24/7 News Coverage
October 10, 2016
EXO WORLDS
TESS will provide exoplanet targets for years to come
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Oct 10, 2016
NASA's search for planets outside of our solar system has mostly involved very distant, faint stars. NASA's upcoming Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), by contrast, will look at the brightest stars in our solar neighborhood. After TESS launches, it will quickly start discovering new exoplanets that ground-based observatories, the Hubble Space Telescope and, later, the James Webb Space Telescope, will target for follow-up studies. TESS is scheduled to launch no later than June 2018. Astr ... read more

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EXO LIFE

Science at cusp of 'transformational' grasp of life via cell modeling
A paper recently published in the Journal of Molecular Biology shows how advances in molecular biology and computer science around the world soon may lead to a three-dimensional computer model of a ... more
IRON AND ICE

Origin of minor planets' rings revealed
A team of researchers has clarified the origin of the rings recently discovered around two minor planets known as centaurs, and their results suggest the existence of rings around other centaurs. Th ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

What Swings a Star Around - Another Star or a Distant Planet?
An international team of astronomers using the Subaru Telescope and led by a graduate student member of SOKENDAI (The Graduate University of Advanced Studies, Japan) has discovered companions circli ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Hubble detects giant 'cannonballs' shooting from star
Great balls of fire! NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has detected superhot blobs of gas, each twice as massive as the planet Mars, being ejected near a dying star. The plasma balls are zooming so fast ... more


MERCURY RISING

Bern-made laser altimeter taking off to Mercury
University of Bern's Laser Altimeter BELA has been successfully tested during the last weeks and the last components will be delivered to ESA on 5 October. The first laser altimeter for inter-planet ... more

Cryogenic Buyer's Guide


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STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Are planets setting the sun's pace?
The Sun's activity is determined by the Sun's magnetic field. Two combined effects are responsible for the latter: The omega and the alpha effect. Exactly where and how the alpha effect originates i ... more
EXO WORLDS

The death of a planet nursery?
The dusty disk surrounding the star TW Hydrae exhibits circular features that may signal the formation of protoplanets. LMU astrophysicist Barbara Ercolano argues, however, that the innermost actual ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
Russia launches dozens of drones as Ukraine claims 'important success'
Russian jets violate Estonian air space in 'brazen intrusion'
U.S. defense in free fall
TIME AND SPACE

Wandering black hole spotted by pair of X-ray telescopes
The vast majority of black holes, whether supermassive or intermediate, are found at the centers of galaxies, but occasionally, a few are caught wandering. ... more
SATURN DAILY

Cassini data reveal subsurface ocean on Saturn's moon Dione
Subsurface oceans are all the rage. Titan and Enceladus have one. Europa and Pluto probably have one. Ceres might have one. Now, Saturn's moon Dione is getting in on the action. ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Milkway's most-mysterious star is even stranger than astronomers thought
A star known by the unassuming name of KIC 8462852 in the constellation Cygnus has been raising eyebrows both in and outside of the scientific community for the past year. In 2015 a team of astronom ... more
Cryogenic Buyer's Guide
6th Annual Modular Construction Summit for Oil and Gas Agenda - December 7-9 - Houston Nuclear Plant Digitalization Conference - Nov 15-16 - Charlotte NC USA
JOVIAN DREAMS

A Second Look at Plumes and the Search for life on Europa
Once can be a coincidence. Twice can be luck. Seeing a hundred-mile-high column of water spew out of Jupiter's icy moon Europa three times in a row has been cited as a good reason to get excited. ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Discovery: A new form of light
Glow-in-the-dark stickers, weird deep-sea fish, LED lightbulbs - all have forms of luminescence. In other words, instead of just reflecting light, they make their own. Now a team of scientists from ... more
24/7 News Coverage
Fossil fuels harm health from 'cradle to grave': report
Trash, mulch and security: All jobs for troops in Washington
Rising oceans to threaten 1.5 million Australians by 2050: report
TIME AND SPACE

Measuring forces with oscillations
A child swings on a swing, gaining momentum with its legs. For physicists, this is a reasonably easy movement. They call it parametric oscillation. Things are getting more complicated if - in additi ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Scientists solve mystery of the lone wolf wave
Solitary waves or solitons, sometimes called lone wolf waves, are just what they sound like. Unlike normal waves, these nonlinear waves persist without dissipating - maintaining their shape, speed and energy even after colliding with other waves. ... more
TECH SPACE

Large volumes of data from ITER transferred to Japan at unprecedented speeds
The National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology (QST), as the implementing agency of the BA activities, in collaboration with the National Institutes of Natural Sciences ... more
TECH SPACE

Turning to the brain to reboot computing
Computation is stuck in a rut. The integrated circuits that powered the past 50 years of technological revolution are reaching their physical limits. This predicament has computer scientists scrambl ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Argonne ahead of the 'curve' in magnetic study
When a baseball pitcher uncorks a nasty curveball, the spinning motion of the ball forces air to flow around it at different speeds, causing the ball to "break" in one direction. The physics behind ... more

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

DarkLight enables visible light communication in the dark
With the rise in wearables such as smartwatches and fitness trackers that rely on smart sensors, and the continued popularity of smartphones, smart devices are taking our country by storm. Wireless ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

New oscillating material may tap unused electromagnetic spectrum
The terahertz gap is an unused portion of the electromagnetic spectrum comprising frequencies between radio waves and infrared radiation. No technologies currently utilize terahertz signals. ... more
24/7 Energy News Coverage
EU to fast-track review of 2035 combustion-engine ban
Norway sovereign wealth fund drops French miner over environmental fears
EU split on 2040 climate goal ahead of UN summit




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IRON AND ICE

Rosetta's comet adventure in numbers

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Astronomers discover dizzying spin of the Milky Way Halo

EXO WORLDS

Protoplanetary Disk Around a Young Star Exhibits Spiral Structure

SOLAR SCIENCE

Regional Forecasts of Solar Storms Set to Begin Oct. 1

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Spiral Arms Embrace Young Star

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

NASA's Fermi Finds Record-Breaking Binary in Galaxy Next Door

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

ALMA catches stellar cocoon with curious chemistry

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Where Primordial Galaxies Lurk

IRON AND ICE

Rosetta: The end of a fairytale

IRON AND ICE

Rosetta measures production of water at comet over two years

Alice Ultraviolet Spectrograph Completes Rosetta Mission to Comet 67P

Farewell Rosetta: ESA Mission to Conclude on Comet's Surface

Rosetta spacecraft headed for comet suicide crash

How to Merge Two Black Holes in a Simple Way

Moon and Mars on a plane

NASA's Asteroid-Bound Spacecraft Aces Instrument Check

New Low-Mass Objects Could Help Refine Planetary Evolution

Planet Mercury Found to Be Tectonically Active

Cosmic Dust Demystified by British Researchers

Hubble spots possible water plumes erupting on Jupiter's Moon Europa

Rosetta: The end of a space odyssey

Rosetta: How to end the fairytale

Discovery of an Extragalactic Hot Molecular Core

NASA-Funded Sounding Rocket Solves One Cosmic Mystery, Reveals Another

Construction of Most Sensitive Dark Matter Detector Moves Forward

Universe is without direction, astronomers say

New research undermines 'RNA world' of early evolution

Galactic Fireworks Illuminate Monster Hydrogen Blob

Hubble Finds Planet Orbiting Pair of Stars

Summer fireworks on Rosetta's comet



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