24/7 News Coverage
April 30, 2016
IRON AND ICE
Comet from Oort Cloud brings clues about solar system's origins
Honolulu (UPI) Apr 29, 2016
A newly identified comet may offer insights into the formation of the solar system. Scientists believe the comet is composed of materials that once made up the inner solar system at the time of Earth's formation. These unique materials have been preserved within the Oort Cloud for billions of years. This particular comet looks more like an asteroid, as it is rather dim and rocky and without a tail. Scientists call such tailless objects - which blur the line between comet and asteroid -- ... read more
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TIME AND SPACE

Weasel chews power cable, puts LHC experiments on hold
A weasel has temporarily thwarted the search for mysterious subatomic particles. ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Superfast light source made from artificial atom
All light sources work by absorbing energy - for example, from an electric current - and emit energy as light. But the energy can also be lost as heat and it is therefore important that the light so ... more
EXO LIFE

Hiding in the Sunshine: The Search for Other Earths
We humans might not be the only ones to ponder our place in the universe. If intelligent aliens do roam the cosmos, they too might ask a question that has gripped humans for centuries: Are we alone? ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


EXO WORLDS

On the Road to Finding Other Earths
Scientists are getting closer to finding worlds that resemble our own "blue marble" of a planet. NASA's Kepler mission alone has confirmed more than 1,000 planets outside our solar system - a handfu ... more


IRON AND ICE

Elektra: A New Triple Asteroid
Astronomers have discovered a new satellite orbiting the main belt asteroid (130) Elektra - the smallest object visible in this image. The team, led by Bin Yang (ESO, Santiago, Chile), imaged it usi ... more

Space Tech Expo - Design - Build - Test - Pasadena CA - May 24-26, 2016

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STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Fermi Telescope helps link cosmic neutrino to blazar blast
Nearly 10 billion years ago, the black hole at the center of a galaxy known as PKS B1424-418 produced a powerful outburst. Light from this blast began arriving at Earth in 2012. Now astronomers usin ... more
EXO LIFE

Are we alone? Setting some limits to our uniqueness
Are humans unique and alone in the vast universe? This question - summed up in the famous Drake equation - has for a half-century been one of the most intractable and uncertain in science. But ... 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 LIFE

Could Earth's light blue color be a signature of life?
In 1990, Voyager 1 captured the most distant portrait of our planet ever taken, revealing that from beyond Pluto's orbit, Earth appears as nothing more than a "pale blue dot." In a new study, resear ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Japan abandons $250mn black hole satellite
Japan is abandoning a quarter-of-a-billion-dollar satellite it sent to study black holes, disappointed space scientists said Thursday, after spending a month trying to save it. ... more
SATURN DAILY

Discovering the bath scum on Titan
It's not everyday that you get to discover something new. But when you do it is a rather strange and quite brilliant feeling. You don't really cry out 'Eureka' (there's usually about a million thing ... more
Human 2 Mars Conference May 17-19 2016 - Washington DC
Cryogenic Buyer's Guide
Transition from Operations to Decommissioning by Preparing a Safe, Cost-Effective Shut Down and Waste Management Strategy 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
SATURN DAILY

Profile of a methane sea on Titan
Saturn's largest moon is covered in seas and lakes of liquid hydrocarbons - and one sea has now been found to be filled with pure methane, with a seabed covered by a sludge of organic-rich material, ... more
EXO LIFE

Hydrothermal systems show spectrum of extreme life on Earth
The Danakil Depression in Ethiopia is one of the most inhospitable places on Earth. Water at near-boiling temperatures bubbles up from underground, high salt concentrations create multi-colored stru ... 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
TIME AND SPACE

Einstein's theory of relativity faces satellite test
Einstein's theory of general relativity is to be put to the test by a newly launched satellite in an experiment that could upend our understanding of physics. ... more
PHYSICS NEWS

Dutch-German impulse for gravitational wave research
Prof. Dr. Karsten Danzmann, director at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Hannover and Prof. Dr. Stan Bentvelsen, director of the National Institute for Subatomic Physics have si ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Physicists detect the enigmatic spin momentum of light
Ever since Kepler's observation in the 17th century that sunlight is one of the reasons that the tails of comets to always face away from the sun, it has been understood that light exerts pressure i ... more
TIME AND SPACE

The atom without properties
The microscopic world is governed by the rules of quantum mechanics, where the properties of a particle can be completely undetermined and yet strongly correlated with those of other particles. Phys ... more
MOON DAILY

First rocket made ready for launch at Vostochny spaceport
A Soyuz-2.1a carrier rocket has been installed at Russia's new Vostochny Cosmodrome's launch site ahead of its first space launch, Russia's Federal Space Agency Roscosmos said Saturday in a statemen ... more

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TIME AND SPACE

Zip software can detect the quantum-classical boundary
Quantum physics has a reputation for being mysterious and mathematically challenging. That makes it all the more surprising that a new technique to detect quantum behaviour relies on a familiar tool ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

New nanodevice shifts light's color at single-photon level
Converting a single photon from one color, or frequency, to another is an essential tool in quantum communication, which harnesses the subtle correlations between the subatomic properties of photons ... 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'


STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Dark matter does not contain certain axion-like particles

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Cosmic beacons reveal the Milky Way's ancient core

EXO WORLDS

Kepler spacecraft recovered and returned to the K2 Mission

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Herschel captures galactic panorama of the Milky Way

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Microscopic 'clocks' time distance to source of galactic cosmic rays

SPACE SCOPES

Hubble sees a star 'inflating' a giant bubble

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Microscopic 'timers' reveal likely source of galactic space radiation

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Nearby supernova ashes continue to rain on Earth

TIME AND SPACE

Numerical simulations shed new light on early universe

TECH SPACE

Students observe damaged Hitomi X-ray satellite and debris

Thanks, actin, for the memories

In these microbes, iron works like oxygen

New Ceres Images Show Bright Craters

Fermi telescope poised to pin down gravitational wave sources

Probing the transforming world of neutrinos

NJIT high-resolution images capture a solar flare as it unfolds

Sorting the wheat from the chaff

Physicist analyzes first electron neutrino data from NOvA Experiment

HAWC Gamma-Ray Observatory's reveals the very-high-energy sky

A Space Spider Watches Over Young Stars

Lone planetary-mass object found in family of stars

NASA missions measure solar flare from 2 spots in space

Inside the fiery furnace

Little Lander That Could: The Legacy of Philae

NASA's Fermi telescope poised to pin down gravitational wave sources

Y Marks the Spot

Comets in the "X"-treme

New hypervelocity binary star challenges dark matter, stellar acceleration models

SDO captures images of a mid-level solar flare

Meteorites arrive at NASA's Johnson Space Center


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