NASA Faces Awkward, Unfortunate Spaceflight Gap
Reality bites: NASA faces awkward, unfortunate spaceflight gap.
Very brief descriptions, with appropriate links, of current or recent news items.
Reality bites: NASA faces awkward, unfortunate spaceflight gap.
With substantial numbers of Republicans and Democrats voting against, the House today nonetheless approved last week’s budget deal for the 2011 fiscal year by a vote of 260-167.
Next important deadline: on May 16 or so the federal government should reach its debt limit.
A revolt on the right over budget deal?
โThere is a gut feeling in some quarters today that the Boehner-Obama deal could be in bigger trouble than anybody realizes.โ
After 588 issues, Marvel to end publication of the Fantastic Four comic book.
The pig squeals at NOAA: The agency’s administrator told Congress yesterday that the 2011 budget deal will cause great harm to weather monitoring.
Note that NOAA is getting $4.5 billion in the 2011 budget, $700 million more than the weather agency got in 2008.
Only in Washington is a budget increase of almost 20 percent in three years called a draconian cut.
The telescope that ate astronomy: More budget problems for the James Webb Space Telescope, with its launch likely delayed again until 2018.
The uncertainty of science: An underground experiment in Italy has failed to detect dark matter, as theorized by scientists.
In a paper published online last night, the XENON100 researchers report three events detected during a 100-day run of the experiment last year that might have been due to dark matter1. However, as they expected to see between 1.2 and 2.4 background events โ interactions mostly caused by a radioactive contaminant in the xenon โ their result is statistically negative and therefore rules out the existence of many of the more strongly interacting and heavier WIMPs.
Boeing moves forward on its commercial manned capsule.
They really do think we are all fools: Last week’s budget deal actually cuts this yearโs deficit by only $352 million, not $38 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
And they might be right.
An evening pause: So cute. Just don’t mess with them!
Repeal it, dammit! Support for Obamacare continues to plummet.