Music|The exhibitions of the museum, which is open until the end of summer, present the birth stages of domestic punk culture.
Finnish The Punk Museum, which presents the history of punk culture, opens in the center of Helsinki on June 8. The museum operates in Graniittitalo until the end of August.
Behind the punk museum is the Suomen Punkmuseo support association, which was founded in 2021 and whose membership includes punk musicians and punk enthusiasts. The association has so far organized several exhibitions in different parts of Finland, but it has not used its own museum space so far.
Also The now-opening Helsinki Punk Museum has changing exhibitions on display throughout the summer, the first of which is on display Heart sounds-show. It describes the birth of punk culture in central and eastern Finland from 1977 to 1992, when music was distributed with c-cassettes and text with typewriters and photocopiers.
The Punk Museum is open from Tuesday to Saturday. Entrance to the museum is free on the opening day, at other times an entrance fee of five euros is charged.
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New mission could shed light on the secrets of the moon’s ‘hidden side
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Over the past few years, competing countries have turned the moon into a hotspot for activity not witnessed since the Apollo 17 astronauts departed from the lunar surface in 1972.
In one lunar region, Japan’s “Moon Sniper” mission has beaten the odds and survived three long, frigid lunar nights since its sideways landing on January 19.
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Engineers at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency didn’t design the spacecraft to last through one lunar night, a two-week period of freezing darkness, but the Moon Sniper continues to thrive amid lunar extremes and send back new images of its landing site.
Elsewhere, an international team of astronomers believes it has homed in on a crater created a few million years ago when something massive slammed into the lunar surface — and sent a chunk of the moon’s far side, or the side that faces away from Earth, hurtling into space. The hunk of moon became a rare quasi-satellite, or asteroid that orbits near Earth.
The Tianwen-2 mission will visit the space rock later this decade. But first, China has set its sights on returning to the moon’s “hidden side.”
The Chang’e-6 mission, which launched Friday, is aiming to bring back the first samples from the South Pole-Aitken basin, or the largest and oldest crater on the moon. Since the Chang’e 4 mission in 2019, China remains the only country to have landed on the moon’s far side, sometimes called the “dark side” of the moon.
The “dark side” of the moon is actually a misnomer, experts say, and the remote lunar hemisphere receives illumination — scientists just don’t know as much about the region as they’d like.
The far side, with its thicker crust, is vastly different from the near side that was explored during the Apollo missions.
Scientists hope that returning samples from the far side could solve some of the biggest remaining lunar mysteries, including the moon’s true origin.