Science-Fiction-Film Foe: Wo die Liebe hinfällt

Wenn man einen Menschen durch ein Roboter-Duplikat ersetzt, was passiert dann mit demjenigen, der ihn liebt? Interessante Frage, leider macht der Film einige Denkfehler. Eine Rezension von Peter Osteried (Science-Fiction, Film)

Wenn man einen Menschen durch ein Roboter-Duplikat ersetzt, was passiert dann mit demjenigen, der ihn liebt? Interessante Frage, leider macht der Film einige Denkfehler. Eine Rezension von Peter Osteried (Science-Fiction, Film)

Daily Telescope: A crab found in the night sky rather than the world’s oceans

Oh, to have seen this supernova back in the day.

The Crab Nebula in all its glory.

Enlarge / The Crab Nebula in all its glory. (credit: Paul Macklin)

Welcome to the Daily Telescope. There is a little too much darkness in this world and not enough light, a little too much pseudoscience and not enough science. We'll let other publications offer you a daily horoscope. At Ars Technica, we're going to take a different route, finding inspiration from very real images of a universe that is filled with stars and wonder.

Good morning. It's January 5, and today's photo reveals the Crab Nebula in all of its glory.

This object, known more formally as Messier 1 or M1, earned its colloquial name when Anglo-Irish astronomer William Parsons observed and drew this object in the early 1840s. It looked something like a crab with arms, and the appellation stuck. The nebula had been discovered about a century earlier by English astronomer John Bevis.

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Deutsche Telekom: Satelliten-SMS von Starlink könnte nach Deutschland kommen

Die Deutsche Telekom beobachtet neue Technologien wie Direct-to-Cell von Starlink. Über Technik, Standards und verwendete Roaming-Schnittstellen ist noch wenig bekannt. (Starlink, Telekom)

Die Deutsche Telekom beobachtet neue Technologien wie Direct-to-Cell von Starlink. Über Technik, Standards und verwendete Roaming-Schnittstellen ist noch wenig bekannt. (Starlink, Telekom)

X-59: Nasa stellt neues Überschallflugzeug vor

Mitte Januar 2024 wird die Nasa gemeinsam mit Lockheed Martin einen neuen Überschalljet vorstellen. X-59 soll ohne Überschall-Knall fliegen. (Überschall, Nasa)

Mitte Januar 2024 wird die Nasa gemeinsam mit Lockheed Martin einen neuen Überschalljet vorstellen. X-59 soll ohne Überschall-Knall fliegen. (Überschall, Nasa)

Rocket Report: SpaceX’s record year; Firefly’s Alpha rocket falls short

Living downrange from one of China’s launch sites sure doesn’t seem safe.

Firefly Aerospace's fourth Alpha rocket lifted off December 22 from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California.

Enlarge / Firefly Aerospace's fourth Alpha rocket lifted off December 22 from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California. (credit: Firefly Aerospace/Trevor Mahlmann)

Welcome to Edition 6.25 of the Rocket Report! We hope all our readers had a peaceful holiday break. While many of us were enjoying time off work, launch companies like SpaceX kept up the pace until the final days of 2023. Last year saw a record level of global launch activity, with 223 orbital launch attempts and 212 rockets successfully reaching orbit. Nearly half of these missions were by SpaceX.

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets, as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Firefly's fourth launch puts payload in wrong orbit. The fourth flight of Firefly Aerospace's Alpha rocket on December 22 placed a small Lockheed Martin technology demonstration satellite into a lower-than-planned orbit after lifting off from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California. US military tracking data indicated the Alpha rocket released its payload into an elliptical orbit ranging between 215 and 523 kilometers in altitude, not the mission's intended circular target orbit. Firefly later confirmed the Alpha rocket's second stage, which was supposed to reignite about 50 minutes after liftoff, did not deliver Lockheed Martin's satellite into the proper orbit. This satellite, nicknamed Tantrum, was designed to test Lockheed Martin's new wideband Electronically Steerable Antenna technology to demonstrate faster on-orbit sensor calibration to deliver rapid capabilities to US military forces.

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