Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

Students discover unique planet

16 years ago from Physorg

The students were testing a method of investigating the light fluctuations of thousands of stars in the OGLE database in an automated way. The brightness of one of the stars...

Hydrogen not seen in early universe

16 years ago from Science Alert

A recent study with a radio telescope couldn’t find any hydrogen in the distant, early reaches of the universe – which is strange, because there should be plenty.

Endeavour to return to Florida

16 years ago from UPI

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif., Dec. 2 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says space shuttle Endeavour is being readied to make its cross-country trip back to the...

NASA to honor lunar lander winner

16 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says it will honor Armadillo Aerospace of Rockwall, Texas, as winner of the 2008 Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge.

Sources of Saturn Moon's Supersonic Water Jets Revealed

16 years ago from National Geographic

Data from the Cassini spacecraft shows that the geysers on the south pole of Enceladus are gushing out from vents that are each about the size of a professional sports...

Iceberg computer program is created

16 years ago from UPI

STATE COLLEGE, Pa., Dec. 1 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists say they've created a computer program to help predict when icebergs will calve from ice sheets.

NASA studies pilot cognition

16 years ago from UPI

CLEVELAND, Dec. 1 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency is trying to find an effective way to monitor pilots' brain activity to help stop mishaps caused by stress,...

Feature: Einstein's theory stands up to the stars

16 years ago from Science Alert

Einstein's theory of relativity may be almost a century old, but it still provides an accurate explanation of the universe as we know it.

Instant insight: Porphyrins get energetic

16 years ago from Chemistry World

Jean-Pierre Sauvage outlines recent advances in the construction of interlocked molecules inspired by photosynthesis

China launches satellite

16 years ago from UPI

BEIJING, Dec. 1 (UPI) -- The Chinese Space Technology Academy announced the Monday launch of a remote sensing satellite, sent aloft on a Long March-2D carrier rocket.

Memory Mission Explores New Territory In Neuroscience

16 years ago from Science Daily

Astrophysicists peer into the far corners of deep space for dark matter, but for neuroscientists are exploring the unknown is much closer to home.

How Many Meteorites Have Landed In Western Canada? Prospects For The Missing Holocene Impact Record

16 years ago from Science Daily

Based on the amount and frequency of meteorite falls and the formation of impact craters on the Earth, there should be over 20 impact craters in the

Up, Up And Away . To A World Record

16 years ago from CBSNews - Science

A daredevil wearing a jet pack has flown across a 1,500-foot-wide canyon in southern Colorado.

Problems prompt manual docking at space station

16 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- A Russian cosmonaut used a joystick to guide a modernized cargo ship to the international space station Sunday after problems with an automated system prompted a last-minute...

The Apollo 8 mission that changed everything

16 years ago from The Guardian - Science

It has proved to be the most enduring image we have of our fragile world. Over a colourless lunar surface, the Earth hangs like a gaudy Christmas bauble against a...

Humanity May Hold Key For Next Earth Evolution

16 years ago from Science Daily

Human degradation of the environment has the potential to stall an ongoing process of planetary evolution, and even rewind the evolutionary clock to leave the planet habitable only by the...

Astronomy students find a galaxy

16 years ago from UPI

MADISON, Wis., Nov. 28 (UPI) -- Five astronomy students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have carried their research to unexpected heights -- they found a galaxy.

GMES: Planet Earth's 'help from above'

16 years ago from European Space Agency

Climate change, natural disasters, humanitarian crises - today's challenges require quick access to information about what's happening on the ground. A new European system will use satellite and terrestrial data...

The Euminedes Dorsum mountains on Mars

16 years ago from European Space Agency

The High Resolution Stereo Camera on board ESA’s Mars Express imaged the Eumenides Dorsum mountains on the Red Planet.

World Briefing | The Americas: Canada: Hawking Takes Post at Physics Institute

16 years ago from NY Times Science

Stephen Hawking will become the first distinguished research chair at Canada’s leading scientific trust, the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Ontario.

Tickling Worms Leads to Discoveries, and a Measure of Fame

16 years ago from NY Times Science

Dr. Martin Chalfie, winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, is learning that winning one of the world’s most prestigious prizes does come with perks.

Bitove inches closer to launching cellphone service

16 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

Entrepreneur John Bitove, the man who founded the Toronto Raptors and who brought XM Satellite Radio to Canada, has moved a step closer to launching a cellphone service with the...

Clue to break-up of ice shelves

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

A US team produces a computer model to predict the rate at which ice shelves break apart into icebergs.

NASA Mission Could Find Life on Europa

16 years ago from Space.com

Proposal is to visit two of Jupiter's large moons, Ganymede and Europa.

New ESA centre in United Kingdom

16 years ago from European Space Agency

A step towards the creation of a new European Space Agency research centre in the United Kingdom was taken this week with an agreement made at the ESA Ministerial...

NASA's Recipe for Space Cornbread Dressing

16 years ago from Live Science

NASA's recipe for astronaut-approved space cornbread dressing.

Modelling civilization as 'heat engine' could improve climate predictions

16 years ago from Physics World

Discovery halves the number of variables needed to forecast emissions, claims physicist

Dawn Spacecraft Glides Into New Year

16 years ago from Science Daily

NASA's Dawn spacecraft shut down its ion propulsion system this week as scheduled. The spacecraft is now gliding toward a Mars flyby in February of next year.