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Podcaster:  Host : Fraser Cain ; Guest : Katie Mack, Ramin Skibba, Charles Black, Brian Koberlein

Weekly-Space-HangoutTitle: Weekly Space Highlight: Astrophysicist Katie Mack

Link: http://cosmoquest.org
You can watch the video in: http://youtu.be/2ZLDVM0_XPc

Description: This Week’s Stories:

Plans Announced for First Phase of Square Kilometer Array
The Milky Way is larger than we thought
Mars once had oceans
Waiting for a Signal from Philae
Is There a Better Way to Sterilize Spacecraft?
Underground Ocean on Jupiter’s Largest Moon, Ganymede
Curiosity REgains Use of Arm, Recommences Mars Science
Explosive Erumptions Rocked the Youthful Moon
“Jupiter” Space Tug Could Deliver Cargo to the Moon
Hydrothermal Activity in the “Broken Heart” of Enceladus
Energy-Harvesting Method Shows Promise for Mars Power Stations
Nine Dwarf Galaxies Discovered in Orbit Around the Milky Way
This is How Venus Would Look Without its Thick Layer of Clouds
A Grand Extravaganza of New Stars
Solar Jet Fuel Has Been Created for the First Time
Dark Matter Dwarf Galaxy?
Hot Water Activity on Icy Moon’s Seafloor
Icy Conditions Delay TMT Work
NASA Creates Anti-Gravity Field, Makes Lab Rats Levitate
Two-Mile-High Structures Rising on Saturn’s Rings
The Further Adventures of Rosetta and Philae
Mysterious Phenomena in a Gigantic Galaxy-Cluster Collision
KSC Shopping for Liquid Hydrogen Solution Ahead of SLS Debut
Billionaire Teams Up with NASA to Mine the Moon
Boeing Would Pull Seats, Life Support, Engines for Cargo-Carrying CST-100
India to Fly RLV Tech Demo by June
Public Gets Chance to Image Mars from Orbit
NASA, Orbital ATK Ready SLS Five-Segment Booster for QM-1 Test Firing
UPDATE: Curiosity to Resume Use of Robotic Arm in a Few Days
Japan’s Hayabusa 2 Asteroid Mission Checks Out
Fastest Star in our Galaxy Propelled by a Thermonuclear Supernova
Giant Methane Storms Raging on Uranus
An Explosive Quartet – Hubble Sees Multiple Images of a Supernova for the Very First Time
Hubble Sees Supernova Split into Four Images by Cosmic Lens
Astronomers Watch the Same Star Explode Over and Over Again Thanks to Gravitational Lensing
Glitch on Curiosity Rover Traced to Drill Mechanism
TWiM: Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos in Patent War over Drone Ship Technology
NASA Spacecraft Becomes First to Orbit a Dwarf Planet
Dawn Spacecraft Slips Quietly Into Orbit Around Dwarf Planet Ceres
A Mission to Europa
Why Isn’t the Universe as Bright as it Should Be?
NASA’s Chandra Observatory Finds Cosmic Showers Halt Galaxy Growth
British Goverment Approves First Spaceport in Europe
NASA Making Plans for Russia’s Secession from ISS
Planet “Reared” by Four Parent Stars
ALMA Performs its First Very Long Baseline Observations
Mars: The Planet that Lost an Ocean’s Worth of Water
Landing Region Chosen for InSight at T Minus One Year to Red Planet Launch
20 Year Old Military Weather Satellite Exploded in Orbit
Power System Failure Likely Cause of Military Satellite Explosion
Bright Spots on Ceres Likely Ice, Not Cryovolcanoes
Far From Home: Wayward Cluster is Both Tiny and Distant
Google Gives Lick Observatory $1M to Relieve Funding Woes
ULA Targets 2018 for Delta 4 Phase-out, Seeks Relaxation of RD-180 Ban
NASA Says Mars Rover Curiosity Temporarily Idled by Short Circuit
An Old Looking Galaxy in a Young Universe
Crew Member Matt Woods participated as a World’s Largest Astronomy Lesson Breaks World Record
A Young Star Takes Center Stage
Mikulski Announces Retirement
Timing of Russian Rocket Engin Ban Puts USA, USAF in Bind
Life “Not as we Know It” Possible on Saturn’s Moon Titan

Bio: Fraser Cain is the publisher of Universe Today

Special Guest: Astrophysicist Katie Mack (@AstroKatie)

Guests:
Ramin Skibba (@raminskibba)
Charles Black (@charlesblack / sen.com/charles-black)
Brian Koberlein (@briankoberlein)

Today’s sponsor: This episode of “365 Days of Astronomy” is sponsored by — no one. We still need sponsors for many days in 2015, so please consider sponsoring a day or two. Just click on the “Donate” button on the lower left side of this webpage, or contact us at signup@365daysofastronomy.org.

Outtro: Thanks for listening. This episode was made possible thanks for support from Celestron.com. please explore the cosmos today

End of podcast:

365 Days of Astronomy
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