A giant sunspot the size of 3 Earths is facing us right now | Watch a European Ariane 5 rocket launch 2 communications satellites tonight! | Space Quiz: Every day, solar wind from the sun batters Earth. What is it made of?
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A sunspot nearly triple the size of Earth is within firing range of our planet, and may send out medium-class flares in the near future.
Should the sunspot blast out a coronal mass ejection, or CME, of charged particles that faces our planet, it's possible those particles will interact with our magnetic field and create colorful lights in our atmosphere, known as auroras.
An Arianespace Ariane 5 rocket is scheduled to lift off from Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana on Wednesday during a 100-minute window that opens at 5:03 p.m. EDT (2103 GMT; 6:03 p.m. local time in Kourou).
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A fully homegrown South Korean rocket has put satellites into orbit for the first time ever.
One of its 6 payloads was a 358-pound (162.5 kilograms) test satellite that successfully made contact with a base station in Antarctica after reaching orbit, according to Reuters. The others were a 1.3-ton dummy satellite and four tiny cubesats developed by university researchers.
(ESA, NASA, NASA-JPL, Caltech, Christopher Clark (STScI), R. Braun (SKA Observatory), C. Nieten (MPI Radioastronomie), Matt Smith (Cardiff University))
Four retired telescope missions are helping astronomers uncover new insights about how dust behaves in galaxies.
The observations were led by data collected from the European Space Agency's Herschel Space Observatory that operated from 2009 to 2013 and detected the thermal signature of dust in far infrared light. The scientists also incorporated data from ESA's Planck mission, which retired in 2013, as well as NASA's Infrared Astronomical Satellite and Cosmic Background Explorer missions, which operated in the 1980s and '90s.
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Any potential alien life in the waters of vast ocean worlds could receive vital nutrients from their planets' molten cores via thick layers of exotic high-pressure ice that can transport salts, new research has found.