24/7 News Coverage
July 24, 2018
IRON AND ICE
China Focus: Capture an asteroid, bring it back to Earth?



Beijing (XNA) Jul 24, 2018
Next time when your kids ask you to bring them a star from the sky, you don't have to shrug and walk away. Tell them to wait, instead. A group of Chinese scientists are mulling a bold idea to capture a small near-Earth asteroid, which might be a potential threat, and bring it back to Earth to exploit its resources. "Sounds like science-fiction, but I believe it can be realized," said Li Mingtao, a researcher at the National Space Science Center under the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Li ... read more

OUTER PLANETS
Radiation Maps of Jupiter's Moon Europa: Key to Future Missions
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 24, 2018
New comprehensive mapping of the radiation pummeling Jupiter's icy moon Europa reveals where scientists should look - and how deep they'll have to go - when searching for signs of habitability and b ... more
TIME AND SPACE
World's fastest man-made spinning object could help study quantum mechanics
West Lafayette IN (SPX) Jul 23, 2018
Researchers have created the fastest man-made rotor in the world, which they believe will help them study quantum mechanics. At more than 60 billion revolutions per minute, this machine is mor ... more
PHYSICS NEWS
How to weigh stars with gravitational lensing
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 24, 2018
Every star in the Milky Way is in motion. But because of the distances their changes in position, the so-called proper motions, are very small and can only be measured using large telescopes over lo ... more
EXO WORLDS
WSU researcher sees possibility of moon life
Pullman WA (SPX) Jul 24, 2018
While the Moon is uninhabitable today, there could have been life on its surface in the distant past. In fact, there may have been two early windows of habitability for Earth's Moon, according ... more


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SOLAR SCIENCE
Rare Red Moon and Mars in Evening Sky on 27 July
London, UK (SPX) Jul 24, 2018
Skywatchers [in have a double treat in store on 27 July: the longest total lunar eclipse of the 21st century and Mars at its brightest for many years. The red planet and the (temporarily) red Moon w ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
NASA prepares to launch Parker Solar Probe, a mission to touch the Sun
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 23, 2018
Early on an August morning, the sky near Cape Canaveral, Florida, will light up with the launch of Parker Solar Probe. No earlier than Aug. 6, 2018, a United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy will thun ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
CALET makes direct measurements of cosmic-ray electron spectrum
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Jul 23, 2018
An international team of researchers succeeded in extending their result from a previous study and directly measured the cosmic-ray all-electron (electron + positron) spectrum in an energy range fro ... more
SATURN DAILY
Cassini data yields super sharp infrared images of Titan
Washington (UPI) Jul 19, 2018
Cassini disappeared into Saturn's atmosphere late last year. But the spacecraft continues to yield impressive images. ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
Discovering Structure in the Outer Corona
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
In 1610, Galileo redesigned the telescope and discovered Jupiter's four largest moons. Nearly 400 years later, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope used its powerful optics to look deep into space - enabli ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage
24/7 Technology News Coverage
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SOLAR SCIENCE
High-Fidelity Images of Sun's Atmosphere Show Structured, Dynamic Corona
San Antonio TX (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
A Southwest Research Institute-led team discovered never-before-detected, fine-grained structures in the Sun's outer atmosphere, or corona. The team imaged this critical region in detail using sophi ... more
EXO WORLDS
X-ray Data May Be First Evidence of a Star Devouring a Planet
Boston MA (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
For nearly a century, astronomers have puzzled over the curious variability of young stars residing in the Taurus-Auriga constellation some 450 light-years from Earth. One star in particular has dra ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
NASA's New Mini Satellite Will Study Milky Way's Halo
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
Astronomers keep coming up short when they survey "normal" matter, the material that makes up galaxies, stars and planets. A new NASA-sponsored CubeSat mission called HaloSat, deployed from the Inte ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
SD mines scientists and students contribute to IceCube breakthrough
Rapid City SD (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
An international team of scientists, including researchers at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, have found the first evidence of a source of high-energy cosmic neutrinos, ghostly suba ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Nanocrystals emit light by efficiently 'tunneling' electrons
San Diego CA (SPX) Jul 24, 2018
Using advanced fabrication techniques, engineers at the University of California San Diego have built a nanosized device out of silver crystals that can generate light by efficiently "tunneling" ele ... more


Scientists discover heaviest known calcium atom, other rare isotopes

EXO WORLDS
Glowing bacteria on deep-sea fish shed light on evolution, 'third type' of symbiosis
Ithaca NY (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
You may recognize the anglerfish from its dramatic appearance in the hit animated film Finding Nemo, as it was very nearly the demise of clownfish Marlin and blue-tang fish Dory. It lives most of it ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com



EXO WORLDS
Origami-inspired device helps marine biologists study aliens
New York NY (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
Scientists have tried to find the safest and most effective ways to explore marine life in the oceanic water, the largest and least explored environment on Earth, for years. Each time, they were fac ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
How does the sun's rotational cycle influence lightning activity on earth?
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
A collaborative research team in Japan has taken the first steps to understanding how the sun's rotational cycle influences lightning activity. They found answers in an unusual source - diaries dati ... more
EXO WORLDS
Finding a Planet with a 10-Year Orbit in a Few Months
Geneva, Switzerland (SPX) Jul 18, 2018
To discover and confirm the presence of a planet around stars other than the Sun, astronomers wait until it has completed three orbits. However, this very effective technique has its drawbacks since ... more
OUTER PLANETS
Dozen new Jupiter moons declared
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 17, 2018
Twelve new moons orbiting Jupiter have been found - 11 "normal" outer moons, and one that they're calling an "oddball." This brings Jupiter's total number of known moons to a whopping 79 - the most ... more
IRON AND ICE
Observatories Team Up to Reveal Rare Double Asteroid
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 13, 2018
New observations by three of the world's largest radio telescopes have revealed that an asteroid discovered last year is actually two objects, each about 3,000 feet (900 meters) in size, orbiting ea ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



The True Colors of Pluto and Charon
Laurel MD (SPX) Jul 23, 2018
Three years after NASA's New Horizons spacecraft gave humankind our first close-up views of Pluto and its largest moon, Charon, scientists are still revealing the wonders of these incredible worlds in the outer solar system. Marking the anniversary of New Horizons' historic flight through the Pluto system on July 14, 2015, mission scientists have released the most accurate natural color im ... more
+ Radiation Maps of Jupiter's Moon Europa: Key to Future Missions
+ Dozen new Jupiter moons declared
+ NASA Juno data indicate another possible volcano on Jupiter moon Io
+ First Global Maps of Pluto and Charon from New Horizons Published
+ Europa's Ocean Ascending
+ Jupiter's moons create uniquely patterned aurora on the gas giant planet
+ 'Cataclysmic' collision shaped Uranus' evolution


WSU researcher sees possibility of moon life
Pullman WA (SPX) Jul 24, 2018
While the Moon is uninhabitable today, there could have been life on its surface in the distant past. In fact, there may have been two early windows of habitability for Earth's Moon, according to a study online in the journal Astrobiology by Dirk Schulze-Makuch, an astrobiologist at Washington State University. Schulze-Makuch and Ian Crawford, a professor of planetary science and ast ... more
+ X-ray Data May Be First Evidence of a Star Devouring a Planet
+ Glowing bacteria on deep-sea fish shed light on evolution, 'third type' of symbiosis
+ Origami-inspired device helps marine biologists study aliens
+ Finding a Planet with a 10-Year Orbit in a Few Months
+ TESS Spacecraft Continues Testing Prior to First Observations
+ Astronomers find a famous exoplanet's doppelganger
+ NASA's Webb Space Telescope to Inspect Atmospheres of Gas Giant Exoplanets
'Storm Chasers' on Mars Searching for Dusty Secrets
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 23, 2018
In June, one of these dust events rapidly engulfed the planet. Scientists first observed a smaller-scale dust storm on May 30. By June 20, it had gone global. For the Opportunity rover, that meant a sudden drop in visibility from a clear, sunny day to that of an overcast one. Because Opportunity runs on solar energy, scientists had to suspend science activities to preserve the rover's batt ... more
+ Martian Atmosphere Behaves as One
+ NASA's MAVEN Spacecraft Finds That "Stolen" Electrons Enable Unusual Aurora on Mars
+ Name Europe's robot to roam and search for life on Mars
+ Opportunity's Science Team Remains Vigilant
+ NASA May Have Destroyed Evidence for Organics on Mars 40 Years Ago
+ Undergrad Mines Data from Curiosity Rover in Search for Life
+ Seasonal 'spiders' emerge on Mars' surface
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Israel plans its first moon launch in December
Yehud, Israel (AFP) July 10, 2018
An Israeli organisation announced plans Tuesday to launch the country's first spacecraft to the moon in December, with hopes of burnishing Israel's reputation as a small nation with otherworldly high-tech ambitions. The unmanned spacecraft, shaped like a pod and weighing some 585 kilogrammes (1,300 pounds) at launch, will land on the moon on February 13, 2019 if all goes according to plan, o ... more
+ The toxic side of the Moon
+ Waystation to the Solar System
+ Queqiao satellite the bridge to China's lunar exploration
+ NASA will seek partnership with US Industry to develop lunar gateway
+ Chinese satellite could link world to Moon's far side: space expert
+ Micro satellite developed by Chinese university starts to work around Moon
+ Long suspected theory about the moon holds water
NASA's New Mini Satellite Will Study Milky Way's Halo
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
Astronomers keep coming up short when they survey "normal" matter, the material that makes up galaxies, stars and planets. A new NASA-sponsored CubeSat mission called HaloSat, deployed from the International Space Station on July 13, will help scientists search for the universe's missing matter by studying X-rays from hot gas surrounding our Milky Way galaxy. The cosmic microwave backgroun ... more
+ SD mines scientists and students contribute to IceCube breakthrough
+ CALET makes direct measurements of cosmic-ray electron spectrum
+ Technicians Ensure James Webb Space Telescope's Sunshield Survives Stresses Experienced During Liftoff
+ Nanocrystals emit light by efficiently 'tunneling' electrons
+ UK Delivers Super-Cool Kit to USA for Dark Matter Experiment
+ Supersharp Images from New VLT Adaptive Optics
+ MeerKAT Radio Telescope Reveals Clearest View Yet of Center of Milky Way


Laser experiments lend insight into metal core at heart of the Earth
Edinburgh UK (SPX) Jul 18, 2018
Scientists have discovered fresh insights into the metallic core at the centre of our planet. The findings could aid understanding of how the Earth was formed from elements in space, some 4 billion years ago. They could also shed light on the fundamental physical nature of nitrogen, one of the most abundant elements in the atmosphere. An international team of researchers carri ... more
+ MetOp-C launch campaign kicks off
+ NASA Debuts Online Toolkit to Promote Commercial Use of Satellite Data
+ Abrupt cloud clearing events over southeast Atlantic Ocean are new piece in climate puzzle
+ Red Sea flushes faster from far flung volcanoes
+ Billion-year-old lake deposit yields clues to Earth's ancient biosphere
+ China to beef up CFC inspections as UN investigates illegal emissions
+ Aist-2D high resolution images received
China Focus: Capture an asteroid, bring it back to Earth?
Beijing (XNA) Jul 24, 2018
Next time when your kids ask you to bring them a star from the sky, you don't have to shrug and walk away. Tell them to wait, instead. A group of Chinese scientists are mulling a bold idea to capture a small near-Earth asteroid, which might be a potential threat, and bring it back to Earth to exploit its resources. "Sounds like science-fiction, but I believe it can be realized," said ... more
+ Twenty Years of Planetary Defense
+ NASA's Dawn spacecraft focused on Ceres as it nears end of mission
+ Observatories Team Up to Reveal Rare Double Asteroid
+ ATLAS Telescope Pinpoints Meteorite Impact Prediction
+ Dusk for Dawn: Mission of many firsts to gather more data in home stretch
+ Fragment of Impacting Asteroid Recovered in Botswana
+ Tiny fine particles of global impact reveals the origin of black carbon
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Discovering Structure in the Outer Corona
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
In 1610, Galileo redesigned the telescope and discovered Jupiter's four largest moons. Nearly 400 years later, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope used its powerful optics to look deep into space - enabling scientists to pin down the age of the universe. Suffice it to say that getting a better look at things produces major scientific advances. In a paper published on July 18 in The Astroph ... more
+ High-Fidelity Images of Sun's Atmosphere Show Structured, Dynamic Corona
+ Rare Red Moon and Mars in Evening Sky on 27 July
+ NASA prepares to launch Parker Solar Probe, a mission to touch the Sun
+ How does the sun's rotational cycle influence lightning activity on earth?
+ Plasma Jets Foretell Unequal Activity of the Sun's Two Hemispheres
+ This Summer's Solar Eclipses from the Ends of the Earth
+ Cutting-Edge Heat Shield Installed on NASA's Parker Solar Probe
PRSS-1 Satellite in Good Condition
Jiuquan, China (SPX) Jul 23, 2018
China launched two satellites for Pakistan on a Long March-2C rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China at 11:56 a.m. Monday. The PRSS-1 is China's first optical remote sensing satellite sold to Pakistan and the 17th satellite developed by the China Academy of Space Technology (CAST) for an overseas buyer. After entering orbit, the PRSS-1 is in good condition ... more
+ China readying for space station era: Yang Liwei
+ China launches new space science program
+ China Rising as Major Space Power
+ China launches new-tech experiment twin satellites
+ China confirms reception of data from Gaofen-6 satellite
+ Experts Explain How China Is Opening International Space Cooperation
+ Beijing welcomes use of Chinese space station by all UN Nations


NASA's New Mini Satellite Will Study Milky Way's Halo
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
Astronomers keep coming up short when they survey "normal" matter, the material that makes up galaxies, stars and planets. A new NASA-sponsored CubeSat mission called HaloSat, deployed from the International Space Station on July 13, will help scientists search for the universe's missing matter by studying X-rays from hot gas surrounding our Milky Way galaxy. The cosmic microwave backgroun ... more
+ SD mines scientists and students contribute to IceCube breakthrough
+ CALET makes direct measurements of cosmic-ray electron spectrum
+ Technicians Ensure James Webb Space Telescope's Sunshield Survives Stresses Experienced During Liftoff
+ Nanocrystals emit light by efficiently 'tunneling' electrons
+ UK Delivers Super-Cool Kit to USA for Dark Matter Experiment
+ Supersharp Images from New VLT Adaptive Optics
+ MeerKAT Radio Telescope Reveals Clearest View Yet of Center of Milky Way
Gault site research pushes back date of earliest North Americans
Reno NV (SPX) Jul 24, 2018
For decades, researchers believed the Western Hemisphere was settled by humans roughly 13,500 years ago, a theory based largely upon the widespread distribution of Clovis artifacts dated to that time. Clovis artifacts are distinctive prehistoric stone tools so named because they were initially found near Clovis, New Mexico, in the 1920s but have since been identified throughout North and S ... more
+ Last survivor of Brazil tribe under threat: NGO
+ More than a quarter of the globe is controlled by indigenous groups
+ Eating bone marrow played a key role in the evolution of the human hand
+ Primates adjust grooming to their social environment
+ Our fractured African roots
+ Stone tools age Asia's first Homo presence
+ Humans evolved in small groups across diverse environs in Africa
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Boeing's quest to take astronauts to space station hits snag
Washington (UPI) Jul 23, 2018
Boeing has acknowledged an anomaly occurred during a recent test of its Starliner spacecraft's launch abort system. The Starliner is being developed to carry astronauts to the International Space Station. It was originally expected to conduct its first crewed test flight by the end of 2018. However, a report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office issued earlier this month suggeste ... more
+ A Two-Dimensional Space Program
+ Seeking 72-hour Space Environment Forecasts with Updates on the Hour
+ First space tourist flights could come in 2019
+ Scientists Can Now Recycle Water, Air, Fuel, Making Deep Space Travel Possible
+ NASA and Peanuts Worldwide to Collaborate on Deep Space Learning Activities
+ Russian cargo ship docks at ISS in record time
+ Google parent 'graduates' moonshot projects Loon, Wing
Scientists calculate sea level rise if Antarctic ice shelves collapse
Washington (UPI) Jul 19, 2018
Scientists have calculated the rise in seas that would result from the collapse of two of Antarctica's most vulnerable ice shelves. Much attention has been paid to the Larsen C ice shelf, as its breakdown has been most visible - and well documented. But the latest research, published this week in the journal The Cryosphere, suggests the collapse of Larsen C would contribute just a few ... more
+ New study puts a figure on sea-level rise following Antarctic ice shelves' collapse
+ Kelp's record journey exposes Antarctic ecosystems to change
+ Potential for Antarctica to become plastics dumping ground and home for new species
+ Study confirms link between global warming, glacial retreat in Greenland
+ A bird's eye view of the Arctic
+ Melting triggers melting
+ Scientists capture breaking of glacier in Greenland


In the ocean's twilight zone, tiny organisms may have giant effect on Earth's carbon cycle
Tallahassee FL (SPX) Jul 19, 2018
Deep in the ocean's twilight zone, swarms of ravenous single-celled organisms may be altering Earth's carbon cycle in ways scientists never expected, according to a new study from Florida State University researchers. In the area 100 to 1,000 meters below the ocean's surface - dubbed the twilight zone because of its largely impenetrable darkness - scientists found that tiny organisms calle ... more
+ Slowdown of North Atlantic circulation rocked the climate of ancient northern Europe
+ Increases in westerly winds weaken the Southern Ocean carbon sink
+ Taiwan steps in after China turns off tourist taps to Palau
+ Cloud brightening, 'sun shields' to save Barrier Reef
+ Wave energy converters are not geared towards the increase in energy over the last century
+ Great Barrier Reef not bouncing back as before, but there is hope
+ Atlantic circulation is not collapsing but changes could accelerate warming
How to weigh stars with gravitational lensing
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 24, 2018
Every star in the Milky Way is in motion. But because of the distances their changes in position, the so-called proper motions, are very small and can only be measured using large telescopes over long time periods. In very rare cases, a foreground star passes a star in the background, at close proximity as seen from Earth. Light from this background star must cross the gravitational field ... more
+ Could Gravitational Waves Reveal How Fast Our Universe Is Expanding?
+ Einstein's Theory of Gravity Still Passes the Test
+ VLT makes most precise test of Einstein's general relativity outside Milky Way
+ Precise gravitation lens test confirms general relativity
+ Scotland's space expertise key to gravitational waves study
+ Gravitational wave event likely signaled creation of a black hole
+ GRACE-FO Spacecraft Ready to Launch
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