Tag Archives: carry

With Raheem Mostert expected to miss the Baltimore Ravens game expect Jeff Wilson and De’Von Achane to carry Miami Dolphins backfield – Sports Illustrated Miami Dolphins News, Analysis and – Sports Illustrated

  1. With Raheem Mostert expected to miss the Baltimore Ravens game expect Jeff Wilson and De’Von Achane to carry Miami Dolphins backfield – Sports Illustrated Miami Dolphins News, Analysis and Sports Illustrated
  2. Raheem Mostert, tied for NFL lead in touchdowns, expected to miss Dolphins’ game vs. Ravens NFL.com
  3. Dolphins RB Raheem Mostert won’t play vs. Ravens, source says ABC News
  4. Fantasy football Week 17 inactives: Who’s in and who’s out? ESPN
  5. NFL Week 17 injury updates, inactives: Dolphins expected to be without Raheem Mostert vs. Ravens, per report CBS Sports

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Sonia Gandhi prompts Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury to list her achievements in Parliament, directs him to ‘carry on’ after he stops abruptly – OpIndia

  1. Sonia Gandhi prompts Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury to list her achievements in Parliament, directs him to ‘carry on’ after he stops abruptly OpIndia
  2. Special Session | ‘Will You Send People to Pakistan if They Don’t Vote For You?’: Manoj Kumar Jha The Quint
  3. ‘This is true, bolne do’: Sonia gets angry as BJP MPs try to disrupt Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury’s speech Times of India
  4. Watch Cong MP Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury Speaks In Lok Sabha At The Beginning Of Parl Special Session India Today
  5. Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury flags ‘stark disparities’, bats for job creation to emerge as developed nation The Hindu
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Natalie Portman Says Women at Cannes Are Expected to Behave Differently Than Men: ‘How We Look, How We Carry Ourselves’ – Variety

  1. Natalie Portman Says Women at Cannes Are Expected to Behave Differently Than Men: ‘How We Look, How We Carry Ourselves’ Variety
  2. Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore Sex Scandal Drama ‘May December’ Heats Up Cannes With 6-Minute Standing Ovation Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore walk the Cannes red carpet for “May December” | AFP AFP News Agency
  4. Julianne Moore on ‘May December,’ Doesn’t Mention Mary Kay Letourneau – IndieWire IndieWire
  5. Star Tracks: Natalie Portman, Angelina Jolie, Ben Affleck [PHOTOS] PEOPLE
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Zach Whitecloud forgives ESPN anchor for insensitive joke: ‘I carry my grandfather’s name’ – The Athletic

  1. Zach Whitecloud forgives ESPN anchor for insensitive joke: ‘I carry my grandfather’s name’ The Athletic
  2. ESPN’s John Anderson apologizes for joke about Golden Knights D Zach Whitecloud’s name: ‘I blew it’ Yahoo Sports
  3. ESPN anchor apologizes after mocking indigenous NHL player’s name: ‘Great name if you’re a toilet paper’ Fox News
  4. Golden Knights’ Zach Whitecloud accepts sportscaster’s apology for insensitive joke Yardbarker
  5. ESPN anchor apologizes to Zach Whitecloud for mocking name – ESPN ESPN Australia
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Birth Control and Breast Cancer: Progestin-Only Methods Carry Similar Risk to Combination Options – Yahoo Life

  1. Birth Control and Breast Cancer: Progestin-Only Methods Carry Similar Risk to Combination Options Yahoo Life
  2. What’s the risk of breast cancer if you are on the pill? Should the new study worry you? The Indian Express
  3. All Hormonal Birth Control Increases Breast Cancer Risk, No Matter the Method, Study Says: Should You Stop Taking Yours? SurvivorNet
  4. The Story Behind a Birth Control Breast Cancer Scare Bloomberg
  5. Study Links Hormonal Birth Control to 20-30% Increase in Breast Cancer Risk | Weather.com The Weather Channel
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mason Greenwood won’t play or train while Manchester United carry out investigation

Mason Greenwood will not return to action for Manchester United while the Premier League club carries out an internal investigation into the allegations made against the 21-year-old.

Charges of attempted rape and assault against Greenwood were dropped on Thursday.

Greenwood, 21, was arrested in January 2022 amid allegations surrounding images and videos. The forward was later charged with attempted rape, controlling and coercive behaviour and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

On Thursday the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said there was “no longer a realistic prospect of conviction” after key witnesses withdrew their cooperation from the investigation.

But Greenwood, an England international, will not return to training or playing while United conduct an internal investigation, which is set to commence immediately.

The club said in a statement: “Manchester United notes the decision of the Crown Prosecution Service that all charges against Mason Greenwood have been dropped.

“The club will now conduct its own process before determining next steps.

“We will not make any further comment until that process is complete.”

It is not yet known how long this process will take to complete. United delayed commencing the internal investigation until after the charges against Greenwood were dropped, so as not to prejudice ongoing criminal proceedings.

Greenwood had been due to stand trial in November 2023.

A Greater Manchester Police statement on Thursday read: “Criminal proceedings against a 21-year-old man in connection with an investigation opened in January 2022 have, today (Thursday 2 February 2023), been discontinued by the CPS.”

Chief Superintendent Michaela Kerr, GMP’s Head of Public Protection, added: “Given the significant media coverage of this case, it is only fair that we share the news that the 21-year-old man, who had been arrested and charged in connection with an investigation opened in January 2022, no longer faces criminal proceedings in relation to this.

“The investigation team has remained in regular contact with the legal team, providing any updates of note, and so understand the rationale for the discontinuation of proceedings at this stage, and that this decision has not been taken lightly.

“Despite the media and public’s interest in this case, we have decided not to comment on it in any further detail.”

A CPS spokesperson told The Athletic: “We have a duty to keep cases under continuous review.

“In this case a combination of the withdrawal of key witnesses and new material that came to light meant there was no longer a realistic prospect of conviction. In these circumstances, we are under a duty to stop the case.

“We have explained our decision to all parties.

“We would always encourage any potential victims to come forward and report to police and we will prosecute wherever our legal test is met.”

(Photo: Matthew Ashton – AMA/Getty Images)



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SpaceX Capsule Refitted to Carry 5 Crew Members in Case of ISS Emergency

SpaceX Dragon Endurance arriving at the ISS on October 6, 2022.

A seat liner from the damaged Soyuz MS-22 capsule at the International Space Station has been relocated to Endurance, converting the SpaceX Crew Dragon to a five-person “lifeboat” should the crew be forced to evacuate in the event of an extreme emergency.

The International Space Station mission management team made the decision to relocate the seat liner from Soyuz MS-22 to the Endurance Crew Dragon on January 12, according to a NASA statement. The seat liner in question belongs to NASA astronaut Frank Rubio, who flew to the ISS on September 21, 2022 aboard the Russian Soyuz craft. This is being done to “provide lifeboat capabilities in the event Rubio would need to return to Earth because of an emergency evacuation from the space station,” the space agency said.

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An apparent micrometeorite struck the Soyuz in December, damaging its cooling system. Roscosmos deemed the spacecraft as being unsafe for a crew ride back to Earth, forcing the Russian space agency and NASA to come up with a solution. That solution is MS-23—an uncrewed replacement Soyuz vehicle that won’t launch to the ISS until February 22 at the earliest.

That’s 33 days from now, an uncomfortable length of time during which Rubio and cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitri Petelin don’t have a safe and reliable means of returning to Earth, should a severe emergency arise on the ISS. A full evacuation of the orbital outpost has never occurred, but that doesn’t mean it can’t happen—hence the need to increase the crew capacity of Endurance, which was originally configured for four astronauts: NASA astronauts Nicole Mann and Josh Cassada, Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), and Anna Kikina of Roscosmos.

On January 17, NASA astronauts Josh Cassada and Nicole Mann worked inside of the Endurance crew ship, gathering tools and performing prep work in advance of the seat liner relocation. The crew moved Rubio’s seat liner and installed it inside the Crew Dragon on the following day, according to NASA. Endurance can now safely accommodate five astronauts, but as NASA points out, the adjustment also “allows for increased crew protection by reducing the heat load inside the MS-22 spacecraft for Prokopyev and Petelin in case of an emergency return to Earth.” Indeed, temperatures inside the MS-22 crew cabin could fluctuate between 100 and 108 degrees Fahrenheit (high 30s to low 40s Celsius) during reentry, according to Roscosmos.

The replacement MS-23 Soyuz is expected to arrive at the ISS in late February, but that doesn’t mean the three-person crew will immediately return to Earth. A replacement crew was supposed to fly on MS-23, but that mission now likely won’t fly until the fall of 2023. A consequence of this is that the MS-22 trio might have to stay on the ISS for an entire year. Dina Contella, ISS program operations integration manager, hinted as much during a news briefing held on Tuesday, saying Rubio, Prokopyev, and Petelin will “probably” return to Earth in September, as reported in Ars Technica

As for the fate of MS-22, it will return to Earth—sans crew—after MS-23 arrives at the station. Once that happens, Rubio’s seat liner and those belonging to Prokopyev and Petelin (currently inside MS-22) will be moved to the newly arrived Soyuz vehicle.

More: Russia Wants to Trade 36 Hijacked Satellites for Soyuz Rocket

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Foo Fighters end ‘the most difficult and tragic year that our band has ever known’ with pledge to carry on without Taylor Hawkins

Pat Smear, Taylor Hawkins, and Dave Grohl of Foo Fighters attend the Los Angeles premiere of ‘Studio 666’ at Hollywood’s TCL Chinese Theatre just one month before Hawkins’s death. (Photo: Rich Fury/Getty Images)

After Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins died suddenly on March 25, 2022, the future of the band was in doubt, given the extremely close friendship that Hawkins shared with Foos frontman Dave Grohl as well as his crucial role in the lineup (he’d been a core member since 1997, co-writing on every album starting with 1999’s There Is Nothing Left to Lose). Four days after Hawkins’s death, Foo Fighters indefinitely canceled all of their future gigs, including a performance at the 64th annual Grammys ceremony (where they ended up bittersweetly winning three awards in absentia.)

While Grohl has occasionally made live surprise cameos — with Lionel Richie at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony, with Billie Eilish at Los Angeles’s Forum, with Sir Paul McCartney at Glastonbury — the band’s only live performances have been at two all-star tribute concerts held in London and Los Angeles this past September. But now, Foo Fighters have confirmed in an emotional social media post that they will carry on without Hawkins — even though they will understandably be a “different band.”

“As we say goodbye to the most difficult and tragic year that our band has ever known, we are reminded of how thankful we are for the people that we love and cherish most, and for the loved ones who are no longer with us,” the band stated. “Foo Fighters were formed 27 years ago to represent the healing power of music and a continuation of life. And for the past 27 years our fans have built a worldwide community, a devoted support system that has helped us all get through the darkest of times together. A place to share our joy and our pain, our hopes and fears, and to join in a chorus of life together through music. Without Taylor, we never would have become the band that we were — and without Taylor, we know that we’re going to be a different band going forward. We also know that you, the fans, meant as much to Taylor as he meant to you. And we know that when we see you again — and we will soon — he’ll be there in spirit with all of us every night.”

The year and a half leading up to Hawkins’s shocking death had been an especially bustling and prolific time for the seemingly unstoppable Foo Fighters. They released their Grammy-winning 10th album Medicine at Midnight, the Record Store Day disco covers album Hail Satin, and the horror-comedy movie Studio 666; performed at President Joe Biden’s inauguration; received the Global Icon Award at the 2021 MTV Video Music Awards; and were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame by McCartney.

Inductee Taylor Hawkins of Foo Fighters speaks onstage during the 36th annual Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony on Oct. 30, 2021. (Photo: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame )

The Foo Fighters were also one of the first actively touring bands to get back onstage once COVID restrictions eased up in 2021, starting with a six-song set at SoFi Stadium’s Vax Live event on May 2 that year, followed by a full 23-song show at the 610-capacity Canyon Club in Agoura, Calif., to celebrate the “reopening” of Los Angeles County nightlife on June 15. The Foos also reopened New York’s Madison Square Garden just five days after the Canyon Club show and headlined several festivals, including Lollapalooza in Chicago. Overall, they played about 40 shows in 2021, and at the time of Hawkins’s death, there had been roughly 60 dates, throughout North America, South America, Europe, and Australia, on the Foo Fighters’ calendar for 2022.

Hawkins’s final show with Foo Fighters was at Lollapalooza Argentina on March 20, 2022. Five days later, he was found dead in his hotel room in Bogotá, Colombia, just hours before the Foos were set to perform at the Estéreo Picnic Festival; in lieu of the concert, candles were placed onstage that night to honor him. Two months after his death, Rolling Stone published a bombshell report titled “Inside Taylor Hawkins’s Final Days as a Foo Fighter,” claiming that the drummer had been on the brink of exhaustion from playing so many physically taxing, nearly three-hour shows, and had been considering scaling back his duties or even quitting the band entirely because he “knew he didn’t have it in him.” The Foos’ camp never publicly addressed these claims, but two of Hawkins’s close friends who were interviewed for the piece, Pearl Jam’s Matt Cameron and the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Chad Smith, blasted Rolling Stone‘s report.

A cause of death has still not been revealed, and Foo Fighters’ Dec. 31 statement did not mention who might replace Hawkins in the lineup or any specific plans for a new album or tour.

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Tiny interstellar probes could carry engineered microbes to other stars

Microbes carried by laser-propelled sails could serve as interstellar probes that can build communications stations to phone home from Alpha Centauri, suggests a scientist known for wanting to resurrect extinct woolly mammoths and use DNA to detect dark matter.

This concept from George Church, a geneticist at Harvard University, builds upon efforts to greatly speed up spaceflight. Current spacecraft usually take years to make trips within the solar system; for example, NASA’s New Horizons probe took nearly 10 years to reach Pluto.

In theory, spacecraft using conventional rockets would require thousands of years to complete an interstellar voyage. For instance, Alpha Centauri, the nearest star system to Earth, is located about 4.37 light-years away — more than 25.6 trillion miles (41.2 trillion kilometers), or more than 276,000 times the distance from Earth to the sun. NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft, which launched in 1977 and reached interstellar space in 2012, would take about 75,000 years to reach Alpha Centauri even if the probe were headed in the right direction, which it’s not.

The interstellar challenge

The problem that all rocket thrusters face is that the propellant they carry with them has mass. Long trips need a lot of propellant, which makes spacecraft heavy. This, in turn, requires more propellant, making them heavier, and so on. 

Previous research has suggested that “light sailing” might be one of the only feasible ways to get a spacecraft to another star within a human lifetime. Although light does not exert much pressure, scientists have long suggested that what little pressure it does apply could have a major effect. Indeed, many experiments have shown that “solar sails” can rely on sunlight for propulsion if the spacecraft is light enough and has a big enough sail. 

Indeed, the $100 million Breakthrough Starshot initiative, announced in 2016, plans to launch swarms of microchip-size spacecraft to Alpha Centauri, each of them equipped with extraordinarily thin, incredibly reflective sails propelled by the most powerful lasers ever built. The plan has them flying at up to 20% the speed of light, reaching Alpha Centauri in about 20 years.

However, Starshot faces many technical challenges. These include building lasers powerful enough for propulsion and creating sails that can withstand extraordinary forces and stay on track to their targets.

George Church, Ph.D., is a genetics professor at Harvard Medical School and the Founding Core Faculty and Lead for Synthetic Biology at the Wyss Institute of Harvard University. He is also a Professor of Health Sciences and Technology at Harvard and the Massachusetts Insitute of Technology and serves as Director for both the U.S. Department of Energy Technology Center and National Institutes of Health Center of Excellence in Genomic Science.

In addition, even if Starshot successfully launches “space-chips” at Alpha Centauri, without another laser at that destination, there is no way for them to slow down. This likely limits Starshot missions to flybys instead of landings.

Any Starshot probe attempt to land would likely prove catastrophic. Although the spacecraft are designed to be extraordinarily lightweight — each just 0.035 ounces (1 gram) or so — when traveling at 20% the speed of light, they would each pack as much energy as one-eight the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima in World War II, Church noted.

Instead, Church suggested using probes a billion times lighter. If they did make impact, it would only pack as much energy as half a food calorie, he noted.

“A probe that lands is tremendously more valuable than one that flies by at great distance and for a very brief time,” Church told Space.com.

Picogram interstellar probes

Breakthrough Starshot’s nanocraft require powerful lasers to reach other stars, technology we don’t have yet. (Image credit: Breakthrough Prize Foundation (via Livestream))

How might such an incredibly light probe prove useful? If they carried genetically modified microbes, they could build themselves equipment upon landing, Church suggested.

Previously, Church has made a number of radical proposals that sound like science fiction. For example, he suggested DNA could help detect dark matter, the invisible and largely intangible substance that researchers suggest makes up about five-sixths of all matter in the universe. He also wants to resurrect extinct beasts such as the woolly mammoth.

However, Church is also a pioneering biologist. In 1984, he developed the first direct genomic sequencing method, which resulted in the first genome sequence, that of Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium normally found in the human stomach. He also helped initiate the Human Genome Project in 1984 to completely map the roughly 3 billion letters contained in human DNA.

Church noted that he became interested in this new idea because of how he grew up in Florida in the shadow of Cape Canaveral rocket launches, and because he teaches a course at MIT called “How To Grow Almost Anything.” As such, he was “looking for projects that push that envelope,” he said.

Previously, scientists have suggested creating interstellar “von Neumann” probes that can replicate themselves and equipment. The concept is named after mathematician John von Neumann, who proposed the idea of self-replicating machines in 1948, Church noted.

Church based his new proposal both on his experience in biology and the pioneering research conducted for Starshot. Since his probes are only about one-billionth the mass of Starshot craft, he suggested that a billion of his probes could be launched for a similar cost to a single Starshot mission.

Starshot also calls for a 100-gigawatt laser array, which would be by far be the most powerful laser humanity has ever constructed. Since Church suggested extraordinarily tiny probes, a relatively modest laser might suffice, he said. For example, a mothership about 0.0014 ounces (40 mg) in mass with a 1.3-foot-diameter (0.4 meter) sail that carries many tiny probes might only require a 2-gigawatt laser array.

Starshot’s probes often call for a sail about 108 square feet (10 square meters) in size with a mass of less than 0.035 ounces (1 gram). In comparison, given how a typical bacterium has a mass of about 1 picogram, or one-trillionth of a gram, it would only require a sail about 15 millionths of a square inch (0.0001 square centimeters) in size with a mass of about 7.6 picograms, Church said. He added that light sails about 8.8 millionths of an ounce (0.25 milligrams) in mass have already been tested in vacuum and in microgravity.

“Deceleration is hard even for picogram scale, but not even under consideration for gram scale,” Church said.

Interstellar probes would likely experience impacts that could cripple or destroy them — from dust grains, or even hydrogen atoms. However, the fact that one could launch a billion or so microbial probes for the cost of one Starshot craft means that losing probes might not prove a major setback.

A living probe with ‘biolaser’

A probe that lands is tremendously more valuable than one that flies by at great distance and for a very brief time.

George Church, Ph.D.

After the probes reached their destination, Church suggested that genetically modified microbes could build themselves communications modules. One strategy to communicate might be bioluminescence, with which microbes could emit light using the kinds of molecules found in fireflies or other naturally bioluminescent organisms. Although this light might be relatively dim, Church noted that given no predators and ideal growing conditions, microbes could cover an entirely planetary surface in just 124 hours.

For a more compact approach, Church suggested a living probe might create a “biolaser” capable of converting starlight into a communication beam. He noted that the gold beetle (Aspidimorpha tecta) can build reflective surfaces potentially useful for creating such an organic device, although Church conceded that building it “would be an interesting laboratory challenge.”

Church suggested the communications array these probes build could transmit flashes back at Earth. These beams could encode data about the destination site such as temperatures, pressure and pH.

Related: A Wild ‘Interstellar Probe’ Mission Idea Is Gaining Momentum

It might prove difficult to find places for these interstellar seeds to grow. “This is why we want millions of shots on millions of target sites,” Church said. Scientists could also rely on so-called “extremophile” microbes known to survive extremes of temperature, pH, pressure and other conditions on Earth, Church said.

Church noted that one potential target might be the closest known exoplanet—Proxima Centauri b, a rocky world in the Alpha Centauri system. However, it receives only 3% of the kind of light useful for photosynthesis, which could make it difficult for any microbial probes to thrive there. It could also potentially experience 10,000 more flares from its star capable of stripping off any atmosphere, making it a hostile place to try and live.

Other potential targets include worlds that may exist around the sun-like stars Alpha Centauri A and B in the Alpha Centauri system. These may not be rocky planets—instead, they may be more similar to Uranus and Neptune, and covered in water and ammonia. However, there are microbes on Earth that could survive in such locales, such as bacteria found in deep-ocean hydrothermal vents.

One major concern would be planetary protection issues — in this case, making sure that Earth microbes do not inflict damage on any alien life that might exist at destinations. Probes can be designed to “aim for strictly limited amount of growth,” Church suggested. An “absolutely high priority” would be testing any potential interstellar probes at targets within the solar system first to see how well they perform, he added.

Church detailed his idea (opens in new tab) Dec. 6 in the journal Astrobiology.

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NASA’s Artemis 1 moon mission will carry benefits back to Earth

NASA’s new moon mission will bring science to multiple solar system destinations, a senior agency official said Wednesday (Nov. 16).

Hours after the launch of Artemis 1 kicked off the larger Artemis program effort to return humans to the moon, a NASA official said that the uncrewed mission, which lifted off at 1:47 a.m. EST (0647 GMT), is a keystone in building future missions with humans on board.

“Artemis 1 is the first in a series of increasingly complex missions to explore the moon in preparation for missions to Mars,” Kate Calvin, NASA’s chief scientist and senior climate advisor, told Space.com in a video interview. 

Related: Artemis 1 launch photos: Amazing views of NASA’s moon rocket debut (gallery)

Compared to the crewed Apollo program moon missions of the 1960s and 1970s, the Artemis program is meant to do more science and stay for longer than even the three days that longer missions like Apollo 17 managed at the end of the program, Calvin explained.

“The science, we’re using both humans and robots to learn more about the moon, in preparation for … other missions in the future,” she said, referring both to Artemis missions and to crewed efforts with other celestial destinations.

While Artemis 1 is flying to lunar realms, Calvin said the mission will nonetheless benefit Earth science. Scientific payloads and mannequins on board the Orion spacecraft will be measuring and assessing radiation in cislunar space to learn “impacts on crew and electronics,” while other experiments and cubesats will gather pictures and biological measurements of living creatures like algae, seeds, fungi and yeast.

Practice living off-Earth for long periods will also benefit sustainability on our planet, Calvin said.

Related: Epic Artemis 1 rocket launch spotted streaking through Earth’s atmosphere in satellite image

The solar arrays on NASA’s Artemis 1 Orion spacecraft are seen during its first orbital maneuvering system engine burn on Nov. 16, 2022. (Image credit: NASA TV)

Following Artemis 1 is the Artemis 2 crewed mission that will loop around the moon no earlier than 2024, and the Artemis 3 landing mission targeting 2025 or 2026, assuming the debut effort goes as planned.

“Each mission within Artemis is increasing the complexity,” Calvin said. “We’re really excited about that, as we’re moving out into back to the moon and on to Mars.”

Elizabeth Howell is the co-author of “Why Am I Taller (opens in new tab)?” (ECW Press, 2022; with Canadian astronaut Dave Williams), a book about space medicine. Follow her on Twitter @howellspace (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).



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