24/7 News Coverage
November 12, 2018
IRON AND ICE
Dawn falls silent as a successful mission comes to an end



Bonn, Germany (SPX) Nov 12, 2018
An extraordinary mission has drawn to an end, after the NASA space probe Dawn fell silent on 31 October. On 27 September 2007, Dawn set off to explore the asteroid Vesta and the dwarf planet Ceres, which are located in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. On board was a German camera system that the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fuer Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) helped to develop and build. Since reaching the asteroid in 2015, the space probe has beamed back breathtaking images an ... read more

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Sandwich structure of nanocrystals as quantum light source
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Nov 09, 2018
Some materials spontaneously emit light if they are excited by an external source, for instance a laser. This phenomenon is known as fluorescence. However, in several gases and quantum systems a muc ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
Windy with a chance of magnetic storms - space weather science with cluster
Paris (ESA) Nov 12, 2018
Space weather is no abstract concept - it may happen in space, but its effects on Earth can be significant. To help better forecast these effects, ESA's Cluster mission, a quartet of spacecraft that ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
SOFIA unravels the mysterious formation of star clusters
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Nov 12, 2018
The sun, like all stars, was born in a giant cold cloud of molecular gas and dust. It may have had dozens or even hundreds of stellar siblings - a star cluster - but these early companions are now s ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Slow death of nearby galaxy
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Nov 12, 2018
Astronomers from CSIRO and The Australian National University have witnessed, in the finest detail ever, the slow death of a neighbouring dwarf galaxy, which is gradually losing its power to form st ... more


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IRON AND ICE
Cosmic Detective Work: Why We Care About Space Rocks
Pasadena CA (JPL) Nov 08, 2018
The entire history of human existence is a tiny blip in our solar system's 4.5-billion-year history. No one was around to see planets forming and undergoing dramatic changes before settling in their ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Astronomers unveil growing black holes in colliding galaxies
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Peering through thick walls of gas and dust surrounding the messy cores of merging galaxies, astronomers are getting their best view yet of close pairs of supermassive black holes as they march towa ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Turbulence in space might solve astrophysical mystery
Plainsboro NJ (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
Contrary to what many people believe, outer space is not empty. In addition to an electrically charged soup of ions and electrons known as plasma, space is permeated by magnetic fields with a wide r ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Astronomers get best view yet of supermassive black holes in colliding galaxies
Maunakea HI (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Two galaxies, drawn together by the force of gravity, are merging into a tangled mass of dense gas and dust. Structure is giving way to chaos, but hiding behind this messy cloud of material are two ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
Parker Solar Probe Reports Good Status After Close Solar Approach
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Parker Solar Probe is alive and well after skimming by the Sun at just 15 million miles from our star's surface. This is far closer than any spacecraft has ever gone - the previous record was set by ... more
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IRON AND ICE
Scientists push back against Harvard 'alien spacecraft' theory
Tampa (AFP) Nov 6, 2018
A scientific paper led by two researchers at Harvard University made a splash this week by claiming that a cigar-shaped rock zooming through our solar system may have been sent by aliens. ... more
IRON AND ICE
Aboard the first spacecraft to the Trojan asteroids
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Nov 07, 2018
Ralph, one of NASA's most well-traveled space explorers, has voyaged far and accomplished much: on the New Horizons mission, Ralph obtained stunning flyby images of Jupiter and its moons; this was f ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Physicists create new, simpler-than-ever quantum 'hard drive for light'
Edmonton, Canada (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
Physicists at the University of Alberta in Canada have developed a new way to build quantum memories, a method for storing delicate quantum information encoded into pulses of light. "We've dev ... more
MOON DAILY
European-built Service Module arrives in US for first Orion lunar mission
Kennedy Space Center FL (SPX) Nov 07, 2018
The powerhouse that will help NASA's Orion spacecraft venture beyond the Moon is stateside. The European-built service module that will propel, power and cool during Orion flight to the Moon on Expl ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
A stellar achievement: Magnetized space winds in the laboratory
Portland OR (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
New insights have been gained about stellar winds, streams of high-speed charged particles called plasma that blow through interstellar space. These winds, created by eruptions from stars or stellar ... more


Johns Hopkins scientist finds elusive star with origins close to Big Bang

EXO WORLDS
Laser tech could be fashioned into Earth's 'porch light' to attract alien astronomers
Boston MA (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
If extraterrestrial intelligence exists somewhere in our galaxy, a new MIT study proposes that laser technology on Earth could, in principle, be fashioned into something of a planetary porch light - ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com



SOLAR SCIENCE
ESA rocks space weather
Paris (ESA) Nov 06, 2018
This week, to coincide with the fifteenth annual European Space Weather Week, ESA is celebrating the dynamic phenomenon of space weather. It's difficult to comprehend the size and sheer power ... more
PHYSICS NEWS
Griffith precision measurement takes it to the limit
Nathan, Australia (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
Griffith University researchers have demonstrated a procedure for making precise measurements of speed, acceleration, material properties and even gravity waves possible, approaching the ultimate se ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Scientists shuffle the deck to create materials with new quantum behaviors
Ames IA (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Layered transition metal dichalcogenides or TMDCs - materials composed of metal nanolayers sandwiched between two other layers of chalcogens - have become extremely attractive to the research commun ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Quantum systems: Same, but different
Vienna, Austria (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Some things are so complicated that it is completely impossible to precisely calculate them. This includes large quantum systems, which consist of many particles, particularly when they are not in a ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Aging a Flock of Stars in the Wild Duck Cluster
Tucson AZ (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Do star clusters harbor many generations of stars or just one? Scientists have long searched for an answer and, thanks to the University of Arizona's MMT telescope, found one in the Wild Duck Cluste ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



SwRI team makes breakthroughs studying Pluto orbiter mission
San Antonio TX (SPX) Oct 25, 2018
A Southwest Research Institute team using internal research funds has made several discoveries that expand the range and value of a future Pluto orbiter mission. The breakthroughs define a fuel-saving orbital tour and demonstrate that an orbiter can continue exploration in the Kuiper Belt after surveying Pluto. These and other results from the study will be reported this week at a workshop on fu ... more
+ ALMA maps temperature of Jupiter's icy moon Europa
+ NASA's Juno Mission Detects Jupiter Wave Trains
+ WorldWide Telescope looks ahead to New Horizons' Ultima Thule glyby
+ Europa plume sites lack expected heat signatures
+ Icy moon of Jupiter, Ganymede, shows evidence of past strike-slip faulting
+ Icy warning for space missions to Jupiter's moon
+ New Horizons sets up for New Year's flyby of Ultima Thule


Laser tech could be fashioned into Earth's 'porch light' to attract alien astronomers
Boston MA (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
If extraterrestrial intelligence exists somewhere in our galaxy, a new MIT study proposes that laser technology on Earth could, in principle, be fashioned into something of a planetary porch light - a beacon strong enough to attract attention from as far as 20,000 light years away. The research, which author James Clark calls a "feasibility study," appears in The Astrophysical Journal. The ... more
+ Laboratory experiments probe the formation of stars and planets
+ NASA retires Kepler Space Telescope, passes planet-hunting torch
+ Rocky and habitable - sizing up a galaxy of planets
+ Some planetary systems just aren't into heavy metal
+ Giant planets around young star raise questions about how planets form
+ Plan developed to characterize and identify ocean worlds
+ Discovering a previously unknown role for a source of magnetic fields
Oxia Planum favoured for ExoMars surface mission
Paris (ESA) Nov 12, 2018
The ExoMars Landing Site Selection Working Group has recommended Oxia Planum as the landing site for the ESA-Roscosmos rover and surface science platform that will launch to the Red Planet in 2020. The proposal will be reviewed internally by ESA and Roscosmos with an official confirmation expected mid-2019. At the heart of the ExoMars programme is the quest to determine if life has e ... more
+ Scientists capture the sound of sunrise on Mars
+ Landing site selected for UK's ExoMars rover in 2021
+ BFR Spawns New Mars TV Series with Homesteading and Profiteers
+ Five Months Since We Received A Signal From Opportunity
+ Curiosity on the move again
+ The Mars InSight Landing Site Is Just Plain Perfect
+ Evidence of outburst flooding indicates plentiful water on early Mars
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

European-built Service Module arrives in US for first Orion lunar mission
Kennedy Space Center FL (SPX) Nov 07, 2018
The powerhouse that will help NASA's Orion spacecraft venture beyond the Moon is stateside. The European-built service module that will propel, power and cool during Orion flight to the Moon on Exploration Mission-1 arrived from Germany at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Tuesday to begin final outfitting, integration and testing with the crew module and other Orion elements. ... more
+ Roscosmos to Study Possibility to 3D Print Lunar Soil Details for Space Repairs
+ First moon walk's commemorative plaque sold for $468,500
+ Neil Armstrong's huge souvenir collection to be auctioned
+ Maxar Technologies' MDA to design lunar rover concept for Canadian Space Agency
+ India successfully conducts crucial test of Moon lander
+ Preparing future explorers for a return to the Moon
+ LGS Innovations' Laser Technology to Bring HD Video from the Moon
Physicists create new, simpler-than-ever quantum 'hard drive for light'
Edmonton, Canada (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
Physicists at the University of Alberta in Canada have developed a new way to build quantum memories, a method for storing delicate quantum information encoded into pulses of light. "We've developed a new way to store pulses of light - down to the single-photon level - in clouds of ultracold rubidium atoms, and to later retrieve them, on-demand, by shining a 'control' pulse of light," said ... more
+ Slow death of nearby galaxy
+ Sandwich structure of nanocrystals as quantum light source
+ Multimessenger links to NASA's Fermi Mission show how luck favors the prepared
+ SOFIA unravels the mysterious formation of star clusters
+ Aging a Flock of Stars in the Wild Duck Cluster
+ Ultra-hot gas around remnants of sun-like stars
+ Galaxy-scale fountain seen in full glory with infalling amd outflowing gas


Ozone hole in northern hemisphere to recover completely by 2030
Washington (UPI) Nov 5, 2018
Scientists expect the Northern hemisphere and mid-latitude ozone holes to be completely repaired some time in the 2030s, according to the first assessment of the ozone hole since 2014. The study, "Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion: 2018," published Monday by the United Nations and the World Meteorological Organization, highlighted the decrease of ozone-depleting substances as the ... more
+ OpenForests launches the forest project platform explorer.land
+ Orbit Logic delivers Landsat mission planning system
+ NASA's ICON to explore boundary between Earth and Space
+ Illegal emissions threaten to undermine UN's optimistic ozone report
+ Europe's third polar-orbiting weather satellite lofted into orbit
+ The cloud will save time, money, and reduce errors in the mapping process
+ MetOp-C ready for big day
Aboard the first spacecraft to the Trojan asteroids
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Nov 07, 2018
Ralph, one of NASA's most well-traveled space explorers, has voyaged far and accomplished much: on the New Horizons mission, Ralph obtained stunning flyby images of Jupiter and its moons; this was followed by a visit to Pluto where Ralph took the first high-definition pictures of the iconic minor planet. And, in 2021, Ralph journeys with the Lucy mission to Jupiter's Trojan asteroids. Ralp ... more
+ Dawn falls silent as a successful mission comes to an end
+ Scientists push back against Harvard 'alien spacecraft' theory
+ Cosmic Detective Work: Why We Care About Space Rocks
+ New insights on comet tails are blowing in the solar wind
+ NASA'S OSIRIS-REx zooms in on Bennu
+ Dawn Mission to Asteroid Belt comes to end
+ NASA's Dawn asteroid mission ends as fuel runs out
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Parker Solar Probe Reports Good Status After Close Solar Approach
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Parker Solar Probe is alive and well after skimming by the Sun at just 15 million miles from our star's surface. This is far closer than any spacecraft has ever gone - the previous record was set by Helios B in 1976 and broken by Parker on Oct. 29 - and this maneuver has exposed the spacecraft to intense heat and solar radiation in a complex solar wind environment. "Parker Solar Probe was ... more
+ Windy with a chance of magnetic storms - space weather science with cluster
+ A stellar achievement: Magnetized space winds in the laboratory
+ ESA rocks space weather
+ Magnetic pumping pushes plasma particles to high energies
+ Borexino sheds light on solar neutrinos
+ Parker Solar Probe breaks record, becomes closest spacecraft to Sun
+ Grant for solar physics aims to understand the Sun in its entirety
China unveils new 'Heavenly Palace' space station as ISS days numbered
Zhuhai, China (AFP) Nov 6, 2018
China unveiled on Tuesday a replica of its first permanently crewed space station, which would replace the international community's orbiting laboratory and symbolises the country's major ambitions beyond Earth. The 17-metre (55-foot) core module was a star attraction at the biennial Airshow China in the southern coastal city of Zhuhai, the country's main aerospace industry exhibition. T ... more
+ China's space programs open up to world
+ China's commercial aerospace companies flourishing
+ China launches Centispace-1-s1 satellite
+ China tests propulsion system of space station's lab capsules
+ China unveils Chang'e-4 rover to explore Moon's far side
+ China's SatCom launch marketing not limited to business interest
+ China to launch space station Tiangong in 2022, welcomes foreign astronauts


Physicists create new, simpler-than-ever quantum 'hard drive for light'
Edmonton, Canada (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
Physicists at the University of Alberta in Canada have developed a new way to build quantum memories, a method for storing delicate quantum information encoded into pulses of light. "We've developed a new way to store pulses of light - down to the single-photon level - in clouds of ultracold rubidium atoms, and to later retrieve them, on-demand, by shining a 'control' pulse of light," said ... more
+ Slow death of nearby galaxy
+ Sandwich structure of nanocrystals as quantum light source
+ Multimessenger links to NASA's Fermi Mission show how luck favors the prepared
+ SOFIA unravels the mysterious formation of star clusters
+ Aging a Flock of Stars in the Wild Duck Cluster
+ Ultra-hot gas around remnants of sun-like stars
+ Galaxy-scale fountain seen in full glory with infalling amd outflowing gas
Culture may explain why brains have become bigger
Washington DC (SPX) Nov 09, 2018
A theory called the cultural brain hypothesis could explain extraordinary increases in brain size in humans and other animals over the last few million years, according to a study published in PLOS Computational Biology by Michael Muthukrishna of the London School of Economics and Political Science and Harvard University, and colleagues at the University of British Columbia and Harvard Universit ... more
+ Experts find that stone tools connected communities
+ Inbreeding may be to blame for abnormalities among early humans
+ History of early settlement and survival in Andean highlands revealed by ancient genomes
+ WSU researchers discover new clues on how sleep works in the brain
+ Researchers discover earliest recorded lead exposure in 250,000-year-old Neanderthal teeth
+ Earliest hominin migrations into the Arabian Peninsula required no novel adaptations
+ Bonobos make themselves appear smaller than they actually are
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

From Quantum Optics to Increased Risk Posture: Student Innovations at NASA
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Throughout space, hundreds of satellites are orbiting Earth and other celestial planets, continuously collecting data about the vast universe. Communicating with these satellites is a complex and evolving challenge. As the U.S. prepares for human travel to the Moon and beyond and NASA missions venture farther into the universe than ever before, the Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN ... more
+ Computer on Russian segment of ISS rebooted after glitch
+ Cosmonauts to perform spacewalk to examine hole in Soyuz hull on December 11
+ NASA Chief, Russian Envoy discuss US-Russian space cooperation
+ Russia's Roscosmos confirms computer glitch on board ISS
+ NASA looks to university researchers for innovative space tech solutions
+ 'Dust up' on International Space Station hints at sources of structure
+ Experience high-res science in first 8K footage from space
East Antarctic Ice Sheet has fewer lakes underneath it than scientists thought
Washington (UPI) Nov 7, 2018
The East Antarctic Ice Sheet has far fewer lakes beneath it than scientists once assumed. During an Antarctic expedition, a team of researchers from the Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, or AWI, observed that areas underneath Recovery Glacier contained only few large bodies of water. This new findings were published Wednesday in the Journal ... more
+ How much debris is lying on glaciers
+ ESA's gravity-mapper reveals relics of ancient continents under Antarctic ice
+ Far fewer lakes below the East Antarctic Ice Sheet than previously believed
+ A call for the cold
+ Natural climate variability explains almost half of Arctic sea ice loss
+ Plans for world's largest ocean sanctuary in Antarctic blocked
+ Study sheds light on why a warmer world may equal a wetter Arctic


Scientists theorize new origin story for Earth's water
Washington DC (SPX) Nov 08, 2018
Earth's water may have originated from both asteroidal material and gas left over from the formation of the Sun, according to new research. The new finding could give scientists important insights about the development of other planets and their potential to support life. In a new study in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, a journal of the American Geophysical Union, researcher ... more
+ ASU geoscientists discover an overlooked source for Earth's water
+ States to decide fate of depleted bigeye tuna
+ Australia revamps Pacific strategy as China looms
+ Plasma-based system provides radical new path for water purification
+ Modern slavery is fueling overfishing
+ One million years of precipitation history of the monsoon reconstructed
+ Study tracks severe bleaching events on a Pacific coral reef over past century
Griffith precision measurement takes it to the limit
Nathan, Australia (SPX) Nov 06, 2018
Griffith University researchers have demonstrated a procedure for making precise measurements of speed, acceleration, material properties and even gravity waves possible, approaching the ultimate sensitivity allowed by laws of quantum physics. Published in Nature Communications, the work saw the Griffith team, led by Professor Geoff Pryde, working with photons (single particles of light) a ... more
+ Gravitational waves could shed light on dark matter
+ In five -10 years, gravitational waves could accurately measure universe's expansion
+ RUDN physicist described the shape of a wormhole
+ Kin of gravitational wave source discovered
+ RUDN mathematicians confirmed the possibility of data transfer via gravitational waves
+ GRACE-FO Satellite Switching to Backup Instrument Processing Unit
+ Boosting gravitational wave detectors with quantum tricks
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