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Apr 8, 2024
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nasa is here. they're going to be doing experiment, but there are also a number of scientists from all other cities, from other countries. some amateurs and professionals. they are going to we looking at the star like everybody else, but a little bit closer with their telescopes, the locals are lining up to buy. their glasses. that is very important, but they are also expecting about 750,000 people here in torreon, mexico is going to be the first country in north america to enjoy this event. and people hello, are ready, they are excited. there's gonna be a party here. they're going to have a fair they're going to have music and they're going to have experts to talk about what's happening in disguise >> bistable a cnn, torreon, mexico and large crowds are flocking to the niagara falls to watch the solar eclipse against the backdrop of the waterfalls. cnn's harry enten reports the solar is edging closer and closer to western new york. i'm here at the beautiful niagara falls, where soon enough the sun
nasa is here. they're going to be doing experiment, but there are also a number of scientists from all other cities, from other countries. some amateurs and professionals. they are going to we looking at the star like everybody else, but a little bit closer with their telescopes, the locals are lining up to buy. their glasses. that is very important, but they are also expecting about 750,000 people here in torreon, mexico is going to be the first country in north america to enjoy this event....
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Apr 4, 2024
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. >> le contamos por que sera un fenomeno historico y como la nasa lo va a aprovechar. >> cuando sophia y jorge vinieron a turbotax... ¡sorprendimos a todos casándonos aquí mismo! (♪♪) y yo hice que contara al presentar sus impuestos, garantizándoles precisión al 100% y su máximo reembolso. intuit turbotax. presentamos mylowe's rewards. la nueva forma de obtener ahorros desde la palma de tu mano. aplica para la tarjeta de crédito que te ahorra 5 por ciento cada día en las cosas que necesitas. como filtros de aire, 5 por ciento. parrillas 5 por ciento. refrigeradores, 5 por ciento. y con cada compra, todos los miembros del programa de lealtad ganan lealtad ganan mylowe's moneyquete ayudan a ahorrar en las cosas que quieres. como una mejora en el baño. un jardín zen interior. nuevas opciones de almacenamientos. llegó el nuevo mylowe's rewards. descarga la app y únete hoy para empezar a ganar y ahorrar. musica >>(musica). violencia en mexico, una mujer quiere pactar con los grupos criminales. >> aqui esta arantxao aizaga para contarnos mas de esto, arantxa, ¿que tal? >> ju
. >> le contamos por que sera un fenomeno historico y como la nasa lo va a aprovechar. >> cuando sophia y jorge vinieron a turbotax... ¡sorprendimos a todos casándonos aquí mismo! (♪♪) y yo hice que contara al presentar sus impuestos, garantizándoles precisión al 100% y su máximo reembolso. intuit turbotax. presentamos mylowe's rewards. la nueva forma de obtener ahorros desde la palma de tu mano. aplica para la tarjeta de crédito que te ahorra 5 por ciento cada día en...
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Apr 8, 2024
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and so what we're sharing with you here is the shot from nasa tv. okay. i'm not sure exactly where the location is, but we're going to see something. >> this being told, even though it says nasa tv up there, this is our own charles clifford in san francisco. he's got a special filter on his so traded over the moon so over the sun. so we're seeing what the view is like here in the bay area. if you look up with those special protective glasses, sharyl xyz doing it right. he's got the protective lens over his camera just as we got to be doing to with our protective glasses. and you'll be looking at a very, very similar view to this. >> so, yeah, as we near 11 o'clock, we're going to be right there in the middle of the period that we're going to be seeing. our maximum coverage between 11 11, 30 will peak right around. 34 to 35% of coverage of the moon over the sun. and this is live view from the bay. right. super excited with this shot. i didn't i didn't know we were going to able to get our i thought it's just people inside the exploratory with these watch p
and so what we're sharing with you here is the shot from nasa tv. okay. i'm not sure exactly where the location is, but we're going to see something. >> this being told, even though it says nasa tv up there, this is our own charles clifford in san francisco. he's got a special filter on his so traded over the moon so over the sun. so we're seeing what the view is like here in the bay area. if you look up with those special protective glasses, sharyl xyz doing it right. he's got the...
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Apr 23, 2024
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the problem is, for months, nasa says what it has been sending was gibberish. now though, it's making some sense again as our science correspondent victoria gill explains. we have ignition and we have liftoff. a spacecraft bound for a journey no one imagined. when voyager one launched in 1977, its mission was to explore our solar system. it captured details of saturn's rings and discovered thatjupiter has a thin ring of its own. then itjust kept going. in 2012, it became the first human made object to leave our solar system and enter interstellar space. but last year, after nearly 50 years exploring, something finally went wrong. the data voyager one was sending back to earth stopped making sense. nasa engineers worked out that one chip on its decades old onboard computer had stopped working. to fix it, they transmitted an essential piece of code that was on that broken chip back to the craft. this very remote reboot worked, and the spacecraft has now sent data reporting its health and status back to earth for the first time in five months. this image taken by
the problem is, for months, nasa says what it has been sending was gibberish. now though, it's making some sense again as our science correspondent victoria gill explains. we have ignition and we have liftoff. a spacecraft bound for a journey no one imagined. when voyager one launched in 1977, its mission was to explore our solar system. it captured details of saturn's rings and discovered thatjupiter has a thin ring of its own. then itjust kept going. in 2012, it became the first human made...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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here's isabel coelho on how nasa is collecting data right now. and tomorrow during the big show. >> astronomical project. nasa is visiting fort drum to fly drones during the solar eclipse measuring differences in the earth's atmosphere before during and after totality. all of our data >> is going to be brought together to look at impacts along this path from mexico up through maine. there's going to be data collection going 5,000 feet. 66%. the scientists from the nasa langley research center chose to come to fort drum because the air space, it's not often that we're able to to take small uas like this in flight as high as we with the current most of the time us aren't aren't going over your 400 to 1000 so having restricted airspace allowed us to go you 9,010 1000 now at this drone is unlike anything nasa has ever used before. it's decked out with instruments that measure things like temperature, wind and atmospheric pressure. scientists will take this data after the project to better understand weather patterns during natural another example of
here's isabel coelho on how nasa is collecting data right now. and tomorrow during the big show. >> astronomical project. nasa is visiting fort drum to fly drones during the solar eclipse measuring differences in the earth's atmosphere before during and after totality. all of our data >> is going to be brought together to look at impacts along this path from mexico up through maine. there's going to be data collection going 5,000 feet. 66%. the scientists from the nasa langley...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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aquÍ la nasa montÓ su campamento como yo le decÍa. ellos transmitieron desde aquÍ todo lo que se estaba viendo. hay muchos cientÍficos, muchos investigadores, hay muchos astrÓnomos con lo cual yo platiquÉ a lo largo de la maÑana para "despierta amÉrica". fascinados con este acontecimiento. por supuesto que mucha televisora. hay gente de repÚblica dominicana, de israel, de espaÑa, de japÓn, de estados unidos, de canadÁ. es un ambiente que uno no estÁ acostumbrado a vivir, pero es algo fascinante de la galaxia, de la luna, del sol. fÉlix: yo creo que ese colapso de las comunicaciones te permitiÓ disfrutar tranquilamente mientras se restablecÍa la seÑal que lo pudiste disfrutar a plenitud. alan: claro. sin lugar a dudas. yo sabÍa que no lo podÍa disfrutar porque iba a estar al aire con ustedes. hubiera preferido en el momento que me hubiese encantado trasmitir con una cÁmara de vÍdeo lo que se viviÓ, lo que aconteciÓ. claro que me ayudo. es un poco desesperante ver el ambiente de trabajo. llegue ayer. no habÍa hotel
aquÍ la nasa montÓ su campamento como yo le decÍa. ellos transmitieron desde aquÍ todo lo que se estaba viendo. hay muchos cientÍficos, muchos investigadores, hay muchos astrÓnomos con lo cual yo platiquÉ a lo largo de la maÑana para "despierta amÉrica". fascinados con este acontecimiento. por supuesto que mucha televisora. hay gente de repÚblica dominicana, de israel, de espaÑa, de japÓn, de estados unidos, de canadÁ. es un ambiente que uno no estÁ acostumbrado a vivir,...
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Apr 3, 2024
04/24
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borja: nos conectamos con la pizca espacial de la nasa, la doctora bea gallardo. gracias por estar con nosotros en la "ediciÓn digital". nos gustarÍa conocer brevemente quÉ tipo de informaciÓn es la que se obtienen un eclipse. >> durante el eclipse estaremos observando la corona solar, la parte externa de la atmÓsfera solar, pero aparte de eso podemos ver cÓmo el eclipse mismo genera variaciones en la atmÓsfera terrestre, en nasa estaremos estudiando todo lo que tenemos que ver con meteorologÍa espacial, desde el sol, lo que afectan los planetas y cÓmo el sol afecta a la tierra durante el eclipse. carolina: seguro millones de personas estaremos pendientes de ese eclipse, para todos es gran parte de esa curiosidad, bien dicen que van estar monitoreÁndolo, hay algÚn plan en particular, lanzar algÚn tipo de satÉlites para que ustedes pueden aprender mÁs del sol, la tierra y la galaxia? hay experimentos en particular, hay uno que me gusta mucho, va a ver un aviÓn con el sonido de la totalidad desde mÉxico a estados unidos, midiendo esos cambios en la a
borja: nos conectamos con la pizca espacial de la nasa, la doctora bea gallardo. gracias por estar con nosotros en la "ediciÓn digital". nos gustarÍa conocer brevemente quÉ tipo de informaciÓn es la que se obtienen un eclipse. >> durante el eclipse estaremos observando la corona solar, la parte externa de la atmÓsfera solar, pero aparte de eso podemos ver cÓmo el eclipse mismo genera variaciones en la atmÓsfera terrestre, en nasa estaremos estudiando todo lo que tenemos...
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Apr 3, 2024
04/24
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nasa plans to send a crew to the moon at the end of 2026. china is also planning to put people on the lunar surface by the end of the decade. so achieving a coordinated approach is essential. so you can sort of picture, you know, in the future, a very busy context on the moon. so you have rovers and you have orbiters, and they're trying to communicate and work together and issues not arising with interference, that type of thing. the space race has been politicised from the very beginning, so achieving a standard approach won't be easy, which means nasa's timetable could easily slip. gary o'donoghue, bbc news, washington. time for a look at the weather. i bet it doesn't rain on the move. —— on the moon. the that i bet it doesn't rain on the move. -- on the moon. the— -- on the moon. the that is a complicated _ -- on the moon. the that is a complicated weather - -- on the moon. the that is a| complicated weather question -- on the moon. the that is a - complicated weather question that i did not
nasa plans to send a crew to the moon at the end of 2026. china is also planning to put people on the lunar surface by the end of the decade. so achieving a coordinated approach is essential. so you can sort of picture, you know, in the future, a very busy context on the moon. so you have rovers and you have orbiters, and they're trying to communicate and work together and issues not arising with interference, that type of thing. the space race has been politicised from the very beginning, so...
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Apr 21, 2024
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at nasa we use the dna logo for. at nasa when somebody report something, somebody listens to it. the way that they treat them needs to be fair and there needs to be an environment of psychological safety. they need to learn from it, communicate that and pass it on, and to create that everybody in the system needs to know what they are supposed to do and how to do it and what is expected of them, and if that does not work they need to know the next option, and if that does not work they need to know the next option. that is why having multiple reporting systems can be a good thing, because if one does not work, the employee needs to know what else they can go to. one of the things would be to know who is the chief of safety. that would be where the buck stops, and in one of the surveys we sought 95% of the people who responded did not know who the chief of safety was. that is a deficit that could be corrected, but people need to learn who the key people are and that system, so they know who they can go to when the processes do not work. >> i wonder to what degree this committee or
at nasa we use the dna logo for. at nasa when somebody report something, somebody listens to it. the way that they treat them needs to be fair and there needs to be an environment of psychological safety. they need to learn from it, communicate that and pass it on, and to create that everybody in the system needs to know what they are supposed to do and how to do it and what is expected of them, and if that does not work they need to know the next option, and if that does not work they need to...
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at nasa are adjusting to march on time. the days there are longer than on us, right? each martian day known as a song last around 24 hours and 40 minutes. so the clocks have to be synchronized for next at the moment please. so that's what the mission has started. i mean, we have a reference period a 3 year just put was don't get the rover fails before that homo. but then we have also fail nicely or another thorough check to make sure all the instruments on board are working on mover has an auto nap system. so we can self drive on the surface of mars. driving on mars, isn't that easy, right? we don't have a map, we don't have a phone that we can just say, hey, send me in that direction to what the river does is it takes pictures in front of it. it actually looks 5 years ahead. and so that way it can actually drive from 2 to 300 meters a day on an economist, least of it will drive itself. we can say, hey, at the end of the day, just drive in that direction for an hour and a half. and we'll see you tomorrow, and it will do that the, there is a time delay in communicating
at nasa are adjusting to march on time. the days there are longer than on us, right? each martian day known as a song last around 24 hours and 40 minutes. so the clocks have to be synchronized for next at the moment please. so that's what the mission has started. i mean, we have a reference period a 3 year just put was don't get the rover fails before that homo. but then we have also fail nicely or another thorough check to make sure all the instruments on board are working on mover has an auto...
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Apr 8, 2024
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that is where nasa says the moon will appear to completely cover the sun for about four minutes or as one scientists just told us we're the moon will eat the sun. that is science. 99% of americans will view at least a partial eclipse, which is still pretty cool, but not totally cool. again, science. the next time this will happen is 2044, 20 years from now. so consider this a deep ties cnn's rosa flores and good to have a valdez are both in the zone as it were less begin with rosa incur ville, texas. good morning to you good morning. eclipse mania here and carville, texas is out of this world and is out of control. this is the heart of the texas hill country. and according to the mayor of this town, about 100 people from all over the world are expected to be here in this town for this. now, let me give you that tiktok of what we're expecting because the he total this eclipse is going to cross from mexico into the united states at about 1:27 p.m. in eagle pass, texas or near eagle pass, texas. i just can't get away from covering the border here and the good thing is that the federal ag
that is where nasa says the moon will appear to completely cover the sun for about four minutes or as one scientists just told us we're the moon will eat the sun. that is science. 99% of americans will view at least a partial eclipse, which is still pretty cool, but not totally cool. again, science. the next time this will happen is 2044, 20 years from now. so consider this a deep ties cnn's rosa flores and good to have a valdez are both in the zone as it were less begin with rosa incur ville,...
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Apr 8, 2024
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citizen science as a way to join nasa suck oration. i am highlighting up just three of those project. it utilizes a smartphone to understand the size of the sun and the second is globe observer. the records things like temperature to affect the eclipse on the temperature and clouds. the third project he will explore the reaction of wildlife and the sounds you hear. these are just a few of the weights to engage in the eclipse. it's not just a stunning visual experience. i hope you join us in these memories. host: these so a clips coordinator there. you can get more on c-span.org. about 10 minutes left and we are asking for your solo a clips plans. what do you think about this rare solo event? this is rural in idaho. caller: good morning. i plan on taking a nap and hopefully i can learn how to pay the national debt off in the dream. host: not interested in that one? caller: during in the clips you could always get a nice afternoon nap. host: good luck with that in idaho. we have heard in alabama. caller: how are you doing? host: i'm doin
citizen science as a way to join nasa suck oration. i am highlighting up just three of those project. it utilizes a smartphone to understand the size of the sun and the second is globe observer. the records things like temperature to affect the eclipse on the temperature and clouds. the third project he will explore the reaction of wildlife and the sounds you hear. these are just a few of the weights to engage in the eclipse. it's not just a stunning visual experience. i hope you join us in...
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Apr 8, 2024
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nasa scientists were busy launching not one, but three rockets all designed to advance eclipse science so brian tatas, that gases facility out there on the eastern shore of virginia? brian, tell us about these launches that you got to see firsthand will three very exciting launches from this facility today with the goal of giving scientists some crucial information >> about how this eclipse might have affected our satellite communications if you blinked, you really could have missed it. >> and our first apec rocket is left the real in a matter of seconds, a so-called sounding rocket blasts off, then disappears from view at nasa's wallops island facility on the virginia coaston, traveling at about 6,000 miles an hour. three of these rockets carried special payloads tailored to the solar eclipse launched just before, during and just after the peak of the eclipse, each rocket traveled about 260 miles above the earth to the ionosphere, the uppermost layer of earth's atmosphere that borders space once the motors are done burning, we will deploy booms that take measurements. and then we'll a
nasa scientists were busy launching not one, but three rockets all designed to advance eclipse science so brian tatas, that gases facility out there on the eastern shore of virginia? brian, tell us about these launches that you got to see firsthand will three very exciting launches from this facility today with the goal of giving scientists some crucial information >> about how this eclipse might have affected our satellite communications if you blinked, you really could have missed it....
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Apr 23, 2024
04/24
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have had to be a bit clever and nasa have had to be a bit clever and nasa have had two instead of using this particular part of the microchip out of the commuter to operate the commands, they are using different parts of the chip to use the software —— out of the computer. so they have ignored that little bit of they have ignored that little bit of the computer, using different parts of the computer. 50 the computer, using different parts of the computer.— of the computer. so what is it sendin: of the computer. so what is it sending back? _ of the computer. so what is it sending back? what - of the computer. so what is it sending back? what kind - of the computer. so what is it sending back? what kind of. sending back? what kind of information is it beaming all the way back to earth? that information is it beaming all the way back to earth?— information is it beaming all the way back to earth? at the moment it is health and — way back to earth? at the moment it is health and engineering _ way back to earth? at the moment it is health and engineering data, - way back to earth?
have had to be a bit clever and nasa have had to be a bit clever and nasa have had two instead of using this particular part of the microchip out of the commuter to operate the commands, they are using different parts of the chip to use the software —— out of the computer. so they have ignored that little bit of they have ignored that little bit of the computer, using different parts of the computer. 50 the computer, using different parts of the computer.— of the computer. so what is it...
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Apr 4, 2024
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seguros son miles de veces mas oscuros y deberian cumplir con la norma internacional y 12312-2. >> la nasa no aprueba ninguna marca particular de visores solares. >> claro. >> importante verificar que esa marca que estas diciendo tu se encuentra en una de las patitas de estos lentes o de estas gafas y como ponerselas tambien es importante, importante, sonia. >> primero la persona tiene que ver hacia abajo, despues se pone las gafas, luego puede voltear a ver este fenomeno natural y a la hora de quitarselos, lo mismo, voltea hacia abajo y se los quita, y esto obviamente para protegerlos. >> asi mismo es. >> ¿estas lista? >> de dios, estoy yo tambien. >> sonia, muchas gracias muy amable y bueno, mas informacion informacion, hoy por primera vez el expresidente de la federacion espanola de futbol luis rubiales hablo sobre el beso no consentido que le dio a la jugadora jenny hermoso en la final de la copa del mundo. >> lo hizo durante una tensa entrevista que coincidio con su regreso a madrid para enfrentar un caso de corrupcion. >> rogelio mora tagle tiene sus palabras es la primera entrevist
seguros son miles de veces mas oscuros y deberian cumplir con la norma internacional y 12312-2. >> la nasa no aprueba ninguna marca particular de visores solares. >> claro. >> importante verificar que esa marca que estas diciendo tu se encuentra en una de las patitas de estos lentes o de estas gafas y como ponerselas tambien es importante, importante, sonia. >> primero la persona tiene que ver hacia abajo, despues se pone las gafas, luego puede voltear a ver este...
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Apr 5, 2024
04/24
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i think to nasa tv, nasa youtube during the event. so maybe one of the first views you get from 50,000 feet would be from him. >> justin jones, i'm gonna look for i'm going to look for that and look forward to it as well the big question that's on the minds of millions of americans that are traveling toward the path of totality is about the weather. and i know that the potential for inclement weather has already affected your plans. tell us about that. >> that's correct yeah. we're expecting some pretty rough weather here at ellington on monday, at least enough to do it put are take-off at risk and permission. this important and central rare opportunity, we just really couldn't have that. so we decided on sunday regulate and relocate the jets to el paso will fly over there, stayed the night and do our mission operating out of it paso and hopefully the weather will cooperate. we can come back home on monday >> yeah. you mentioned just how critical and rare this opportunity is. it's gonna be a while before we see another eclipse like th
i think to nasa tv, nasa youtube during the event. so maybe one of the first views you get from 50,000 feet would be from him. >> justin jones, i'm gonna look for i'm going to look for that and look forward to it as well the big question that's on the minds of millions of americans that are traveling toward the path of totality is about the weather. and i know that the potential for inclement weather has already affected your plans. tell us about that. >> that's correct yeah. we're...
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Apr 23, 2024
04/24
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the problem is for months nasa says what it has been sending was gibberish. now though — it's making some sense again as our science correspondent victoria gill explains. we have ignition and we have liftoff. a spacecraft bound for a journey no one imagined. when voyager1 launched in 1977, its mission was to explore our solar system. it captured details of saturn's rings and discovered thatjupiter has a thin ring of its own. then itjust kept going. in 2012, it became the first human made object to leave our solar system and enter interstellar space. but last year, after nearly 50 years exploring, something finally went wrong. the data voyager1 was sending back to earth stopped making sense. nasa engineers worked out that a single chip on its decades—old on board computer had stopped working. to fix it, they transmitted an essential piece of code that was on that broken ship back to the spacecraft from mission control. it took 22.5 hours for that code to reach voyager1 in interstellar space. but this very remote reboot worked. the craft has now sent readab
the problem is for months nasa says what it has been sending was gibberish. now though — it's making some sense again as our science correspondent victoria gill explains. we have ignition and we have liftoff. a spacecraft bound for a journey no one imagined. when voyager1 launched in 1977, its mission was to explore our solar system. it captured details of saturn's rings and discovered thatjupiter has a thin ring of its own. then itjust kept going. in 2012, it became the first human made...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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exactly right >> what did you what >> why is nasa was nasa shooting? thing rockets up during the solar eclipse? tell us the things that can only be learned during a solar eclipse yeah i mean the thing is if you want to get above kind of like that those cloud line. and so they can see and it's like light up things in different ways and see again, it's like peer a little more deeply into the chromosphere appear a little more deeply into that sun's corona. again, a lot of times the different colors a process called spectroscopy. we can tell a lot about the chemical makeup that things that are going on and again, it's like this. they will collect the data, all the citizens science data will come flooding in and then soon there will be a great report. and i think it will be i think it'd be quite incredible to read aid what they've discovered in this time of solar maximum and another year we'll go back to a time of solar minimum with the sun. so it won't be as active as it was today. i'm pretty sure they were also trying to make sure they were getting gettin
exactly right >> what did you what >> why is nasa was nasa shooting? thing rockets up during the solar eclipse? tell us the things that can only be learned during a solar eclipse yeah i mean the thing is if you want to get above kind of like that those cloud line. and so they can see and it's like light up things in different ways and see again, it's like peer a little more deeply into the chromosphere appear a little more deeply into that sun's corona. again, a lot of times the...
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Apr 25, 2024
04/24
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according to nasa, after ensuring the health of the probe's engineering systems, scientists are now looking to receive scientific information from voyager 1 based on a chip responsible for the memory and some software codes of the spacecraft's internal computer is malfunctioning, nasa research results. the loss of these codes renders scientific and engineering data virtually unusable. but the engineers were able to move the code processing location in the chip memory by sending signals. voyager 1 is analyzing the interstellar space of the outer solar system as the farthest spacecraft from earth. thank you for your attention and support. good evening and the fitna that is for the seizure of the holy shrines of daesh raised by zionists and america, these muslim people and warriors who call themselves warriors of the harim and haram entered. and you saw that those who had promised to pray in a certain mosque in syria in the near future are now caught in the hadith of sedition, and as a result, we once again had warriors of the shrine and martyrs of the shrine when israel wants us. may the clou
according to nasa, after ensuring the health of the probe's engineering systems, scientists are now looking to receive scientific information from voyager 1 based on a chip responsible for the memory and some software codes of the spacecraft's internal computer is malfunctioning, nasa research results. the loss of these codes renders scientific and engineering data virtually unusable. but the engineers were able to move the code processing location in the chip memory by sending signals. voyager...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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this must be huge for nasa, how exciting is it? so exciting, my colleagues are thrilled, many are travelling there and many are talking about the science but also talk about how excited they are to have this experience. is excited they are to have this experience-_ excited they are to have this experience. excited they are to have this exerience. , ., , experience. is there anything in articular experience. is there anything in particular that _ experience. is there anything in particular that they _ experience. is there anything in particular that they will - experience. is there anything in particular that they will be - experience. is there anything in i particular that they will be looking for in terms of the scientific perspective with this particular eclipse? perspective with this particular eclise? ~ , ~ perspective with this particular eclise? ~ , . ., eclipse? absolutely. we have research guests _ eclipse? absolutely. we have research guests called - eclipse? absolutely. we have research guests called the - eclipse? absolu
this must be huge for nasa, how exciting is it? so exciting, my colleagues are thrilled, many are travelling there and many are talking about the science but also talk about how excited they are to have this experience. is excited they are to have this experience-_ excited they are to have this experience. excited they are to have this exerience. , ., , experience. is there anything in articular experience. is there anything in particular that _ experience. is there anything in particular that...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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it is part of nasa's nationwide eclipse ballooning project. that gives us a clue. this is a live shot right now. we have been witnessing that path of totality across the states in the united states. we will talk some more about it in the next half hour. stay with us on bbc. hello. monday brought us a bit of mix of weather types. while some of us had some spells of warm spring sunshine, other areas were stuck under the cloud and rain all day. it's been a really wet first week of april and that unsettled theme continues for the next few days. so more blustery spells of rain at times and it's turning a little bit cooler than it has been, too. so we've got low pressure driving our weather at the moment — here it is. it's gradually easing its way eastwards through the rest of the evening, overnight and over the next 24 hours or so, it'll bring us some more wet and windy weather. some thunderstorms initially for the far south of east anglia. they clear northwards and then the bulk of the rain through tonight will be northern ireland, scotland, perhaps western parts of
it is part of nasa's nationwide eclipse ballooning project. that gives us a clue. this is a live shot right now. we have been witnessing that path of totality across the states in the united states. we will talk some more about it in the next half hour. stay with us on bbc. hello. monday brought us a bit of mix of weather types. while some of us had some spells of warm spring sunshine, other areas were stuck under the cloud and rain all day. it's been a really wet first week of april and that...
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Apr 9, 2024
04/24
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we're going to take you inside a triple rocket launch by nasa, aimed at learning more about today. phase. solar eclipse >> the day you get your clear choice, dental implants changes your struggle with missing teeth forever, it changes how you eat, how you feel, and how you enjoy life it changes your smile. and now others smile at you clear choice network doctors have changed over 100,000 lives with dental implants and they can change yours too because a clear choice day changes every three day. schedule, a free consultation >> i met with the turbotax expert because i had two full-time jobs, lawyering and miemie count on me, mia file your taxes for you with 100% accuracy guaranteed. lead to turbotax full service expert, do your taxes as soon as today >> it's a new day >> when were are shared values propel us towards a more secure future through august a partnership built upon cutting-edge american, australian, and british technologies will develop state-of-the-art next generation submarines build something stronger together security, decade of peace and prosperity for america and ou
we're going to take you inside a triple rocket launch by nasa, aimed at learning more about today. phase. solar eclipse >> the day you get your clear choice, dental implants changes your struggle with missing teeth forever, it changes how you eat, how you feel, and how you enjoy life it changes your smile. and now others smile at you clear choice network doctors have changed over 100,000 lives with dental implants and they can change yours too because a clear choice day changes every...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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we've been speaking to people here, one nasa engineer telling me he's drove in last night, has been flipping his car. an emotional and element, a spiritual express, i believe we can go now to now to pallab ghosh. it's a big day in the science community. it's a big day in the science community-— it's a big day in the science community. we are in for an incredible — community. we are in for an incredible treat, _ community. we are in for an incredible treat, all - community. we are in for an incredible treat, all across . community. we are in for an - incredible treat, all across mexico and the _ incredible treat, all across mexico and the united states, into canada, giving _ and the united states, into canada, giving one _ and the united states, into canada, giving one of the most spectacular natural_ giving one of the most spectacular natural events that we could wish to see. natural events that we could wish to see the _ natural events that we could wish to see. the first thing you'll see is what's — see. the first thing you'll see is what's called bailey's beads when the last_ what's
we've been speaking to people here, one nasa engineer telling me he's drove in last night, has been flipping his car. an emotional and element, a spiritual express, i believe we can go now to now to pallab ghosh. it's a big day in the science community. it's a big day in the science community-— it's a big day in the science community. we are in for an incredible — community. we are in for an incredible treat, _ community. we are in for an incredible treat, all - community. we are in for an...
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Apr 6, 2024
04/24
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we got nasa over to our right over there. we got the beautiful niagara falls behind us and yeah, there are plenty of people who are coming here preparations. are already in place on this side of the border. no state of emergency but they're making sure the national guards ready, they're making shaw making sure the coast guard has ready as well. are there extra port-a-potty is out there in case we will have to do their business and there have been plenty of folks who have been coming as well. in fact, we spoke to a couple that came all the way from england i guess the 20-17 one was so impressive, you decided i gotta i gotta i gotta double dip yeah, about eclipses as well, because i've got one in 2026 is going over spain. so i've already got a lot line.com on just, wondering 20-27. >> also done. sunstein and 2028. there's one in australia i've gotten line does. so i heard >> of tornado chasers before. i've heard of hurricane chasers report, apparently we've discovered a new breed and that is a chasers. >> oh yeah oh there you h
we got nasa over to our right over there. we got the beautiful niagara falls behind us and yeah, there are plenty of people who are coming here preparations. are already in place on this side of the border. no state of emergency but they're making sure the national guards ready, they're making shaw making sure the coast guard has ready as well. are there extra port-a-potty is out there in case we will have to do their business and there have been plenty of folks who have been coming as well. in...
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Apr 21, 2024
04/24
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de hecho, es el planeta más observado por la nasa, porque aquí vivimos. así que pues es un buen momento para poder reflexionar y conocer más acerca de nuestro planeta. estas son las condiciones. mañana domingo los 81 especialmente para san josé próximo viernes ya vio otro sistema que se acerca a la región sacramento 86 grados. ya por el miércoles desciende la temperatura fresno 87 90 grados. el lunes próximo viernes y sábado 62 69 grados más posibilidades de lluvias primaverales. más detalles esta noche a las 11 regresamos. gracias por esos detalles, guillermo. le contamos ahora de un grupo de estudiantes hispanos del condado de santa clara que puso a prueba su creatividad para crear conciencia sobre enfermedades sexuales. los jóvenes se inspiraron en los 80 para crear un video al ritmo del rap en el que envían un mensaje de prevención. el proyecto fue parte de un concurso que el departamento de salud realizó para conmemorar el mes de la prevención de las enfermedades de salud sexual en los adolescentes. por eso este. la idea fue de que ha
de hecho, es el planeta más observado por la nasa, porque aquí vivimos. así que pues es un buen momento para poder reflexionar y conocer más acerca de nuestro planeta. estas son las condiciones. mañana domingo los 81 especialmente para san josé próximo viernes ya vio otro sistema que se acerca a la región sacramento 86 grados. ya por el miércoles desciende la temperatura fresno 87 90 grados. el lunes próximo viernes y sábado 62 69 grados más posibilidades de lluvias primaverales....
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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and a former nasa astronaut herself, pam melroy. pam, thank you so much for being with us on this special day. and i know that you were in washington, dc for the last total solar eclipse, but you only got to see a partial eclipse. have you ever seen a total solar eclipse? >> good morning, christian. it is wonderful to be here with you and 50,000 of our closest friends at the speedway no, i have never seen a total solar eclipse. i've seen several partial, but there's something very mysterious about our total solar eclipse. when literally day turns tonight, animals start to behave differently. we're seeing changes, years, atmosphere. it's a mystical, mysterious experience >> and i love >> the thought that millions of americans will stand together today looking up into the sky, wearing your glasses, where and 50,000 of them roughly, right here at the indianapolis motor speedway. pam, you've seen so much the incredible things in your life. you've been displaced multiple times >> but this i >> imagine a total solar eclipse is always been
and a former nasa astronaut herself, pam melroy. pam, thank you so much for being with us on this special day. and i know that you were in washington, dc for the last total solar eclipse, but you only got to see a partial eclipse. have you ever seen a total solar eclipse? >> good morning, christian. it is wonderful to be here with you and 50,000 of our closest friends at the speedway no, i have never seen a total solar eclipse. i've seen several partial, but there's something very...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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indianapolis motor speedway and witness an extraordinary natural events, the cosmic coincidence as nasa officials have called it as the moon moves across the face of the sun. we are just about an hour and 3 minutes away from totality here. it will be an extraordinary moment. i think nobody knows how they are going to react. i've never been in a total eclipse before. i don't know the physical or spiritual reaction you get. as everybody goes silent in the face of that spectacle? it will be a beautiful moment one way or another. you are still a huge celebrity here. every single person in this 50,000 person crowd wishes it was you here rather than me but they are stuck with me for today i'm afraid. >> aishah: i miss them and hello to everybody out there. i think you might turn into a werewolf if you look at it too long. >> i will try not. my mother might -- a long time ago. we have all got the glasses. i got mine. they are ready here obviously. we will only be looking with the use of these things, because that is the only safe way to do it. everybody right across the country whether you've
indianapolis motor speedway and witness an extraordinary natural events, the cosmic coincidence as nasa officials have called it as the moon moves across the face of the sun. we are just about an hour and 3 minutes away from totality here. it will be an extraordinary moment. i think nobody knows how they are going to react. i've never been in a total eclipse before. i don't know the physical or spiritual reaction you get. as everybody goes silent in the face of that spectacle? it will be a...
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Apr 9, 2024
04/24
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bueno, de hecho sandra, desde hace 2 años, la agencia de la nasa comenzó a prepararse en la ciudad de torreón, allá en méxico, debido a su ubicación bajo la trayectoria de este fenómeno, dicha entidad instaló un planetario que transmitió en vivo este eclipse. fue ana méndez quien estuvo allá donde la oscuridad fue casi total debido a este fenómeno y los residentes aseguran, estaban súper emocionados. el cielo se oscureció en pleno día. cayó la noche y con ella un asombro colectivo. el eclipse solar llegó a su punto máximo, dejando a todos atónitos. yo siento que ya el mundo se paró. o sea, en verdad estoy bien. nervioso está bien. bonito la verdad. no sé explica cómo el ambiente nocturno provocó los gritos y aplausos de miles de personas de todo el mundo que desde torreón, coahuila vivieron la experiencia. nadie había tocado y ha sido genial poder compartir con todos y estar viendo esto. y entonces chicos y grandes se maravillaron ante el fenómeno como ser humano siente hasta la piel, se eriza de de ver tan tan fantástico suceso. son las 12 19, hora local, ti
bueno, de hecho sandra, desde hace 2 años, la agencia de la nasa comenzó a prepararse en la ciudad de torreón, allá en méxico, debido a su ubicación bajo la trayectoria de este fenómeno, dicha entidad instaló un planetario que transmitió en vivo este eclipse. fue ana méndez quien estuvo allá donde la oscuridad fue casi total debido a este fenómeno y los residentes aseguran, estaban súper emocionados. el cielo se oscureció en pleno día. cayó la noche y con ella un asombro...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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we spoke to a nasa astrophysicists. this is also home to the glenn research center, the only nasa facility that's on the path of totality. we spoke to a nasa astrophysicists who will tell us what we'll see when we see the total eclipse >> when the moon fully goes in front of the sun, you can take off your eclipse glasses. you're going to see the edges of the outer layers of the sun called the corona. so these are streams of incredibly hot gas streaming outwards from the sun, and they're pushing those particles away from the sun, turning into the solar wind, which streaming let's throughout the solar system >> what it will do is put the universe in perspective for us and make us feel like we are part of something, a very small part of something that is much, much bigger. i've covered a couple of eclipse's seen a couple of eclipse's. this is the first total eclipse that i have seen but it is going to be amazing. look at all the people gathered out here, all the cameras, all the gear that they're already breaking out on he
we spoke to a nasa astrophysicists. this is also home to the glenn research center, the only nasa facility that's on the path of totality. we spoke to a nasa astrophysicists who will tell us what we'll see when we see the total eclipse >> when the moon fully goes in front of the sun, you can take off your eclipse glasses. you're going to see the edges of the outer layers of the sun called the corona. so these are streams of incredibly hot gas streaming outwards from the sun, and they're...
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now he's editor of nasa watch in washington dc. keith as always, is great having you on the show. so large parts of north america were treated to the spectacular phenomenon, but for people missed out what is so special about a total solar eclipse, as well as your to duction mentioned this happened once or twice a year. but normally it's silver either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world, we're going to a lot of people. this one cut straight across to 3 countries like that, you know, half a 1000000000 people in the past. it was perhaps 30 to 40000000 people who got the full eclipse and maybe 3 times that in the area nearby. i and you know, it doesn't happen that off and i can remember the times. i've seen them. uh, one was back in 1970 and that was one boy. so it must be something that i remember that date, it was march 7th, 1970. so there's something about them was they were saying the path of totality swept across several major north american cities. what was it like where you are in washington dc. we had about 90 percent coverage and i was actually on the air with
now he's editor of nasa watch in washington dc. keith as always, is great having you on the show. so large parts of north america were treated to the spectacular phenomenon, but for people missed out what is so special about a total solar eclipse, as well as your to duction mentioned this happened once or twice a year. but normally it's silver either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world, we're going to a lot of people. this one cut straight across to 3 countries like that, you...
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Apr 1, 2024
04/24
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well, nasa has partnered with stratasys, polymer 3d printing solutions for an upcoming space mission to test 3d printed materials on the surface of the moon. live now to foster ferguson, global director of aerospace, stratasys. why is 3d printing so important for creating things first, do we have a 3d printer big enough? i first, do we have a 3d printer big enough?— first, do we have a 3d printer big enough? i don't know if we have a sd _ big enough? i don't know if we have a 3d printer _ big enough? i don't know if we have a 3d printer big _ big enough? i don't know if we have a 3d printer big enough i have a 3d printer big enough right now to do what you may be suggested that but we're definitely excited about with nasa and the aerospace team to test a few things that are going to be ongoing here. what are ou going to be ongoing here. what are you testing? _ going to be ongoing here. what are you testing? right - going to be ongoing here. what are you testing? right now - going to be ongoing here. what are you testing? right now is l are you testing? right now is the global— ar
well, nasa has partnered with stratasys, polymer 3d printing solutions for an upcoming space mission to test 3d printed materials on the surface of the moon. live now to foster ferguson, global director of aerospace, stratasys. why is 3d printing so important for creating things first, do we have a 3d printer big enough? i first, do we have a 3d printer big enough?— first, do we have a 3d printer big enough? i don't know if we have a sd _ big enough? i don't know if we have a 3d printer _ big...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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y les digo que aquí personal de el exploratorio junto a científicos de la nasa, han estado estudiando este fenómeno, un fenómeno que pues se da cada tantos años. ellos me dicen que lo importante de esto es que cuando el eclipse máximo, pues ocurre, ellos van a poder estudiar la reacción del sol y también el arco del sol y también como ese, pues tiene comportamiento entre no solo nosotros pero en especial entre los animales. y aunque aquí todo culminó alrededor de las 2 y 30 del mediodía, usted puede venir todavía a informarse y a ver la repetición de los videos que ellos capturaron en texas y también en méxico. y rápidamente. por qué no se vio aquí un 100% aquí? me dijeron. pues en especial por la distancia, como está ubicada la tierra del sol y nuestra ubicación aquí en el área de la bahía en vivo andrés brender telemundo. interesantes datos. gracias andrés por ese informe desde san francisco y de san francisco vamos a pasar a la ciudad de torreón en el estado de coahuila, allá en méxico, porque miles lograron presenciar también el eclipse en su totalidad
y les digo que aquí personal de el exploratorio junto a científicos de la nasa, han estado estudiando este fenómeno, un fenómeno que pues se da cada tantos años. ellos me dicen que lo importante de esto es que cuando el eclipse máximo, pues ocurre, ellos van a poder estudiar la reacción del sol y también el arco del sol y también como ese, pues tiene comportamiento entre no solo nosotros pero en especial entre los animales. y aunque aquí todo culminó alrededor de las 2 y 30 del...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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nasa astronaut guy you are achieving the impossible is a gradebook. -- retired nasa astronaut. guide as you know i'm a fellow astronaut because jim sentance famously gave me a pen to prove it so i guess we're all astronauts toge together. but in all seriousness that he have to help me out here with this multiple rocket -- more than about that? >> whenever we have -- it's great to see you, neil, and terry nice outfit, good had. [laughter] i hope you were also wore glasses the when you were viewing -- >> i can still see the sun -- i don't know why. >> is an opportunity not for not just to enjoy the spectacular event on earth and view the eclipse. is also an opportunity for scientists to learn about the sun and what they call space whether which is the activity of the sun. so the sun is so right and it's really hard to observe it under normal circum circumstances. but the earth, when the moon eclipse is the son and asked in natural what we call corona graph which blocks out the brightness of the sun. is also used observe the -- and you can see the outer corona of the sun itself an
nasa astronaut guy you are achieving the impossible is a gradebook. -- retired nasa astronaut. guide as you know i'm a fellow astronaut because jim sentance famously gave me a pen to prove it so i guess we're all astronauts toge together. but in all seriousness that he have to help me out here with this multiple rocket -- more than about that? >> whenever we have -- it's great to see you, neil, and terry nice outfit, good had. [laughter] i hope you were also wore glasses the when you were...
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Apr 22, 2024
04/24
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today we have nasa administrator bill nelson, karen shake jermaine, division director for nasa earth sciences, tom waggoner, associate director for earth
today we have nasa administrator bill nelson, karen shake jermaine, division director for nasa earth sciences, tom waggoner, associate director for earth
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Apr 17, 2024
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and nasa and other agencies don't use enough, in my opinion. mr. meshkati: the national academy have just one good news. f.a.a. has gone to national academy and national academy has created a panel of they call it community of experts for risk analysis of transport aircraft. and that one i have the privilege of being a member, we meet over zoom weekly. and i think it has been great. because f.a.a. has reached out to nuclear power industry for that community of experts, how do they do p.r.a., public risk assessment, they do that here. back to you, senator cantwell, i think the two recommendations you brought up, 31 and 30, is fantastic. that's exactly that i think in light of this state safety program, if these two combined together, i think that's going to be the paradigm shift for s.m.s. sen. cantwell: i think it's pretty simple to get a real s. ph-frpt s. and i think it's -- s.m.s. and i think it's a great idea as we envisioned to get a panel of experts. so i'm glad to see that that's actually happening with the national academies as it relates t
and nasa and other agencies don't use enough, in my opinion. mr. meshkati: the national academy have just one good news. f.a.a. has gone to national academy and national academy has created a panel of they call it community of experts for risk analysis of transport aircraft. and that one i have the privilege of being a member, we meet over zoom weekly. and i think it has been great. because f.a.a. has reached out to nuclear power industry for that community of experts, how do they do p.r.a.,...
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keith cowan, editor at nasa, watch told us what's so special about a total solar eclipse. well, as your to duction mentioned, this happened once or twice a year. but normally it's silver, either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world where you onto a lot of people. this one cut straight across a 23 countries like got, you know, half a 1000000000 people in the past. it was perhaps 30 to 40000000 people who got the full eclipse and maybe 3 times that in the area nearby. and you know, it doesn't happen that off and i can remember the times i've seen them. uh, one was back in 1970 and that was one boy. so it must be something that i remember that date, it was march 7th, 1970. so there's something about them was they were saying the path of totality swept across several major north american cities. what was it like where you are in washington dc. we had about 90 percent coverage and i was actually on the air with somebody. i could have done a lot of interviews today and i was looking at my window and i just had this fixed it. i saw shadows, i shouldn't see it this t
keith cowan, editor at nasa, watch told us what's so special about a total solar eclipse. well, as your to duction mentioned, this happened once or twice a year. but normally it's silver, either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world where you onto a lot of people. this one cut straight across a 23 countries like got, you know, half a 1000000000 people in the past. it was perhaps 30 to 40000000 people who got the full eclipse and maybe 3 times that in the area nearby. and you know,...
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Apr 7, 2024
04/24
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nasa is using citizens scientists as part of a listening party. what is that all about? yeah, so there's a couple of different nasa experience experiments, some of the listening parties i've heard of include sonification, this is basically taking things like the images that we see or the light that we are seeing and converting it into sound so that people that might have limited vision or blindness can actually experience as well the eclipse, nonetheless we have experiments like the citizen cape project, through the full top path of totality people are going to be observing the solar clip were not only getting four and a half minutes of data like we're going to get over here but we might get hours. an hour or two of data that we can as you said, spend the next couple of months looking at and seeing all the different things we can learn about the solar corona. that was a fascinating conversation that i had. he is from the university of colorado, travelled to texas, one of the states we understand is going to lie in total, going to be in the path of totality of the solar e
nasa is using citizens scientists as part of a listening party. what is that all about? yeah, so there's a couple of different nasa experience experiments, some of the listening parties i've heard of include sonification, this is basically taking things like the images that we see or the light that we are seeing and converting it into sound so that people that might have limited vision or blindness can actually experience as well the eclipse, nonetheless we have experiments like the citizen...
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Apr 27, 2024
04/24
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meantime, nasa's juno spacecraft has captured some new images of jupiter's moon. io. take a look. the images revealing at 127 mile long lava lake, some volcanic plumes as well. and a detailed look at some mountain peaks. juno's camera captured the views while flying past the moon in december. these are pretty wild other than earth. is the only other place in our solar system where experts have found active magma volcanoes. very coming up, an amazon worker let the cat out of the box literally how the company. >> accidentally ships the first real life past. the san francisco art fair is set for this weekend. the fair features artists from san francisco and all around the world, including iran. and even as far away india. >> from painting to copper, etching and even artists using led lights. the fair is posting a lot of different types of artwork. it's located at fort mason center this weekend. doors open at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. a single-day ticket is available online may start at 35 bucks. if you want to go both days, those tickets cost $65. this pup got himself into some tr
meantime, nasa's juno spacecraft has captured some new images of jupiter's moon. io. take a look. the images revealing at 127 mile long lava lake, some volcanic plumes as well. and a detailed look at some mountain peaks. juno's camera captured the views while flying past the moon in december. these are pretty wild other than earth. is the only other place in our solar system where experts have found active magma volcanoes. very coming up, an amazon worker let the cat out of the box literally...
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Apr 24, 2024
04/24
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and we meet the nasa scientists who repaired a spacecraft from 15 billion miles away. the voyager 1 is known for being the first spacecraft to go beyond our solar system, so when it stopped sending data back to earth last november, the team faced a daunting task. they traced the problem to a single malfunctioning computer chip and announced yesterday that they finally made contact again. suzanne dodd, the voyager project manager, said this was all about teamwork. >> it's just incredible to be a part of this mission that continues to this day and that has inspired so many generations of people to go into space exploration or science. >> maurice: suzanne dodd and the voyager 1 team at nasa, tonight's "heart of america." all about teamwork. and that is tonight's . >>> good evening, a bittersweet victory of a mother of a home depot security guard who was shot and killed during a shoplifting in pleasanton last year. >> there is that moment that happens when you got it. you got it. and you can breathe. >> there has been a plea deal but the road to get here is not easy. her m
and we meet the nasa scientists who repaired a spacecraft from 15 billion miles away. the voyager 1 is known for being the first spacecraft to go beyond our solar system, so when it stopped sending data back to earth last november, the team faced a daunting task. they traced the problem to a single malfunctioning computer chip and announced yesterday that they finally made contact again. suzanne dodd, the voyager project manager, said this was all about teamwork. >> it's just incredible...
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Apr 18, 2024
04/24
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KGO
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and tonight nasa now confirming where it came from. 45 and undr to be in our hpv vaccination ad. sound like you? nah...not me. in a relationship. if you're sexually active and unvaccinated, it could still be you. i'm too old if you're under 45, you're not. for most people, hpv clears on its own. but for those who don't clear the virus, it can cause certain cancers. wow... gardasil 9 is a vaccine given to adults through age 45 that can help protect against certain hpv-related cervical, vaginal, vulvar, anal, and certain head and neck cancers, such as throat and back of mouth cancers, and genital warts. gardasil 9 doesn't protect everyone and doesn't treat cancer or hpv infection. these diseases may have many causes. your doctor may recommend screening for certain hpv-related cancers. routine cervical cancer screenings are still needed. you shouldn't get gardasil 9 if you're allergic to the vaccine, its ingredients, or yeast. tell your doctor if you have a weakened immune system, are pregnant, or plan to be. the most common side effects include injection site reactions, headache, f
and tonight nasa now confirming where it came from. 45 and undr to be in our hpv vaccination ad. sound like you? nah...not me. in a relationship. if you're sexually active and unvaccinated, it could still be you. i'm too old if you're under 45, you're not. for most people, hpv clears on its own. but for those who don't clear the virus, it can cause certain cancers. wow... gardasil 9 is a vaccine given to adults through age 45 that can help protect against certain hpv-related cervical, vaginal,...
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keith colleen is editor at nasa watch. and he told us, what's so special about a total solar eclipse, as well as your to duction mentioned this happened once or twice a year. but normally the silver, either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world, we're going to a lot of people. this one cut straight across to 3 countries like that, you know, half a 1000000000 people in the past. it was perhaps 30 to 40000000 people who got the full eclipse and maybe 3 times that in the area nearby. and you know, it doesn't happen that off and i can remember the times i've seen them. uh, one was back in 1970 and that was one boy. so it must be something that i remember that date, it was march 7th, 1970. so there's something about them was they were saying the path of totality swept across several major north american cities. what was it like where you are in washington dc. we had about 90 percent coverage and i was actually on the air with somebody. i could have done a lot of interviews today and i was looking at my window and i
keith colleen is editor at nasa watch. and he told us, what's so special about a total solar eclipse, as well as your to duction mentioned this happened once or twice a year. but normally the silver, either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world, we're going to a lot of people. this one cut straight across to 3 countries like that, you know, half a 1000000000 people in the past. it was perhaps 30 to 40000000 people who got the full eclipse and maybe 3 times that in the area nearby....
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Apr 6, 2024
04/24
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first cosmonaut in our sovereign history on board. captain, also a native of belarus, oleg novitsky and nasa representative laurel ohara. by the way, an american like marina had a space debut. the flight home itself is considered more difficult, but the crew is positive. this can be seen in the smiles for the memorable photos of the last day of the expedition. preparations for the return were carried out in orbit still deep at night by our earthly standards; everything was monitored in the star city, in the mission control center. first, how the hatches between the ships were closed. and the russian module ks rassvet. the tightness was checked 2 days ago, the satellite phones were also recharged , the equipment was stowed, and undocking was already done this morning. there is a discrepancy between objects. accepted. so that the landing goes smoothly. in the kazakh steppe has all the necessary services on duty, covering the areas of two settlements at once. the assets of the federal air transport agency, roscosmos, the ministry of defense, the federal medical-bilgil agency are fully prepared
first cosmonaut in our sovereign history on board. captain, also a native of belarus, oleg novitsky and nasa representative laurel ohara. by the way, an american like marina had a space debut. the flight home itself is considered more difficult, but the crew is positive. this can be seen in the smiles for the memorable photos of the last day of the expedition. preparations for the return were carried out in orbit still deep at night by our earthly standards; everything was monitored in the star...
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keith cowan, editor at nasa, watch told us what's so special about a total solar eclipse. well, as your introduction mentioned, this happened once or twice a year. but normally the silver, either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world, we're going to a lot of people. this one cut straight across a 23 countries like that, you know, half a 1000000000 people. in the past, it was perhaps 30 to 40000000 people who got the full eclipse and maybe 3 times that in the area nearby. and you know, it doesn't happen that off and i can remember the times i've seen them. uh, one was back in 1970 and that was one boy. so it must be something that i remember that date it was march 7th, 1970. so there's something about them. why they were saying the path of totality swept across several major north american cities. what was it like where you are in washington dc. so we have about 90 percent coverage and i was actually on the air with somebody. i could have done a lot of interviews today, and i was looking at my window and i just had this fixed it. i exhaust shadows, i shouldn't
keith cowan, editor at nasa, watch told us what's so special about a total solar eclipse. well, as your introduction mentioned, this happened once or twice a year. but normally the silver, either the ocean where nobody lives or parts of the world, we're going to a lot of people. this one cut straight across a 23 countries like that, you know, half a 1000000000 people. in the past, it was perhaps 30 to 40000000 people who got the full eclipse and maybe 3 times that in the area nearby. and you...
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Apr 23, 2024
04/24
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KPIX
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we meet the nasa scientist who repaired a spacecraft from 15 billion miles away. the voyager 1 is known for being the first spacecraft to go beyond our solar system, so when it stopped sending data back to earth last november, the team faced a daunting task. they traced the problem to a single manufacturing computer chip and announced yesterday that the malfunctioning computer chip -- they announced yesterday that they finally made contact once again. suzanne dodd, the voyager project manager, said this was all about teamwork. >> it's just an incredible to ba part of this mission that continues to this day, and that has inspired so many generationo space exploration or science. >> maurice: suzanne dodd and the voyager 1 team at nasa, tonight's "heart of america." all about teamwork. when that is tonight's "cbs evening news." par norah o'donnell, i'm maurice to block. thank you so >> announcer: these underage hosts threw a party. >> there were cups in hands, bottles in hand. >> judge judy: party looked pretty wild to me. >> you could say that. >> announcer: then th
we meet the nasa scientist who repaired a spacecraft from 15 billion miles away. the voyager 1 is known for being the first spacecraft to go beyond our solar system, so when it stopped sending data back to earth last november, the team faced a daunting task. they traced the problem to a single manufacturing computer chip and announced yesterday that the malfunctioning computer chip -- they announced yesterday that they finally made contact once again. suzanne dodd, the voyager project manager,...
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Apr 7, 2024
04/24
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FOXNEWSW
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anyway, if you deliver in the northeast, nasa, dial in here, it's not jimmy failer research. most of my research is on websites we can't name. [laughter] just make sure we are on the same page but nasa says some of the best places to watch our new hampshire, maine and vermont. be careful and vermont last time i was there, i cropped stopped me for driving without a super. have you ever seen anything on the road and vermont not a subaru? i don't think you legally can but you haven't lived until you've been pulled up by a cop on a bus but under orders with bernie sanders. [laughter] my advice is to track our if you can't, scientist don't expect another total eclipse in the u.s. until 2044 which is right in the middle of president money boo-boos second term. i'm kidding because the way we are going, we are not making it to 2024. who's ready for comedy? ocular our best and brightest, financial plan, charles payne to off the meter. mental fitness to the test with jim or jim plus i put the pedal to the metal with the new york international auto show in tv and football star michael s
anyway, if you deliver in the northeast, nasa, dial in here, it's not jimmy failer research. most of my research is on websites we can't name. [laughter] just make sure we are on the same page but nasa says some of the best places to watch our new hampshire, maine and vermont. be careful and vermont last time i was there, i cropped stopped me for driving without a super. have you ever seen anything on the road and vermont not a subaru? i don't think you legally can but you haven't lived until...
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Apr 30, 2024
04/24
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KDTV
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eliane: la nasa dio a conocer hoy una colecciÓn de fotografÍas. las mÁs espectaculares del aÑo 2023. la colecciÓn incluye unas 100 fotografÍas consideradas surrealistas o llamativas. entre las fotos, hay varias del despegue del enorme cohete ruso soyus, y la colecciÓn completa de fotos tambiÉn puede verse en la pÁgina web de la completa de fotos tambiÉn puede verse en la pÁgina web de la nasa. es tiempo de redefinir qué significa estar más saludable. sí. porque estar más saludable es algo que hacemos juntos. ¿cómo lo ves, josé? (♪♪) ♪ con marco y con cynthia, y ana explicando. ♪ ♪ con carla, la abuela se sigue cuidando. ♪ (♪♪) ♪ ayudando a mía, que vive ordenando. ♪ ♪ estando presentes y siempre a su lado. ♪ ♪ para recordar lo que es importante. ♪ ♪ juntos es más saludable. ♪ ella le agrega downy unstopables a su carga. ahora olerá fresco todo el día. aún fresco. aún fresco. todavía fresco. frescura 6 veces más duradera y protección contra los olores con downy unstopables. sentirse clarament
eliane: la nasa dio a conocer hoy una colecciÓn de fotografÍas. las mÁs espectaculares del aÑo 2023. la colecciÓn incluye unas 100 fotografÍas consideradas surrealistas o llamativas. entre las fotos, hay varias del despegue del enorme cohete ruso soyus, y la colecciÓn completa de fotos tambiÉn puede verse en la pÁgina web de la completa de fotos tambiÉn puede verse en la pÁgina web de la nasa. es tiempo de redefinir qué significa estar más saludable. sí. porque estar más...
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Apr 23, 2024
04/24
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BBCNEWS
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and why this nasa probe 15 billion miles from earth was spouting gibberish — and is now making sense. and on newsnight at 10:30pm... we'll go deeper behind the headlines and speak live to key players on today's big stories. plus, a first look at tomorrow's front pages. good evening. a boat dangerously crammed with more than 100 people — got into trouble just off the french coast in the early hours — leading to the deaths of five of those attempting the crossing, including a child. it happened just hours after mps passed the government's rwanda bill — which is designed to deter people from attempting crossings like this. 0ur correspondent andrew harding was on that beach in the early hours of this morning — just north of wimereux — filming as police ran towards the people smugglers and those who had paid them to cross. they'd only been at sea a short time when they got into difficulty. well, we can join andrew now. good evening. the smugglers in this area have accessed almost 150 miles of coastline from which to launch their small boats which makes it very rare and very diffi
and why this nasa probe 15 billion miles from earth was spouting gibberish — and is now making sense. and on newsnight at 10:30pm... we'll go deeper behind the headlines and speak live to key players on today's big stories. plus, a first look at tomorrow's front pages. good evening. a boat dangerously crammed with more than 100 people — got into trouble just off the french coast in the early hours — leading to the deaths of five of those attempting the crossing, including a child. it...
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Apr 23, 2024
04/24
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BBCNEWS
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nasa engineers worked out that a single chip on its decades—old on board computer had stopped working. to fix it, they transmitted an essential piece of code that was on that broken ship back to the spacecraft from mission control. it took 22 and a half hours for that code to reach voyager 1 in interstellar space. but this very remote reboot worked. the craft has now sent readable data reporting its health and status back to earth for the first time in five months. a lot of this technology is �*60s, not �*70s. we are now in 2024, which is quite extraordinary. i sit here at my age thinking, "good god, this thing is still going," and it's brilliant. the next step is to get scientific information from the craft, to keep learning from its interstellar mission. by next year, though, voyager 1's ability to generate enough power to operate its instruments is set to come to an end, leaving this tiny icon of space exploration to wander the universe — possibly for eternity. victoria gill, bbc news. amazing. now let's turn our attention to the world of movies, and netflix will soon be show
nasa engineers worked out that a single chip on its decades—old on board computer had stopped working. to fix it, they transmitted an essential piece of code that was on that broken ship back to the spacecraft from mission control. it took 22 and a half hours for that code to reach voyager 1 in interstellar space. but this very remote reboot worked. the craft has now sent readable data reporting its health and status back to earth for the first time in five months. a lot of this technology is...
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Apr 30, 2024
04/24
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KDTV
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eliane: la nasa dio a conocer hoy una colecciÓn de fotografÍas. las mÁs espectaculares del aÑo 2023. la colecciÓn incluye unas 100 fotografÍas consideradas surrealistas o llamativas. entre las fotos, hay varias del despegue del enorme cohete ruso soyus, y la colecciÓn completa de fotos tambiÉn puede verse en la pÁgina web de la nasa. eliane: son visitantes de un parque de diversiones en japÓn que tuvieron que ser evacuados de esa montaÑa rusa, esto cuando se detuvo de emergencia. una agencia de noticias japonesa reportÓ que los carros de la atracciÓn se detuvieron cuando hacÍa su primera subida. 18 personas fueron evacuadas sin que ninguna fuera lesionada. paulian y un policÍa de iowa impresionando los datos generados por las tormentas y los tornados del fin de semana se encontrÓ con este animalito que necesitaba ser rescatado. este bÚho pequeÑo que se lastimÓ un ala. eliane: el oficial lo encontrÓ y decidiÓ bautizarlo. el bÚho fue llevado a un centro de rehabilitaciÓn donde estarÁ pasando un par de meses para regresar a su h
eliane: la nasa dio a conocer hoy una colecciÓn de fotografÍas. las mÁs espectaculares del aÑo 2023. la colecciÓn incluye unas 100 fotografÍas consideradas surrealistas o llamativas. entre las fotos, hay varias del despegue del enorme cohete ruso soyus, y la colecciÓn completa de fotos tambiÉn puede verse en la pÁgina web de la nasa. eliane: son visitantes de un parque de diversiones en japÓn que tuvieron que ser evacuados de esa montaÑa rusa, esto cuando se detuvo de emergencia. una...