24/7 News Coverage
May 09, 2019
MOON DAILY
Amazon's Bezos unveils lunar lander project 'Blue Moon'



Washington DC (AFP) May 09, 2019
Jeff Bezos, who heads both Amazon and space company Blue Origin, unveiled on Thursday a lunar lander that he said would be used to transport equipment, and possibly human beings, to the south pole of the Moon by 2024. "This is Blue Moon," he said at a presentation in Washington, as curtains lifted to show a mock-up of a huge vessel weighing many tons and able to carry four self-driving rovers. "It's an incredible vehicle, and it will go to the Moon," he declared. The vehicle has been u ... read more

IRON AND ICE
First planetary defense technology demonstration to collide with asteroid in 2022
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 07, 2019
The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) - NASA's first mission to demonstrate a planetary defense technique - will get one chance to hit its target, the small moonlet in the binary asteroid syst ... more
MOON DAILY
Lunar Power System Team Wins President's Award
Cleveland OH (SPX) May 09, 2019
In preparation of establishing a sustainable presence on the Moon by 2028, NASA is developing new technologies that will let astronauts land, live and explore the surface. In this video, Marc Gibson ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Observations that question dark matter disproved
Trieste, Italy (SPX) Apr 30, 2019
As fascinating as it is mysterious, dark matter is one of the greatest enigmas of astrophysics and cosmology. It is thought to account for 90% of the matter in the Universe, but its existence has be ... more
PHYSICS NEWS
LIGO and Virgo Detect Neutron Star Smash-Ups
Pasadena CA (SPX) May 03, 2019
On April 25, 2019, the National Science Foundation's Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and the European-based Virgo detector registered gravitational waves from what appears ... more


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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Could Rare Supernova Resolve Longstanding Origin Debate
Washington DC (SPX) May 08, 2019
Detection of a supernova with an unusual chemical signature by a team of astronomers led by Carnegie's Juna Kollmeier - and including Carnegie's Nidia Morrell, Anthony Piro, Mark Phillips, and Josh ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Are M106's Globular Clusters a Relic of Cosmic High Noon
Michoacan, Mexico (SPX) May 03, 2019
An international scientific team led by a Mexican researcher discovered globular clusters rotating at the same speed as the gas in the disk of the spiral galaxy Messier 106 (also known as M106 or NG ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Blue supergiant stars open doors to concert in space
Leuven, Belgium (SPX) May 07, 2019
Blue supergiants are rock-and-roll: they live fast and die young. This makes them rare and difficult to study. Before space telescopes were invented, few blue supergiants had been observed, so our k ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Astronomers discover 2,000-year-old remnant of a nova
Gottingen, Germany (SPX) May 01, 2019
For the first time, a European research team involving the University of Gottingen has discovered the remains of a nova in a galactic globular cluster. A nova is an explosion of hydrogen on the surf ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Pinpointing the Gaia Spacecraft to the Map the Milky Way
Paris (ESA) May 03, 2019
This image, a composite of several observations captured by ESO's VLT Survey Telescope (VST), shows the ESA spacecraft Gaia as a faint trail of dots across the lower half of the star-filled field of ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage
24/7 Technology News Coverage
24/7 China News Coverage



TIME AND SPACE
Telescopes in space for even sharper images of black holes
Nijmegen, Netherlands (SPX) May 07, 2019
Astronomers have just managed to take the first image of a black hole, and now the next challenge facing them is how to take even sharper images, so that Einstein's Theory of General Relativity can ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Hubble Astronomers Assemble Wide View of the Evolving Universe
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 03, 2019
Astronomers have put together the largest and most comprehensive "history book" of galaxies into one single image, using 16 years' worth of observations from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Explosions of universe's first stars spewed powerful jets
Boston MA (SPX) May 09, 2019
Several hundred million years after the Big Bang, the very first stars flared into the universe as massively bright accumulations of hydrogen and helium gas. Within the cores of these first stars, e ... more
TIME AND SPACE
New Clues About How Ancient Galaxies Lit up the Universe
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 09, 2019
NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has revealed that some of the universe's earliest galaxies were brighter than expected. The excess light is a byproduct of the galaxies releasing incredibly high amoun ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
A new filter to better map the dark universe
Berkeley CA (SPX) May 09, 2019
The earliest known light in our universe, known as the cosmic microwave background, was emitted about 380,000 years after the Big Bang. The patterning of this relic light holds many important clues ... more


Sculpting super-fast light pulses

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Star formation burst in the Milky Way 2-3 billion years ago
Barcelona CA (SPX) May 09, 2019
A team led by researchers of the Institute of Cosmos Sciences of the University of Barcelona (ICCUB, UB-IEEC) and the Besancon Astronomical Observatory have found, analysing data from the Gaia satel ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com



STELLAR CHEMISTRY
What a dying star's ashes tell us about the birth of our solar system
Tucson AZ (SPX) May 01, 2019
A grain of dust forged in the death throes of a long-gone star was discovered by a team of researchers led by the University of Arizona. The discovery challenges some of the current theories a ... more
TECH SPACE
Recognising sustainable behaviour in orbit
Paris (ESA) May 07, 2019
Solving the growing problem of space debris will require everyone who flies rockets and satellites to adhere to sustainable practices, which doesn't always happen. Now there will be a way to recogni ... more
TIME AND SPACE
New material also reveals new quasiparticles
Villigen, Switzerland (SPX) May 08, 2019
Researchers at PSI have investigated a novel crystalline material that exhibits electronic properties that have never been seen before. It is a crystal of aluminum and platinum atoms arranged in a s ... more
TIME AND SPACE
First demonstration of antimatter wave interferometry
Bern, Switzerland (SPX) May 07, 2019
Matter waves constitute a crucial feature of quantum mechanics, where particles have wave properties in addition to particle characteristics. This wave-particle duality was postulated already in 192 ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Chemical evidence shows how a dwarf galaxy contributes to growth of Milky Way
Beijing, China (SPX) May 01, 2019
Small stellar systems like dwarf galaxies are suggested to be the main building blocks of our Galaxy. However, it is unclear how many and what kind of stars in our Galaxy are originated from satelli ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



Brazilian scientists investigate dwarf planet's ring
Sao Paulo, Brazil (SPX) May 08, 2019
Discovered in 2004, Haumea is a dwarf planet located beyond Pluto's orbit in a region of the Solar System called the Kuiper Belt. Pluto was demoted from the category of fully fledged planets in 2006 because of the discovery of Haumea and other dwarf planets. Haumea was officially recognized as a dwarf planet in 2008. Its ellipsoidal shape resembles that of the ball used in rugby or America ... more
+ Next-Generation NASA Instrument Advanced to Study the Atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune
+ Public Invited to Help Name Solar System's Largest Unnamed World
+ Europa Clipper High-Gain Antenna Undergoes Testing
+ Scientists to Conduct Largest-Ever Hubble Survey of the Kuiper Belt
+ Jupiter's unknown journey revealed
+ A Prehistoric Mystery in the Kuiper Belt
+ Ultima Thule in 3D


Cosmic dust reveals new insights on the formation of solar system
Toronto, Canada (SPX) Apr 30, 2019
The study of a tiny grain of stardust - older than our solar system - is shining new light on how planetary systems are formed. The microbe-sized extraterrestrial particle, which originated from a nova explosion more than 4.5 billion years ago, was discovered inside a meteorite collected in Antarctica by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Alongside planetary sc ... more
+ Planetary Habitability? It's What's Inside That Counts
+ Rapid destruction of Earth-like atmospheres by young stars
+ Slime mold memorizes foreign substances by absorbing them
+ Necrophagy: A means of survival in the Dead Sea
+ Oil-eating bacteria found at the bottom of the ocean
+ Explosion on Jupiter-sized star 10 times more powerful than ever seen on our sun
+ Astronomers discover third planet in the Kepler-47 circumbinary system
For InSight, dust cleanings will yield new science
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 07, 2019
The same winds that blanket Mars with dust can also blow that dust away. Catastrophic dust storms have the potential to end a mission, as with NASA's Opportunity rover. But far more often, passing winds cleared off the rover's solar panels and gave it an energy boost. Those dust clearings allowed Opportunity and its sister rover, Spirit, to survive for years beyond their 90-day expiration dates. ... more
+ Lockheed Martin completes testing milestone for Mars 2020 heat shield
+ Martian Dust Could Help Explain Water Loss, Plus Other Learnings From Global Storm
+ ESA to Lose Member State Support if ExoMars Launch Postponed - Director-General
+ InSight lander captures audio of first likely 'quake' on Mars
+ All-woman engineering team heads to NASA Mars competition
+ A small step for China: Mars base for teens opens in desert
+ Things Are Stacking Up for NASA's Mars 2020 Spacecraft
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Amazon's Bezos unveils lunar lander project 'Blue Moon'
Washington DC (AFP) May 09, 2019
Jeff Bezos, who heads both Amazon and space company Blue Origin, unveiled on Thursday a lunar lander that he said would be used to transport equipment, and possibly human beings, to the south pole of the Moon by 2024. "This is Blue Moon," he said at a presentation in Washington, as curtains lifted to show a mock-up of a huge vessel weighing many tons and able to carry four self-driving rov ... more
+ Lunar Power System Team Wins President's Award
+ Magma is the key to the moon's makeup
+ India aims to be 1st country to land rover on Moon's south pole
+ China's Chang'e-4 probe resumes work for fifth lunar day
+ Launch of India's Second Lunar Mission 'Chandrayaan-2' Postponed Yet Again
+ What's on the far side of the Moon?
+ Rock hits Moon during lunar eclipse
Could Rare Supernova Resolve Longstanding Origin Debate
Washington DC (SPX) May 08, 2019
Detection of a supernova with an unusual chemical signature by a team of astronomers led by Carnegie's Juna Kollmeier - and including Carnegie's Nidia Morrell, Anthony Piro, Mark Phillips, and Josh Simon - may hold the key to solving the longstanding mystery that is the source of these violent explosions. Observations taken by the Magellan telescopes at Carnegie's Las Campanas Observatory in Chi ... more
+ Observations that question dark matter disproved
+ Are M106's Globular Clusters a Relic of Cosmic High Noon
+ A new filter to better map the dark universe
+ Star formation burst in the Milky Way 2-3 billion years ago
+ Blue supergiant stars open doors to concert in space
+ Sculpting super-fast light pulses
+ Astronomers discover 2,000-year-old remnant of a nova


Ozone monitoring team spots "fingerprints" on Earth's atmosphere
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 06, 2019
The Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) aboard NASA's Aura satellite specializes in finding "fingerprints" - signatures of gases and particles that clutter the atmosphere. By measuring solar radiation reflected from Earth's surface and scattered by its atmosphere, the OMI team derives important information about aerosols such as dust and smoke and pollutants like nitrogen and sulfur dioxide. ... more
+ Scientists track giant ocean vortex from space
+ What does Earth's core have in common with salad dressing? Maybe this
+ Global TanDEM-X forest map is available
+ SFL highlights microspace EO missions at IAA Symposium in Berlin
+ Ocean activity is key controller of summer monsoons
+ How Atmospheric Sounding Transformed Weather Prediction
+ OCO-3 Ready to Extend NASA's Study of Carbon
First planetary defense technology demonstration to collide with asteroid in 2022
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 07, 2019
The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) - NASA's first mission to demonstrate a planetary defense technique - will get one chance to hit its target, the small moonlet in the binary asteroid system Didymos. The asteroid poses no threat to Earth and is an ideal test target: measuring the change in how the smaller asteroid orbits about the larger asteroid in a binary system is much easier ... more
+ Hera's APEX CubeSat will reveal the stuff that asteroids are made of
+ Killer asteroid flattens New York in simulation exercise
+ Hera's CubeSat to perform first radar probe of an asteroid
+ Scientists Planning Now for Asteroid Flyby a Decade Away
+ ASU researchers find water in samples from asteroid Itokawa
+ Asteroid impact exercise offers practice for NASA, ESA scientists, engineers
+ Gaia survey reveals three new asteroids
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Scientists discover what powers celestial phenomenon STEVE
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 26, 2019
The celestial phenomenon known as STEVE is likely caused by a combination of heating of charged particles in the atmosphere and energetic electrons like those that power the aurora, according to new research. In a new study, scientists found STEVE's source region in space and identified two mechanisms that cause it. Last year, the obscure atmospheric lights became an internet sensation. Ty ... more
+ Indian Scientists Make Deepest Radio Images of the Sun
+ New model accurately predicts harmful space weather
+ NASA launches two rockets studying auroras
+ Jupiter's Atmosphere Heats up under Solar Wind
+ And the Blobs Just Keep on Coming
+ Unexpected rain on Sun links two solar mysteries
+ Climate changes make some aspects of weather forecasting increasingly difficult
China's Yuanwang-7 departs for space monitoring missions
Nanjing (XNA) May 03, 2019
China's spacecraft tracking ship Yuanwang-7 is sailing to the Pacific Ocean, beginning its first maritime space monitoring mission this year. The ship departed from a port in eastern China's Jiangsu Province Wednesday. As a part of China's new generation of spacecraft tracking ships, Yuanwang-7 is about 220 meters long, 40 meters high and has a displacement of nearly 30,000 tonnes. I ... more
+ China's tracking ship Yuanwang-2 starts new mission after retirement
+ China to build moon station in 'about 10 years'
+ China to enhance international space cooperation
+ China opens Chang'e-6 for international payloads, asteroids next
+ China's commercial carrier rocket finishes engine test
+ China launches new data relay satellite
+ Super-powerful Long March 9 said to begin missions around 2030


Could Rare Supernova Resolve Longstanding Origin Debate
Washington DC (SPX) May 08, 2019
Detection of a supernova with an unusual chemical signature by a team of astronomers led by Carnegie's Juna Kollmeier - and including Carnegie's Nidia Morrell, Anthony Piro, Mark Phillips, and Josh Simon - may hold the key to solving the longstanding mystery that is the source of these violent explosions. Observations taken by the Magellan telescopes at Carnegie's Las Campanas Observatory in Chi ... more
+ Observations that question dark matter disproved
+ Are M106's Globular Clusters a Relic of Cosmic High Noon
+ A new filter to better map the dark universe
+ Star formation burst in the Milky Way 2-3 billion years ago
+ Blue supergiant stars open doors to concert in space
+ Sculpting super-fast light pulses
+ Astronomers discover 2,000-year-old remnant of a nova
China, India boost global booze binge: study
Paris (AFP) May 8, 2019
The world consumed ten percent more alcohol per adult in 2017 than in 1990, due in large part to heavier and more widespread drinking in China and India, researchers said Wednesday. On current trends, global consumption per capita will rise another 17 percent over the next decade, they reported in The Lancet. By 2030 half of all adults worldwide will drink alcohol, and almost a quarter w ... more
+ Prehistoric craftsmen sought freshwater mussels for their ornamental shell
+ Tibetan plateau first occupied by middle Pleistocene Denisovans
+ Stanford researchers' artificial synapse is fast, efficient and durable
+ The building blocks for astronomically literate citizens
+ Middle Pleistocene human skull reveals variation and continuity in early Asian humans
+ Ancient human relative explains mountain gene mutation
+ Human ancestors were 'grounded,' new analysis shows
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

NASA awards ATLAS Space Operations space operations partnership
Traverse City MI (SPX) May 07, 2019
ATLAS Space Operations, Inc., a leading innovator in communications for the space industry, today announced NASA has awarded it a contract for the Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) Program's Space Relay Partnership and Services Study. Prime contractor ATLAS partnered in its proposal with Laser Light Communications, Inc, a leader in advanced optical communications and data distribution v ... more
+ Gateway to the Solar System
+ RSC Energia developed a one-orbit rendezvous profile
+ Observing Gaia from Earth to improve its star maps
+ NASA Aids Testing of Boeing Deep Space Habitat Ground Prototype in Alabama
+ Power Glitch in US Segment of ISS Fixed, Station Back to Full Power - NASA
+ NASA and Blue Origin Help Classrooms and Researchers Reach Space
+ Photobioreactor: oxygen and a source of nutrition for astronauts
US climate change refusal sinks Arctic declaration: delegates
Rovaniemi, Finland (AFP) May 7, 2019
Members of the Arctic Council meeting in Finland's far north on Tuesday failed to issue their traditional final declaration due to a US refusal to mention climate change, delegates said. At the start of the 11th ministerial meeting, chair Finnish Foreign Minister Timo Soini announced a change to the planned agenda, saying the final joint declaration would be replaced by ministerial statement ... more
+ Thawing permafrost leaves traceable carbon footprint in Arctic rivers
+ US climate sceptics send shivers through Arctic cooperation
+ Arctic rivers provide fingerprint of carbon release from thawing permafrost
+ Alaska's thaw threatens prehistoric sites once frozen in time
+ Climate change forcing Alaskans to hunt for new ways to survive
+ Alaska's indigenous people feel the heat of climate change
+ Pompeo slams China, Russia for 'aggressive' Arctic behaviour


Radical desalination approach may disrupt the water industry
New York NY (SPX) May 08, 2019
Hypersaline brines - water that contains high concentrations of dissolved salts and whose saline levels are higher than ocean water - are a growing environmental concern around the world. Very challenging and costly to treat, they result from water produced during oil and gas production, inland desalination concentrate, landfill leachate (a major problem for municipal solid waste landfills), flu ... more
+ Two-thirds of world's longest rivers throttled by mankind: study
+ Impossible research produces 400-year El Nino record, revealing startling changes
+ Data with Flippers? Studying the Ocean from a Seal's POV
+ Study demonstrates seagrass' strong potential for curbing erosion
+ Overfishing risks ocean deserts as stocks plummet
+ Tapping fresh water under the ocean has consequences
+ Half the Earth's oceans may have come from asteroids
LIGO and Virgo Detect Neutron Star Smash-Ups
Pasadena CA (SPX) May 03, 2019
On April 25, 2019, the National Science Foundation's Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and the European-based Virgo detector registered gravitational waves from what appears likely to be a crash between two neutron stars - the dense remnants of massive stars that previously exploded. One day later, on April 26, the LIGO-Virgo network spotted another candidate source with ... more
+ Scientists Find More Evidence the Universe Is a Violent Place
+ What Earth's gravity reveals about climate change
+ Ten years before the detection of gravitational waves
+ Upgraded Detectors to Resume Hunt for Gravitational Waves
+ Taking gravity from strength to strength
+ New compute cluster to find and interpret gravitational waves
+ Resolving the jet or cocoon riddle of a gravitational wave event
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