NASA has decided to pluck a small boulder off an asteroid and bring it back to the vicinity of Earth, rather than bag up an entire asteroid, agency officials in charge of the Asteroid Redirect Mission (ARM) announced today.

The $1.25 billion mission, which is planned to launch in December 2020, would send a robotic spacecraft for a rendezvous with an asteroid in 2022. After touching down on the asteroid’s surface, the spacecraft would snatch a boulder several meters across. The spacecraft would then orbit the asteroid for up to 400 days, testing out an idea for defending Earth from a catastrophic asteroid impact: using the spacecraft’s own gravitational field to subtly alter the asteroid’s orbit. Next, the spacecraft would bring the snatched rock back to Earth’s vicinity in 2025. Finally, as part of preparations for a possible mission to Mars, astronauts would visit and examine the rock for some 25 days, using the planned Orion spacecraft to make the trip.

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Deep-water marine fish living on the continental slopes at depths from 2,000 feet to one mile have liver pathologies, tumors and other health problems that may be linked to human-caused  pollution, one of the first studies of its type has found. The research, conducted in the Bay of Biscay west of France, also discovered the first case of a deep water fish species with an “intersex” condition, a blend of male and female sex organs. The sampling was done in an area with no apparent point-source pollution, and appears to reflect general ocean conditions.

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Did Mars ever support life?  This question has intrigued us for centuries!  We have had spacecraft on Mars for quite a while poking and analyzing soil and rocks and taking photos.  Now NASA has new data which help answer these questions.

A team using the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument suite aboard NASA's Curiosity rover has made the first detection of nitrogen on the surface of Mars from release during heating of Martian sediments. 

The nitrogen was detected in the form of nitric oxide, and could be released from the breakdown of nitrates during heating. Nitrates are a class of molecules that contain nitrogen in a form that can be used by living organisms. The discovery adds to the evidence that ancient Mars was habitable for life.

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¿Acaso alguna vez Marte fue capaz de sostener la vida? Esta pregunta nos ha intrigado ¡durante siglos! Ha habido una nave espacial en Marte por un buen rato hurgando, haciendo análisis de suelos y rocas y tomando fotos. Ahora la NASA tiene nuevos datos que ayudan a responder estas preguntas.

Un equipo utilizando el conjunto de instrumentos para el Análisis de las Muestras en Marte (SAM por sus siglas en inglés) a bordo del Rover Curiosity de la NASA ha detectado por primera vez el nitrógeno en la superficie de Marte, que se desprende durante el calentamiento de los sedimentos marcianos.

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Un nuevo estudio "proporciona evidencia de que las filtraciones de metano son hábitats semejantes a islas que albergan comunidades microbianas únicas diferentes de otros ecosistemas del fondo marino." Estas filtraciones juegan un papel importante en la biodiversidad microbiana del suelo marino.

Las filtraciones de metano son fugas de gas natural en el fondo del mar que descargan metano en el agua. Los microorganismos que viven en o cerca de estas filtraciones pueden utilizar el metano como fuente de alimento, evitando que el gas se acumule en la hidrosfera circundante o que migre a la atmósfera.

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As we all know, cars, trucks, and other motor vehicles aren’t the best friends of the environment. However, for many of us it’s simply not practical to depend strictly on mass transportation or make the switch to an all-electric vehicle. As a green-thinking member of society, where does that leave you? What should your stance be on driving with relation to sustainability?

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