24/7 News Coverage
May 17, 2019
MOON DAILY
Chinese lunar rover's "lucky" find could unlock secrets of moon and earth



Beijing (XNA) May 17, 2019
China's Yutu-2, the first rover on the far side of the moon, has found materials from deep inside the moon that could help unravel the mystery of the lunar mantle composition and the formation and evolution of the moon and the earth. Using data obtained by the visible and near infrared spectrometer installed on Yutu-2, a research team led by Li Chunlai, with the National Astronomical Observatories of China under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, found that the lunar soil in the landing area of the ... read more

MOON DAILY
China's Chang'E 4 Mission Discovers New "Secrets" from Far Side of the Moon
Beijing, China (SPX) May 17, 2019
A lunar lander named for the Chinese goddess of the Moon may have lessened the mystery of the far side of the Moon. The fourth probe of Chang'E (CE-4) was the first mission to land on the far side o ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Galaxy Blazes with New Stars Born from Close Encounter
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 17, 2019
The irregular galaxy NGC 4485 shows all the signs of having been involved in a hit-and-run accident with a bypassing galaxy. Rather than destroying the galaxy, the chance encounter is spawning a new ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
ALMA Discovers Aluminum Around Young Star
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) May 17, 2019
Researchers using ALMA data discovered an aluminum-bearing molecule for the first time around a young star. Aluminum rich inclusions found in meteorites are some of the oldest solid objects formed i ... more
MOON DAILY
Chang'e 4 mission discovers new secrets from Lunar farside
Beijing, China (SPX) May 16, 2019
A lunar lander named for the Chinese goddess of the moon may have lessened the mystery of the far side of the moon. The fourth probe of Chang'E (CE-4) was the first mission to land on the far side o ... more


Previous Issues May 16 May 15 May 14 May 13 May 10
Advertise at Space Media Network Directed Energy And Next Generation Munitions - Jun 25-26 - On Line Event
DSI's 2nd DoD Hypersonic Capabilities Symposium Jul 20-21, 2020 Alexandria, VA
Human 2 Mars Summit - Washington DC - Aug 31 - Sep 01, 2020
Hypersonic Weapons Summit 2020 | Oct 28 - Oct 30 | Washington DC
Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison & Memory Foam Mattress Review
MOON DAILY
Beresheet Impact Site Spotted
Washington DC (SPX) May 16, 2019
The photo above shows the landing site of the Israeli Beresheet spacecraft on a region of the Moon called Sea of Serenity, or Mare Serenitatis in Latin. On April 11, 2019, SpaceIL, a non-profi ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
NASA Scientist Receives Patent for Innovative Technique for Measuring Space Weather Phenomena
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 15, 2019
A NASA expert in space-weather phenomena has won a patent for an idea that, if fully implemented, would create the world's largest scientific instrument for detecting a condition that has caused pow ... more
IRON AND ICE
'Extreme Crunch' Looming if No Limits Put on Space Mining 'Gold Rush'
Washington DC (Sputnik) May 15, 2019
Researchers have been proposing to set a special "tripwire" that would issue a warning once humanity is close to mining one eighth of the solar system, which has been preliminarily estimated to occu ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
Strong Magnetic Storm May Cause Satellites to Deorbit - Russian Academy
Moscow (Sputnik) May 15, 2019
One of the strongest magnetic storms in recent years, which began earlier on 14 May and is forecast to continue through the evening, may increase the possibility of spacecraft deorbiting and cause p ... more
EXO WORLDS
Small, hardy planets can survive stellar end sequence
Warwick UK (SPX) May 15, 2019
Small, hardy planets packed with dense elements have the best chance of avoiding being crushed and swallowed up when their host star dies, new research from the University of Warwick has found. ... more
24/7 Disaster News Coverage
24/7 Technology News Coverage
24/7 China News Coverage



PHYSICS NEWS
UCLA students touch space with a microgravity experiment
Los Angeles CA (SPX) May 10, 2019
It took only 10 minutes and a ride aboard the Blue Origin New Shepard reusable rocket for 11 students in the Bruin Spacecraft Group to make history. At 6:32 a.m. on May 2, their experimental p ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
10 years ago, Hubble's final servicing mission made it better than ever
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 14, 2019
Astronaut Mike Massimino floated next to the Hubble Space Telescope's cylindrical body and began to remove the screws that fastened a handrail to one of the telescope's instrument panels. The first ... more
MOON DAILY
Study finds new Luna wrinkles
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 14, 2019
Billions of years ago, Earth's Moon formed vast basins called "mare" (pronounced MAR-ay)*. Scientists have long assumed these basins were dead, still places where the last geologic activity occurred ... more
MOON DAILY
Shrinking Moon may be generating moonquakes
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 14, 2019
The Moon is shrinking as its interior cools, getting more than about 150 feet (50 meters) skinnier over the last several hundred million years. Just as a grape wrinkles as it shrinks down to a raisi ... more
MOON DAILY
Lunar tunnel engineers excited by boring Moon colonies
Naples, Italy (AFP) May 10, 2019
As space agencies prepare to return humans to the Moon, top engineers are racing to design a tunnel boring machine capable of digging underground colonies for the first lunar inhabitants. ... more


NASA dubs 2024 Moon mission 'Artemis,' asks for $1.6 billion

PHYSICS NEWS
Gravitational waves leave a detectable mark, physicists say
Ithaca NY (SPX) May 10, 2019
Gravitational waves, first detected in 2016, offer a new window on the universe, with the potential to tell us about everything from the time following the Big Bang to more recent events in galaxy c ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com



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
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
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Our history in the stars
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) May 13, 2019
Astronomers map the substance aluminum monoxide (AlO) in a cloud around a distant young star - Origin Source I. The finding clarifies some important details about how our solar system, and ultimatel ... 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
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
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



NASA's New Horizons Team Publishes First Kuiper Belt Flyby Science Results
Laurel MD (SPX) May 17, 2019
NASA's New Horizons mission team has published the first profile of the farthest world ever explored, a planetary building block and Kuiper Belt object called 2014 MU69. Analyzing just the first sets of data gathered during the New Horizons spacecraft's New Year's 2019 flyby of MU69 (nicknamed Ultima Thule) the mission team quickly discovered an object far more complex than expected. The team pu ... more
+ Brazilian scientists investigate dwarf planet's ring
+ 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


Small, hardy planets can survive stellar end sequence
Warwick UK (SPX) May 15, 2019
Small, hardy planets packed with dense elements have the best chance of avoiding being crushed and swallowed up when their host star dies, new research from the University of Warwick has found. Astrophysicists from the Astronomy and Astrophysics Group have modelled the chances of different planets being destroyed by tidal forces when their host stars become white dwarfs and have determined ... more
+ Gravitational forces in protoplanetary disks may push super-Earths close to their stars
+ Rare-Earth metals in the atmosphere of a glowing-hot exoplanet
+ Cosmic dust reveals new insights on the formation of solar system
+ 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
NASA's MRO Completes 60,000 Trips Around Mars
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 16, 2019
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter hit a dizzying milestone this morning: It completed 60,000 loops around the Red Planet at 10:39 a.m. PDT (1:39 p.m. EDT). On average, MRO takes 112 minutes to circle Mars, whipping around at about 2 miles per second (3.4 kilometers per second). Since entering orbit on March 10, 2006, the spacecraft has been collecting daily science about the planet's surf ... more
+ How the Sun pumps out water from Mars into space
+ New water cycle on Mars discovered
+ For InSight, dust cleanings will yield new science
+ Why this Martian full moon looks like candy
+ 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
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Chinese lunar rover's "lucky" find could unlock secrets of moon and earth
Beijing (XNA) May 17, 2019
China's Yutu-2, the first rover on the far side of the moon, has found materials from deep inside the moon that could help unravel the mystery of the lunar mantle composition and the formation and evolution of the moon and the earth. Using data obtained by the visible and near infrared spectrometer installed on Yutu-2, a research team led by Li Chunlai, with the National Astronomical Obser ... more
+ Chang'e 4 mission discovers new secrets from Lunar farside
+ Beresheet Impact Site Spotted
+ China's Chang'E 4 Mission Discovers New "Secrets" from Far Side of the Moon
+ Study finds new Luna wrinkles
+ Lunar tunnel engineers excited by boring Moon colonies
+ Shrinking Moon may be generating moonquakes
+ NASA dubs 2024 Moon mission 'Artemis,' asks for $1.6 billion
Galaxy Blazes with New Stars Born from Close Encounter
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 17, 2019
The irregular galaxy NGC 4485 shows all the signs of having been involved in a hit-and-run accident with a bypassing galaxy. Rather than destroying the galaxy, the chance encounter is spawning a new generation of stars, and presumably planets. The right side of the galaxy is ablaze with star formation, shown in the plethora of young blue stars and star-incubating pinkish nebulas. The left ... more
+ ALMA Discovers Aluminum Around Young Star
+ 10 years ago, Hubble's final servicing mission made it better than ever
+ Star formation burst in the Milky Way 2-3 billion years ago
+ SKA Consortium completes design of Science Data Processor
+ What a dying star's ashes tell us about the birth of our solar system
+ Our history in the stars
+ Precise temperature measurements with invisible light


The air we breathe
Paris (ESA) May 17, 2019
Air pollution is a global environmental health problem, especially for those living in urban areas. Not only does it negatively impact our ecosystems, it considerably affects our health. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), around 8 million premature deaths per year are linked to air pollution, more than double of previous estimates. One of the pollutants with the strongest ev ... more
+ Space Station science looking at Earth
+ Joining forces on Earth science to benefit society
+ Orbiting NASA instrument to examine Boston's carbon emissions, plant life
+ How Venus and Mars can teach us about Earth
+ Spotlight on the pulse of our planet
+ New potential for tracking severe storms
+ At least 300 Himalayan yaks starve to death in India
Bedbugs survived the impact event that wiped out the dinosaurs
Washington (UPI) May 16, 2019
Bedbugs are notoriously difficult to eradicate. Not even the fiery asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs could rid Earth of its bedbug infestation. DNA analysis of some 30 different bedbug species showed the insect has been around for at least 115 million years. Previously, scientists suggested bedbugs emerged between 50 and 60 million years ago. Bats were supposedly the b ... more
+ 'Extreme Crunch' Looming if No Limits Put on Space Mining 'Gold Rush'
+ First planetary defense technology demonstration to collide with asteroid in 2022
+ 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
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

NASA Scientist Receives Patent for Innovative Technique for Measuring Space Weather Phenomena
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 15, 2019
A NASA expert in space-weather phenomena has won a patent for an idea that, if fully implemented, would create the world's largest scientific instrument for detecting a condition that has caused power outages in the past. Antti Pulkkinen, a scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and his team have started implementing the idea. They've installed scientific s ... more
+ Strong Magnetic Storm May Cause Satellites to Deorbit - Russian Academy
+ Scientists discover what powers celestial phenomenon STEVE
+ 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
China develops new-generation rockets for upcoming missions
Beijing (XNA) May 17, 2019
China has developed a number of new-generation carrier rockets to take the country's space industry to the next level. b>The Long March-7 br> /b> The Long March-7 is a medium-sized carrier rocket with high reliability and safety. It is designed to launch cargo vehicles during the construction of China's manned space station project and meet the long-term demand for upgrading manned carri ... more
+ China's satellite navigation industry sees rapid development
+ China's Yuanwang-7 departs for space monitoring missions
+ 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


Galaxy Blazes with New Stars Born from Close Encounter
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 17, 2019
The irregular galaxy NGC 4485 shows all the signs of having been involved in a hit-and-run accident with a bypassing galaxy. Rather than destroying the galaxy, the chance encounter is spawning a new generation of stars, and presumably planets. The right side of the galaxy is ablaze with star formation, shown in the plethora of young blue stars and star-incubating pinkish nebulas. The left ... more
+ ALMA Discovers Aluminum Around Young Star
+ 10 years ago, Hubble's final servicing mission made it better than ever
+ Star formation burst in the Milky Way 2-3 billion years ago
+ SKA Consortium completes design of Science Data Processor
+ What a dying star's ashes tell us about the birth of our solar system
+ Our history in the stars
+ Precise temperature measurements with invisible light
Relay station in the brain controls an array of movements
Washington (UPI) May 15, 2019
Neuroscientists have identified two different nerve cell populations within the brain's substantia nigra, a relay station that controls a diverse array of movements. Physical movements are executed through the coordination of myriad neural signals. Like a relay center, sending and receiving information, the brain's substantia nigra performs the coordination. Despite its importanc ... more
+ New data platform illuminates history of humans' environmental impact
+ Tooth fossils fill 6-million-year-old gap in primate evolution
+ Ancient teeth suggest Neanderthals, modern humans diverged 800,000 years ago
+ Ancient chewing gum reveals Scandinavia's oldest human DNA
+ Evidence suggests Stone Age family explored Italian cave on their hands, knees
+ Climate change triggered South American population decline 8,000 years ago
+ China, India boost global booze binge: study
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Oscar Avalos Dreams in Titanium
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 17, 2019
You could say Oscar Avalos' JPL career was a Christmas miracle. As a young Mexican American immigrant, Avalos and his parents traveled back to Colima, Mexico, every December to spend the holidays in their hometown with family and friends. But a trip in 1980 proved life-altering. Then a freshman at Manual Arts High School in South Los Angeles, Avalos had his heart set on becoming an auto me ... more
+ House committee limits Space Development Agency funding, asks for detailed plans
+ Trump, NASA want another $1.6 billion to return America to the moon
+ NASA Awards $106 Million to US Small Businesses for Technology Development
+ NISTex-II instrument successfully launched on May 4th
+ High-tech supremacy at stake in US-China trade war
+ Space plants project could be astronaut game changer
+ LightSail 2 set to launch next month
New study boosts understanding of how ocean melts Antarctic Ice Sheet
Hobart, Australia (SPX) May 15, 2019
An innovative use of instruments that measure the ocean near Antarctica has helped Australian scientists to get a clearer picture of how the ocean is melting the Antarctic ice sheet. Until now, most measurements in Antarctica were made during summer, leaving winter conditions, when the sea freezes over with ice, largely unknown. But scientists from IMAS and the CSIRO, supported by AC ... more
+ A quarter of glacier ice in West Antarctica is now unstable
+ U.S. military personnel begin Exercise Northern Edge in Alaska
+ Jakobshavn Isbrae Glacier bucks the trend
+ Influential excrement: How life in Antarctica thrives on penguin poop
+ US climate sceptics send shivers through Arctic cooperation
+ Arctic rivers provide fingerprint of carbon release from thawing permafrost
+ Thawing permafrost leaves traceable carbon footprint in Arctic rivers


Water cycle wrapped
Paris (ESA) May 16, 2019
As our climate changes, the availability of freshwater is a growing issue for many people around the world. Understanding the water cycle and how the climate and human usage is causing shifts in natural cycling processes is vital to safeguarding supplies. While numerous satellites measure individual components of the water cycle, it has never been described as a whole over a particular region - ... more
+ 'Super corals' give glimmer of hope for world's dying reefs
+ Study explores the use of robots and artificial intelligence to understand the deep-sea
+ UN chief hails Pacific's 'moral authority' on climate
+ What we've learned from water in motion
+ Mapping salty waters
+ Better understanding of coral-algae relationship could help prevent bleaching
+ Remarkable fish see color in deep, dark water
UCLA students touch space with a microgravity experiment
Los Angeles CA (SPX) May 10, 2019
It took only 10 minutes and a ride aboard the Blue Origin New Shepard reusable rocket for 11 students in the Bruin Spacecraft Group to make history. At 6:32 a.m. on May 2, their experimental pump designed for use in zero-gravity environments, named "Blue Dawn ," completed its flight into a low-Earth orbit and freefall - thereby becoming the first space payload developed and built entirely ... more
+ Gravitational waves leave a detectable mark, physicists say
+ LIGO and Virgo Detect Neutron Star Smash-Ups
+ 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
Buy Advertising Media Advertising Kit Editorial & Other Enquiries Privacy statement
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2018 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement