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      Our Martian heritage must be preserved, say leading scientists

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 December, 2024

    Academics agree that by protecting robotic vehicles and landing sites we will help archaeologists of the future

    Just as the outline of an iron-age hut or remains of a Roman sword cause excitement today, archaeologists of the future could be brushing Martian dust off metal and marvelling at one of Nasa’s rovers.

    Researchers have said that such instruments, as well as other forms of human activity on Mars, including landing sites and debris, must be preserved as part of the archaeological record of space exploration.

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      EU launches €10bn space programme to rival Musk’s Starlink

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 December, 2024

    Britain not part of Link2 project described as ‘a significant step towards Europe’s sovereignty and secure connectivity’

    The EU has launched an ambitious €10bn (£8.3bn) space programme with a constellation of 290 satellites to rival Elon Musk’s Starlink, further widening the post-Brexit security gap with the UK.

    The constellation is intended to secure the bloc’s security for governments and armies, amid increasing global concerns over cybersecurity.

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      Galaxies, auroras and a cosmic bat: Southern Sky astrophotography exhibition 2024 – in pictures

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 14 December, 2024

    The Southern Sky Astrophotography 2024 exhibition displays the top entries from the 20th David Malin awards for Australian astronomers and photographers. The images are on display at the Sydney observatory until 1 February

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      Geminid meteor shower to light up UK skies this weekend

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 14 December, 2024

    Storm originating from rocky asteroid expected to produce 120 meteors an hour in bright multicoloured display

    One of the most spectacular meteor showers of the year is expected to light up the night sky this weekend.

    The Geminid meteor shower, which is called a meteor storm because of its intensity, is expected to peak some time between Saturday and Sunday.

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      Nasa announces further delays in Artemis moon missions

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 6 December, 2024

    US space agency chief says astronauts still on schedule to make landing ‘well ahead’ of China’s lunar voyage

    The Nasa administrator, Bill Nelson, announced on Thursday new delays in the US space agency’s Artemis programme to return astronauts to the moon for the first time since 1972, pushing back the next two planned missions amid potential policy changes under president-elect Donald Trump’s administration.

    Nelson told a news conference at Nasa headquarters that the next Artemis mission, sending astronauts around the moon and back, has been delayed to April 2026, with the subsequent astronaut landing mission using SpaceX’s Starship planned for the following year.

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      The Great Filter Comes For Us All

      news.movim.eu / CodingHorror • 2 December, 2024 • 4 minutes

    The Great Filter Comes For Us All

    With a 13 billion year head start on evolution, why haven’t any other forms of life in the universe contacted us by now?

    The Great Filter Comes For Us All

    ( Arrival is a fantastic movie. Watch it , but don’t stop there – read the Story of Your Life novella it was based on for so much additional nuance.)

    This is called the Fermi paradox :

    The Fermi Paradox is a contradiction between high estimates of the probability of the existence of extraterrestrial civilizations, such as in the Drake equation , and lack of any evidence for such civilizations.

    • There are billions of stars in the galaxy that are similar to the Sun, including many billions of years older than Earth.
    • With high probability, some of these stars will have Earth-like planets, and if the Earth is typical, some might develop intelligent life.
    • Some of these civilizations might develop interstellar travel, a step the Earth is investigating now.
    • Even at the slow pace of currently envisioned interstellar travel, the Milky Way galaxy could be completely traversed in about a million years.


    According to this line of thinking, the Earth should have already been visited by extraterrestrial aliens . In an informal conversation, Fermi noted no convincing evidence of this, nor any signs of alien intelligence anywhere in the observable universe, leading him to ask, “Where is everybody?”

    To me, this is a compelling argument, in the same way that the lack of evidence of any time travellers is:

    Many have argued that the absence of time travelers from the future demonstrates that such technology will never be developed, suggesting that it is impossible. This is analogous to the Fermi paradox related to the absence of evidence of extraterrestrial life. As the absence of extraterrestrial visitors does not categorically prove they do not exist, so the absence of time travelers fails to prove time travel is physically impossible; it might be that time travel is physically possible but is never developed or is cautiously used. Carl Sagan once suggested the possibility that time travelers could be here but are disguising their existence or are not recognized as time travelers.

    It seems, to me at least, clear evidence that time travel is not possible, given the enormous amount of time behind us. Something, somewhere, would certainly have invented it by now... right?

    So if not, what happened? The Great Filter maybe?

    The Great Filter theory says that at some point from pre-life to Type III intelligence, there’s a wall that all or nearly all attempts at life hit. There’s some stage in that long evolutionary process that is extremely unlikely or impossible for life to get beyond. That stage is The Great Filter.

    I liked Wait But Why’s take on this a lot, which covers three main filter possibilities :

    1. Life is extraordinarily rare, almost impossible
    The Great Filter Comes For Us All
    1. We are not a rare form of life, but near the first to evolve
    The Great Filter Comes For Us All
    1. Almost no life makes it to this point
    The Great Filter Comes For Us All

    Those are three Great Filter possibilities, but the question remains: why are we so alone in the observable universe ? I grant you that what we can observe is appallingly tiny given the unimaginable scale of the universe, so “what we can observe” may not be enough by many orders of magnitude.

    I encourage you to read the entire article, it’s full of great ideas explained well, including many other Great Filter possibilities. Mostly I wanted to share my personal theory of why we haven’t encountered alien life by now . Like computers themselves, things don’t get larger. They get smaller . And faster . And so does intelligent life.

    Why build planet-size anything when the real action is in the small things? Small spaces, small units of time, everything gets smaller .

    Large is inefficient and unnecessary. Look at the history of computers: from giant to tiny and tinier. From slow to fast and faster. Personally, I have a feeling really advanced life eventually does away with all physical stuff that slows you down as soon as they can, and enters the infinite spaces between :

    This is, of course, a variant on the Fermi paradox: We don’t see clues to widespread, large-scale engineering, and consequently we must conclude that we’re alone. But the possibly flawed assumption here is when we say that highly visible construction projects are an inevitable outcome of intelligence. It could be that it’s the engineering of the small, rather than the large, that is inevitable. This follows from the laws of inertia (smaller machines are faster, and require less energy to function) as well as the speed of light (small computers have faster internal communication). It may be – and this is, of course, speculation – that advanced societies are building small technology and have little incentive or need to rearrange the stars in their neighborhoods, for instance. They may prefer to build nanobots instead.

    Seth Shostak

    Seth delivers an excellent TED talk on this topic as well:

    If we can barely see far in the universe as is, there’s no way we could possibly see into the infinite space and time between.

    That is of course just my opinion, but we’ll see ... eventually.

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      Atmospheric analysis shows Venus never had Earth-like life, scientists say

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 2 December, 2024

    Research indicates planet’s interior is dry in blow to theories that it was previously habitable

    With a surface hot enough to melt lead and with clouds of sulphuric acid above it, it is a planet often called Earth’s “evil twin” – similar in size, yet worlds apart.

    Some scientists have long believed it was once much more hospitable, home to cooler temperatures and oceans of liquid water. But now researchers have dealt a blow to the idea that Venus ever hosted life as we know it.

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      A lot of people are mistaking Elon Musk’s Starlink satellites for UAPs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 15 November, 2024

    SpaceX's Starlink Internet satellites are responsible for more and more public reports of unexplained anomalous phenomena (UAPs), but most recent cases remain unsolved, according to a US government report released Thursday.

    Starlinks often move across the sky in "trains" that appear like gleaming gems in the blackness of space. They are particularly visible to the naked eye shortly after each Starlink launch.

    In recent years, leaks and disclosures from government officials have revitalized open discussion about mysterious lights and objects, some of which move in, to put it bluntly, unquestionably weird ways. Some of these images, particularly those from sophisticated instruments on military fighter jets , have made their way into the national discourse. The New Yorker, Ars' sister publication, has a thorough report on how UAPs—you might know them better as UFOs—became mainstream.

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      Citing “decreasing” launch opportunities, ABL Space will pivot to missile defense

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 15 November, 2024

    A 7-year-old launch company that has yet to have a rocket successfully lift off announced a radical pivot on Thursday. Its new plan? Focusing on missile defense.

    The founder and president of ABL Space Systems, Dan Piemont, announced the decision on LinkedIn , adding, "We're consolidating our operational footprint and parting ways with some talented members of our team." He said companies interested in hiring great people in Los Angeles or Mojave, California, should reach out.

    A bright beginning

    With a background in economics and physics, Piemont founded ABL in 2017 with the aim of developing a ship-and-shoot rocket. The idea was to set up mobile ground systems in remote locations on short notice and launch on demand for the US military and other customers.

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      arstechnica.com /space/2024/11/citing-decreasing-launch-opportunities-abl-space-will-pivot-to-missile-defense/

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