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This Week in Space

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It’s time for the weekly edition of In Case You Missed It from the Space subsite paired with links from around the web of news we didn’t cover here. It was a slow-traffic week for Space this week, so if you read something you like, pass it along to a friend!

Quantum mechanics inspiring jewellery designs.

Celebrating May the 4th with Star Wars science stories.

A wee bit of love for the Cat’s Eye nebula.

Celebrating the anniversary of Alan Shepard’s first spaceflight.

Celebrating Cinco de Mayo with cool cloud patterns over Guadalupe.

Video of a daytime fireball in Toronto, Canada.

Star Wars on the red carpet as a Death Star evening gown.

Real life Doctor Who/Star Trek/Ghostbusters crossover resulting in an acoustic tractor beam.

The US climate change report is bad news.

I got a bit obsessed with space junk, first finding it pretty, then researching the history of space junk, and finally finding junk crashed in Australia.

I ran into a bit of trouble while playing the Kerbal Space Program.

Tornado destruction traced out in a satellite image.

The sun was downright interesting this week, with image releases of an unprecedented set of solar flare detailed observations, a weirdly soothing solar flare video, a geometrically striking coronal hole, and a new set of models of how our magnetic field blows in the solar wind.

Tracking people chatting about sunrises on Twitter is surprisingly fun.

A look at Titan from different heights in the atmosphere.

An exploration of new technology for automatic hazard detection.

The science of sinkholes, including the recent surge of car-eating sinkholes.

Dinosaur-day extended beyond one day, looking at my first dinosaur, illustrating the Iguanodon, a national park dedicated to dinosaurs.

Fossilized footprints are a fun mystery.

The science in EuroVision songs.

Still not satisfied? Here’s a look at planetary science news that I didn’t cover this week:

A deep-sea robotic explorer was lost despite a whole lot of safeguards, probably imploding in the depths.

Photographs from a continental plate tearing apart.

Why is seismic interpretation so difficult? This flowchart starts getting at the complexity of the problem.

Fundamental principles of science in 140 characters.

Carnival of Space #353

Top image: Nereus, the lost deep-sea explorer. Photography credit: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

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