24/7 News Coverage
April 06, 2016
TECH SPACE
Record-breaking steel could be used for body armor, shields for satellites
San Diego CA (SPX) Apr 06, 2016
A team of engineers has developed and tested a type of steel with a record-breaking ability to withstand an impact without deforming permanently. The new steel alloy could be used in a wide range of applications, from drill bits, to body armor for soldiers, to meteor-resistant casings for satellites. The material is an amorphous steel alloy, a promising subclass of steel alloys made of arrangements of atoms that deviate from steel's classical crystal-like structure, where iron atoms occupy specifi ... read more
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IRON AND ICE

Asteroid-Hunting Spacecraft Delivers a Second Year of Data
NASA's Near-Earth Object Wide-field Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) mission has released its second year of survey data. The spacecraft has now characterized a total of 439 NEOs since the mission was re-s ... more
PHYSICS NEWS

WVU astrophysicists part of gravitational wave search
On the heels of their participation in the historic research that resulted in the detection of gravitational waves, West Virginia University astrophysicists continue to plow new ground and build upo ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Simulating supermassive black holes
Near the edge of the visible Universe are some of the brightest objects ever observed, known as quasars, which are believed to contain supermassive black holes of more than a billion times the mass ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Hubble's journey to the center of our galaxy
Peering deep into the heart of our Milky Way galaxy, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope reveals a rich tapestry of more than half a million stars. Except for a few blue foreground stars, the stars are pa ... more


TIME AND SPACE

Elusive Japanese black hole seeking satellite breaks silence
Japan's X-Ray Astronomy Satellite Hitomi, which was launched last month, has managed to make fleeting contact with ground control amid reports that the spacecraft has separated into six parts. ... more

Transition from Operations to Decommissioning by Preparing a Safe, Cost-Effective Shut Down and Waste Management Strategy

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IRON AND ICE

One year on station at Ceres
One year after taking up its new residence in the solar system, Dawn is continuing to witness extraordinary sights on dwarf planet Ceres. The indefatigable explorer is carrying out its intensive cam ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Andromeda's first spinning neutron star
Decades of searching in the Milky Way's nearby 'twin' galaxy Andromeda have finally paid off, with the discovery of an elusive breed of stellar corpse, a neutron star, by ESA's XMM-Newton space tele ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Russia offers to extend nuclear arms limits with US
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan sign mutual defense pact
Brazil, Chile sign defense agreement
EXO WORLDS

Planet formation in Earth-like orbit around a young star
The disks of dust and gas that surround young stars are the formation sites of planets. New images from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) reveal never-before-seen details in th ... more
EXO WORLDS

NASA's Spitzer Maps Climate Patterns on a Super-Earth
Observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope have led to the first temperature map of a super-Earth planet - a rocky planet nearly two times as big as ours. The map reveals extreme temperature s ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Magnetar could have boosted explosion of extremely bright supernova
Calculations by scientists have found highly magnetized, rapidly spinning neutron stars called magnetars could explain the energy source behind two extremely unusual stellar explosions. Stella ... more
Cryogenic Buyer's Guide Military Network Modernization 2016 - Washington DC - April 25-27
Space Tech Expo - Design - Build - Test - Pasadena CA - May 24-26, 2016 The World's Largest Commercial Drone Conference and Expo - Sept 7-9 - Las Vegas
Directed Energy And Next Generation Munitions - 20-22 June - Washington DC
EXO WORLDS

'Smoothed' light will help search for Earth's twins
Physicists of MIPT (Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology) and the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences developed optical technology for the "correction" of light coming ... more
MOON DAILY

The Moon thought to play a major role in maintaining Earth's magnetic field
The Earth's magnetic field permanently protects us from the charged particles and radiation that originate in the Sun. This shield is produced by the geodynamo, the rapid motion of huge quantities o ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Ex-US climate envoy: Trump threatening 'consensus science' worldwide
How did an Indian zoo get the world's most endangered great ape?
Australian scientists grapple with 'despicable' butterfly heist
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Researchers demonstrate a new way to characterize twisted light
Researchers at the University of Rochester have overcome experimental challenges to demonstrate a new way for getting a full picture of twisted light: characterizing the Wigner distribution. T ... more
TECH SPACE

Electronic counterpart to ecological models revealed
Predicting the future from the present - that's what logistic maps can do. For example, they can be used to predict the evolution of a population in the near future based on its present situation. ... more
TIME AND SPACE

New use for X-rays: A radar gun for unruly atoms
X-rays have long been used to make pictures of tiny objects, even single atoms. Now a team of scientists has discovered a new use for X-rays at the atomic scale: using them like a radar gun to measu ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Revealing the ion transport at nanoscale
EPFL researchers have shown that a law of physics having to do with electron transport at nanoscale can also be analogously applied to the ion transport. This discovery provides insight into a key a ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

UWM to continue operating IceCube Neutrino Observatory
The National Science Foundation has renewed a cooperative agreement with the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW-Madison) to operate the IceCube Neutrino Observatory, a massive particle detector bur ... more

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STELLAR CHEMISTRY

INTEGRAL sets limits on gamma rays from merging black holes
Following the discovery of gravitational waves from the merging of two black holes, ESA's INTEGRAL satellite has revealed no simultaneous gamma rays, just as models predict. On 14 September, the ter ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Trigger for Milky Way's Youngest Supernova Identified
Scientists have used data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and the NSF's Jansky Very Large Array to determine the likely trigger for the most recent supernova in the Milky Way. They applied a n ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
What to look for in China and Europe's climate plans
Chinese firms pay price of jihadist strikes against Mali junta
EU states agree broad UN emissions target avoiding 'embarrassment'


TIME AND SPACE

Eindhoven and Mexican researchers prove Huygens was right

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Seeking the origin of gold in the universe

MOON DAILY

Moon Mission: A Blueprint for the Red Planet

PHYSICS NEWS

Continuing the Search for Gravitational Waves

SATURN DAILY

Working Toward 'Seamless' Infrared Maps of Titan

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Hunting the "ghost" of the universe

EXO WORLDS

Map of rocky exoplanet reveals a lava world

EXO LIFE

New Search for Signals from 20,000 Star Systems Begins

EXO WORLDS

Instrument Team Selected to Build Next-Gen Planet Hunter

EXO WORLDS

Investigating the Mystery of Migrating 'Hot Jupiters'

Earth's moon wandered off axis billions of years ago

The Lunar Race That Isn't

Our sun could also be a superflare star

Cassini Spies Titan's Tallest Peaks

Oddball planet raises questions about origins of 'hot Jupiters'

Moons of Saturn may be younger than the dinosaurs

Computer model explains sustained eruptions on icy moon of Saturn

First Discovery of a Binary Companion for a Type Ia Supernova

The wilds of the local group

Lockheed Martin Opens Space Fence Test Facility

NJIT researchers make a major cavefish discovery in Thailand

A view of the colorful microcosm within a proton

Tracing star formation rates in distant galaxies

Solar Wind Induces Jupiter's X-ray Aurora

Improving benchtop particle accelerators

Entanglement becomes easier to measure

Quantum simulation of a disordered system explain quantum many-particle problem

A New Way to Determine the Age of Stars

GRaND Seeks Subsurface Water Ice on Ceres

For bacteria, life in space is better than on Earth


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