24/7 News Coverage
November 24, 2015
SPACE SCOPES
Where Alice in Wonderland Meets Albert Einstein
Boston MA (SPX) Nov 25, 2015
One hundred years ago this month, Albert Einstein published his theory of general relativity, one of the most important scientific achievements in the last century. A key result of Einstein's theory is that matter warps space-time, and thus a massive object can cause an observable bending of light from a background object. The first success of the theory was the observation, during a solar eclipse, that light from a distant background star was deflected by the predicted amount as it passed near th ... read more
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STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Planetary nebulae map of the Milkyway gets distancing tweak
A way of estimating more accurate distances to the thousands of so-called planetary nebulae dispersed across our Galaxy has been announced by a team of three astronomers based at the University of H ... more
EXO WORLDS

How DSCOVR Could Help in Exoplanet Hunting
Could a space weather satellite be helpful in exoplanet hunting? Well, it now turns out it could. According to a team of scientists led by Stephen Kane from the San Francisco State University, the D ... more
EXO WORLDS

Retro Exo and Its Originators
Exoplanets are mysterious, they're complicated, they're important, they're awe-inspiring. And, to a team of artists at the Jet Propulsion Lab, they're also totally fun. They're a topic for endless a ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


TIME AND SPACE

Supercomputing the strange difference between matter and antimatter
An international team of physicists including theorists from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory has published the first calculation of direct "CP" symmetry violatio ... more


STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Earth Might Have Hairy Dark Matter
The solar system might be a lot hairier than we thought. A new study publishing this week in the Astrophysical Journal by Gary Prezeau of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, prop ... more

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OUTER PLANETS

Composite images compare sunlit faces of Pluto
New composite images released by NASA show Pluto and Charon lit up by the sun. The images were taken by New Horizons' cameras as the probe approached the dwarf planet and its moon. ... more
EXO WORLDS

Forming planet observed for first time
An international team of scientists in Australia and the United States has captured the first-ever images of a planet in the making. The accumulation of dust and gas particles onto a new planet - th ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
US lawmaker warns of military 'misunderstanding' risk with China
Spain approves 'total' arms embargo against Israel
Khamenei says Iran 'won't yield' to pressure to abandon uranium enrichment
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

VISTA pinpoints earliest giant galaxies
Just counting the number of galaxies in a patch of sky provides a way to test astronomers' theories of galaxy formation and evolution. However, such a simple task becomes increasingly hard as astron ... more
EXO LIFE

Radiation blasts leave most Earth-like planet uninhabitable, new research suggests
The most Earth-like planet could have been made uninhabitable by vast quantities of radiation, new research led by the University of Warwick research has found. The atmosphere of the planet, K ... more
PHYSICS NEWS

Gravity, who needs it
What happens to your body in space? NASA's Human Research Program has been unfolding answers for over a decade. Space is a dangerous, unfriendly place. Isolated from family and friends, exposed to r ... more
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Turn key solar systems for domestic and commercial installations
Solar systems for home and business installations
SOLAR SCIENCE

Stormy space weather puts equatorial regions' power at risk
Dr Brett Carter of the RMIT SPACE Research Centre and his team from RMIT, Boston College and Dartmouth College, found that these equatorial electrical disruptions threaten power grids in Southeast A ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Ultra-short X-ray pulses could shed new light on the fastest events in physics
Ultra-short x-ray pulses could shed new light on the fastest events in physics. If you've ever been captivated by slow-motion footage on a wildlife documentary, or you've shuddered when similar tech ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Typhoon Ragasa hits south China after killing 15 in Taiwan
Toxic homes a lasting legacy of Los Angeles fires
Climate change causing havoc with global water cycle: UN
EXO WORLDS

UA researchers capture first photo of planet in making
There are 450 light-years between Earth and LkCa15, a young star with a transition disk around it, a cosmic whirling dervish, a birthplace for planets. Despite the disk's considerable distance from ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Black holes don't need to spin to spit out jets
Jet streams emanating or pulsing outward from stellar objects are often the result of rotational forces. Spinning has long been the explanation for the jets of black holes. ... more
TIME AND SPACE

NIST team proves 'spooky action at a distance' is really real
Einstein was wrong about at least one thing: There are, in fact, "spooky actions at a distance," as now proven by researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Eins ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Forged in the hearts of stars
Apart from hydrogen, as many have heard from the Carl Sagan and Neil deGrasse Tyson "Cosmos" series, every ingredient in the human body is made from elements forged by stars. The calcium in our bone ... more
SATURN DAILY

Two Moons About Saturn
Although Dione (near) and Enceladus (far) are composed of nearly the same materials, Enceladus has a considerably higher reflectivity than Dione. As a result, it appears brighter against the dark ni ... more

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EXO LIFE

'Chemical Laptop' Could Search for Signs of Life Outside Earth
If you were looking for the signatures of life on another world, you would want to take something small and portable with you. That's the philosophy behind the "Chemical Laptop" being developed at N ... more
TECH SPACE

Simple errors limit scientific scrutiny
Researchers have found more than half of the public datasets provided with scientific papers are incomplete, which prevents reproducibility tests and follow-up studies. However, slight improvements ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
China's Alibaba teams up with Nvidia on AI robot tech
In just one year, Google turns AI setbacks into dominance
China steps into spotlight at UN climate talks
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Astronomers discover a distant galaxy with a pulse

SPACE SCOPES

Hubble Views a Lonely Galaxy

SOLAR SCIENCE

Queen's University Belfast lead research milestone in predicting solar flares

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Gaia consortium meets ahead of first data catalogue release next year

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

3D visualisation redefines Milky Way's local architecture

TIME AND SPACE

Discovery of classic pi formula a 'cunning piece of magic'

TIME AND SPACE

Experiment records extreme quantum weirdness

EXO WORLDS

Rocket Scientists to Launch Planet-Finding Telescope

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Discovery measures 'heartbeats' of distant galaxy's stars

EXO WORLDS

5400mph winds discovered hurtling around planet outside solar system

New exoplanet in our neighborhood

The colors of Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko

More Than Meets the Eye - Delta Orionis in Orion's Belt

Ancient stars at the center of the galaxy contain 'fingerprints' from the early universe

Cassini Finds Monstrous Ice Cloud in Titan's South Polar Region

Astronomers eager to get a whiff of newfound Venus-like planet

Secondhand Spacecraft Has Firsthand Asteroid Experience

Rosetta and Philae: one year since landing on a comet

Oldest stars found near Milky Way center

Machine learning could solve riddles of galaxy formation

Fermi Satellite Detects First Gamma-Ray Pulsar in Another Galaxy

The glowing halo of a zombie star

Asteroid ripped apart to form star's glowing ring system

Recreating a heavenly chorus of plasma waves on Earth

A new explanation for the explosive nature of magnetic reconnection

Mercury Gets a Meteoroid Shower from Comet Encke

New Results from GPI Exoplanet Survey

Early Earth's Haze May Give Clue to Habitability Elsewhere

Measurement of Hubble constant questioned by Nobel laureate Riess' team

UCLA professor proposes simpler way to define what makes a planet


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