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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "Deep_Impact" retrieved in 0.001 sec with these stats:

  • "deep" found 1699 times in 1132 documents
  • "impact" found 2417 times in 1475 documents



'''Author - H. Frystacki '''Co-Author(s)''' - '''JBIS Volume ''' - Contents of the Journal of the British Interplanetary Society for Volume 64 64 '''Page ''' - 173-174 '''Year''' - 2011 '''Keywords''' - Neutrino speed, neutrino mass, quantized space-time, dark energy '''JBIS Reference Code ''' - 2011.64.173 '''Number of Pages''' - 2 Abstract In the second half of September ...
... Moon. This impact was so large that it punched through the crust of the Moon and exposed the relatively warmer, softer mantle material underneath. It is over 7.4 miles deep, and is also the largest impact structure found to date at over 1,500 miles in diameter. ---- Answer ...
... giant planets and beyond. Read about Pioneer 10 & 11, Voyager 1 & 2, Galileo , Cassini , NEAR , Deep Space One and the ESA Huygens probe to Titan . Space junkies and armchair astronauts are ... each equipment-specific reference. Flight data and images for all of the unmanned deep space probes, including Cassini, Deep Space One, Galileo, Huygens, NEAR, Pioneer 10 and 11, Stardust , and Voyager 1 ...
... Permanent ice covers ~ 18 % of the Earth; permafrost underlies a further ~ 20 %. Response to shallow impacts will vary according to season from brittle fracture to flow accompanied by vaporisation. Seasonal climatic ... cratering, as particulate ejecta from icy targets will contribute in the winter months to the `impact winter' effect associated with large events, and water vapour derived from thawed permafrost or melted ...
... to duplicate the results of the two superpowers, European space planners prepared several studies of deep space missions. In the end, none of the European projects came to fruition, although some ... of the superpowers, thus maturing experiences that would turn out to be useful when European deep space missions finally took off in the 1980s. '''To BUY this paper click http://www ...
... 56 '''Page ''' - 74-86 '''Year''' - 2003 '''Keywords''' - Exobiology, Mars, human missions, lander, EVA, communication, paleolake, impact crater, Haughton '''JBIS Reference Code ''' - 2003.56.74 '''Number of Pages''' - 13 Abstract The search ... describe the study of the microbiology of the Haughton impact crater in the Canadian Arctic, from a simulated Mars lander (the FMARS). Impact events have had a profound influence on Mars, and ...
... '''Number of Pages''' - 6 Abstract Most literature on the effect of near earth object (NEO) impacts on our planet has focused on extinction-level events of the sort that apparently ended ... damage. The question is, how does the world community prepare for a sub-critical NEO impact (SCI)? '''To BUY this paper click http://www.jbis.org.uk/paper.php?p=1999 ...
... the British Interplanetary Society for Volume 59 59 '''Page ''' - 386-394 '''Year''' - 2006 '''Keywords''' - NEO, impact missions, sample and return. '''JBIS Reference Code ''' - 2006.59.386 '''Number of Pages''' - 9 Abstract ... have been considered: rendezvous, sample return missions both with and without Earth gravity assist and impact missions. '''To BUY this paper click http://www.jbis.org.uk/paper.php?p=2006 ...
... future.Image:9781894959155.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http://www.apogeespacebooks.com/Books/Deep_Space.html Click here Category:Publications
... Mars Fast Track mission to speeds ~50 km/sec may be possible with an enhanced Deep Space Network. With this array one could test near-sun conditions for desorption in a ...

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