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        11 votes
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        Galactic empires may live at the center of our galaxy, hence why we don't hear from them21 votes
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        Doom in space15 votes
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        Starship was doomed from the beginning38 votes
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        Reusable rockets are here, so why is NASA paying more to launch stuff to space?20 votes
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        Asteroid discovered only two days ago will fly by Earth closer than the moon today43 votes
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        Starship Flight 11 successful24 votes
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        An interstellar comet flew past Mars, and spacecraft took pictures (gifted link)15 votes
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        Prospect of life on Saturn’s moons rises after discovery of organic substances34 votes
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        European Space Agency will pay an Italian company nearly $50 million to design a mini-Starship12 votes
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        Face to face with the scale of the cosmos25 votes
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        Did NASA just find alien life on Mars? Here's what we know.21 votes
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        After ten years of black hole science, Stephen Hawking is proven right23 votes
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        James Webb Telescope detects possible atmosphere around Earth-like exoplanet TRAPPIST-1e, forty light years away from Earth21 votes
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        Could a space traveler accelerate at 1g forever?I was reading this Reddit post and was curious about whether the passengers of this theoretical spaceship could experience 1g of acceleration forever assuming the ship has an infinite fuel source....I was reading this Reddit post and was curious about whether the passengers of this theoretical spaceship could experience 1g of acceleration forever assuming the ship has an infinite fuel source. They shouldn’t be able to pass the speed of light relative to an outside observer, but is there some phenomenon where the passengers can feel like they are accelerating forever? 28 votes
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        The day when three NASA astronauts staged a strike in space20 votes
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        Deep in the Swedish forest lies one of Europe's hopes for a spaceport that can ultimately compete with the United States, China and Russia12 votes
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        SpaceX's Starship completes successful test flight after a year of mishaps25 votes
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        Two geologists who found a meteorite that had fallen onto a plot of land outside Enköping are entitled to the stone, the Swedish Supreme Court rules15 votes
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        A Gigantic Jet caught on camera: a spritacular moment for NASA astronaut Nicole Ayers!33 votes
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        Early universe’s ‘little red dots’ may be black hole stars17 votes
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        NASA-ISRO satellite lifts off to track Earth’s changing surfaces9 votes
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        A huge fight looms over the NASA budget this fall26 votes
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        Texas has long been under threat from the launches and explosions of SpaceX rockets. Now Hawaii is emerging as another possible victim.15 votes
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        SpaceNews goes hard-core paywallAs of July 1st, all articles are behind a paywall. This includes all historical articles (going back decades, apparently), including any and all InternetArchive copies -- so RIP every Wikipedia...As of July 1st, all articles are behind a paywall. This includes all historical articles (going back decades, apparently), including any and all InternetArchive copies -- so RIP every Wikipedia link that has ever referenced them as a source. A free-registration option gets you access to 3 articles per month. A proper subscription is $230/year. A freelance journalist who has been published with them in the past had this to say about it, which I thought was enlightening and, well, thoughtful. On SpaceNews going paywalled, and the broader disregard for archiving in journalism. I reviewed his stuff a bit, and I like his writing, so I added his RSS link to my feed (while simultaneously deleting my SpaceNews link), and on a whim--because he has his email right there on his "About" page, I emailed him to tell him that I liked his article and I just replaced SpaceNews with him. Like, an hour later, I received a response from him, reminding me that he focuses primarily on the Moon, and that he loves RSS and is happy to hear people still use it. And it was so refreshing to connect--almost directly--with an actual human being writing news. Just thought I'd share. Oh, I also want to comment on that price ... $230/year is--IMHO--wildly overpriced. But almost immediately, it also occurred to me that they probably lost more readership going from $0/year to $1/year, than going from $1 to $230 so, you know, business-wise, I suppose it's not exactly a horrible decision. But I'd like to hear other people's opinions on that price, too. 19 votes
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        About Starfront Observatories7 votes
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        ASCII Moon: View and cycle through the Moon's phases, rendered in ASCII art18 votes
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        Nichelle Nichols Space Camp for teen girls to open in 202632 votes
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        South Pole Telescope releases most precise small-scale CMB data to date — consistent with standard model11 votes
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        What's the most unusual or interesting orbital objects in our solar system?I'm building a fun bit of code that uses public APIs to track the location of unusual orbital objects. Including the Tesla Roadster still drifting somewhere between us and Mars, the "Trash Bag...I'm building a fun bit of code that uses public APIs to track the location of unusual orbital objects. Including the Tesla Roadster still drifting somewhere between us and Mars, the "Trash Bag object" orbiting Earth, Oumuamua, and some famous satellites like the Voyager probes. What would you include in a highlight reel of random stuff moving around in our solar system? I leave the scope as broad as possible: an observable object in our solar system of any size or mass. 24 votes
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        The Vera C. Rubin Observatory will discover billions of dynamic objects while building up a deep map of the universe13 votes
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        Honda stuns world with previously unknown reusable methane-based rocket launch in Japan, freestanding launch (no stand) and landing with extreme precision85 votes
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        Astronomers find ‘missing’ matter22 votes
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        SpaceX Starship rocket explodes in setback to Elon Musk's Mars mission27 votes
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        A better way to turn solar sails10 votes
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        Cosmic Dawn: The untold story of the James Webb Space Telescope (Full NASA+ documentary)7 votes
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        Atlas of Space14 votes
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        NASA to silence Voyager's social media accounts16 votes
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        COSMOS-Web unveils largest look ever into the deep universe with public data release8 votes
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        Jupiter was formerly twice its current size and had a much stronger magnetic field, study says22 votes
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        A broken thruster jeopardized Voyager 1, but engineers executed a remote fix20 votes
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        The unlikely rise of the Indian space program9 votes
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        World's largest database of nanosatellites, over 4400 nanosats and CubeSats8 votes
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        Norway is the 55th country to sign the Artemis Accords – document outlines best practices for responsible space exploration8 votes
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        US President Donald Trump seeks to cancel NASA’s Mars Sample Return34 votes
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        Evidence of controversial Planet 9 uncovered in sky surveys taken twenty-three years apart36 votes
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        Is dark energy weakening over time? Why some cosmologists aren’t sure.19 votes
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        Amazon launches its first internet satellites to compete against SpaceX's Starlinks27 votes
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        China, Russia may build nuclear plant on moon to power lunar station, official says23 votes
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        The Energia-Buran, as detailed by an eyewitness to the Soviet spaceplane before its destruction12 votes