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Chinese ‘Moon-Walk’ On Earth! Beijing Says Developing Zero Gravity Conditions On Earth With Ambitious Lunar Project

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Chinese ‘Moon-Walk’ On Earth! Beijing Says Developing Zero Gravity Conditions On Earth With Ambitious Lunar Project

China’s space program has gained enough attention in recent months. As Beijing prepares to fully activate its space station and plans to build a joint lunar base with Russia, China claims to have built a research facility that simulates low-gravity conditions on the moon.

The research facility was reportedly inspired by frog levitation experiments using magnets. According to scientists involved in the project, this could provide valuable research for China’s lunar exploration efforts.

The simulator, located in Xuzhou, a city in eastern Jiangsu province, is expected to open in the next few months.

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The announcement comes after China claimed its Chang’e 5 lunar probe had found live evidence of water on the lunar surface. Chang’e 5 is China’s fifth lunar exploration mission and the first sample return mission. The findings will provide more clues for the upcoming Chang’e-6 and Chang’e-7 missions in the future.

Li Ruilin, chief scientist from China University of Mining and Technology, said it was “the first of its kind in the world” and would take lunar simulations to a new level. The simulator could make gravity “disappear,” Lee said in a Jan. 11 interview. Low gravity can be achieved in airplanes or drop towers, but for very short periods of time. In the simulator, however, Lee said the effect could last “for as long as you want.”

In 2018, Chinese state media reported that China planned to launch its own “artificial moon” by 2020 to replace street lights and reduce electricity costs in urban areas. Chengdu, a city in southwestern Sichuan province, is developing a “lighting satellite,” which China Daily later reported would shine at the same time as the real moon, but eight times as brightly. It should be a mirror orbiting Chengdu at an altitude of 500 kilometers.

However, this new “artificial moon” offers the same gravitational pull as a real moon, orchestrated by scientists using magnetic fields.

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Complete News Source : eurasiantimes

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Nasa’s old map of Jupiter, which reminds many of dosa, has gone viral once more

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Nasa’s old map of Jupiter, which reminds many of dosa, has gone viral once more

Certain images or videos frequently resurface on the Internet, leaving people speechless. When those clips or pictures are shared again on one social media platform or another, they create a buzz. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) created and posted this image of a map of Jupiter online a few years ago. After being shared on Twitter, the image drew a lot of attention this time. And, as usual, the image made people think of dosa, a popular South Indian dish.

The image was shared by the Twitter account Latest in Space. “From the very bottom of Jupiter, I’m looking up. While tweeting the image, they wrote, “Seen by NASA Cassini.” The images from the Cassini spacecraft’s narrow-angle camera were used to create this out-of-this-world image, which is part of a coloured map series produced by the space agency.

The article was published a few days ago. The tweet has received nearly 20,000 likes since it was shared, and the number is growing. The tweet has been retweeted more than 2,000 times. Take a look at some of the comments to see how the image of Jupiter looks like dosa.

A Twitter user commented, “Looks like a designer dosa.” “When I rush to pick up a call, this is what happens to my dosa on the dosa pan,” one joked. “This is how my mother makes Dosa,” a third said. “Jupiter in the making,” wrote a fourth, along with a photo of someone preparing – you guessed it – dosa.

 

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