Archive for 26 Jul 2010

Korea heating up a tad. Kind of normal though. Whenever the US and South Korea do any combined forces drill, NorKo has a fit and declares that they will retaliate with the full might of the North Korean people, yada, yada.

US shows its power to NKorea with carrier drills
By ERIC TALMADGE

ABOARD THE USS GEORGE WASHINGTON – If you want to let someone know you’re thinking about them, send a massive aircraft carrier.

The East Sea off the coast of the Korean peninsula roiled with U.S. and South Korean ships, submarines, fighter jets and helicopters Monday in a set of high-profile military maneuvers intended to show North Korea that it is being watched.

Military officials said that despite threats of retaliation, North Korea was staying clear. Most of the firepower for the four-day exercises — which North Korea condemns — has been flying off the decks of the USS George Washington, a U.S. supercarrier that can carry up to 70 aircraft and more than 5,000 sailors and aviators.

Washington and Seoul are hoping the drills — and the deployment of the most potent symbol of American military reach in the U.S. Navy — will send a powerful message to North Korea in the wake of the March sinking of a South Korean warship that killed 46 sailors. An international investigation determined the ship was sunk by torpedo, likely in a sneak attack by a North Korean submarine.

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NASA News…

Posted: 26 Jul 2010 in Government, NASA
Tags: ,

NASA news.

NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)
Artist’s conception of Sedna, an exoplanet hiding on the fringes of our solar system.

NASA’s Deep Space Camera Locates Host of ‘Earths’
NewsCore

Scientists celebrated Sunday after finding more than 700 suspected new planets — including up to 140 similar in size to Earth — in just six weeks of using a powerful new space observatory.

Early results from NASA’s Kepler Mission, a small satellite observing deep space, suggested planets like Earth were far more common than previously thought.

Past discoveries suggested most planets outside our solar system were gas giants such as Jupiter and Saturn — but the new evidence tipped the balance in favor of solid worlds.

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