WEBVTT
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Good day, and welcome to Astronomy Daily, your go to
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source for everything happening in space and astronomy.
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I'm Anna and I'm Avery. It's Thursday, February the twelfth,
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twenty twenty six, and we have a packed show for
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you today.
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We really do. China has just pulled off a major
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milestone in its push to land astronauts on the Moon,
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including a pretty spectacular rocket splashdown that should have a
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few people at SpaceX paying attention.
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We've also got ULA's Vulcan centa rocket launching a pair
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of space surveillance satellites for the US Space Force, a
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deep dive into why Artemis two has so few chances
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to actually get off the ground, and a stunning new
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Hubble image of a dying star.
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Plus did NASA's Viking missions actually find life on Mars
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fifty years ago? New research says the answer might be yes,
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And astronomers are still hunting for the remains of a
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comet that dramatically fell apart during COVID lockdowns.
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Let's get into it.
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Our lead story today takes us to wang Chong Space
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launch site on the island of Hainan, where yesterday February eleventh,
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China conducted a landmark test that checked off multiple firsts
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in a single mission.
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This was a low altitude demonstration flight of China's next
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generation Long March ten rocket carrying the Mangjo crew capsule,
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and what they were testing was something called a max
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Q abort Basically, can the capsule safely escape the rocket
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at the moment of maximum aerodynamic stress during ascent?
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And for context, that's the point during any rocket launch
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where the vehicle is experiencing the greatest combination of speed
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and atmospheric resistance. If something goes wrong at max Q,
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the crew needs to get away fast. This was China's
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first ever test of that scenario with a crude class spacecraft.
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The capsule successfully separated from the rocket, It deployed its parachutes,
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and was recovered at sea. It was carrying lunar space
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suits and test dummies rather than actual tycho knots, obviously,
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but the abort system performed exactly as designed.
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Now here's where it gets really interesting. Avery After the
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capsule separated, the Long March ten first stage didn't just
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tumble into the ocean. It performed a powered vertical landing
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a soft splash down at Sea very much in the
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style of SpaceX's Falcon nine booster recoveries, and.
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That's a huge deal because until now, only the United
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States has had operational reusable orbital class rockets. This was
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China's first successful rocket recovery attempt, and it worked on
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the very first powered flight of the Long March ten prototype.
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And they even had a dedicated autonomous recovery vessel called
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the Linghangzer standing by, which is essentially China's answer to
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SpaceX's drone ships.
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The full Long March ten is going to be an
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absolute beast when it's complete. A tricore rocket standing around
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ninety meters tall with about twenty seven hundred tons of
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liftoff thrust. It's designed to be China's largest launch vehicle
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and the only one capable of sending both a cruse
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spacecraft and a lunar lander to the Moon in a
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single launch.
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If things continue at this pace, China is projecting a
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full orbital flight of the Long March ten by twenty
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twenty seven, with Tycho knots on the lunar surface before
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the end of the decade. That puts them in a
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very real race with NASA's Artemis program. Which is targeting
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its own crude landing with Artemis three no earlier than
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twenty twenty eight, and this.
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Test was conducted from the brand new launch pad number
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three and Wangchang, which was built specifically for these lunar missions,
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so the infrastructure is going in alongside the hardware.
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A genuinely significant day for the Chinese space program, and
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one that adds real momentum to what's shaping up to
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be the most exciting Moon race since Apollo.
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Sticking with rockets but moving to Cape canaveral, ULA's Vulcan
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Centaur rocket is set to launch early this morning, February twelve,
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with the window opening at three thirty am Eastern time.
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This is the fourth Vulcan mission overall, and the first
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of twenty twenty six. The payload is a pair of
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GSSAP satellites. That's the Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program built
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by Northrop Grumman for the US Space Force.
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Think of GSSAP as a neighborhood watch program for geosynchronous orbit.
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These satellites monitor other spacecraft at that critical thirty five
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thousand kilometer altitude, improving flight safety and giving Space Force
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operators better situational awareness about what's happening up there.
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There's also a secondary payload called Propulsive ESPA, essentially a
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training spacecraft that Space Force guardians will use to practice
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precision orbital maneuvers and validate techniques for protecting assets in orbit.
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What's notable about this particular mission is that it's the
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longest Vulcan flight to date, nearly ten hours, because the
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Centaur upper stage is performing a direct insertion all the
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way to geosynchronous orbit rather than just dropping the satellites
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into a transfer orbit.
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ULA is under some pressure this year. They've got interim
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CEO John Elbon at the Helm after Tory Bruno departed
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to join Blue Origin late last year, and they're targeting
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eighteen to twenty two launches in twenty twenty six after
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falling short of their targets in twenty twenty five.
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They've invested heavily in infrastructure, a second mobile launch platform
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and a second integration facility at the CAPE. So the
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capacity is there. The question is whether Vulcan can deliver
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on the reliability and cadence that they're roughly eighty mission
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backlog demands.
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We should note that ULA's webcast coverage will end at
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faring separation about five minutes after launch, because the classified
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nature of the payload means the rest of the mission
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is conducted in silence. Now, speaking of getting rockets off
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the ground, let's talk about Artemis two, because if you've
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been following the countdown to the first crude Moon mission
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in over fifty years, you might have noticed something surprising
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about how few chances there actually are to launch.
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NASA has published the available launch dates, and there are
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just eleven opportunities across March and April combined. Five dates
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in March the sixth through the ninth, plus March eleventh
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and six in April. Each window is about two hours long.
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Eleven chances in sixty one days. That's it, and some
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of those could be lost to weather or the need
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to replace consumables like rocket fuel. So why so few?
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It all comes down to orbital mechanics and the specific
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requirements of this mission. Artemis two doesn't fly straight right
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to the Moon. The SLS rocket first delivers the Orion
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capsule to high Earth orbit, where the crew and ground
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teams run through a series of checkouts. Then comes a
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translunar injection burn to send Orion on its way.
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So the launch time on any given day has to
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thread the needle. SLS needs to reach the right orbit,
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Orion needs to be in the correct alignment with both
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Earth and the Moon for that translunar injection burn, and
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the whole trajectory has to work as a free return loop,
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using the Moon's gravity to sling the capsule home.
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And then there's a power constraint. Orion's solar arrays can't
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be in darkness for more than ninety minutes at a stretch,
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so NASA has to rule out any trajectory that would
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put the spacecraft in an extended eclipse. That alone eliminates
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a lot of potential dates.
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The return profile matters too, Orion needs a specific entry
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angle and conditions for splashdown, so that further narrows the field.
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Now, the reason we're talking about March and April specifically
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is that the first wet dress rehearsal that's the full
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practice run of fueling and countdown procedures, ended early on
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February second because of a liquid hydrogen leak that took
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February off the table entirely.
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A second wet dress attempt is expected soon, possibly this weekend,
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and NASA officials have been reassuring everyone that there are
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launch opportunities in every month beyond April as well. They
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just haven't published those dates yet.
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And it's worth remembering that Artemis I had similar hydrogen
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leak issues and still flew successfully in late twenty twenty two,
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so this isn't uncharted territory.
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Whenever it flies, it'll be historic. No astronaut has been
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beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo seventeen in December nineteen
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seventy two. That's over fifty three years.
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Moving on to our next story, and it's time for
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some pure cosmic beauty. NASA has released a breath taking
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new image from the Hubble Space Telescope showing the Egg
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Nebula in extraordinary detail.
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The Egg Nebula is about a thousand light years away
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in the constellation Signess, and it's what astronomers call a
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preplanetary nebula, which, despite the name, has nothing to do
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with planets forming. It's the early stage of a dying
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Sun like star, shedding its outer layers.
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And NASA describes it as the first youngest and closest
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preplanetary nebula ever discovered, which makes it incredibly valuable for
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studying how stars like our Sun eventually meet their end.
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What makes this image so striking is the structure. At
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the center. You have the dying star, the yoke of
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the egg, hidden behind a dense cloud of dust. Quinn
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Beams of light punch outward through gaps in that dusty shell,
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illuminating a series of concentric arcs of gas that ripple
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outward like waves.
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And unlike most nebulae, which glow because they're gas as
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has been ionized, the egg nebula shines purely by reflected
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light from the central star. The star hasn't heated up
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enough yet to ionize its surroundings. That's what makes this
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a preplanetary nebula rather than a full planetary nebula.
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The symmetry is remarkable too. Scientists say the patterns are
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far too orderly to have come from a violent event
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like a supernova. Instead, they point to coordinated sputtering events
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in the carbon enriched core of the dying star, though
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the exact mechanism is still poorly understood.
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There's also evidence of gravitational interactions with one or more
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hidden companion stars very deep within the dust, which may
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be helping to shape those dramatic outflows.
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This preplanetary phase only lasts a few thousand years, an
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absolute blink in cosmic terms, so catching a nebula at
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this stage is like catching lightning in a bottle, and
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the material being shed here is the same kind of
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carbon rich stardust that seated our own solar system four
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and a half billion years ago.
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Hubble has observed the agnebula before, but this new image,
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taken with the wide field camera three, combines multiple data
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sets to produce the most detailed portrait yet. Thirty five
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years in orbit, and Hubble is still delivering.
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Now for a story that could fundamentally change how we
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think about Mars. New research published in the journal Astrobiology
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is making the case that NASA's Viking missions may have
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actually detected signs of life on Mars back in nineteen
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seventy six. We just didn't know how to read the data.
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This is a big claim, so let's unpack it. The
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Viking Landers carried an instrument called the GCMs, the gas
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chromatography mass spectrometer, which was designed to detect organic molecules
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in the Martian soil. At the time, it returned what
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was interpreted as a negative result no organics found, case closed,
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and that.
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Can illusion essentially shut down the debate for decades. The
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Viking Project scientist Gerald Soffen famously said nobody's no life,
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and that became the textbook answer.
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But here's the twist. In two thousand and eight, NASA's
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Phoenix Lander discovered perchlorates in the Martian soil. Perchlorates are
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powerful oxidizing chemicals, and it turns out they break down
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organic molecules when heated, which is exactly what the Viking
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GCMs did to its soil samples.
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So in twenty ten, astrobiologist Rafael Navarro Gonzalez showed that
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if you take organic material and heated in the presence
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of perchlorate, you get methyl chloride and carbon dioxide, which
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is precisely the chemical signature that Viking detected and dismissed
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as either contamination or an unknown chemical process.
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Lead author doctor Benner puts it very directly, the GCMs
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didn't fail to discover organics. It did discover them through
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their degradation products. We just didn't understand what we were
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looking at.
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The team has even developed a model for what Martian
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microbes might look like. They call it barsoom that's bacterial
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autotrophes that respire with stored oxygen on Mars. The idea
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is that these organisms could photosynthesize during the Martian Day,
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produce and store oxygen, then use it to survive the
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freezing Martian Knights.
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I should emphasize this doesn't prove there's life on Mars,
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but it does reopen a door that was closed fifty
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years ago and makes a compelling case that the evidence
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was there all along, hiding in plain sight.
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And it raises a fascinating question if we go back
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to Mars with modern instruments designed with perchlorates in mind,
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what else might we find.
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Our final story today is a bit of a cosmic
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cold case. Remember comment see twenty nineteen why four at lists.
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Oh the pandemic comment. It was to discovered in December
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twenty nineteen, and as it flew toward the Inner Solar
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System in early twenty twenty, it brightened so rapidly that
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astronomers predicted it could become visible to the naked eye,
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a real lockdown spectacle.
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And then, like so many plans in twenty twenty, it
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fell apart literally in late April twenty twenty, the comet
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dramatically disintegrated into dozens of pieces. Hubble tracked about thirty