
Multiple Choice: Which planet in our solar system rotates in the opposite direction of every other planet?
A. Venus
B. Jupiter
C. Uranus
Take a guess and then check your answer by going to the “Astronomy Question Answer Sheet” page.

Multiple Choice: Which planet in our solar system rotates in the opposite direction of every other planet?
A. Venus
B. Jupiter
C. Uranus
Take a guess and then check your answer by going to the “Astronomy Question Answer Sheet” page.

Will Elon Musk have the freedom to muck around at NASA and with space policy in general? It all depends whether VP-elect J.D. Vance is willing to step aside from what could be seen as a duplicative space policy role, as noted in The Conversation:
Vice-president-elect J.D. Vance will chair the National Space Council, which develops policy on civil, commercial, international and national security. Many of the first Trump administration’s space policy successes can be traced to the council. Given the influence Musk seems likely to have in the new administration, the National Space Council could be seen as duplicating or being in conflict with the objectives of SpaceX’s founder…So could the council become a casualty of these drives? If it survives, its future potential depends on who is named as the executive secretary, a position that has significant power.
The National Space Council, which is under the White House, has a web page stating that while the Council was established in 1989, it was dormant from 1993-2017. Hence, it was the last Trump administration that brought it back to life.
Is Trump willing to let it lay dormant again so that Mr. Musk can have even greater say in steering taxpayer funds into his pockets? We’ll see what happens, as Mr. Trump often quips.

With NASA now facing a new administration in Washington, it is worth looking at where the agency is at the moment and what may need some attention. The 2024 Report on NASA’s Top Management and Performance Challenges, released by the NASA Office of the Inspector General (OIG), is a good place to start.
Here are a few of the challenges facing NASA at the moment:
This is quite a list, and the report goes into great detail on all of them. Of course, this is not SSA or the IRS with a pretty standard day-to-day mission, and where future expectations of the agency are easily foreseeable. As the auditors note, NASA is dealing with high-risk, complex issues requiring highly skilled workers who have to maintain many current programs around the solar system while also assisting a newly emerging private space industry here in the United States (which is pinching its staff). Moreover, looking back at the beginning of the universe as well as searching for sources of life in the universe today are big missions. We are asking a lot of NASA. This is rocket science and much, much more.
Kudos to NASA for what it has done over the years while maintaining a highly-motivated workforce.
In addition, since I expect Elon Musk will try to claim that he came up with these issues on his own, I thought it was worth highlighting this report now. NASA knows it has a lot to do and it is working to solve these matters each and every day.

One more reminder to tune into HBO’s Dune: Prophecy tomorrow night, with the final trailer gives you one last look at what’s in store. I for one look forward to anything that can take me away from this planet for a little while.
You might also enjoy the ScreenRant interview with series executive producer Jordan Goldberg and Travis Fimmel. You may remember Fimmel from the History Channel’ Vikings as well as the short-live HBO series Raised by Wolves.
Another background piece can be found in the USAToday story titled “How Prince William and Prince Harry informed HBO’s ‘Dune: Prophecy’.” Unfortunately, it appears nothing from this distant world can really be fully detached from our own.
Even so, I recommend you find a quiet space to take in the Dune world all over again.

If the political news these days is a bit too much, I recommend you sit back and have some fun with a few Star Wars videos. The For the Empire series provides humorous behind-the-scene antics in the Empire. One of my favorite short films is The Battlefield where a storm trooper encounters a Jedi on the battlefield for the first time. Or try A Certain Point of View for commentary on the Empire’s foreign policy.
It reminds me of the Star Wars skits from Robot Chicken, which are worth a second viewing as well.
While none of this is Andor, it is a welcome respite from today’s news. We all need a laugh or two.
The For The Empire series on YouTube uses Epic Games’ Unreal Engine to produce these high quality videos. It it quite a few steps beyond the claymation of Robot Chicken. If this is the future of animation, then Hollywood had better watch its back.