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Stories, updates, insights, and original analysis from The Planetary Society.
Planetary Society Statement on Proposed Cuts to Planetary Science Budget
The Planetary Society is deeply troubled with the priorities reflected in NASA's FY13 budget. If implemented, it will portend grave consequences for our nation's ability to conduct deep-space science missions and could irreversibly erode unique aspects of the space industrial base needed for such missions.
LeetUp Reconnaissance Report
A recap of the
You Can Hear Neil Tyson Testify
Neil DeGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist extraordinaire and Planetary Society Board Member, will be testifying to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation tomorrow, March 7.
New "Snapshot From Space": Defending Our Planet
A new installment of our
Venus' very pretty craters
Each Magellan images of Venus seems to be a work of abstract art.
Pretty pictures: Voyager 2 at Jupiter
Here are two perfect examples of Voyager 2's amazing untapped treasures.
Mars Above, Mars Below
With Mars at opposition once again, astronomers around the world will soon be looking up for our best telescopic views of the Red Planet. But next weekend, I and a group of scientists will be turning our gaze downward for views of that alien planet.
Third Rock Rocks!
Have you heard it?
Mars Exploration Rovers Update: Opportunity Turns On, Tunes In, and Drops Panoramic Postcard to Earth
There's no hail or snow or sleet, though it is the depth of winter at Meridiani Planum and a cold unimaginable to us has gripped the landscape.
Dawn Journal: Bonus time at low altitude
Dawn is continuing its exploits at Vesta, performing detailed studies of the colossal asteroid from its low altitude mapping orbit (LAMO).
BepiColombo's launch date has slipped to August 2015
ESA announced this morning that the launch of their BepiColombo mission, a cooperative effort with JAXA, has been delayed from its originally planned July 2014 to the backup launch window in August 2015.
Snapshots From Space: NASA's Treasure Trove of Unprocessed Images
The second episode of Emily Lakdawalla's new video series reveals the gigantic library of solar system images captured by NASA spacecraft, and explains why we've seen so few of them. Emily says they're all online, waiting for space geeks to turn them into gold.
This is how far human radio broadcasts have reached into the galaxy
There is an ever-expanding bubble announcing Humanity's presence to anyone listening in the Milky Way.
Space, Available
Recent deep funding cuts by the Administration and Congress for NASA's space exploration programs are turning the final frontier into an ever-receding dream.
Iapetus' peerless equatorial ridge
A new paper in the Journal of Geophysical Research - Planets by Dombard, Cheng, McKinnon, and KayI claims to explain how Iapetus' equatorial ridge formed. Cool!
NASA Budget Cuts Do Not Make Business Sense
Garry Hunt brings a distinctive perspective to the now-raging debate over the cuts to NASA's science program proposed in the Administration's fiscal year 2013 budget.
Pretty picture: A sunset postcard and a special shadow from Opportunity
It took Don Davis many hours of meticulous labor to assemble this beautiful postcard from Mars.
Adventures in urban astrophotography
Just because you live in an urban area with skyglow doesn't mean you can't have fun with astrophotography. How to capture the planets, constellations and the ISS.
Emily's New Video Series: Snapshots From Space
This is the first episode of editor Emily Lakdawalla's new video series exploring the solar system.
More Dawn Vesta approach images: First color views
On June 30, Dawn stopped thrusting for a full Vestian day -- five hours and 20 minutes -- and just watched the asteroid rotate. But unlike the previous observations, they used all of Dawn's color filters to acquire the best-ever color photos of the lumpy world.



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