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December 13, 2013
TIME AND SPACE
Collapse of the universe is closer than ever before
Odense, Denmark (SPX) Dec 13, 2013
Maybe it happens tomorrow. Maybe in a billion years. Physicists have long predicted that the universe may one day collapse, and that everything in it will be compressed to a small hard ball. New calculations from physicists at the University of Southern Denmark now confirm this prediction - and they also conclude that the risk of a collapse is even greater than previously thought. Sooner or later a radical shift in the forces of the universe will cause every little particle in it to become extreme ... read more
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IRON AND ICE

Chinese flyby of asteroid shows space rock is "rubble"
China's first flyby of an asteroid shows that a gigantic space rock which once triggered a doomsday scare is essentially rubble, scientists reported on Thursday. ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Hidden Details Revealed in Nearby Starburst Galaxy: Green Bank Telescope's new vision debuts
Using the new, high-frequency capabilities of the National Science Foundation's Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT), astronomers have captured never-before-seen details of the nearby starburst ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE

IRIS Provides Unprecedented Images of Sun
The region located between the surface of the sun and its atmosphere has been revealed as a more violent place than previously understood, according to images and data from NASA's newest solar obser ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


MOON DAILY

Ancient crater could hold clues about moon's mantle
Researchers from Brown University and the University of Hawaii have found some mineralogical surprises in the Moon's largest impact crater. Data from the Moon Mineralogy Mapper that flew aboard Indi ... more


IRON AND ICE

Countdown Begins for NASA's OSIRIS-REx Asteroid Mission
NASA's OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample return mission began its countdown on December 9, at 7:43 PM EST, with 999 days remaining until the opening of the mission's launch window in September 2016. ... more
The Year In Space
SOLAR SCIENCE

CU-Boulder scientist: 2012 solar storm points up need for society to prepare
A massive ejection of material from the sun initially traveling at over 7 million miles per hour that narrowly missed Earth last year is an event solar scientists hope will open the eyes of policyma ... more
EXO LIFE

Hard rock life
Scientists are digging deep into the Earth's surface collecting census data on the microbial denizens of the hardened rocks. What they're finding is that, even miles deep and halfway across the glob ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Denmark closes airspace to civilian drones amid rise in sightings
Top diplomats of North Korea, China agree to oppose 'hegemonism'
What is the high seas treaty?
IRON AND ICE

Fire vs. Ice: The Science of ISON at Perihelion
After a year of observations, scientists waited with bated breath on Nov. 28, 2013, as Comet ISON made its closest approach to the sun, known as perihelion. Would the comet disintegrate in the fierc ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE

Scientist: Near-miss solar storm should be a wake-up call
A massive solar storm that narrowly missed Earth last year should open the eyes of policymakers to the threat of severe space weather, a U.S. scientist says. ... more
EXO WORLDS

Feature of Earth's atmosphere may help in search for habitable planets
An atmospheric peculiarity on Earth is likely common to billions of planets, a finding that may help identify potentially habitable worlds, U.S. scientists say. ... more
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MOON DAILY

Minerals in giant impact crater may be clues to moon's makeup, origin
Mineralogical discoveries in the moon's largest impact crater could yield clues to the evolution of our companion's crust and mantle, U.S. researchers say. ... more
DEEP IMPACT

Meteor rattles houses, brightens sky over Tucson
A loud boom and a bright streak in the sky over Tucson, Ariz., Tuesday evening may have been a preview of the year's largest meteor shower, astronomers said. ... more
24/7 News Coverage
The first animals on Earth may have been sea sponges, study suggests
Wildfire-induced thunderstorms recreated in Earth system models for first time
Fengyun satellite strengthens China global weather forecasting capacity
IRON AND ICE

'Wake up' competition for Europe's sleepy comet-chaser
Citizens of Planet Earth are being invited to make a "video shout-out" to wake up a deep-space probe, Rosetta, that has been in hibernation since June 2011. ... more
EXO LIFE

'Goldilocks' clue to habitable planets
The bad news: Earth's oceans will evaporate away. ... more
IRON AND ICE

Wake up, Rosetta!
Think it's tough getting up in the morning when the alarm clock sounds? Imagine what it must be like waking up 673 million kilometres from the warmth of the Sun and with no coffee. You might need so ... more
IRON AND ICE
The Sounds of New Horizons

On the Path to Pluto, 5 AU and Closing

SwRI study finds that Pluto satellites' orbital ballet may hint of long-ago collisions


IRON AND ICE
Hard rock life

'Goldilocks' clue to habitable planets

Odds of alien life 'very high,' House panel hears


IRON AND ICE
Feature of Earth's atmosphere may help in search for habitable planets

Astronomers discover planet that shouldn't be there

Hot Jupiters Highlight Challenges in the Search for Life Beyond Earth


IRON AND ICE
The Tough Task of Finding Fossils While Wearing a Spacesuit

Bid to colonize Mars wins high-profile backing

Mars One Selects Lockheed Martin to Study First Private Unmanned Mission to Mars

TECH SPACE

Google opens first data centres in Asia
US search engine giant Google Wednesday opened its first data centres in Asia to cater for soaring demand, and said it would double its planned investment in the Taiwan facility to $600 million. ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE

Image of sun shows two areas of sunspots, one arriving and one leaving
NASA has released an image of the sun showing two sunspots - one "coming" and one "going" - both the size of Jupiter, astronomers say. ... more
EXO WORLDS

Astronomers discover planet that shouldn't be there
An international team of astronomers, led by a University of Arizona graduate student, has discovered the most distantly orbiting planet found to date around a single, sun-like star. It is the first ... more
PHYSICS NEWS

You can't get entangled without a wormhole
Quantum entanglement is one of the more bizarre theories to come out of the study of quantum mechanics - so strange, in fact, that Albert Einstein famously referred to it as "spooky action at a dist ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
NASA ISRO radar satellite beams first Earth images from space
India plans mega-dam to counter China water fears
Breakthrough in UAV swarm intelligence as SRI redefines topology mapping
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Neutron Stars' X-ray Superbursts Mystify, Inspire Los Alamos Scientists

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Explosive growth of young star

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Supernova Blast Provides Clues to Age of Binary Star System

TIME AND SPACE

Quantum effects help cells capture light, but the details are obscure

TECH SPACE

SST Australia: Signed, Sealed and Ready for Delivery

MOON DAILY

Silent Orbit for China's Moon Lander

EXO WORLDS

Hot Jupiters Highlight Challenges in the Search for Life Beyond Earth

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Fledgling supernova remnant reveals neutron star's secrets

IRON AND ICE

Subaru Telescope's Image Captures the Intricacy of Comet Lovejoy's Tail

SOLAR SCIENCE

The Sun's Magnetic Field is about to Flip

New comet gets astronomers' attention with intricate tail structure

Early Universe less dusty than thought

A Whirling Dervish puts physicists in a spin

Quietly Cruising Through The Asteroid Belt

Astronomers find strange planet orbiting where there shouldn't be one

Odds of alien life 'very high,' House panel hears

Controllers prepare for spacecraft's rendezvous with protoplanet Ceres

Earth's gravity scarred by earthquake

Cassini Spacecraft Obtains Best Views of Saturn Hexagon

Cloud firm Box raises $100 mn

Astronomers detect water in atmosphere of distant exoplanets

'Spooky action' builds a wormhole between 'entangled' particles

China's most moon-like place

NASA's Dawn Fills out its Ceres Dance Card

LADEE Instruments Healthy and Ready for Science

December Expedition to Explore Life in Hydrothermal Vent

Hubble Traces Subtle Signals of Water on Hazy Worlds

A Blast from Its Past Dates the Youngest Neutron-Star Binary

Model Suggests Ocean Currents Shape Europa's Icy Shell in Ways Critical for Potential Habitats

Comet ISON is confirmed dead after brush with Sun

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