Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

Titan may boast ice-spewing volcanoes

16 years ago from News @ Nature

Cassini spacecraft spots possible cryo-activity on Saturn's moon.

Liquid Saltwater Is Likely Present On Mars, New Analysis Shows

16 years ago from Science Daily

Salty, liquid water has been detected on a leg of the Mars Phoenix Lander and therefore could be present at other locations on the planet, according to analysis by a...

NASA's Fermi mission, Namibia's HESS telescopes explore a blazar

16 years ago from

An international team of astrophysicists using telescopes on the ground and in space have uncovered surprising changes in radiation emitted by an active galaxy. The picture that emerges from these...

Big and small dents

16 years ago from

The Earth explorer satellite GOCE (Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer), built by the European Space Agency ESA, was successfully launched from the Russian Cosmodrome Plesetsk. GOCE is the...

Real-Life Astronaut Dishes on 'Battlestar Galactica'

16 years ago from Space.com

Astronaut Garrett Reisman may have cameo in final "Battlestar" episode.

NASA Celebrates Sun-Earth Day With Illuminating Webcast

NASA scientists will reveal new information and images about our sun and its influence on Earth and the solar system for Sun-Earth Day, recognized each year in conjunction with the...

ESA postpones Herschel-Planck launch

16 years ago from UPI

PARIS, March 18 (UPI) -- The European Space Agency says it has postponed the Herschel and Planck spacecraft launch that was initially planned for April 16.

The Day The Sun Brought Darkness

16 years ago from Science Daily

On March 13, 1989 the entire province of Quebec, Canada suffered an electrical power blackout. Hundreds of blackouts occur in some part of North America every year. The Quebec Blackout...

Space tourism from Sweden to start in 2012

16 years ago from Physorg

Short tourist flights into space are expected to begin launching from northern Sweden in 2012, one of the companies involved in the project said Wednesday.

NASA Explorer Schools Compete in Lego Robotics Contest

Fillmore's San Cayetano Elementary School and Mesa Union School from Somis captured top honors at the 3rd Annual Southern California NASA Explorer Schools Robotics Competition at JPL on Tuesday, March...

NASA releases unique frozen Earth movie

16 years ago from UPI

GREENBELT, Md., March 18 (UPI) -- NASA says it has produced a unique movie about Earth's changing ice and snow cover to be shown at U.S. science centers...

SPACE PHOTOS THIS WEEK: Galaxy Clash, Blue Medusa, More

16 years ago from National Geographic

See colliding galaxies, the dark side of a moon, a "cat's eye" nebula, and more in this week's roundup of images from space.

Liftoff for latest REXUS flights

16 years ago from European Space Agency

Three educational experiments sponsored by ESA’s Education Office blasted off to the edge of space on 12 and 13 March during the latest REXUS sounding rocket campaign from the Esrange...

Clues To A Secret Of Life Found In Meteorite Dust

16 years ago from Science Daily

NASA scientists analyzing the dust of meteorites have discovered new clues to a long-standing mystery about how life works on its most basic, molecular level.

Second near-miss by Tunguska-sized space rock this month

16 years ago from Science Blog

I don't know the statistics for events like this, but I'd like to. In any case, two Tunguska-sized objects zipping by at less than one-fourth the distance to the Moon...

No sweat: Shuttle's exercise gear on the fritz

16 years ago from Physorg

Space junk from a Soviet satellite no longer poses a threat to Discovery shuttle, but astronauts face a vexing new problem: the spacecraft's exercise equipment is on the fritz, NASA...

Space Station Construction Visible Through Backyard Telescopes

16 years ago from Science @ NASA

The STS-119 mission coincides with a series of ISS flybys over North American towns and cities. People who go outside after sunset can see the shuttle-station combo with their naked...

Military Satellite Set to Give Major Communications Boost

16 years ago from Space.com

An Atlas 5 rocket will launch a new military communications satellite late Tuesday.

How Rookie Astronauts Adapt to Space

16 years ago from Space.com

For nearly half of Discovery's crew, space is likely an exhilarating, though until now alien, experience.

Gravity probe blasts off

16 years ago from Physics World

€350m craft to provide high-resolution map of Earth’s gravitational field

Robotic Lunar Bulldozers

16 years ago from Space.com

Lunar bulldozer robots may perform site preparation for moon bases.

Scheme to Curb Global Warming Could Backfire

16 years ago from Live Science

Proposed geoengineering scheme would reduce light available for solar power.

Seeking Out the Sun's Long-Lost Siblings

16 years ago from Scientific American

For decades astronomers have been on the hunt for so-called "solar twins"--stars with the same ages, masses, temperatures, luminosities and chemical abundances as our own sun. [More]

NASA awards launch services contract

16 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, March 17 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says it has selected United Launch Alliance of Littleton, Colo., to provide launch services for various missions.

Galactic Dust Bunnies Found To Contain Carbon After All

16 years ago from Science Daily

Stars rich in carbon complex molecules may form at the center of our Milky Way galaxy. This discovery is significant because it adds to our knowledge of how stars form...

Blobs in Photos of Mars Lander Stir a Debate: Are They Water?

16 years ago from NY Times Science

A theory that Mars salts could allow liquid water at close to 90 below.

Black Holes: Eternal Prisons No More, Stephen Hawking's Lecture

16 years ago from Physorg

Celebrated physicist, Stephen Hawking, delivered an inspiring speech to a full house in Bovard Auditorium on March 10. USC College Dean Howard Gillman kicked off the event by introducing Nick...

Southpaw Solar System

16 years ago from Science NOW

Meteorites might have seeded early Earth with "left-handed" amino acids