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RADIO TELESCOPES AROUND THE WORLD COMBINE IN REAL TIME
Oct 8, 2004 - European and US astronomers have linked up their radio telescopes for 
the first time in real-time, through the Internet. The researchers have created the 
world's biggest virtual radio telescope by merging observations from instruments in 
the UK, Sweden, the Netherlands, Poland, and Puerto Rico. The virtual instrument has a 
resolution which is 5 times better than the Hubble Space Telescope. The team imaged an 
object called IRC+10420, a star nearing the end of its life; at some point in the near 
future it'll explode as a supernova.

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ROVERS STILL TURNING UP WATER EVIDENCE
Oct 8, 2004 - Now operating three times longer than originally expected, NASA's Mars 
Exploration Rovers are still turning up fresh evidence that liquid water once flowed 
on Mars. Opportunity has found a rock, dubbed "Escher", which has a network of cracks 
similar to cracked mud when the water has dried up. On the other side of Mars, Spirit 
is still climbing up the "Columbia Hills", and it seems that every rock it looks at 
shows evidence that it was altered by water. "We haven't seen a single unaltered 
volcanic rock, since we crossed the boundary from the plains into the hills, and I'm 
beginning to suspect we never will," said principal investigator Dr. Steve Squyres.

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MOTION OF MATERIAL IN THE EARLY UNIVERSE
Oct 8, 2004 - Researchers from Caltech have looked deep into space to a time when 
early material in the Universe was swirling towards the creation of galaxy clusters 
and superclusters. They did their measurements using an instrument in the Chilean 
Andes called the Cosmic Background Imager (CBI), which looks at the Universe when it 
was only 400,000 years old - a time before galaxies, stars, and planets had formed. By 
watching the motion of this material as it began forming larger structures, the 
researchers were able to confirm that dark matter and dark energy were having an 
effect even then.

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