Title | Authored on | Link to edit Content | |
---|---|---|---|
Research Recap for April 16 | |||
Milwaukee native helps Perseverance Rover capture images of Mars | Then, in 2011, Dixon transferred to the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, the year the . Sitting at his desk, watching the launch coverage, Dixon said the fear faded鈥 |
||
Perseverance and the Martian Clock | Perseverance and the Martian Clock What is 鈥淢ars Time鈥? Are you excited about machines flying on another planet? Or Martian rocks coming back to Earth? If you are curious about spacecraft on the Red Planet then check out our Season 7 Premiere&苍产蝉辫;蹿别补迟耻谤颈苍驳鈥 |
||
草榴社区 student rediscovers regionally extinct bumblebee on Western鈥檚 campus | |||
Western's Geosciences programs ranked #7 nationally by Study.com | |||
Western's Geosciences programs ranked #7 nationally by Study.com | |||
Perseverance's eyes see a different Mars | 鈥淲e developed Mastcam-Z for a rover going to a spot on Mars that hadn鈥檛 been selected yet, so we had to design it with all the possibilities in mind鈥攖he optimal set of eyes to capture the geology of any spot on Mars,鈥 says Melissa Rice, a planetary scientist at Western Washington University and鈥 |
||
Perseverance's eyes see a different Mars | 鈥淲e developed Mastcam-Z for a rover going to a spot on Mars that hadn鈥檛 been selected yet, so we had to design it with all the possibilities in mind鈥攖he optimal set of eyes to capture the geology of any spot on Mars,鈥 says Melissa Rice, a planetary scientist at Western Washington University and鈥 |
||
How a Washington geologist is helping with the search for life on Mars | NASA celebrated the successful landing of its Perseverance rover on the surfaces of Mars on Thursday. Now, the real work begins, as the rover begins its search for signs of life on the planet鈥檚 surface, with the aid of Western Washington University planetary geologist 鈥 |
||
How a Washington geologist is helping with the search for life on Mars | NASA celebrated the successful landing of its Perseverance rover on the surfaces of Mars on Thursday. Now, the real work begins, as the rover begins its search for signs of life on the planet鈥檚 surface, with the aid of Western Washington University planetary geologist 鈥 |