24/7 News Coverage
October 24, 2016
MOON DAILY
Small impacts are reworking the moon's soil faster than scientists thoug
Tempe AZ (SPX) Oct 24, 2016
The Moon's surface is being "gardened" - churned by small impacts - more than 100 times faster than scientists previously thought. This means that surface features believed to be young are perhaps even younger than assumed. It also means that any structures placed on the Moon as part of human expeditions will need better protection. This new discovery comes from more than seven years of high-resolution lunar images studied by a team of scientists from Arizona State University and Cornell Universit ... read more

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TIME AND SPACE

Cosmological Mystery Solved by Map of Voids and Superclusters
A team of astrophysicists at the University of Portsmouth have created the largest ever map of voids and superclusters in the universe, which helps solve a long-standing cosmological mystery. The ma ... more
MOON DAILY

2016 Ends with Three Supermoons
Step outside on October 16, and take a look at the moon. Not only will the moon be full, but on that day, the moon will be at it's closest point to our planet as it orbits Earth. This makes the Octo ... more
JOVIAN DREAMS

Long-term, hi-res tracking of eruptions on Jovian moon Io
Jupiter's moon Io continues to be the most volcanically active body in the solar system, as documented by the longest series of frequent, high-resolution observations of the moon's thermal emission ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com


EXO WORLDS

Astronomers find oldest known planetary disk
At 45 million years old, a newly discovered primordial ring of gas and dust is the oldest known planet-forming disk in the universe. The record-breaking circumstellar disk surrounds a red dwarf in the Carina stellar association. ... more


TIME AND SPACE

The 1950s: The decade in which gravity physics became experimental
In the 1950s and earlier, the gravity theory of Einstein's general relativity was largely a theoretical science. In a new paper published in EPJ H, Jim Peebles, a physicist and theoretical cosmologi ... more

Cryogenic Buyer's Guide


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SATURN DAILY

Going Out in a Blaze of Glory: Cassini's Grand Finale
With the conclusion of the international Cassini mission set for September 15, 2017, the spacecraft is poised to soon begin a thrilling two-part endgame. Cassini will enter the first part of this de ... more
IRON AND ICE

Unexpected discoveries on a metal world
Astronomers have discovered possible evidence for water on the surface of the largest metallic asteroid in the solar system. Named 16 Psyche, the object is one of the most massive in the asteroid be ... more
Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
U.S. defense in free fall
U.S. and Saudis conduct Middle East's largest counter-drone exercise
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan sign mutual defense pact
IRON AND ICE

Avalanches, Not Internal Pressure, Cause Comet Outbursts
Outbursts of comet nuclei are likely caused by surface avalanches rather than geyser-like eruptions from within, research by the Planetary Science Institute's Jordan Steckloff shows. Rapid asy ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Scientists create most detailed map of the Milky Way
Australian scientists have worked with researchers in Germany to create the most detailed map of the Milky Way, using the world's largest radio telescopes. The HI4PI project, which is a combin ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Did LIGO detect black holes or gravastars
After the first direct detection of gravitational waves that was announced last February by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration and made news all over the world, Luciano Rezzolla (Goethe University Fr ... 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
STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Astronomers to explore mysteries of star formation with new camera
How do stars form deep inside clouds of molecular gas? What's the history of star formation throughout cosmic time? When did the first stars form? And how did they produce the materials necessary fo ... more
JOVIAN DREAMS

Scientists intrigued by data from first Juno flyby
NASA's Juno spacecraft entered safe mode Tuesday, Oct. 18 at about 10:47 p.m. PDT (Oct. 19 at 1:47 a.m. EDT). Early indications are a software performance monitor induced a reboot of the spacecraft' ... 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
EXO WORLDS

ALMA spots possible formation site of icy giant planet
A number of extrasolar planets have been found in the past two decades and now researchers agree that planets can have a wide variety of characteristics. However, it is still unclear how this divers ... more
EXO LIFE

Building Blocks of Life's Building Blocks Come From Starlight
Life exists in a myriad of wondrous forms, but if you break any organism down to its most basic parts, it's all the same stuff: carbon atoms connected to hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and other element ... more
JOVIAN DREAMS

Glitch, safe mode as Juno space probe orbits Jupiter
Officials in charge of NASA's Juno space probe orbiting Jupiter last weekend delayed a crucial maneuver due to a main engine malfunction, they said Wednesday. ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Phonon and magnon are a couple
Professor Park Je-Geun, Associate Director of the Center for Correlated Electron Systems (CCES), within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), and colleagues have observed, quantified and created a ... more
TIME AND SPACE

Two-dimensional spin-orbit coupling for Bose-Einstein condensates realized
Spin-orbit coupling is one of the fundamental effects in quantum physics. It plays a vital role in many basic physic phenomena and exotic quantum states. These phenomena led to the foundation of sev ... more

SOLAR SCIENCE

The Sun's coronal tail wags its photospheric dog
Solar physicists have long viewed the rotation of sunspots as a primary generator of solar flares - the sudden, powerful blasts of electromagnetic radiation and charged particles that burst into spa ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE

Wayward Field Lines Challenge Solar Radiation Models
In addition to the constant emission of warmth and light, our sun sends out occasional bursts of solar radiation that propel high-energy particles toward Earth. These solar energetic particles, or S ... 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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STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Massive Cloud on Collision Course with the Milky Way

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

How Deadly Would A Nearby Gamma Ray Burst Be?

MOON DAILY

Hunter's Supermoon to light up Saturday night sky

MOON DAILY

Spectacular Lunar Grazing Occultation of Bright Star on Oct. 18

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

The Milky Way's ancient heart

TIME AND SPACE

Dense molecular gas disks drive the growth of supermassive black holes

TIME AND SPACE

Lights, action, electrons!

MOON DAILY

Small Impacts Are Reworking Lunar Soil Faster Than Scientists Thought

STELLAR CHEMISTRY

Who stole all the stars

TIME AND SPACE

Teleporting toward a quantum Internet

Proxima Centauri might be more sunlike than we thought

'Weighing' atoms with electrons

Stars with Three Planet-Forming Discs of Gas

Study suggests comet strike's link to age-old warming event

Filming light and electrons coupled together as they travel under cover

A facelift for the Moon every 81,000 years

UC physicists join collaborative efforts in search for new ghost neutrinos

Stable molecular state of photons and artificial atom discovered

The Milky Way's Ancient Heart

VISTA finds ancient star cluster in Milky Way center

Hubble detects giant 'cannonballs' shooting from star

Detonating white dwarfs as supernovae

Using oxygen as a tracer of galactic evolution

Stellar ages in seconds

Discovery of an extragalactic hot molecular core

Discovery: A new form of light

The death of a planet nursery?

Kepler Gets the 'Big Picture' of Comet 67P

Researchers discover effect of rare solar wind on Earth's radiation belts

Bern-made laser altimeter taking off to Mercury



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