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Is 2023 the Year of Io?

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

Release Date: 06/22/2023

SpaceX vs FAA and EPA and Cards Against Humanity show art SpaceX vs FAA and EPA and Cards Against Humanity

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

This week we’re doing something we’ve never done before; we’re dedicating the majority of the show to a single story: SpaceX’s recurring failure to follow the rules, regulations, and norms of international spaceflight. We have the receipts, and we hope that you will hear us out before you hit that comment button.

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Planning for Asteroid Attacks, Dino Prints Cross Ocean, Viper Updates, & more show art Planning for Asteroid Attacks, Dino Prints Cross Ocean, Viper Updates, & more

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

Let's take a fast-paced journey thru all that's new in space and astronomy, including volcanic glass beads, dino prints that span the ocean, a deep dive into asteroid exploration, and tales from the launch pad.

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Mars is the future, the day the Dinos Died, a Star's Death in 3 Acts, and more show art Mars is the future, the day the Dinos Died, a Star's Death in 3 Acts, and more

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

Let's take a fast-paced journey thru all that's new in space and astronomy, including new info on the origins of the Dino Killing asteroid, a star being nommed by a star, a deep dive into Mars exploration, and tales from the launch pad.

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NASA Budget Woes May Murder Missions show art NASA Budget Woes May Murder Missions

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

Let's take a fast-paced journey thru all that's new in space and astronomy, including Hubble, Chandra, and VIPER face cuts/cancellations, weird exoplanet orbits, Roman gains an instrument, and tales from the launch pad.

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Found: 1 Intermediate Mass Black Hole show art Found: 1 Intermediate Mass Black Hole

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

Let's take a fast-paced journey thru all that's new in space and astronomy, including how Jupiter's Great Red Spot went missing, Io's Lava Lake, Titan's coastal erosion, and this week's tales from the launch pad. We also take a close look at the discovery of the first intermediate-mass black hole in the Omega Centauri globular cluster

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JWST Reveals Star Formation Details show art JWST Reveals Star Formation Details

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

Let's take a fast-paced journey thru all that's new in space and astronomy, including Mars Perseverance Rover fords an ancient river, black holes sometimes form like baby stars, and this week's tales from the launch pad. We also look in detail at how JWST images reveal star formation in never-before-seen details.

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Planning to go back to the moon show art Planning to go back to the moon

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

Let's take a quick tour of the latest news, including updates on the Hubble Space Telescopes and single gyro operations, EUCLID's image release, an amazing new image of Io by LBT, and new calculations of Pluto's oceans. We also look in detail at plans to return humans to the moon using Starship by SpaceX and Blue Moon by Blue Origin.

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Climate in Crisis (and stars in formation) show art Climate in Crisis (and stars in formation)

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

In this episode, we bring you stories on how JWST - Not LIGO and Virgo - spotted the most distant Black Hole merge to date, why the search for life on other worlds gets more challenging the more we look, and we take a deep dive into the things we’re doing that cause and relieve climate change.

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Carrington 2024 show art Carrington 2024

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

In this episode, we’re taking a closer look at Sunspot complex 3664 and the beautiful chaos that it’s been creating. And because we’re in a planetary science kind of mood, we’re also looking at stories related to observing weather on alien worlds, the history of Mars Climate, and even how solar storms might affect that particular Red Planet.

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Io and Juno Begin to Part Ways show art Io and Juno Begin to Part Ways

EVSN: Escape Velocity Space News

In February, on the closest approach, NASA's Juno spacecraft was within 930 miles of the closest moon Io’s surface. Since then, Juno’s orbit has been shrinking, bringing the mission closer to Jupiter and away from the circling Galilean moons. Io and Juno have parted ways, and Juno is now snuggling down into tighter orbits around her Jupiter.

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In general, the kind of year we’ll experience gets its label at the end of the year. 2005 was the year of the never-ending hurricane season. 2017 was the year we experienced an eclipse and lost Cassini. 2020 was the year satellite constellations went from a handful to hundreds of spacecraft. 2022 was the year of Mars exploration with Curiosity, Percy, Ginny, Insight, and Tianwen-1. Each year gets to define itself, and it is up to us to fight or embrace what that year brings us. This year, 2023, is still young, but I’m going to guess that come January 2024, this will be the year of Io. (This episode originally aired on television March 11, 2023)