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MaRS Discovery District is a not-for-profit corporation founded in Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 2000. Its stated goal is to commercialize publicly funded medical research and other technologies with the help of local private enterprises and as such is a public-private partnership . [ 1 ]
Mars Canada Ltd is the Canadian division of Mars, Incorporated, ... In 1967, the first Canadian office was opened in Montreal, moving to Toronto in 1972.
Google Mars is an application within Google Earth that is a version of the program for imagery of the planet Mars. Google also operates a browser-based version, although the maps are of a much higher resolution within Google Earth, and include 3D terrain, as well as infrared imagery and elevation data.
On the Sidewalk Labs website is a 200-page document explaining its vision for a smart neighborhood in Toronto. It's packed with illustrations that show a warm, idyllic community full of grassy ...
Sidewalk Labs, a subsidiary of Google (formerly its parent company Alphabet Inc.), issued the winning bid in 2017. The Master Innovation Development Plan (MIDP) was created in 2019 through conversations with over 21,000 Toronto residents and had aimed to be an innovative reinvention of Toronto's neglected eastern downtown waterfront. [1]
Chris C. Kemp (born 1977) is an American entrepreneur who, along with Dr. Adam London, [1] founded Astra, a space technology firm based in California, in 2016. [2] He served as the chief information officer (CIO) for the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California, [3] and as NASA's first chief technology officer (CTO) for information technology. [4]
Some argue that rainfall on a warm and wet early mars produced them. [12] Others have suggested they were produced by mass wasting, [13] spring sapping, [14] or from snowmelt [15] on an ancient Mars whose climate was dry and cold much like today's. The Peace Vallis drainage basin (or catchment) covers an area of about 1,500 km 2 (579 mi 2).
Mars meteorites in the Natural History Museum in Vienna. Once returned to Earth, stored samples can be studied with the most sophisticated science instruments available. Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for science at NASA Headquarters in Washington, expect such studies to allow several new discoveries at many field