To dondon forcing many to flee their homes. From the Civil Rights Movement to journalism, a look back at the life of editor and activist John Siegenthaler, sr. Thanks for being with us. We begin tonight with day 5 of the conflict between israel and gaza. We have a lot to catch you up on. But first, a run down of the latest numbers. Israel has launched more than 1,000 air strikes against gaza so far this week as of midnight local time. According to gazas health ministry, the death toll has reached 154 people, at least 88 of those killed have been civilians. So far, at least 1,062 people have been injured, majority of which are women and children. Our Nick Schifrin is on the ground in gaza city. Reporter thomas action its been a dramatic day purposing waited by two sounds i can hear now. One, a drone right on top of us, an israeli drone that has been firing constantly all night in addition to f16s trying overhead as well as a bombardment from naval art i willery. And healing ambulance, p
ExoMars 2022 mission in final testing, ESA & Roscosmos prepare for approaching launch
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“To me, Mars is the uncanny valley of Earth,” said planetary geophysicist Kevin Lewis of Johns Hopkins University. “It’s similar but was shaped by different processes. It feels so unnatural to our terrestrial experience.”
In a 2019 paper in Science, NASA researchers detail how they repurposed sensors used to drive the Curiosity rover and turned them into gravimeters, which measure changes in gravitational pull. That enabled them to measure the subtle tug from rock layers on lower Mount Sharp, which rises 3 miles (5 kilometers) from the base of Gale Crater and which Curiosity has been climbing since 2014. The results? It turns out the density of those rock layers is much lower than expected.
is zero room for error. about 17 minutes from now, if all goes as planned, the rover will touchdown on the martian surface. but it takes 14 minutes for a signal to travel from mars to earth, so best case scenario, confirmation will come in about 31 minutes. we expect pictures around 2 a.m. eastern. now, joining us from the laboratory in california. in moscow r where russian space officials are closely following the development and science correspondent david brodie joins us from edge water, new jersey. but first we will go to john zarrella there live in pasadena. john, we are about to enter the period that officials are calling seven minutes of terror, where they will not know if curiosity is alive or dead. that s exactly right, john. this is it. they ve all been using the olympic term that they have to stick this landing. as you pointed out, that this maneuver to entering the atmosphere of mars, traveling at 13,200 miles an hour, in less than ten minutes from now, they ll