Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

E. coli closes 3rd restaurant in southern Ontario

16 years ago from CBC: Health

A 50s-style diner in Burlington, Ont., has voluntarily closed as health officials investigated two confirmed and three possible cases of E. coli connected to the restaurant on Friday.

India Launches Unmanned Orbiter to Moon

16 years ago from NY Times Science

The mission is scheduled to last for two years, in which the craft will search the lunar surface for natural resources.

What a View! Space Bubbles Would Thrill Tourists

16 years ago from Space.com

Space tourists may get an unprecedented view of the Earth aboard a new bubble-like spaceship.

Phoenix Lander Finishes Soil Delivery to Onboard Labs

16 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has finished scooping soil samples to deliver to its onboard laboratories, and is now preparing to analyze samples already obtained. Scientists are anxious to...

NASA Probe To Map Solar System's Edge

16 years ago from CBSNews - Science

A small NASA spacecraft embarks on a two-year mission this weekend to give scientists their first view of the happenings at the edge of the solar system. Also, efforts to...

Airliner had near miss with UFO

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

A passenger jet en route to Heathrow Airport had a near miss with a UFO, Ministry of Defence files reveal.

Man Who Helped Set the Stage for Nobel-Winning Work Has Left Science

16 years ago from NY Times Science

Douglas C. Prasher provided the essential piece that made the work that won this year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry possible.

Observatory: Worm Grunting: A Mystery Solved

16 years ago from NY Times Science

Researchers have provided an answer to why vibrations made with a stake driven into the ground can cause earthworms to come to the surface.

Science Weekly Extra podcast: David Rooney discusses the decimalisation of time

16 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Alok Jha speaks to David Rooney,the curator of time at the Royal Observatory Greenwich

Running for my life: 1 woman's race against time

16 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- The routine was the same as always - the exact way I have grown accustomed to dealing with the hours before a big race. But on that...

Europe delays ExoMars mission, again

16 years ago from UPI

LONDON, Oct. 18 (UPI) -- The European Space Agency says it's delaying its unmanned mission to Mars until 2016 and may seek help from Russia and the United...

U.S. to study possible space-based defense

16 years ago from Reuters:Science

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress has approved $5 million for an independent study of possible space-based missile defenses, a potential step toward a system once mocked as "Star Wars."

Lucy Mangan on evolution stopping

16 years ago from The Guardian - Science

Lucy Mangan: If God made man in his own image, he is a fat bloke with his feet up watching Sky+

VIDEO: Mexico Lakes Linked to Mars?

16 years ago from National Geographic

A northern Mexico valley may hold the first human footprint in the Americas, and could even provide the basis for discovering organisms on Mars, according to a NASA scientist.

CERN says atom smasher back in action in spring

16 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- Damage to the world's largest atom smasher caused by a bad electrical connection will take much of the planned winter shutdown to repair, but it will be...

Star quest knowledge provides new view of ourselves

16 years ago from Harvard Science

In a basement laboratory at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA), surrounded by instruments built to detect the universe’s distant secrets, sits a machine that will help us look not outward to the...

Scientists have new clue to mystery of sunken sub

16 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- It's long been a mystery why the H.L. Hunley never returned after becoming the first submarine in history to sink an enemy warship in 1864, but new...

One Mystery of Jet Streams Explained

16 years ago from Live Science

A simulation shows how thunderstorms create jet streams on giant planets.

FOR KIDS: A new look at Saturn's rings

16 years ago from Sciencenews.org

New information from space missions suggests Saturn's rings may be older and have more mass than previously thought

Microwaves Could Extract Water From Moon And Mars

16 years ago from Science Daily

When astronauts land on the Moon in the not too distant future, it's possible they will be visiting an outpost where they can pick up some fuel and a refreshing...

Viewing the Universe in a different light

16 years ago from European Space Agency

European scientists are preparing two new windows on the Universe that will give astronomers an unprecedented look at stars forming, and the aftermath of the 'Big Bang.'

Epilogue: Jim Benson, Space Pioneer

16 years ago from Space.com

Recently deceased founder of SpaceDev shared his roadmap for settling the Solar System. Credit: SPACE.com

Building a safer space together

16 years ago from European Space Agency

The conference ‘Building a Safer Space Together’, taking place in Rome from 21 to 23 October, is an invitation to reflect and exchange information on the essential aspects of space...

ESA Council meeting at ministerial level: The Hague, 25/26 November 2008

16 years ago from European Space Agency

ESA PR 42-2008. The next ESA Council meeting at ministerial level will take place on 25/26 November in The Hague, the Netherlands, at the World Forum, Churchillplein 10, 2517 JW.

2 Japanese, 1 American Share Physics Nobel

16 years ago from CBSNews - Science

Two Japanese citizens and an American won the 2008 Nobel Prize in physics for discoveries in the world of subatomic physics, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced.

Gamma-ray Bursts: The Mystery Continues

16 years ago from Science @ NASA

More than four decades after they were discovered, gamma-ray bursts continue to mystify astrophysicists. Next week, experts from 25 countries will converge on Huntsville, Alabama, to discuss and debate...

Space Expectations [Slide Show]

16 years ago from Scientific American

German rocket physicist and astronautics engineer Wernher von Braun played a crucial role in developing the rocket technology, including the Saturn 5 , that put U.S. astronauts on the surface...

New NASA advisory council chairman named

16 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says NASA Advisory Council Chairman Harrison "Jack" Schmitt is resigning, with Kenneth Ford to succeed him as chairman.