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February 27, 2015
TIME AND SPACE
A solution to the puzzle of the origin of matter itself
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Feb 26, 2015
Most of the laws of nature treat particles and antiparticles equally, but stars and planets are made of particles, or matter, and not antiparticles, or antimatter. That asymmetry, which favors matter to a very small degree, has puzzled scientists for many years. New research by UCLA physicists, published in the journal Physical Review Letters, offers a possible solution to the mystery of the origin of matter in the universe. Alexander Kusenko, a professor of physics and astronomy in the UCLA ... read more
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TIME AND SPACE

Astronomers find impossibly large black hole
An international team of astronomers have found a huge and ancient black hole which was powering the brightest object early in the universe. The black hole's mass is 12 billion times that of t ... more
IRON AND ICE

Dawn begins exploration of the first dwarf planet
The Dawn spacecraft is performing flawlessly as it conducts the first exploration of the first dwarf planet. Each new picture of Ceres reveals exciting and surprising new details about a fascinating ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Monster black hole discovered at cosmic dawn
Scientists have discovered the brightest quasar in the early universe, powered by the most massive black hole yet known at that time. The international team led by astronomers from Peking University ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


IRON AND ICE

'Bright Spot' on Ceres Has Dimmer Companion
Dwarf planet Ceres continues to puzzle scientists as NASA's Dawn spacecraft gets closer to being captured into orbit around the object. The latest images from Dawn, taken nearly 29,000 miles (46,000 ... more


STELLAR CHEMISTRY

The Strange Case of the Missing Dwarf
The new SPHERE instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope has been used to search for a brown dwarf expected to be orbiting the unusual double star V471 Tauri. SPHERE has given astronomers the best lo ... more
Human 2 Mars Conference Mat 5-7 2015 - Washington DC 26th Space Cryogenics Workshop Small Modular Reactors - USA - 2015 Nuclear Decommissioning Conference Europe May 2015
Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison & Memory Foam Mattress Review
SOLAR SCIENCE

SOHO Sees Something New Near The Sun
An unusual comet skimmed past the sun on Feb 18-21, 2015, as captured by the European Space Agency (ESA) and NASA's Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, or SOHO. This comet was interesting for ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Widespread winds and eedback from supermassive black holes
Astronomers have discovered that the winds from supermassive black holes at the centre of galaxies blow outward in all directions, a suspected phenomenon that had been difficult to prove before now. ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
EU states to hold talks on 'drone wall' to protect bloc
Denmark military intel fails to identify source of drone flights
Lithuania eases rules on shooting down drones
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Does dark matter cause mass extinctions and geologic upheavals
Research by New York University Biology Professor Michael Rampino concludes that Earth's infrequent but predictable path around and through our Galaxy's disc may have a direct and significant effect ... more
EXO LIFE

Life Might Thrive a Dozen Miles Beneath Earth's Surface
Life teems all over our planet's exterior and even down into the lightless oceanic depths. But just how far underground might life be able to hack it? New research offers evidence of bacteria ... more
EXO WORLDS

Planets Can Alter Each Other's Climates over Eons
A new study sheds light on how exoplanets in tightly-packed solar systems interact with each other gravitationally by affecting one another's climates and their abilities to support alien life. ... more
Training Space Professionals Since 1970

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

The Cosmic Chemistry That Gave Rise to Water
Earth's water has a mysterious past stretching back to the primordial clouds of gas that birthed the Sun and other stars. By using telescopes and computer simulations to study such star nurseries, r ... more
TIME AND SPACE

The building blocks of the future defy logic
Wake up in the morning and stretch; your midsection narrows. Pull on a piece of plastic at separate ends; it becomes thinner. So does a rubber band. One might assume that when a force is applied alo ... more
24/7 News Coverage
NASA ISRO radar satellite beams first Earth images from space
Morocco High Atlas whistle language strives for survival
China warns Papua New Guinea over Australian defence deal
TIME AND SPACE

Stretch and relax by losing 1 electron magnetism switch
The scientists used the unique Nanocluster Trap experimental station at the BESSY II synchrotron radiation source at Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin and published their results in the Journal Angewandte Ch ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Direct observation of bond formations
A collaboration between researchers from KEK, the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), RIKEN, and the Japan Synchrotron Radiation Resear ... more
TECH SPACE

Building trustworthy big data algorithms
Much of our reams of data sit in large databases of unstructured text. Finding insights among emails, text documents, and websites is extremely difficult unless we can search, characterize, and clas ... more
TIME AND SPACE

New data on formation of mysterious chemical gardens
Recent research which has counted with the participation of the University of Granada Andalusian Institute of Earth Sciences has yielded new data on chemical gardens, mysterious formations produced ... more
TIME AND SPACE

In the quantum world, the future affects the past
We're so used murder mysteries that we don't even notice how mystery authors play with time. Typically the murder occurs well before the midpoint of the book, but there is an information blackout at ... more

TIME AND SPACE

Getting a grip on exotic atomic nuclei
A new model describing atomic nuclei, proposed by a physicist from the University of Warsaw Faculty of Physics, more accurately predicts the properties of various exotic isotopes that are created in ... more
TECH SPACE

Apple to invest 1.7bn euros in Ireland, Denmark data centres
US tech giant Apple said Monday it would invest 1.7 billion euros ($1.9 billion) in two data centres located in Ireland and Denmark, to boost online services in the European market. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
JUNO begins decade-long mission to probe neutrino mysteries
SFL Missions to Deliver Spacecraft Buses for HawkEye 360 RF Signal Detection Expansion
Voyager debuts first space based multi cloud region to advance orbital data processing
TECH SPACE

Data-storage for eternity

TIME AND SPACE

Supercomputer explore how an air-reed instrument generates air flow and sound

TIME AND SPACE

New and improved Large Hadron Collider ready to do science again

SOLAR SCIENCE

For the first time, spacecraft catch a solar shockwave in the act

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Stars akin to the sun also explode when they die

SOLAR SCIENCE

The origin of the magnetic field covering the Sun has been discovered

SOLAR SCIENCE

A new view of the solar system: Astrophysical jets driven by the sun

TIME AND SPACE

Forget the Higgs Boson, Massively Upgraded LHC to Search for 'Squark'

DEEP IMPACT

NASA photographs fireball streaking across Pennsylvania skies

EXO WORLDS

The mystery of cosmic oceans and dunes

Dark matter guides growth of supermassive black holes

Why do starburst galaxies 'burst'?

NASA, ESA Telescopes Give Shape to Furious Black Hole Winds

With new data, Planck satellite brings early universe into focus

Hubble Gets Best View of Circumstellar Debris Disk Distorted by Planet

The strange case of the missing dwarf

Two Years On, Source of Russian Chelyabinsk Meteor Remains Elusive

Laser 'ruler' holds promise for hunting exoplanets

A novel approach for high performance field emission electron sources

Exploded Star Blooms Like a Cosmic Flower

Mismatched twin stars spotted in the delivery room

Correlations of quantum particles help in distinguishing physical processes

Close Encounters of a Scholz Kind

Dawn Captures Sharper Images of Ceres

Be My Valentine: Rosetta Spacecraft Makes Close Pass by Comet 67P

A new spin on spintronics

Interstellar technology throws light on spinning black holes

Life on other planets: Alternative chemistries of life

Rosetta probe gets best comet closeup pics yet

NASA wants to send a submarine to Saturn's moon Titan

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