24/7 News Coverage
July 31, 2013
IRON AND ICE
NASA Completes First Internal Review of Concepts for Asteroid Redirect Mission
Washington DC (SPX) Aug 01, 2013
NASA has completed the first step toward a mission to find and capture a near-Earth asteroid, redirect it to a stable lunar orbit and send humans to study it. In preparation for fiscal year 2014, a mission formulation review on Tuesday brought together NASA leaders from across the country to examine internal studies proposing multiple concepts and alternatives for each phase of the asteroid mission. The review assessed technical and programmatic aspects of the mission. "At this meeting, we e ... read more
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IRON AND ICE

Dawn's Arrays Keep It Powering Along
Powering its way through the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, Dawn continues on course and on schedule for its 2015 appointment with dwarf planet Ceres. After spending more than a year o ... more
SATURN DAILY

Gravitational tide the secret of Saturn's weird moon
Enceladus, a white moon of Saturn with ice-spewing volcanoes, owes its strangeness to tides of gravitational forces exerted by its mother, a study said on Wednesday. Discovered in 1789 by William Herschel, Enceladus measures only 504 kilometres (315 miles) across yet is one of the great oddities of the Solar System. Its surface is a gorgeous white shell of ice, rather than asteroid-pocked rock and dust, and the surface is pristine except for a network of fractures near its south pole. These cracks - dubbed "tiger stripes" - emit fountains of water vapour that instantly turn into icy grains on contact with the chill vacuum of space. Some astrophysicists conclude that the worldlet harbours an ocean of saltwater, which in turn makes it a good candidate as a source for life. But how can a sub-surface sea exist, if the ambient temperature is close to absolute zero - -273 degrees Celsius (-460 degrees Fahrenheit) - and the Sun is a distant dot? The answer, say theorists, lies with a phenomenon called tidal forces. They argue that the gravitational pull exerted by Saturn, the second largest planet of the Solar System, squeezes Enceladus' innards, causing friction whose heat allows the water to remain in a liquid state. Long debated, the notion has now gained the support of comparisons of the icy plume as the moon crawls around Saturn on an egg-shaped orbit. When Enceladus is closest to Saturn, the plume is at its dimmest, a sign that the fractures are being closed up by a mighty gravitational pull from the giant mother plant, and so relatively little water escapes, according to the new study. When Enceladus is at its farthest point from Saturn, the plume is several times brighter, suggesting that the fractures open out - rather like an unclenched fist - and more water is disgorged. The evidence comes from 252 infra-red images taken by the great US explorer probe Cassini during its lonely swings around the planet. They provide "strong evidence that tidal forces do play an important role in controlling Enceladus' plume activity, perhaps by changing the width of the conduits between the surface and various underground reservoirs," says the paper, led by Matthew Hedman of Cornell University in New York. Many of the icy grains from Enceladus fall back on its surface, which explains its dazzling white surface. The ice may also be the origin of one of the rings of Saturn that give the gas giant its special beauty, according to some thinking. ri/bm ... more
DEEP IMPACT

Perseid Fireballs
In astronomy, there's nothing quite like a bright meteor streaking across the glittering canopy of a moonless night sky. The unexpected flash of light adds a dash of magic to an ordinary walk under ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


TIME AND SPACE

Making big 'Schroedinger cats'
Since Erwin Schroedinger's famous 1935 cat thought experiment, physicists around the globe have tried to create large scale systems to test how the rules of quantum mechanics apply to everyday objec ... more


EXO WORLDS

Pulsating star sheds light on exoplanet
A team of researchers has devised a way to measure the internal properties of stars-a method that offers more accurate assessments of their orbiting planets. The research, which appears in Proceedin ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Experimental quest to test Einstein's speed limit
Albert Einstein's assertion that there's an ultimate speed limit - the speed of light - has withstood countless tests over the past 100 years, but that didn't stop University of California, Berkeley ... more
IRON AND ICE

NASA Sees Enthusiastic Response to Asteroid Call for Ideas
NASA has received more than 400 responses to its request for information (RFI) on the agency's asteroid initiative, Deputy Administrator Lori Garver announced Friday. "Under our plan, we're in ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Russia regularly targeting UK satellites: space command boss
French navy boards Russia 'shadow fleet' ship, arrests two
Defense contractors brace for climate threats despite Trump's denials
TIME AND SPACE

Removing complexity layers from the universe's creation
Complicated statistical behaviour observed in complex systems such as early universe can often be understood if it is broken down into simpler ones. Two physicists, Petr Jizba (currently affiliated ... more
EXO WORLDS

Chandra Sees Eclipsing Planet in X-rays for First Time
For the first time since exoplanets, or planets around stars other than the sun, were discovered almost 20 years ago, X-ray observations have detected an exoplanet passing in front of its parent sta ... more
TECH SPACE

US Lawmaker Seeks to Partner with Russia to Clean Up Space
A prominent US lawmaker and advocate of the United States' role in space told a conference on the commercialization of space that the US and Russia should team up for extraterrestrial projects - and ... more

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TIME AND SPACE

When fluid dynamics mimic quantum mechanics
In the early days of quantum physics, in an attempt to explain the wavelike behavior of quantum particles, the French physicist Louis de Broglie proposed what he called a "pilot wave" theory. Accord ... more
TECH SPACE

Sony, Panasonic mulling 300-gigabyte Blu-ray format
Japan's Sony and Panasonic say they're working on a successor to Blu-ray, hoping to offer optical discs holding at least 300 gigabytes of data by 2015. ... more
24/7 News Coverage
USF study: Ancient plankton hint at steadier future for ocean life
Researchers wake up microbes trapped in permafrost for thousands of years
China's 'Great Green Wall' brings hope but also hardship
TIME AND SPACE

Elementary Physics in a Single Molecule
A team of physicists has succeeded in performing an extraordinary experiment: They demonstrated how magnetism that generally manifests itself by a force between two magnetized objects acts within a ... more
TIME AND SPACE

What if quantum physics worked on a macroscopic level?
Quantum physics concerns a world of infinitely small things. But for years, researchers from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), Switzerland, have been attempting to observe the properties of quantum ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Rice researchers part of new LHC discovery
A discovery facilitated by Rice University's contribution to the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will impact scientists' search for dark matter in the universe. CERN, the European Organization for Nucle ... more
TIME AND SPACE
SciTechTalk: Grab your erasers, there are more moons than we thought

NASA Hubble Finds New Neptune Moon

NASA finds new moon on Neptune


TIME AND SPACE
Purple bacteria on Earth could survive alien light

Exploring the World of Life Underground

ET Calls, Then What?


TIME AND SPACE
Chandra Sees Eclipsing Planet in X-rays for First Time

Pulsating star sheds light on exoplanet

A warmer planetary haven around cool stars, as ice warms rather than cools


TIME AND SPACE
Mars Rover Opportunity Nears Solander Point

Curiosity Mars Rover Gleams in View from Orbiter

Mars Curiosity sets one-day driving distance record

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Starburst wind keeps galaxies thin
Unlike humans, galaxies don't have an obesity problem. In fact there are far fewer galaxies at the most massive end of the galactic scale than expected and scientists have long sought to explain why ... more
EXO LIFE

Purple bacteria on Earth could survive alien light
Purple bacteria contain pigments that allow them to use sunlight as their source of energy, hence their color. Small as they are, these microbes can teach us a lot about life on Earth, because they ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE

Particle accelerator at heart of Van Allen radiation belts
Using data from a NASA satellite, a team of scientists led by the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and involving the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered a massive particle acc ... more
MOON DAILY

Environmental Controls Move Beyond Earth
It looks like the Government is not satisfied with controlling the environment on Earth. The EPA has already made it all but illegal to produce CO2. Did anyone tell them that humans produce this gre ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
Hydropower emerges as Southeast Asia's hidden force in driving down carbon emissions
Deep-sea mining poses new threat to sharks, rays and ghost sharks
Turning palm waste into a machine-learning-optimized CO2 capture material
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Shedding New Light on the Brightest Objects in the Universe

EXO WORLDS

A warmer planetary haven around cool stars, as ice warms rather than cools

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Starburst to star bust

EXO WORLDS

Solar system's youth gives clues to planet search

TIME AND SPACE

The limits to galactic growth

IRON AND ICE

NASA's Wise Finds Mysterious Centaurs May Be Comets

MOON DAILY

Bad night's sleep? The moon could be to blame

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

World's largest gamma telescope to study cosmic rays from Siberia

IRON AND ICE

NASA's Hubble: Galaxies, Comets, and Stars! Oh My!

IRON AND ICE

Spitzer Observes Gas Emission From Comet ISON

Scientists establish age of Mars meteorites found on Earth

Mystery of the Missing Waves on Titan

NASA's IRIS Telescope Offers First Glimpse of Sun's Mysterious Atmosphere

NASA Comet ISON Observing Campaign

Researcher Seeks New Way to Study Asteroid and Comet Interiors

Gas, dust observed streaming from 'soda-pop' comet approaching Earth

Moon Base and Beyond

Large Coronal Hole Near the Sun's North Pole

First-ever lunar south pole mission could be attempted by 2016

Revealed: How galaxies go from burst to bust

Catalog of cosmic X-Ray sightings will aid astronomers

Protons hop from one water molecule to another given suitable energy conditions

Exploring the World of Life Underground

A scientific experiment is able to create a wave that is frozen in time

Snow falling around infant solar system

'Water-Trapped' Worlds

World's cheapest computer gets millions tinkering

ET Calls, Then What?

NASA's Hubble Shows Link Between Stars' Ages and Their Orbits

MESSENGER to Capture Images of Earth and Moon During Search for Satellites of Mercury

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