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FUTURE ROBOTS MAY "HOP" ACROSS MARS
Nov 25, 2004 - NASA's Spirit Rover has just completed a long hard slog across 
difficult Martian terrain to reach the Columbia hills. The short journey of 
just a couple of kilometres has taken Spirit months. Imagine if it could 
thoroughly analyze an area and then just pick up and fly somewhere new? NASA is 
considering a proposal from Pioneer Astronautics, which envisions a vehicle 
that could land on Mars, refuel with local materials, and then fly hundreds of 
kilometres to explore; repeating this process over and over again - the Martian 
Gashopper Aircraft.

http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/mars_gashopper.html
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INGREDIENTS ARE THERE TO MAKE ROCKY PLANETS
Nov 25, 2004 - Protoplanetary discs surrounding new stars seem to have the 
building blocks for rocky planets right from the start, according to new 
research from an international team of researchers. The astronomers used the 
European Southern Observatory's VLT Interferometer to examine the discs around 
three young stars, which were similar to what our own Sun looked like more than 
4.5 billion years ago. They found that the inner part of these discs is very 
rich in sand, ready to be clumped by gravity into larger and larger rocks until 
full planets form.

http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/right_ingredients_rocky_planets.html
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DETAILED VIEW OF DIONE
Nov 25, 2004 - Cassini took this amazing photograph of Dione, one of Saturn's 
larger moons, on October 27 when it was 1.2 million km (746,000 miles) away. 
Voyager first saw the craters and bright, wispy streaks on its surface 24 years 
ago. Cassini is expected to do much much better, though, when it makes a close 
pass to the moon in mid-December, 2004.

http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/detailed_view_dione.html
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