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WHAT'S UP THIS WEEK - NOV 29 - DEC 5, 2004
Nov 30, 2004 - Welcome back, SkyWatchers! With the Moon out of the way during 
the early evening hours this week, we will take this opportunity to further 
study with binoculars and telescopes the circumpolar constellation of 
Cassiopeia. Challenging double stars, splendid galactic clusters, nebula 
regions and two of the Andromeda Group galaxies await you! As the weekend 
approaches, you're invited to play comet hunter as several of our solar system 
"travelers" are within range of amateur equipment. For morning viewers, the 
planets and Moon continue to provide a fantastic display of the ecliptic plane 
and by Sunday both Venus and Mars will be approximately one degree apart. As 
always, you will find things here for all skill and interest levels. So go 
outside, tilt your head back, and open your eyes....

Because here's what's up!

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WHY EROS HAS SO FEW CRATERS
Nov 30, 2004 - When the NEAR spacecraft approached the Asteroid Eros in 
2000/2001, scientists found much less small impact craters than they were 
expecting. Either there are less small asteroids in the Solar System than 
scientists were expecting, or something's happening on the surface of Eros to 
obscure the impact craters. Researchers from the University of Arizona think 
they have an answer: seismic shaking. Whenever Eros is struck by a small 
asteroid, it sets off shaking across the entire asteroid. Loose material creeps 
across the surface, down slopes, and can fill up older craters, obscuring them 
completely.

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ASTRONAUTS MOVE SOYUZ ON STATION
Nov 30, 2004 - The crew of Expedition 10 completed maneuvers today to move 
their Soyuz spacecraft from one docking port of the International Space Station 
to another. They undocked the Russian-built spacecraft from the Pirs module at 
0929 UTC (4:29 am EST), backed away about 100 feet (30 metres), and then moved 
it over to the Zarya docking point. The whole operation took about 20 minutes, 
and clears the way for the crew to use the Pirs compartment for two upcoming 
spacewalks, scheduled for early 2005.

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PORTRAIT OF MIMAS IN SATURN'S RINGS
Nov 30, 2004 - Cassini took this amazing full colour picture of Saturn's moon 
Mimas set against the giant planet's rings. The bright swath next to Mimas is 
created by sunlight passing through the Cassini division; a gap in the rings. 
The dark band that stretches across the bottom of the picture is actually the 
shadow of Saturn's B ring, which is the densest. Cassini took this image when 
it was 3.7 million km (2.3 million miles) from Saturn.

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