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Home»Posts tagged with»neptune

Alaska Army National Guard ‘First Scouts’ awarded state’s highest heroism medal for 1955 rescue

By Alan Brown and Balinda ONeal | Alaska National Guard Public Affairs on Mar 30, 2023   Featured, General News, North Slope/Northwest Alaska, Rural  

Alaska Army National Guard ‘First Scouts’ awarded state’s highest heroism medal for 1955 rescue

GAMBELL (ST. LAWRENCE ISLAND), Alaska – On June 22, 1955, two Russian MiG-15s from Siberia shot down a U.S. Navy P2V-5 Neptune plane flying a routine maritime patrol from Kodiak out over the Bering Sea. After it crashed in flames on St. Lawrence Island, 16 Alaska National Guardsmen from the First Scout Battalion mounted an […]

Hubble Sees Neptune’s Mysterious Shrinking Storm

By Ray Villard | Space Telescope Science Instittute on Feb 23, 2018   Featured, Science/Education  

Hubble Sees Neptune’s Mysterious Shrinking Storm

Three billion miles away on the farthest known major planet in our solar system, an ominous, dark storm – once big enough to stretch across the Atlantic Ocean from Boston to Portugal – is shrinking out of existence as seen in pictures of Neptune taken by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. Immense dark storms on Neptune […]

Some Potentially Habitable Planets Began as Gaseous, Neptune-Like Worlds

By Peter Kelley | University of Washington on Jan 30, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

Some Potentially Habitable Planets Began as Gaseous, Neptune-Like Worlds

Two phenomena known to inhibit the potential habitability of planets — tidal forces and vigorous stellar activity — might instead help chances for life on certain planets orbiting low-mass stars, University of Washington astronomers have found. In a paper published this month in the journal Astrobiology, UW doctoral student Rodrigo Luger and co-authorRory Barnes, research […]

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