Petitions of the week – SCOTUSblog

Posted Wed, April 8th, 2020 9:50 am by Andrew Hamm

This week we highlight petitions pending before the Supreme Court that address, among other things, whether a local ordinance that discriminates against interstate commerce, and was enacted for a discriminatory purpose, must discriminate exclusively against nonresidents to be subject to heightened scrutiny under the dormant commerce clause; whether a claim for violation of a prisoner-patients 14th Amendment right to informed consent requires a showing of deliberate indifference and proof of refusal; and whether the defenses of qualified immunity or good faith allow a defendant who takes another persons money or property in violation of the Constitutionbut in reliance on a statute or court ruling that is later declared unconstitutionalto keep that money or property when the owner sues for its return.

Thepetitions of the weekare below the jump:

Center for Biological Diversity v. Wolf19-975Issue: Whether Section 102(c) of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996which grants the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security unfettered discretion to waive all federal, and related state, local, and tribal laws, regulations and legal requirements, and sets forth no standards or criteria to apply in determining whether such waiver is necessary for expeditious border-wall constructionviolates the separation of powers, the nondelegation doctrine and the presentment clause of the Constitution.

Jessop v. City of Fresno, California19-1021Issue: Whether it is clearly established that the Fourth Amendment prohibits police officers from stealing property listed in a search warrant.

Rosenblatt v. City of Santa Monica, California19-1081Issues: (1) Whether a local ordinance that discriminates against interstate commerce, and was enacted for a discriminatory purpose, must additionally discriminate exclusively against nonresidents to be subject to heightened scrutiny under the dormant commerce clause; and (2) whether a local ordinance that purports to ban advertisements for interstate services made over the internet, and is enforced in that extraterritorial manner, can be saved from dormant commerce clause scrutiny based on an irrebuttable presumption that the legislature did not intend for the ordinance to apply in the extraterritorial manner in which the ordinance is being enforced.

Deasey v. Slater19-1085Issue: Whether, for purposes of qualified immunity, a merely sufficiently analogous case is enough to show that the law is clearly established, or whether something more is required, i.e., a closely analogous case finding the alleged violation unlawful.

Sharp v. Harris19-1105Issues: (1) Whether, in holding that the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals made an unreasonable determination of the facts, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit contravened the Supreme Courts repeated admonition that state-court decisions be given the benefit of the doubt, as inCullen v. PinholsterandWoodford v. Visciotti; and (2) whether the OCCA was objectively unreasonable in crediting the testimony of three experts who opined that the respondent, Jimmy Dean Harris, was not intellectually disabled and in not crediting the testimony of the one dissenting doctor, who has been censured, used an outdated test, made no assessment of adaptive functioning and disregarded the influence of factors he acknowledged could influence IQ test scores.

Sharp v. Smith19-1106Issues: (1) Whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit erred in concluding thatMoore v. Texas IandMoore v. Texas IIwere mere applications ofAtkins v. Virginiathat could be applied retroactively on collateral review, contrary toShoop v. Hilland the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit; (2) whether, in sua sponte holding that the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals did not rule on the adaptive-functioning prong because its analysis was too cursory, the 10th Circuit violated the Supreme Courts precedent that forbids the imposition of opinion-writing standards,Johnson v. Williams; and (3) whether, reviewed de novo or with deference, the 10th Circuit erred in granting habeas relief on the respondent Roderick Smiths claim of adaptive-functioning deficits when Smiths only expert to opine on this prong improperly administered the adaptive-functioning assessment directly to Smith, contemporaneously administered other tests to Smith that showed malingering and relied on information that was disputed by other witnesses.

National Collegiate Athletic Association v. New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemens Association19-1114Issues: (1) Whether a party was wrongfully enjoined underFederal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(c)when the district court confirmed via the grant of a permanent injunction that its entry of a temporary restraining order was correct under then-applicable law; and (2) whether a district court retains its full equitable discretion to deny recovery on a Rule 65(c) injunction bond.

Mooney v. Illinois Education Association19-1126Issues: (1) Whether42 U.S.C. 1983provides a good-faith defense to private entities who violate anothers constitutional rights before the courts have clearly established the illegality of their conduct; and (2) whether the defenses of qualified immunity or good faith allow a defendant who takes another persons money or property in violation of the Constitutionbut in reliance on a statute or court ruling that purported to authorize its conduct and is only later declared unconstitutionalto keep that money or property when the owner sues for its return.

Danielson v. Inslee19-1130Issues: (1) Whether42 U.S.C. 1983provides a good-faith defense to private entities who violate anothers constitutional rights before the courts have clearly established the illegality of their conduct; and (2) whether the defenses of qualified immunity or good faith allow a defendant who takes another persons money or property in violation of the Constitutionbut in reliance on a statute or court ruling that purported to authorize its conduct and is only later declared unconstitutionalto keep that money or property when the owner sues for its return.

Knight v. Grossman19-1138Issue: Whether a claim for violation of a prisoner-patients 14th Amendment right to informed consent requires a showing of deliberate indifference and proof of refusal or whether the approach adopted by a majority of circuits, which applies a balancing test weighing, on one hand, the states interests in providing for the basic needs of prisoners and, on the other hand, the prisoners right to such information as is reasonably necessary to make an informed decision to accept or reject proposed treatment as well as a reasonable explanation of the viable alternative treatments available, should control.

Posted in Center for Biological Diversity v. Wolf, Jessop v. City of Fresno, California, Rosenblatt v. City of Santa Monica, California, Deasey v. Slater, Sharp v. Harris, Sharp v. Smith, National Collegiate Athletic Association v. New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemens Association, Mooney v. Illinois Education Association, Danielson v. Inslee, Knight v. Grossman, Cases in the Pipeline

Recommended Citation: Andrew Hamm, Petitions of the week, SCOTUSblog (Apr. 8, 2020, 9:50 AM), https://www.scotusblog.com/2020/04/petitions-of-the-week-90/

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Space exploration is booming now’s the time to back it – MoneyWeek

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From liftoff to touchdown: The hectic timeline of Apollo 13 – Space.com

After performing two successful moon landings, NASA had pulled ahead of the Soviet Union as the undisputed leader in the Space Race. But a potentially fatal accident on its third lunar surface-bound mission was about to bring it back down to Earth.

Apollo 13 was surrounded by superstition from the start, the number 13 believed to be unlucky, but NASA wasnt going to let that get in the way of Science. The unfortunate events that transpired left Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and John Swigert in the belly of the beast as they were put on a timer to return back to Earth.

Related: Apollo 13 in Real Time website offers new insight into mission, 50 years later

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The crew was commanded by Jim Lovell, a NASA veteran who had flown across the Gemini and Apollo programs, with command module (CM) pilot John "Jack" Swigert and lunar module (LM) pilot Fred Haise, both of whom hadnt yet traveled to space.

The three men boarded the CM, nicknamed Odyssey, at the tip of a Saturn V rocket at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on April 11, 1970. Here, NASA was reminded again of waning interest in space exploration with a launch turnout of around 200,000 people. It was a crowd that paled in comparison to the 7 million who had come to see Apollo 11 liftoff almost a year earlier.

Related: Where are NASA's extra Saturn V moon rockets from the Apollo era?

Approaching 56 hours into the mission and around 205,000 miles (330,000 kilometers) from home, the crew had just ended a live TV broadcast though not many TV stations were interested enough to show it. Noticing a slight drop in pressure, Houston flight controllers wanted to check the oxygen levels in the Service Module (SM), so they asked Swigert to perform a routine cryo stir on the tanks.

This is where things went horribly wrong.

The crew heard a loud bang from outside and called down to Houston to report, with Swigert famously saying, "Okay, Houston, we've had a problem here."

Both the crew and the ground team noticed that the oxygen tanks and fuel cells were showing alarming readings, with oxygen tank two completely depleted and tank one falling at a steady rate. Several people at Mission Control assumed this was a fault with instrumentation, but Lovell reported he could see gas leaking out of the SM, confirming their readings were worryingly correct.

They would later discover that a current overload in an oxygen tank during routine testing shorted out the heater switch and had fused the circuit breaker shut, turning the tank into a bomb. A bomb that had been set off when Swigert had started the stir, and blown a 13-foot (3.9-meter) panel off the SM. With power and oxygen failing fast, Apollo 13s mission was no longer to land on the moon, but to return home alive.

It was decided that the remaining fuel cell for the CM needed to be preserved for re-entry since this was impossible in the LM, called Aquarius. The crew would need to power down the CM and evacuate to the Aquarius, which could be used as a lifeboat because it had its own life support system. This, however, presented problems: the LM was only designed for two astronauts to visit the Moon for around 20 hours, whereas the trip home would require all three men to be stuffed in the capsule for four or five days.

As the craft drifted 157 miles (254 km) beyond the far side of the moon, another maneuver was planned to speed up the journey two hours after pericynthion, the closest approach to the moon. It was also debated whether the SM should be jettisoned to increase speed further, but some argued this could expose the CMs heat shield to the freezing cold of space for too long, risking it breaking on re-entry. This would also involve using all remaining fuel, meaning no other course corrections could be performed later. NASA chose the safer option of a four-minute burn, which would shave off 12 hours of flight and put the craft on target with the Pacific Ocean. Almost 24 hours after the explosion, the crew completed another successful burn.

Related: This stunning 4K video re-creates Apollo 13's perilous trip around moon

However, now carbon dioxide levels were rising. The scrubbing system aboard the LM wasnt designed to filter the air for three, and calculations saw that the lithium hydroxide canisters that removed the CO2 would not support the crew until return. The CM had its own supply of canisters, but because of a different design, these were incompatible. It was up to Houston to find a makeshift filtration method using only items on board Apollo 13. Within 35 hours of testing, they had a fix utilizing spacesuit hoses, plastic bags and duct tape.

Next was to jettison the damaged SM while using the LM thrusters to move a safe distance from it. This was the first time the crew saw the extent of the explosion, relaying the damage down to the ground. The LM jettison was next, and a special last-minute procedure had been designed to keep distance by pressurizing the connecting tunnel before release. Calculations were a success, and the crew bid farewell to Aquarius, the reason they had made it this far.

As Odyssey began its descent, tensions were high and the world was watching. Ionized air around the craft upon re-entry meant a total communications blackout, and for over four minutes NASA had no contact, fearing the shields or parachutes could still fail. After a longer-than-expected blackout, the crew finally made contact. They had made it home, splashing down in the Pacific Ocean to be picked up by USS Iwo Jima. The mission was dubbed a "successful failure," proving NASA could work well in a crisis.

Related: Apollo 13's importance: How failure can lead to great success

Additional resources:

This article was adapted from a previous version published in All About Space Bookazine, a Future Ltd. publication. Follow us on Twitter@Spacedotcomand onFacebook.

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Temple honors 30th anniversary of PA space grant in Washington, DC – Temple Universirty College of Engineering

In late-February, Temple engineering faculty and students from a NASA-funded space lab celebrated the 30th anniversary of the NASA Space Grant with a special trip to Washington, DC.

John Helferty, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Director of the Student Space Exploration and Embedded Systems Lab, helped to organize the trip.

"It was a great way to highlight the work that's been done over the last three decades," Dr. Helferty said. "Students have truly benefited from NASA's support in bringing space-related engineering projects and opportunities for discovery."

The team brought completed robotics projects to showcase to members of Congress and their staffs, such as a high-altitude balloon payload launched during the 2017 solar eclipse. Students also met NASA Administrator Jim Brindistine for a Q&A session at NASA headquarters, and heard about the NASA Artemis program.

"It was kind of surreal." added Melony Breeze, a mechanical engineering major who was joined by fellow students Morgan Basileo, Darshan Patel and David Fiel. "It was great to see how many different facets there are at work and research being done at both graduate and undergraduate levels, all covered under the space umbrella."

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On Orbit Live at SATELLITE What Does ‘New Space’ Really Mean? – Via Satellite

The topic of this episode our first live podcast is more or less a question. What exactly do we, people in the space and satellite industry, mean when we use the term New Space? New Space is often used to describe new companies, new ideas, and new technologies. Is New Space a technical term? Or, is it a cultural identity?

This episode was recorded during the SATELLITE 2020 show in Washington D.C., and its co-hosted by our good friends Grace Graham (Brooke Owens Fellow, Utah State University, Via Satellite contributor) and Brian Garret-Glazer (Avionics Magazine). Our special guest panelists are Dr. Tanya Harrison (Planet), Charlie Nitschelm (Students for the Exploration and Development of Space SEDS), Rafferty Jackson (Jack Industries, Astia) and Ali Younis (Astranis). Via Satellite also covered the panel during SATELLITE.

Wed like to thank Charlie and SEDS for sponsoring this episode. SEDS is a non-profit that empowers young people to participate and make an impact in space exploration. Visit SEDS website for more information about how you can join or volunteer for SEDS and their many causes and events throughout the year.

Finally, the Via Satellite team would like to send our best wishes to all of our listeners as we deal with this global health crisis. We hope all of you stay safe and healthy, and we also thank you for listening to this podcast. We may be stuck inside, but thanks to modern technology, we can still talk to people all around the world. So, if you have an idea for an episode, or are interested in participating in a discussion, please follow us and message us on Twitter (@OnOrbitPodcast). Enjoy the show!

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Russia Says Trump’s Space Mining Order Is an Attempt to ‘Seize’ Other Planets – PCMag

Russian space agency Roscosmos has accused Donald Trump of attempting to seize other planets, through the executive order the President signed on Monday.

The executive order proposes that the United States mine celestial bodies including the moon and Mars for water and certain minerals. The Trump administration does not view [space] as a global commons and therefore encourages the right to engage in commercial exploration, recovery, and use of resources in outer space.

Legislation already exists that puts jurisdiction of all celestial bodies under international law. It's called the 1979 Moon Agreement, but only 18 states have signed it and no state that engages in space exploration, such as Russia, China, the United States, Japan, or countries included in the European Space Agency, have ratified it. In the executive order, the Trump administration states that it does not consider this treaty effective, and would object to any attempt by any other state or international organization to treat the Moon Agreement as reflecting or otherwise expressing customary international law.

Roscomos claims the order puts the United States against the notion of space belonging to humanity as a whole. Attempts to expropriate outer space and aggressive plans to actually seize territories of other planets hardly set the countries (on course for) fruitful cooperation, it said in a statement, reported by Reuters.

Sergei Savelyev, Roscomos deputy head in charge of international cooperation, alluded that Trumps executive order was similar to colonialism, commenting that there have already been examples in history when one country decided to start seizing territories in its own interests and everyone remembers how that turned out, according to the Moscow Times.

A spokesperson for the Kremlin, Dmitry Peskov, said that any kind of attempt to privatise space in one form or another - and I find it difficult to say now whether this can be seen as an attempt to privatise space - would be unacceptable.

Last year, Donald Trump introduced the Space Force to the US military, giving it the authority to "organize, train, and equip military space forces to ensure unfettered access to, and freedom to operate in space, and to provide vital capabilities to joint and coalition forces in peacetime and across the spectrum of conflict." In March, the Space Force launched its first satellite.

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Russia Says Trump's Space Mining Order Is an Attempt to 'Seize' Other Planets - PCMag

NASA to invest in lots of new and exciting space stuff with NIAC – Warrior Trading News

The space race is on again!

A rare press release this week by NASA reveals that the agency is investing in no less than 23 of what it calls potentially revolutionary concepts that may promote more extensive exploration of outer space in the next generation of space study.

With a $7 million investment, the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts program or NIAC funds early-stage technologies, including a solar gravity lens for telescoping viewing, and a plan to identify earth-like planets outside of our solar system.

NIAC is an innovative program that encourages researchers and the agency to think outside of the box for solutions that could overcome challenges facing future science and exploration missions, said Walt Engelund, deputy associate administrator for programs within NASAs Space Technology Mission Directorate in a press statement around the program. Were excited about the new concepts and to see how additional time and resources advances the research selected for follow-on Phase II and III studies.

Another major innovation mentioned in the report is also still in the concept stage, but has enormous potential for inspiring us to think bigger when it comes to space exploration NASA reports on research simulating the idea of moving 50 billion miles from Earth using multiple small spacecrafts and solar sail technology.

At the same time, researchers are also looking into understanding nearer deep space by mapping asteroids and other celestial bodies within our solar system.

In the generations to come, what was originally seen as the deepest reaches of space may be as familiar to us as our own backyards.

NASAs investment could have an impact in some technology sectors, and has its place among the various national efforts being announced now to advance deep space research.

From commercial crew to a flood of Mars missions, 2020 promises to be an exciting year for spaceflight, wrote Elizabeth Howell at Space.com on Dec. 31, the last day of 2019. Companies and space agencies alike have a series of interesting missions on deck for the year, from returning lunar samples to studying the sun up close.

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NASA to invest in lots of new and exciting space stuff with NIAC - Warrior Trading News

Space Lettuce Is Out of This World Good – HowStuffWorks

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Growing lettuce in space isn't just another small step for man, it's a giant leap for vegetables everywhere. Peas, radishes and lettuce are all being grown in special growth chambers on the International Space Station, and a study published March 6, 2020, in the journal Frontiers in Plant Science proves space lettuce is not only safe to eat but just as healthy as its earthly counterpart. It's even got potential to be a game changer for longer missions, and the lessons learned will help greenhouse gardeners grow healthier veggies here on Earth.

Astronauts normally rely on a limited menu made up of mostly packaged foods, often with lower levels of vitamins and minerals. But lettuce has key nutrients as well as phenolics, molecules that have anticancer, antiviral and anti-inflammatory properties that give space travelers both a physical and psychological boost. American astronaut Joseph M. Acaba shared on Twitter"... Nothing beats fresh, homegrown food."

Space lettuce is grown under LED lights and of course less gravity. And after 33 to 56 days, it's ready to be safely enjoyed fresh and full of nutrition.

Perhaps the biggest benefit of an outer space salad is its ability to help extend exploration missions. Mars isn't exactly just around the corner it can take six months to travel the 140 million-mile (225 million-kilometer) distance to the red planet. And that's just one-way. Plus, growing food while in orbit naturally cuts down on the astronomical budget of space travel.

While only a lucky few will get the chance to make the trip into outer space, anyone can visit The Kennedy Space Center outside of Orlando, Florida, to get a feel for the experience. Time your visit right and you may even see a rocket launch. Of course you won't be able to try the space lettuce, but the veggies you buy at the grocery may soon benefit from the lessons learned in space. NASA's data will help farmers use optimal amounts of water and nutrients to grow healthier crops in greenhouses and small spaces.

The science of food is quickly expanding into the last frontier, and space lettuce is graciously leading the way. Its journey will help scientists grow other types of leafy vegetables as well as tomatoes and peppers, giving astronauts, as well as us here on Earth, more access to the nutrients we need.

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2020-2026 Artificial Intelligence in Space Exploration Industry Production, Sales and Consumption Status and Prospects Professional Market Research…

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Video games we’re playing during the coronavirus lockdown – CNET

In the age of the coronavirus lockdown, many of us have more time than we know what to do with. We also more than likely have the urge to indulge in a bit of escapism. Which can only mean on thing: Folks, it's time for video games.

Here's what some of the CNET staff have been playing over the last couple of weeks.

Read more: TV shows we're watching during the coronavirus lockdown

I'm normally obsessed with playing whatever is brand new, right now. By that logic I should be putting hours into Doom Eternal or Animal Crossing, but I'm not. I'm playing Halo.

And not even Halo 5, the most recent Halo. I'm playing the old ones.

For some reason I recently had the urge to revisit my "glory" days playing Halo multiplayer, so I jumped into Halo: The Master Chief Collection. It's been an absolute blast. I'm especially shocked by how good Halo: CE multiplayer holds up.

Gonna drown in nostalgia for the next few months. Halo is my 70s classic rock station.

-- Mark Serrels

Since I can't take any real life trips, Outer Wilds helped save my sanity during this isolation with amazing simulated space exploration. I finished Outer Wilds over the weekend and this Indie sci-fi gem ended up being one of my favorite gaming experiences ever.

In the game, you're tasked with exploring your solar system in a rickety ship and figuring out what happened to the mysterious species who predated you in the galaxy. What follows is a game filled with magical discoveries and breathtaking moments. It actually makes you feel like you're exploring outer space -- with all of the wonder and terror that entails.

Note: Outer Wilds came out around the same time as a game with a similar title called Outer Worlds. I played that one too. It's Fallout in space and it's fine. Outer Wilds is the magical one.

-- Andrew Gebhart

The first week of working from home was the hardest for me. I'm not a morning person at the best of times and my flat is freezing cold. Between the physical discomfort, the anxious state of the world and the fact that I was now averaging 650 steps a day on my Fitbit, I was utterly miserable. Only one thing could save me: My housemate's Nintendo Switch and Ring Fit Adventure.

Nintendo's home fitness game can't cure a global pandemic or make the future any more certain. I'm not even convinced it can give me a six pack. But it's done wonders for my mental health. A 20-minute session warms me up, pumps me full of endorphins and challenges me without wearing me out before the day's even started.

It also gives me an artificial sense of purpose that "real" exercise just can't provide: I've never responded well to arbitrary, seemingly impossible fitness goals like "run 5K" or "complete a single press-up." But if doing some knee lifts will help me defeat a beefy dragon, it turns out I'm on board.

-- Sarah McDermott

Now's not the time for new games. Now's not the time for new anything. Now's the time for wallowing in your PJs, eating peanut butter and apples, and going back to the things you love most deeply.

For me that's Civ. I've spent thousands of hours on Sid Meier's venerable series, going back to Civilization II on my dad's first PC, marveling at its Encarta-like animations when you built a Wonder.

In a time of upheaval and uncertainty, what better than a game where you control a whole nation? And instead of crushing and nuking your rivals, why not challenge them to make a fairer, wiser society, or race them to the stars?

-- Nick Hide

No, no, no, not me -- my sons, ages 17 and 14. They're both baseball and hockey players, and with no on-ice or on-field activities, they've been putting in the hours on the Xbox (which recently displaced the PS4).

It was a favorite activity anyway, but now it's their stand-in for the real thing. The 17-year-old is more likely to play solo, while the 14-year-old has been tearing it up virtually with some of his hockey teammates -- likewise with his forays into Fortnite. It's loud. It's enthusiastic. It's intense.

-- Jon Skillings

Board game hobbyists like me are having a hard time coping with the quarantine. Not only are we all discouraged from meeting up with our friends and game groups in person, but most game stores are closed as well. While many stores are still shipping products and doing curb-side pickup, the central congregation place for tournaments and casual meet-ups are basically gone. In this environment, Tabletop Simulator has become a godsend for my friends and I.

If you've never heard of Tabletop Simulator it is exactly what it sounds like, a digital environment for you and your friends to play board games online. The best thing about it is the vast array of mods that let you play any game you can think of (past and present). It not only means the staples of my game group are easily accessible, but other titles we've yet to try are at our fingertips as well.

I've found myself playing board games with friends online almost every night since the shelter orders took effect in our state. While it doesn't replace the feeling of shuffling Magic cards, screaming accusations at your friends over Secret Hitler, or moving your traveler across the Japanese countryside in Tokaido, Tabletop Simulator will at least keep people like me sane while we're all locked inside for the foreseeable future.

-- Joshua Mobley

Yes, I have ADD, which seems even worse than usual now. I'll start playing something based on my mood, hit a snag and jump to another game -- I've been known to start as many as 5 games sequentially. I also get cramped sitting at my desk in the dining room chair not intended for long sessions, which forces me to stop playing games I'm better at with keyboard and mouse -- Doom Eternal and Control, to name two -- and switch to controller-preferred games I can play in bed. That would be everything else. Clearly, I'm not a completionist.

Don't Starve seems to be my most frequent go-to game, in part because it's also playable on phone via GeForce now. (At least until a cat decided one of my Junglecat controllers was a toy and hid it.) There's actually something soothing, for a while at least, about its constant permadeath-restart repetitiveness that I normally don't like.

-- Lori Grunin

I've had Death Stranding since it came out last November, but I've been putting off playing it for a variety of reasons. Now seems to be an appropriate time to play a game about Americans being confined indoors and separated from each other due to an invisible enemy.

The Division, on the other hand, is about a virus that originated in New York City causing it to be quarantined. That game was my favorite when it came out in 2016, but the sequel hasn't won me over.

I had been anticipating the Warlords of New York expansion for some time as it moves the game's setting from Washington D.C. back to New York City. Little did I know the new content would come just days before the real city would be shutdown due to a virus.

-- Oscar Gonzalez

Despite how many incredible games have come out recently, all I want to do is bury myself within The Sims. Coping mechanism? Perhaps. Maybe I'm opting to spend time in a simulated world instead of the real world for a reason. But then, maybe that reason is because I'm determined and focused to turn myself into a Sims building expert within the next few months.

Some people have fitness or productivity goals -- maybe writing a book or starting a podcast -- but I want to learn how to make realistic looking houses and community lots on The Sims 4. My Sims deserve better than boxy houses that look unlived in!

And yes, I'm simultaneously (pun not entirely intended) giving myself actual Sim challenges too. I tried the 100 baby challenge once before and HATED it but this time I might actually give the others a proper crack. Or I might strategically design a hell house that will test my Sims to within an inch of their simmy lives. Who's to say?

-- Steph Panecasio

Back in the innocent days of Black Friday 2019, an incredible PS4 Pro deal won me over -- mainly because it included three exclusives I've always wanted to play: Horizon Zero Dawn (which I finished and FRIGGIN LOVED, of course), Spider-Man (which I started and couldn't get into, but will give it another chance) and God of War.

I finished GoW last night at 12:15 AM and I'm still filled with joy at the sheer awesomeness of it all. Stunning graphics, clever puzzles, just the right amount of lore, perfectly endless tough-complex-rewarding combat and a surprisingly strong story driven by a comically stoic badass father and piggybacking smart-alec son had me looking forward to every free night I had to play (and there've been plenty of them).

Now that I'm done I've already downloaded another exclusive I'm psyched to start tonight --the PS4 Plus freebie Uncharted 4-- and have taken advantage of the Spring Sale to stuff my game pantry with more shelf-safe entertainment: Jedi: Fallen Order, Death Stranding, NBA 2K20 and Outer Wilds. Bring it on, quarantine.

-- David Katzmaier

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Video games we're playing during the coronavirus lockdown - CNET

Escape from isolation by exploring space from home – CBC.ca

NASA has developed a new website called NASA at Home that is full of activities for young and old to explore the universe from home during these times of physical distancing.

Many parents are struggling to keep young minds occupied during this extended home isolation, and this site provides a wide variety of space videos, podcasts, e-books, games, VR tours and science activities that can be done at home using everyday materials.

It is an out-of-this-world escape from the difficulties we are all facing on this planet.

The space agency has an enormous library of videos dating back to the earliest days of space flight. You can re-live the Apollo missions to the moon, and get the latest on the plans to return there by 2024 through the eyes of the newest generation of astronauts. Or you can leave Earth entirely to explore the solar system through the eyes of robots that have visited other planets.

A series of podcasts narrated by NASA scientists keep you up to date on the latest developments in space exploration.

For the younger kids, a segment called Space Place has a series of computer games and activities such as building indoor rockets or balloon-powered rovers.

The older crowd can take 3D VR tours of NASA facilities or the International Space Station, plus there is a library of space themed e-books to read.

Beyond entertainment, if you like, you can participate in real space science from your own home through a platform called Zooniverse .You can pitch in on the mission of the planet hunter TESS space telescope,searching for planets around other stars. These missions involve so much data that NASA is inviting the public to help analyze it. Who knows, perhaps you could discover a planet of your own!

The Juno mission to Jupiter involves a camera called JunoCamdedicated to public access where you can help decide what part of the giant planet the spacecraft photographs next.

There is even an environmental program called GLOBE Observer which allows you to take daily measurements from your backyard or balcony to track environmental changes that are then compared to satellite observations of the Earth from space.

During this time when our own planet seems to be getting more dangerous with the spread of a deadly disease around the globe, it is a refreshing escape to explore other worlds that are so different, alien and far away. But having said that, remember, that despite the challenges we face from nature, whether it is disease, hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanoes, or whatever is thrown at us, we can deal with them and move on, as humans have always done.

Because no matter how tough it seems at times, when compared to all the other planets we know of, the Earth is still the only planet we can live on the crown jewel of the solar system.

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Google bans employees from using this video chat app – Times of India

NEW DELHI: After NASA and Elon Musks space exploration company SpaceX, its now Googles turn to ban its employees from using the Zoom app. Ever since work from home has become a norm across the world due to the coronavirus pandemic, professionals have turned to apps like Zoom. The teleconferencing app has seen its popularity go through the charts but comes with its fair share of privacy concerns. As reported by BuzzFeed, Google sent an email last week to all its employees about banning the app. Google told its employees that whoever had Zoom installed on their machines, the software will soon not function. Google emailed employees last week about the ban, telling workers who had the Zoom app installed on their Google-provided machines that the software would soon no longer function. Interestingly, Google does have its own Zoom competitor, Meet, which is a part of the G-Suite apps. Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda told BuzzFeed News that the company has had a policy of not allowing employees to use unapproved apps for work. Recently, our security team informed employees using Zoom Desktop Client that it will no longer run on corporate computers as it does not meet our security standards for apps used by our employees. Employees who have been using Zoom to stay in touch with family and friends can continue to do so through a web browser or via mobile, Castenada told BuzzFeed News. '; var randomNumber = Math.random(); var isIndia = (window.geoinfo && window.geoinfo.CountryCode === 'IN') && (window.location.href.indexOf('outsideindia') === -1 ); console.log(isIndia && randomNumber Elon Musks space exploration company SpaceX has also told its employees not to use Zoom. According to a report by Reuters, SpaceX sent a memo to its employees on March 28 where it clearly stated that employees shouldnt use Zoom. We understand that many of us were using this tool for conferences and meeting support. Please use email, text or phone as alternate means of communication, the memo noted. The report further stated that the company had taken the decision to not use Zoom as the app was facing significant privacy and security concerns. A flurry of online reports has suggested that Zoom does have privacy and security concerns. Lack of end-to-end encryption has been a big concern. Zoom CEO Eric S Yuan said that the company is taking the necessary steps to meet the challenges. The company for the next 90 days will not launch any new features but instead work on security and privacy issues.

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Google bans employees from using this video chat app - Times of India

Chamath Palihapitiya Blasts Fed for Bailing Out Billionaires and CEOs Amid Pandemic – Observer

On Thursday morning, the Federal Reserve announced a string of new moves to inject $2.3 trillion into embattled businesses and municipal governments, on top of the $2.2 trillion rescue package passed in March, to help the economy tackle the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

The business pillar of the new stimulus plan includes details of the Feds Main Street Lending Program, targeting small to mid-size businesses, and market intervention measures, including plans to buy corporate bonds regardless of their investment grades.

SEE ALSO: How to Receive Your Coronavirus Stimulus Check Fast and Hassle-Free

But as billionaire venture capitalist Chamath Palihapitiya sees it, the central bank might as well has given money directly to American people, instead of their employers, since the beginning of this crisis. Im not disagreeing with what the Fed has to do, he said in CNBCs Halftime Report interview on Thursday. It would be better for Fed to have given half a million [dollars] to every man, woman and child in the United States.

On Main Street today, people are getting wiped out. Right now, rich CEOs are not, boards that have horrible governance are not. People are, the Social Capital founder and CEOwent on to explain. What weve done is disproportionately prop up poor performing CEOs and boards, and you have to wash these people out.

Just to be clear on who we are talking about, he added. Were talking about a hedge fund that serves a bunch of billionaire family offices. Who cares? They dont get the summer in the Hamptons?

To be fair, the Feds first round of coronavirus rescue plan did include a budget to deposit money directly to peoples bank accounts. About one-eighth of Marchs $2.2 trillion stimulus package, or $250 billion, was allocated for sending checks of up to $1,200 per person to eligible Americans. In fact, the Internal Revenue Service just started sending out those checks on Thursday.

But Palihapitiya has a better idea: instead of giving people a small check that wont last long while leaving a much bigger chunk of money to large businesses in hopes that their employees will benefit, why not give people a larger check and skip businesses in the first place?

We should spend $8 trillion and give every American their 2019 taxes back, he suggested in a Tweet on Thursday in response to a person asking how workers would get paid if their employers, like airlines, go bankrupt and have no revenue.

Palihapitiya has always been a central bank skeptic when it comes to market intervention. I am generally of the view that we have exhausted the ability for central banks to meaningfully manage inflation, in either direction, but that doesnt mean it wont continue to drive stock prices higher by unnecessarily cutting rates and flooding markets with money, he wrote in Social Capitals 2019 annual letter to investors.

Social Capital prides itself on investing in promising businesses that also serve greater good, such as curing cancer, space exploration and mitigating climate change. Over the course from 2011 to 2019, the venture capital firm realized an economic return of 32.9 percent, compared to S&P 500 indexs 15 percent, per its 2019 report.

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Chamath Palihapitiya Blasts Fed for Bailing Out Billionaires and CEOs Amid Pandemic - Observer

Best online class sites: do these online courses from the comfort of home – TechRadar India

When you're stuck at home, working and relaxing aren't the only two things you can do (although you can do them in spades). It's also very possible to use the internet to learn new things.

In particular, plenty of websites offer online classes or online courses, so you can learn new topics in a staggered and easy-to-digest way. This is ideal for taking quick lessons during a busy day or letting you do your own research between lessons.

There are online courses on a variety of topics, from sciences and technology to arts, humanities and creativity, and while some of them are quite academic, teaching you a scientific tradition or literary period, others are more life-skilled focused, like helping you be creative or write the perfect resume.

To help you find the best online class or course website for you, we've listed some of the best that are worth checking out some are free, while others are paid for. We haven't put them in order, since the websites teach in varied ways that will largely come down to personal taste.

You might have heard of MasterClass, thanks to its ubiquitous marketing. It's an online site with plenty of courses, and each is taught by a celebrity in the field. Gordon Ramsay teaches cooking, Chris Hadfield teaches space exploration, Martin Scorsese teaches film-making, Margaret Atwood teaches creative writing, and there are around 80 more.

Each lesson has plenty of classes in bite-sized chunks, along with supplemental material (workbooks, writing excerpts and recipes) and community areas where you can discuss the classes and talk to other people who are enrolled.

MasterClass has more courses in some areas than others, so if you're a fan of film, cooking, writing, business or arts, you're sure to find something here that's useful to you.

MasterClass costs $15 / 15 (roughly AU$30) per month or $180 / 180 (roughly AU$320) for an annual membership, but you can buy one-off classes for $90 / 85 (roughly AU$170). We'd recommend the annual pass though, because you'll be using the service enough to make it worth it.

Check out the MasterClass website here.

FutureLearn hosts courses from some of the biggest universities from the UK and abroad, on a host of topics in categories like healthcare and medicine, IT, computer science and teaching. There are some arts and humanities courses too, but the number and breadth of topics has certainly gone down over the years.

FutureLearn breaks its courses into bite-sized lessons, some of which are quite long. Many can be easy to get through in one sitting, though, so it's easy to consume. Once you start a course you have access to it for fourteen days (or more, if you have Unlimited mode).

It's actually free to do lessons on FutureLearn, unlike some other platforms, but if you pay $269 / 199.99 (roughly AU$400) you can unlock Unlimited mode, letting you access courses when you want and gain certificates for completing them.

Check out the FutureLearn website here

Unlike many of the online course sites on this list, Skillshare lessons aren't taught by universities but everyday people, who earn a living in the field. It's a different perspective, and is probably more useful for some people.

Some of the classes offered include illustration, photography, using particular software like Adobe After Effects, and self-improvement, so there's a broad mix of practical skills on offer here.

Most classes consist of between 10 and 20 lessons (roughly 5-10 minutes long), so they're very consumable. That's the perfect amount of time to use them to guide you along your own projects or creative sessions too.

Skillshare has lots of free lessons when you sign up, but the vast majority (around 20,000, according to the website) are available if you buy a Skillshare Premium account for $8 / 7 per month.

Check out the Skillshare website here

Coursera is another online class site that offers courses organized by universities, in this case primarily US institutes, on topics like Machine Learning, creative writing and digital languages.

Coursera has two extra reasons you might want to check it out, though. Firstly, it offers 'Specializations' or collections of courses that you can chain together to properly hone your skills in a certain area. Secondly, it offers actual online degrees from top universities if simple courses are too lightweight for you.

Some lessons on Coursera are free, but if you pay (prices starting $39, roughly 30 or AU$63) you can access extra quizzes and teachings, and you get a certificate at the end as well.

Check out the Coursera website here

edX, like Coursera, offers plenty of vocational skills from well-known universities in the US and abroad, so if you're looking for online courses to improve your resume, this might be a website worth checking out.

There are a few reasons to check out edX over some competitors. It offers courses in different languages (not just English), the courses are all free to access and open-source, and it has a wider range of subjects than any one of the other sites.

Check out the edX website here

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Best online class sites: do these online courses from the comfort of home - TechRadar India

A Cosmic Phenomenon: Discovery Of Connection of Energy Within A Galaxy Sparks Excitement To What Other Space S – iTech Post

Science By Renz , Apr 09, 2020 09:37 AM EDT

(Photo : Pixabay)

An unprecedented event has been discovered in the radio galaxy named ESO 137-006 showing bizarre new thread-like appendages that connect the lobes of plasma within the cosmic entity.

On Wednesday, Astronomer Dr Mpati Ramatsoku of Rhodes University announced he and his colleagues have become accustomed to the usual sight of the galaxy.

Dr Ramatsoku said the space cluster consists of a core which is home to a supermassive black hole that shoots out two jets of plasma that race at near the speed of light. The energy found within the jets will ultimately slow down and disperse, producing large radio lobes.

The astronomer also stated what makes this particular galaxy different is the appearance of what seems to be several, supplementary filaments that link the lobes.

Ramatsoku is the lead author of an international team of astronomers' study of the discovery. They are conducting this endeavour with help from the state-of-the-art radio telescope MeerKat from the Northern Cape Karoo.

The radio telescope SA MeerKat which was launched in 2018, is the means of answering fundamental astrophysical questions regarding the universe.

Ramatsoku said this particular galaxy that belongs in the Norma cluster of galaxies is quite captivating and one of the brightest in the southern sky. And its characterization being the two bright lobes of radio emission which are bent in one direction.

She added with this discovery; they now have knowledge of these new features in the form of multiple collimated synchrotron thread connecting the lobes.

The head of the South African Research Chairs Initiative for radio astronomy over at Rhodes, Professor Oleg Smirnov, expressed the team's excitement over the discovery. He said the beautiful revelations of space are of great importance for MeerKat because they are proof of its amazing capability for locating the 'unknown unknowns' within our universe.

The unexpected finding boosts the team's morale and reminds them of the very reason they undertook their profession in the first place.

Read Also: Looking For The Best Band For Your Buck? Here Are Some Cost-Efficient American Road Monsters You Can Choose From!

Further study of the phenomenon is required to understand its nature further, added Ramatsoku. She also said it is probable for the event to be distinct to the observed galaxy due to its severe climate and environment. It is correct to think the occurrence is common in other radio galaxies but are undetectable due to the lack of more powerful astronomical equipment.

She states if it is indeed more than one galaxies phenomenon, it brings about new challenges and unknowns in figuring out the true nature of these cosmic bodies.

Insight to the nature and physics of these filaments may bring with it backing for other sensitive radio interferometers such as MeerKat and future similar equipment, like the Square Kilometre Array (SKA).

Smirnov credited professor Justin Jonas for being the one responsible for MeerKat's birth and the transfer of the SKA to South Africa. Having been with Rhodes since his student days, Professor Jonas was awarded the vice chancellor's distinguished achievement award last 2019.

A reporter for Herald said even the smaller institutions, such as Rhodes University, are capable of bringing about discoveries of cosmic importance to the field of space exploration.

Read Also: NASA Program To Utilize $7M In Funding Research, From Stronger Spacecraft To Landing Humans On Mars - What They Have Planned Will Blow You Away

2020 ITECHPOST, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

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A Cosmic Phenomenon: Discovery Of Connection of Energy Within A Galaxy Sparks Excitement To What Other Space S - iTech Post

Classes Online And In Space – Cardinal & Cream

Jeremy Blaschke,Union University assistant professor of biology,responded to the universitys transition to online classes in a unique and engaging way by taking his students into space.

Like many institutions across the nation, Union University made the decision to move classes online beginning March 16 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, abruptly uprooting the structured educational boundaries students and faculty have known their whole lives.

In a matter of days, professors had to restructure class material to an online format. For many courses, this meant restructuring the entire semester.For many Union professors, the idea of going online threatened the structure they were comfortable teaching in.

Blaschke decided to combat this by simulating a new kind of structure of his own through storytelling.

Its 1000 years in the future, and the humans that inhabit both Earth and Mars are almost extinct. Blaschke is a member of a 10-person crew that is exploring another planet to possibly inhabit and are reporting back to a group of biologists on the species they discover. The biologists in this scenario are the students in Blaschkes Zoology class.

There are some really crazy animals that we talk about that people have never heard of and have never imagined being real animals, said Blaschke in a news release from Union University. For a lot of these, they seem alien already.

Senior psychology and sociology major Jaime May is serving as one of Blaschkes biologists for this mission. She feels like this fictional world that Blaschke has created makes online school a little bit easier.

Im grateful that he cares so much about our education and achievement, May said, that he is willing to sacrifice more of his own time to see us succeed.

Blaschkes space exploration mission backstory is complete with a spaceship background and costume for his YouTube video lectures, and his students, divided into small groups, were tasked with creating names, backstories and personalities of their crew members. Now all of these crew members and their stories are being woven into the story that will unfold as the semester continues.

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Classes Online And In Space - Cardinal & Cream

Blowtorch of the Gods Captured by Black Hole Image Makers – The New York Times

Dr. Kims group has now reprocessed the observations from those four nights. In addition the group used two other sets of radio telescopes at different frequencies and different resolutions on other days. They did this to study the structure of the quasars jet and zoom in on its source, like opening a set of Matryoshka dolls, in Dr. Kims words.

The results can be seen in the movie above. As viewed from afar at the lowest magnification, the jet bends down from a bright spot at the top of the frame, which corresponds to the center of the quasar, where the black hole is presumably working its grinding magic. Seen closer up, the jet decomposes into a series of blobs or hot spots shooting out. They form a line that bends slightly.

Under the highest magnification, the viewer is left with two blobs one at the top of the image, which is source of the jet, and the lower feature, which is one of the jets outbursts of energy. The source of the jet looks like a bar turned sideways, nearly perpendicular to the direction of the blowtorch.

That, Dr. Kim said in a statement, was a surprise, because they found this unexpected, perpendicular form where they expected to find only the source of the jet.

This is like finding a very different shape by opening the smallest Matryoshka doll, he said.

The perpendicular structure, the astronomers said in their paper, could be the accretion disk itself, the doughnut of fiery doomed material that circles the black hole. Enormous pressures and magnetic fields in that realm squeeze energy out the top and bottom of the doughnut at nearly the speed of light.

Dr. Doleman ventured, however, that it could just be the beam twisting again to make life difficult for the observers.

In the second half of the movie, the astronomers compared images from the Event Horizon Telescope at a single wavelength over the course of a week to see how the knots in the jet were moving.

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Blowtorch of the Gods Captured by Black Hole Image Makers - The New York Times

E. Margaret Burbidge, Astronomer Who Blazed Trails on Earth, Dies at 100 – The New York Times

She joined the University of California, San Diego, in the early 1960s and went on to become the first director of its Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences. At her death, she was universityprofessor emeritus there.

With her husband, the American physicist William Fowler and the English astronomer Fred Hoyle, Dr. Burbidge wrote a 1957article that is considered one of the most influential scientific papers of its era. Titled Synthesis of the Elements in Stars, but known in astronomical circles simply as B2FH, it was published in the journal Reviewsof Modern Physics.

In it, the authors argued that nearly all of the chemical elements, from aluminum to zinc, are forged in the bodies of stars, a process nowcalled stellar nucleosynthesis.

It was already known that the lightest elements, like hydrogen and helium, had been created amid theBigBang. But the origin of the heavier elements, including the carbon that makes up plants and animals, the oxygen in the atmosphere and the gold and silver mined from the ground in sum, the very matter of the universe was the subject of longstanding debate.

The thesis of B2FH, now widely accepted,isthat the heavier elements are synthesized from the lighter ones by thermonuclear reactions within stars. Loosed into space, these elements can also recombine to form new stars, beginning the cycle once more.

As the article describes it, we are all, in essence, made from stars.

That work laid the foundations for all of modern nuclear astrophysics, and particle astrophysics as well, Dr. Fowler said. It gave a blueprint for how the elements were formed in the cosmos.

(For work on the evolution of stars in general, Dr. Fowler shared the 1983Nobel Prize in Physics with the Indian-American astrophysicist SubrahmanyanChandrasekhar.)

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E. Margaret Burbidge, Astronomer Who Blazed Trails on Earth, Dies at 100 - The New York Times

Astronomers are hoping to see the very first stars and galaxies in the Universe – Universe Today

Sometimes its easy being an astronomer. When your celestial target is something simple and bright, the game can be pretty straightforward: point your telescope at the thing and just wait for all the juicy photons to pour on in.

But sometimes being an astronomer is tough, like when youre trying to study the first stars to appear in the universe. Theyre much too far away and too faint to see directly with telescopes (even the much-hyped James Webb Space Telescope will only be able to see the first galaxies, an accumulation of light from hundreds of billions of stars). To date, we dont have any observations of the first stars, which is a major bummer.

So, astronomers engage in a little bit of cosmic peek-a-boo.Before the first stars formed (the exact date is uncertain, because we havent observed it yet, but we suspect it happened about thirteen billion years ago), the universe was composed almost entirely of pure, unadulterated neutral hydrogen: single electrons bound to single protons in perfect harmony.

But then the first stars appeared, and poured their high-energy radiation throughout the cosmos, flooding the universe with copious X-rays and gamma rays. That intense radiation ripped apart the neutral hydrogen, converting it into the thin but hot plasma that we see in the present-day universe. This process, known as the Epoch of Reionization, started in little patches that eventually grew to engulf the cosmos, like a bunch of weird bubbles.

All this is fascinating, but how can astronomers actually detect this process? They can do it through a little trick of neutral hydrogen: it emits radiation at a very specific frequent, 1420 MHz, which corresponds to a wavelength of 21 centimeters. Before the first stars came online, the neutral gas pumped out this 21cm radiation by the bucketload, with the signal gradually diminishing as the universe became a plasma.

Sounds like a plan, except a) this signal is incredibly weak, and b) a bajillion other things in the universe emit radiation at similar frequencies, including our radios on Earth.

Disentangling the annoying noise from the juicy cosmological signal requires takes mountains of data and sifting through the astronomical haystack for the 21cm needle. We currently dont have the capabilities to make the detection that will have to wait for next-generation radio telescopes like the Square Kilometer Array but current observatories like the Murchison Widefield Array in Western Australia are laying all the necessary groundwork.

Including delivering 200 TB of data in its first pass, which is currently under analysis by some of the most powerful supercomputers in the world.

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Marvel at the universe with the free Northeast Astronomy Forum Virtual Experience today! – Space.com

Each year around this time, thousands of skywatchers, scientists and telescope manufactures flock to Suffern, New York for a weekend reveling at the stars the Northeast Astronomy Forum. This year, due to the coronavirus pandemic, the event has gone virtual and you can watch it live for free today (April 6), no tickets needed.

The Northeast Astronomy Forum, or NEAF, is organized by the Rockland Astronomy Club and has been held for nearly three decades at SUNY Rockland Community College. NEAF 2020 was originally scheduled for this weekend, April 4-5, but the coronavirus pandemic forced organizers to postpone the live event to help curb the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

Instead, NEAF 2020 will hold a one-day free event from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. EDT (7 a.m. - 5 p.m. PDT). You can tune in to the livestream event here directly from NEAF. It is also being streamed live on YouTube here.

Related: Free space projects for kids at home during the coronavirus outbreakMore: Coronavirus pandemic: Full space industry coverage

The event promises to be packed "featuring product demonstrations, fantastic vendor discounts, door prizes, and amazing speakers that have made the Northeast Astronomy Forum legendary," organizers said in a statement."

Among the speakers in today's forum will be Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA Associate Administrator for science missions; C. Alex Young, the agency's associate director for science, heliophysics division; Samuel Hale, executive director of the Mount Wilson Observatory in California; Dianna Colman, chair of the Yerkes Foundation to Save Yerkes; and planetary scientist Janni Radebaugh, who will discuss Dragonfly, a mission to send a helicopter to Saturn's moon Titan.

Today's one-day livestream is not the end for NEAF 2020. Organizers and CUNY Rockland Community College have rescheduled the event for Sept. 12 and 13.

Email Tariq Malik attmalik@space.comor follow him@tariqjmalik. Follow us@Spacedotcom, Facebook and Instagram.

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Marvel at the universe with the free Northeast Astronomy Forum Virtual Experience today! - Space.com