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xetf COVID-19 could impact a person s vision
« le: Octobre 05, 2024, 02:45:42 pm »
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 Pushes from officials with the European Space Agency are part of a growing call among astronomers, focused on lunar missions, to create a time zone  stanley quencher for our moon.As it stands, teams on lunar missions currently use the Earth-based times zones that are dedicated to the nation that manages the mission.Among the issues space explorers face is how to better sync the various missions.The ESA said in a statement,  We agreed on the importance and urgency of defining a common lunar reference time, which is internationally accepted and toward which all lunar systems and users may refer to. Experts on the matter still haven t come to a consensus on exactly how it would all work.ESA navigation engineer Pietro Giordano said in that statement,  A joint international effort is now being launched tow stanley quencher ard achieving this. If space navigators can figure out how to put the plan into motion, it could create an easier path forward, as NASAplans to send astronauts to the moon more than 50 years after their last mission.Having a lunar time zone would create easier communication standards and navigation for nations headed to the moon.And a planned global satellite navigation systemon the lunar surfa stanley quencher ce might  Lzgx Kansas to receive more than $45M in settlement money regarding opioid epidemic
 WASHINGTON 鈥?A federal judge in  stanley termos New Jersey says the lawyer who killed her son and se stanley taza riously wounded her husband also had been tracking Sup stanley vattenflaska reme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. U.S. District Judge Esther Salas said FBI agents discovered the information in a locker belonging to the lawyer, Roy Den Hollander. Hollander killed Salas  son Daniel last summer at their home, and wounded her husband. He later committed suicide. Salas told CBS News   60 Minutes  that FBI agents found a gun and ammunition.  But the most troubling thing they found was a manila folder with a work-up on Justice Sonia Sotomayor,  Salas said.The segment with Salas is scheduled for broadcast Sunday, but a portion of the interview aired Friday on  CBS This Morning.   Who knows what could have happened  But we need to understand that judges are at risk,  Salas told correspondent Bill Whitaker in the clip.  That we put ourselves in great danger every day for doing our jobs. Salas says she is supporting a bill that would remove personal information about judges from the Internet and upgrade home security systems for judges, according to the Washington Post.Both the Supreme Court and the FBI declined to comment Friday.