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    VIRGOCosmos In Brief - Aktualní novinky vesmírného výzkumu v kostce
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    Researchers question Apollo-era evidence for the Late Heavy Bombardment
    http://phys.org/news/2016-10-apollo-era-evidence-late-heavy-bombardment.html

    Many scientists believe that a cataclysmic series of impact events called the Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB) occurred around 4.1 to 3.9 billion years ago,
    during which there was a spike in asteroids colliding with the planets of the inner solar system. Among the possible explanations for the LHB is the migration
    of large planets to the outer solar system, disrupting objects in the asteroid belt and the Kuiper belt and flinging them toward the inner solar system.

    The Earth is constantly resurfaced by erosion and cratonic growth, and as a result, can't contribute much geologic data about the existence of the LHB. Much
    of the evidence is therefore derived from the moon—specifically, from Apollo-era lunar samples returned to Earth in the 1960s and 1970s. Researchers used argon
    dating to determine age spectra of lunar rocks found in three major lunar basins. The so-called "plateau ages" of these rocks, as determined from 40Ar/39Ar age
    spectra, suggest a cluster of impacts approximately 3.9 billion years ago.

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    ESA opens its ears to citizens of Europe | The Planetary Society
    http://www.planetary.org/blogs/guest-blogs/2016/1004-esa-opens-its-ears-to-europe.html
    On 10 September 2016, over 2000 citizens from 22 European countries participated in the first ever Citizens’ Debate on
    Space for Europe. Never before has the future of space activities been addressed in such an event held across so many countries.

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    University of Birmingham announces £6m for UK's first Institute of Gravitational Wave Astronomy
    http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/...test/2016/10/institute-of-gravitational-wave-astronomy-announced.aspx
    The University of Birmingham is set to invest £6 million in a new Institute of Gravitational Wave Astronomy –
    the first of its kind in the UK.
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    Space in Images - 2016 - 10 - Parachute for Mars
    http://www.esa.int/spaceinimages/Images/2016/10/Parachute_for_Mars

    A full-size model of the ExoMars entry, descent and landing module, Schiaparelli,
    with its parachute deployed was revealed on ESA’s open day last Sunday in the Netherlands.

    Weighing 600 kg, Schiaparelli is part of the joint ESA–Roscosmos ExoMars mission that will arrive
    at the Red Planet on 19 October. It will demonstrate Europe’s techonology for a controlled landing
    on Mars, including the 12 m-diameter parachute.

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    http://www.forbes.com/...physics-goes-to-topology-in-materials-not-gravitational-waves/#b3ba69a57e37

    Earlier today, the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics was announced: half to David J. Thouless, a quarter each to F. Duncan M. Haldane and J. Michael Kosterlitz,
    for theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter. This was a huge upset, as everyone was anticipating the Nobel
    Prize would go various members of the LIGO collaboration, who earlier this year announced the first discovered gravitational waves from merging black holes.
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    Test prep for JWST continues in the NASA Goddard cleanroom

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    JMARS Webinar Information | JMARS - Java Mission-planning and Analysis for Remote Sensing
    https://jmars.mars.asu.edu/webinar2016

    Want to learn how to work with Mars remote sensing data? Join us Thursday, October 13th
    from 12-2 p.m. PDT for a free online webinar and find out how JMARS can help!

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    World Space Week | Celebrate UN-declared World Space Week, 4-10 October annually, the largest space event in the world
    http://www.worldspaceweek.org/
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    Největší letošní zklamání

    The 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics - Press Release
    http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2016/press.html

    Announcement of the Nobel Prize in Physics 2016
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qpoBG5hy-A
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    Spirals with a Tale to Tell | ESO
    http://www.eso.org/public/images/potw1640a/?lang

    This beautiful image, captured with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) features a protoplanetary disc surrounding the young star Elias 2-27, some 450 light years
    away. ALMA has discovered and observed plenty of protoplanetary discs, but this disc is special as it shows two distinct spiral arms, almost like a tiny version of a spiral galaxy.

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    Cassini: Mission to Saturn: Two Tiny Moons
    https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/resources/7511/

    Two tiny moons of Saturn, almost lost amid the planet's enormous rings, are seen orbiting in this image. Pan, visible within the Encke Gap near lower-right,
    is in the process of overtaking the slower Atlas, visible at upper-left.

    All orbiting bodies, large and small, follow the same basic rules. In this case, Pan (17 miles or 28 kilometers across) orbits closer to Saturn than Atlas
    (30 kilometers across). According to the rules of planetary motion deduced by Johannes Kepler over 400 years ago, Pan orbits the planet faster than Atlas does.

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    LAWRENCE KRAUSS - Nature's Imagination
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bl7Q5InIdUQ&feature=youtu.be
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    Could human civilization spread across the whole galaxy? - Roey Tzezana
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rpy9Qp7NAaw
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    Millisecond Pulsarssu201638 | www.cfa.harvard.edu/
    https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/news/su201638

    When a star with a mass of roughly ten solar masses finishes its life, it explodes as a supernova, leaving behind a neutron star as remnant "ash."
    Neutron stars have masses of one-to-several suns but they are tiny in diameter, only tens of kilometers. They spin rapidly, and when they have
    associated magnetic fields, charged particles caught in them emit electromagnetic radiation in a lighthouse-like beam that can sweep past the Earth
    with great regularity every few seconds or less. These kinds of neutron stars are called pulsars, and they are dramatic, powerful probes of supernovae,
    their progenitor stars, and the properties of nuclear matter under the extreme conditions that exist in these stars.

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    ESO's dustbuster reveals hidden stars
    http://phys.org/news/2016-10-eso-dustbuster-reveals-hidden-stars.html
    In this new image of the nebula Messier 78, young stars cast a bluish pall over their surroundings, while red fledgling stars
    peer out from their cocoons of cosmic dust. To our eyes, most of these stars would be hidden behind the dust, but ESO's Visible
    and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) sees near-infrared light, which passes right through dust. The telescope is
    like a giant dustbuster that lets astronomers probe deep into the heart of the stellar environment.

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    Are There Other Intelligent Civilizations Out There? Two Views on the Fermi Paradox
    http://singularityhub.com/...her-intelligent-civilizations-out-there-two-views-on-the-fermi-paradox/

    Scientists have now discovered a few thousand planets orbiting other stars and, based on these observations,
    believe there may be as many as 8.8 billion potentially habitable Earth-sized planets in the Milky Way alone.
    Include stars smaller than the sun and that number increases to 40 billion potentially habitable Earth-like planets.

    During a panel discussion on space exploration at Singularity University's Global Summit, Jill Tarter, the Bernard M. Oliver
    chair at the SETI Institute, was asked to explain the Fermi paradox and her position on it. Her answer was pretty brilliant:

    “The Fermi paradox can be summarized as: If there ever was, anywhere and anywhen, a technological civilization other than ours,
    then in a time that is very short, they would obviously develop the ability for interstellar travel, and they would obviously
    colonize the galaxy.

    No matter what your model is, it would take place in a time that's short compared to the lifetime of the galaxy. But they’re not here.
    Therefore, given the structure of the paradox, there can’t have been any technology anywhere and anywhen before us. We're the first.”

    Tarter next pivoted into her stance on the paradox:

    “That whole logical structure revolves around your ability to say they’re not here. And I don’t think we can say that. I don’t think
    that we have explored even our own backyard—the solar system—well enough to rule out the possibility of alien technology being there.

    I mean, we're really working very hard to find one kilometer rocks out there that might have our name on them. Littler things are much
    harder to find.

    So, I don't think that they're here abducting Aunt Alice off the streets of New York for salacious medical experiments. There's no evidence
    for that. But we really haven't looked either physically or for signals. We have hardly begun our SETI search.

    All that we’ve been able to do in 50 years is numerically equivalent to kind of scooping one eight-ounce glass out of the world’s oceans
    and looking and saying, ‘Huh, well, no fish in there; I guess there are no fish in the ocean.’ That’s where we are.”
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    Tracking Rosetta for the last time at the Allen Telescope Array
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6iwWn7dt2QY&feature=youtu.be&t=1h23m56s
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    One more interesting document abot Albert Einstein becoming US citizen in October the 1st, 1940

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