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7416 results for: ‘推荐 (自适应手机版)远程线上教育机构网站模板 编程培训行业类网站源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.EWRHBZKSwYTWDQf’

  • Hot hot hot, above the Great Red Spot

    Posted by Henrik Melin in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on July 28, 2016 One of the largest remaining questions in understanding the upper atmosphere of Jupiter, the outmost layer of the atmosphere, is: ‘Why is this region so very hot?’.

  • Rajnikant Patel

    The academic profile of Dr Rajnikant Patel, Associate Professor at University of Leicester

  • #PlanetarySeminar: NASA’s Dr Paul Mahaffy on Mars from Curiosity and MAVEN

    Dr Paul Mahaffy, NASA AMES, SAM (MSL) and MAVEN Principal Investigator, will talk about Martian Organics, Isotopes, and the Evolution of Habitability Explored in Gale Crater with the Curiosity Rover and from Orbit with the MAVEN mission.

  • Leicester’s Jupiter Research on the BBC Sky at Night

    The BBC Sky at Night team travelled to the National Space Centre for a special show on five years of the Juno mission, featuring interviews with our Jupiter experts.

  • Jupiters jawdropping north pole unlike anything encountered in Solar System

    Last week NASA's Juno spacecraft sent back the first-ever images of Jupiter's north pole, taken during the spacecraft's first flyby of the planet with its instruments switched on.

  • The Great Jupiter-Saturn Conjunction of 2020

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 2 December 2020 A spectacular event is unfolding in the night skies this December, as Jupiter and Saturn appear closer in the sky than at any time in the past four centuries.

  • Current and recent visiting fellows

    Details on the experience you need and the documents you need to submit to be eligable for Visiting Fellow status.

  • Festival examines what the anti-apartheid picket can teach human rights defenders

    Dr Gavin Brown from the Department of Geography will be giving a talk on Tuesday 8 December at 6.

  • 12th September 2017 Sol 1814 – Curiosity’s View Across Gale Crater

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on September 12, 2017 View from Vera Rubin Ridge   The Curiosity Rover has reached an elevation of 300 metres above our landing site.

  • 1st February 2018 Sol 1952 Vera Rubin Ridge and Scotland on Mars

    Mars Science Laboratory

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