has been thought to lie in a structure called the Orion Spur, or Local Arm, which is smaller
    than the nearby Perseus Arm.
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