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"The Time of Apollo"

This stirring 1970s documentary narrated by Burgess Meredith pays tribute to the grand accomplishments of Apollo as men left Earth to explore the Moon and fulfill President Kennedy's challenge to the nation.

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1958: America in space

This is a video report on the United States' space exploration efforts during 1958. These historic pioneering days included the launch of Explorer 1, the first American satellite to orbit Earth.

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The Flight of Faith 7

The final and longest manned flight of Project Mercury was carried out by astronaut Gordon Cooper in May 1963. This film shows the voyage of Faith 7.

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STS-62 crew report

Shuttle mission STS-62 was a two-week flight of Columbia with packages of microgravity research experiments housed on pallets in the payload bay. The crew narrates the highlights in this film.

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Pegasus launches AIM

An air-launched Pegasus rocket lofts NASA's AIM satellite into orbit to study mysterious clouds at the edge of space.

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The Sun in 3-D

NASA's twin STEREO spacecraft have made the first three-dimensional images of the Sun. Scientists unveil the images in this news conference held April 23.

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Hubble turns 17

The Hubble Space Telescope was launched in April 1990, opening a new window on the universe that has revolutionized our understanding of the cosmos.

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Scientists discover vast intergalactic cloud of plasma
LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY NEWS RELEASE
Posted: April 30, 2007

LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico - Combining the world's largest radio telescope at Arecibo, Puerto Rico with a precision imaging, seven-antenna synthesis radio telescope at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory (DRAO), a team of researchers led by Los Alamos scientist Philipp Kronberg have discovered a new giant in the heavens, a giant in the form of a previously undetected cloud of intergalactic plasma that stretches more than 6 million light years across. The diffuse, magnetized intergalactic zone of high energy electrons may be evidence for galaxy-sized black holes as sources for the mysterious cosmic rays that continuously zip though the Universe. 

In research reported in the April issue of Astrophysical Journal, the team of researchers from Los Alamos, Arecibo, and DRAO in Penticton, British Columbia describe their discovery of a 2-3 megaparsec zone of diffuse, intergalactic plasma located beside the Coma cluster of galaxies. The combined use of the 305 meter Arecibo radio telescope to make a base scan of 50 square degrees of sky, and the DRAO, making 24 separate 12 hour observations over 24 days of the same sky area, resulted in an image comparable to that of a 1000 meter diameter radio telescope. After Arecibo mapped the larger cloud structure, DRAO data was used to enhance the resolution of the image. 

According to Kronberg, "One of the most exciting aspects of the discovery is the new questions it poses. For example, what kind of mechanism could create a cloud of such enormous dimensions that does not coincide with any single galaxy, or galaxy cluster? Is that same mechanism connected to the mysterious source of the ultra high energy cosmic rays that come from beyond our galaxy? And separately, could the newly discovered fluctuating radio glow be related to unwanted foregrounds of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation?" 

The synchrotron-radiating plasma cloud is spread across a vast region of space that may contain several black hole harboring radio galaxies. The cloud may be evidence that black holes in galaxies convert and transfer their enormous gravitational energy, by a yet unknown process, into magnetic fields and cosmic rays in the vast intergalactic regions of the Universe. 

Kronberg's work also provides the first preview of small (arc minute - level) features that could be associated with unwanted and confusing foregrounds to the CMB radiation. Because these same radiation frequencies are to be imaged by the PLANCK CMB Explorer, corrections to the observed CMB for foreground fluctuations (the so-called microwave "cirrus clouds") are vitally important to using CMB fluctuations as a probe of the early Universe. 

In addition to Kronberg, other members of the research team included, Roland Kothes from DRAO, and Christopher Salter and Phil Perillat from Arecibo and the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center. The DRAO is operated by the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics and the National Research Council of Canada. 

Los Alamos National Laboratory, a multidisciplinary research institution engaged in strategic science on behalf of national security, is operated by Los Alamos National Security, LLC, a team composed of Bechtel National, the University of California, BWX Technologies, and Washington Group International for the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. 

Los Alamos enhances national security by ensuring the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear stockpile, developing technologies to reduce threats from weapons of mass destruction, and solving problems related to energy, environment, infrastructure, health, and global security concerns.