Friday, March 7 2025 13:09 AEST

April 2020

Doug Drexler on The Orville

Mr Doug Drexler is finally back on Trekzone to talk about his new project, one that has him as excited as a kid in a candy store. Doug’s been hired for Orville’s third season and he says it’s a thrill…

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Space Force’s First Launch

Despite the Coronavirus pandemic sweeping the world, the US Space Force has overseen it’s first launch. The military communications satellite will aid missile detection and communications.

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OneWeb Files Bankruptcy

The main rival to Starlink has declared bankruptcy in the United States, but it seems like it wasn’t just the current world climate that contributed to the cause.

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SpaceX to Transport to Gateway

While NASA remains undecided on whether the Gateway station around the moon will actually go ahead, they’ve awarded SpaceX’s Dragon XL capsule the contract of getting cargo into lunar orbit to aid the Artemis missions.

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The Slowest Rotating ‘Cosmic Lighthouse’ Yet Discovered

Distant neutron stars typically spin a full 360 degrees within seconds. However, a new type of ‘radio transient object’ – so called as they are detected in radio waves – has emerged that rotate much more slowly. In the time it takes this cosmic lighthouse to rotate you could watch Interstellar twice before it completes a full spin.

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Mapping Ripples In A Cosmic Ocean

An international study led by Australian astronomers has created the most detailed maps of gravitational waves across the universe to date in three new research papers. The study also produced the largest ever galactic-scale gravitational wave detector and found further evidence of a “background” of these invisible yet incredibly fast ripples in space that can help unlock some major mysteries of the universe.

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How Saturn’s Rings Might Be Keeping A Youthful Appearance

Even though Saturn’s rings appear clean and young, they may be as old as the planet itself according to international researchers. It was previously thought that impacts with small rocky debris travelling through space – called micrometeoroids – would dirty and darken the rings over time, but in 2004 the Cassini spacecraft revealed the rings to be clean and bright suggesting that they are not very old.

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