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Premium video content for our Spaceflight Now Plus  subscribers. 
  
Soyuz moves ports 
 The three-man Expedition 14 crew of the International Space Station complete a short trip, flying their Soyuz capsule to another docking port in preparation for receiving a resupply ship.
   
  Undock | Re-dock 
  
STS-39: Military maneuvers 
 Space shuttle Discovery's STS-39 flight, launched in April 1991, served as a research mission for the U.S. Department of Defense. An instrument-laden spacecraft for the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization was released to watch Discovery perform countless rocket firings and maneuvers, as well as canisters releasing clouds of gas. The crew tells the story of the mission in this post-flight film presentation.
   
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STS-37: Spacewalkers help Gamma Ray Observatory 
 Seeking to study explosive forces across the universe, the Gamma Ray Observatory was launched aboard shuttle Atlantis in April 1991. But when the craft's communications antenna failed to unfold, spacewalking astronauts ventured outside the shuttle to save the day. The rescue EVA was followed by a planned spacewalk to test new equipment and techniques. The crew of STS-37 narrate this post-flight mission film.
   
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Mars rover seen by orbiter 
 Dazzling images from Mars are revealed by scientists. The robotic rover Opportunity has reached the massive Victoria crater with its steep cliffs and layers of rock exposing the planet's geologic history. Meanwhile, the new Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has photographed the rover and its surroundings from high above.
   
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STS-35: Insights into lifestyles of the galaxies 
 Loaded with a package of telescopes in its payload bay, shuttle Columbia soared into space for the first ASTRO mission in December 1990. The crew narrates this highlights film from the STS-35 mission in which the astronauts worked around the clock in two shifts to operate the observatory. The flight launched and then landed at night, and included the astronauts teaching from space.
   
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Hubble discovery 
 n this news conference from NASA Headquarters, scientists announce the Hubble Space Telescope's discovery of 16 extrasolar planet candidates orbiting a variety of distant stars in the central region of our Milky Way galaxy. Five of the newly found planets represent a new extreme type of planet not found in any nearby searches.
   
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Colliding galaxies pictured in amazing Hubble picture 
     HUBBLE INFORMATION CENTRE NEWS RELEASE Posted: October 17, 2006 
	
  
    Credit: NASA, ESA, and B. Whitmore (Space Telescope Science Institute). Acknowledgement: James Long (ESA/Hubble) Download larger image version here
   
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A new Hubble image of the Antennae galaxies is the sharpest yet of this merging pair of galaxies. As the two galaxies smash together, billions of stars are born, mostly in groups and clusters of stars. The brightest and most compact of these are called super star clusters.
The Universe is an all-action arena for some of the largest, most 
slowly evolving dramas known to mankind. A new picture taken by the 
Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), onboard the NASA/ESA Hubble Space 
Telescope, shows the "sharpest ever" view of the Antennae galaxies - 
seemingly a violent clash between a pair of once isolated galaxies, but 
in reality a fertile marriage. As the two galaxies interact, billions 
of stars are born, mostly in groups and clusters of stars. The 
brightest and most compact of these are called super star clusters. 
 The two spiral galaxies started to fuse together about 500 million 
years ago making the Antenna galaxies the nearest and youngest example 
of a pair of colliding galaxies. Nearly half of the faint objects in 
the Antennae are young clusters containing tens of thousands of stars. 
The orange blobs to the left and right of image centre are the two 
cores of the original galaxies and consist mainly of old stars criss-
crossed by filaments of dark brown dust. The two galaxies are dotted 
with brilliant blue star-forming regions surrounded by glowing hydrogen 
gas, appearing in the image in pink.
 The image allows astronomers to better distinguish between the stars 
and super star clusters created in the collision of two spiral 
galaxies. By age dating the clusters in the image, astronomers find 
that only about 10% of the newly formed super star clusters in the 
Antennae will live to see their ten millionth birthday. The vast 
majority of the super star clusters formed during this interaction will 
disperse, with the individual stars becoming part of the smooth 
background of the galaxy. It is however believed that about a hundred 
of the most massive clusters will survive to form regular globular 
clusters, similar to the globular clusters found in our own Milky Way 
galaxy. 
 The Antennae galaxies take their name from the long antenna-like "arms" 
extending far out from the nuclei of the two galaxies, best seen by 
ground-based telescopes. These "tidal tails" were formed during the 
initial encounter of the galaxies some 200 to 300 million years ago. 
They give us a preview of what may happen when our Milky Way galaxy 
will collide with the neighbouring Andromeda galaxy in several billion 
years.
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