24/7 News Coverage
October 19, 2015
SOLAR SCIENCE
Large solar storms 'dodge' detection systems on Earth
Madrid, Spain (SPX) Oct 20, 2015
According to observations from the Tihany Magnetic Observatory in Hungary, the indices used by scientists to assess the Sun's geomagnetic perturbations to the Earth are unable to detect some of these events, which could put both power supply and communication networks at risk. The Tihany Magnetic Observatory registered a solar storm similar to the largest one ever recorded while other observatories were completely unaware of the event. In 1859 the largest and most powerful solar storm ever recorde ... read more
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EXO LIFE

Life on Earth likely started 4.1 billion years ago
UCLA geochemists have found evidence that life likely existed on Earth at least 4.1 billion years ago - 300 million years earlier than previous research suggested. The discovery indicates that life ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Quantum coherent-like state observed in a biological protein for the first time
If you take certain atoms and make them almost as cold as they possibly can be, the atoms will fuse into a collective low-energy quantum state called a Bose-Einstein condensate. In 1968 physicist He ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Latest experiment at Large Hadron Collider reports first results
After a two-year hiatus, the Large Hadron Collider, the largest and most powerful particle accelerator in the world, began its second run of experiments in June, smashing together subatomic particle ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


TIME AND SPACE

A resonator for electrons
More than two thousand years ago the Greek inventor and philosopher Archimedes already came up with the idea of using a curved mirror to reflect light in such a way as to focus it into a point - leg ... more


TIME AND SPACE

Chalmers researchers extend the lifetime of atoms using a mirror
Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have succeeded in an experiment where they get an artificial atom to survive ten times longer than normal by positioning the atom in front of a mirro ... more
Training Space Professionals Since 1970

Make SMRs a commercial reality Turn key solar systems for domestic and commercial installations
Solar systems for home and business installations
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MOON DAILY

Mound near lunar south pole formed by unique volcanic process
A giant mound near the Moon's south pole appears to be a volcanic structure unlike any other found on the lunar surface, according to new research by Brown University geologists. The formation ... more
IRON AND ICE

Comet Encke: A solar windsock observed by NASA's STEREO
Much like the flapping of a windsock displays the quick changes in wind's speed and direction, called turbulence, comet tails can be used as probes of the solar wind - the constant flowing stream of ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Trump to U.N.: 'Your countries are going to hell'
Taiwan running out of time for satellite communications, space chief tells AFP
US lawmaker warns of military 'misunderstanding' risk with China
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

VLA Reveals Spectacular "Halos" of Spiral Galaxies
A study of spiral galaxies seen edge-on has revealed that "halos" of cosmic rays and magnetic fields above and below the galaxies' disks are much more common than previously thought. An intern ... more
PHYSICS NEWS

LISA Pathfinder prepped for Vega launch in December
The LISA Pathfinder demonstrator for space-based observations of gravitational waves is undergoing checkout at the Spaceport, preparing it for a December 2 launch on Arianespace's sixth flight of th ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

ALMA Unveils Rapid Star Formation in Distant Galaxies
Galaxies forming stars at extreme rates nine billion years ago were more efficient than average galaxies today, researchers find. The majority of stars have been believed to lie on a "main seq ... more
Nuclear Operations and Maintenance Efficiency Summit USA 2015
TIME AND SPACE

Shedding light on the growth of stars and black holes
A Southampton astronomer is among a team of international researchers whose work has revealed a surprising similarity between the way in which astronomical objects grow including black holes, white ... more
SATURN DAILY

Cassini Begins Series of Flybys with Close-up of Saturn Moon Enceladus
NASA's Cassini spacecraft will wrap up its time in the region of Saturn's large, icy moons with a series of three close encounters with Enceladus starting Wednesday, Oct. 14. Images are expected to ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Toxic homes a lasting legacy of Los Angeles fires
'Greatest con job ever': Trump trashes climate science at UN
Turkey facing worst drought in over 50 years
IRON AND ICE

AIMing a light across millions of kilometres
Imagine beaming a light across millions of kilometres of empty space, all the way back to Earth. ESA's proposed Asteroid Impact Mission is intended to do just that: demonstrate laser communications ... more
SATURN DAILY

Closest-ever Views of Saturn's Moon Enceladus
NASA's Cassini spacecraft has begun returning its best-ever views of the northern extremes of Saturn's icy, ocean-bearing moon Enceladus. The spacecraft obtained the images during its Oct. 14 flyby, ... more
TECH SPACE

Mathematicians find 'magic key' to drive Ramanujan's taxi-cab number
Taxi-cab numbers, among the most beloved integers in math, trace their origins to 1918 and what seemed like a casual insight by the Indian genius Srinivasa Ramanujan. Now mathematicians at Emory Uni ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Flickering light reveals remarkable link with matter-eating black holes
An international team of astronomers, including Dr Simon Vaughan from the University of Leicester's Department of Physics and Astronomy, has discovered a previously unknown link between the way youn ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE

Blast waves in the Sun's atmosphere
Two teams of researchers led by Nariaki Nitta from the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center in the USA and by Radoslav Bucik from the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Ge ... more
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STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Researchers discover distant galactic halos
A study of spiral galaxies seen edge-on has revealed that halos of cosmic rays and magnetic fields above and below the galaxies' disks are much more common than previously thought. Edge-on galaxies, ... more
IRON AND ICE

What smacks into Ceres stays on Ceres
A new set of high-velocity impact experiments suggests that the dwarf planet Ceres may be something of a cosmic dartboard: Projectiles that slam into it tend to stick. The experiments, perform ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
How quantum computers can be validated when solving unsolvable problems
Neutrinovoltaic master formula published as pathway to scalable clean energy
Boeing defense workers reject deal to end strike
TIME AND SPACE

On the precision frontier: A new calculation holds promise

TIME AND SPACE

Scientists produce shortest electron bunches ever by surfing plasma waves

TIME AND SPACE

A particle purely made of nuclear force

IRON AND ICE

SwRI-led study finds comet tail may shed light on solar wind heating

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

A cosmic sackful of black coal

SATURN DAILY

Cassini Begins Series of Flybys of Enceladus

SPACE SCOPES

Planetary portrait captures new changes in Jupiter's Great Red Spot

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Listening to the Extragalactic Radio

EXO WORLDS

Airbus DS ready to start testing exoplanet tracker CHEOPS

TIME AND SPACE

A quantum simulator of impossible physics

Planetary Data System Releases Final Raw MESSENGER Dataset

Hubble Telescope Spots Mysterious Space Objects

Mercury featuring prominently in October skies

Double the (quantum) fun

Exoplanet Anniversary: From Zero to Thousands in 20 Years

LISA Pathfinder takes a major step closer to launch

Where to look for life

Mysterious ripples found racing through planet-forming disc

More students earning statistics degrees - but not enough

Physicists shrink particle accelerator

Laser-wielding physicists seize control of atoms' behavior

Lunar Pox

Scientists present, discuss latest data from experiments smashing nuclei

Scientists produce status check on quantum teleportation

AIDA Double Mission to Divert Didymos Asteroid's Didymoon

Japanese, Canadian win Nobel Physics Prize

Where to Search for Life? 'Habitability Index' Devised as a Guide

World's largest atom smashers produce world's smallest droplets

Johns Hopkins research on infant universe takes step forward

Peeking into our galaxy's stellar nursery

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