24/7 News Coverage
July 25, 2019
MOON DAILY
Toyota Unveils Its Cosmic Collaboration for Futuristic Moon Rover



Tokyo, Japan (Sputnik) Jul 24, 2019
Many major national space agencies are currently looking to utilise the resource of the Moon and its shadowed craters through the development of new technologies. NASA has previously used "moon buggies" on the final three Apollo moon missions, in 1971 and 1972, respectively, and plans to have astronauts on the Moon's south pole by 2024. Toyota has announced the cosmic-scale launch of its off-road moon rover of the future for astronauts. The joint effort by Japan's world-renowned car company ... read more

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Coupled exploration of light and matter
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Jul 22, 2019
The concept of 'quasiparticles' is a highly successful framework for the description of complex phenomena that emerge in many-body systems. One species of quasiparticles that in particular has attra ... more
EXO WORLDS
ELSI scientists discover new chemistry that may help explain the origins of cellular life
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Jul 24, 2019
Before life began on Earth, the environment likely contained a massive number of chemicals that reacted with each other more or less randomly, and it is unclear how things as complex as cells could ... more
MOON DAILY
Polar Moon water not as invincible as expected, scientists argue
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 24, 2019
The Moon's south pole region is home to some of the most extreme environments in the solar system: it's unimaginably cold, massively cratered, and has areas that are either constantly bathed in sunl ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
NASA Delivers Hardware for ESA Dark Energy Mission
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 24, 2019
The European Space Agency's Euclid mission, set to launch in 2022, will investigate two of the biggest mysteries in modern astronomy: dark matter and dark energy. A team of NASA engineers recently d ... more


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MOON DAILY
China invites nations to join in moon exploration
Washington DC (XNA) Jul 23, 2019
In 1969, when Neil Armstrong became the first person to walk on the moon, the astronomical body was for Chinese just a glowing orb overhead to gaze at and muse about. Now, fifty years later, China h ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
The early days of the Milky Way revealed
Santa Cruz, Spain (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
The universe 13,000 million years ago was very different from the universe we know today. It is understood that stars were forming at a very rapid rate, forming the first dwarf galaxies, whose merge ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Astronomers Map Vast Void in Our Cosmic Neighborhood
Honolulu HI (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
An astronomer from the University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy (IfA) and an international team published a new study that reveals more of the vast cosmic structure surrounding our Milky Way gal ... more
IRON AND ICE
What gives meteorites their shape
New York NY (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
Meteoroids coming from outer space are randomly shaped, but many of these, which land on earth as meteorites, are found to be carved into cones. Scientists have now figured out how the physics of fl ... more
MOON DAILY
India launches historic bid to put spacecraft on Moon
Sriharikota, India (AFP) July 22, 2019
India launched a bid to become a leading space power Monday, sending up a rocket to put a craft on the surface of the Moon in what it called a "historic day" for the nation. ... more
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MOON DAILY
Lunar Surface Trash or Treasure?
Bethesda MD (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
Since 1959, the lunar surface has experienced a barrage of man-made attacks of various kinds. It all began on September 13 with Soviet probe Luna 2 when it smashed into Mare Imbrium and all but vapo ... more
MOON DAILY
After Chandrayaan-m Mission India needs to improve satellite launcher capacity
New Delhi (Sputnik) Jul 23, 2019
As India continues to celebrate the historic launch of its second Moon Mission, the Chandrayaan-2, experts believe that the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) needs to improve its launchers t ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
First Calculations of Magnetic Activity in "Hot Jupiters"
Tempe AZ (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
Gas-giant planets orbiting close to their stars have powerful magnetic fields, many times stronger than our own Jupiter, according to a new study by a team of astrophysicists. It is the first time t ... more
MOON DAILY
NASA seeks input from US industry on Artemis Lander development
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
In a major step toward returning astronauts to the surface of the Moon under the Artemis lunar exploration program and preparing for future missions to Mars, NASA is seeking comments from American c ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Physicists find first possible 3D quantum spin liquid
Houston TX (SPX) Jul 22, 2019
There's no known way to prove a three-dimensional "quantum spin liquid" exists, so Rice University physicists and their collaborators did the next best thing: They showed their single crystals of ce ... more


India launches spacecraft on Moon-landing mission

MOON DAILY
One giant leap: 50 years ago, humanity's first steps on the Moon
Houston (AFP) July 21, 2019
"That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind": it was with these words that Neil Armstrong became the first person to set foot on the Moon 50 years ago, an occasion celebrated by space enthusiasts globally Saturday. ... more
Space News from SpaceDaily.com



MOON DAILY
Three original NASA moon-walk videos auctioned off for $1.82M
Washington (UPI) Jul 21, 2019
The original NASA videotapes of the Apollo 11 moon walk were auctioned off for $1.82 million on the 50th anniversary of the feat. ... more
MOON DAILY
Building a toolkit for the Moon
Paris (ESA) Jul 22, 2019
As the world celebrates 50 years since the first lunar landing, the team at ESA's astronaut centre is looking to the future of lunar exploration. This includes developing prototypes for rock and soi ... more
TECH SPACE
Electronic chip mimics the brain to make memories in a flash
Melbourne, Australia (SPX) Jul 22, 2019
Researchers from RMIT University drew inspiration from an emerging tool in biotechnology - optogenetics - to develop a device that replicates the way the brain stores and loses information. Op ... more
MOON DAILY
Powering the future with lunar soil
Paris (ESA) Jul 22, 2019
Building a lunar base would be one of the next logical steps in our exploration of the Solar System, but the survival of a future crew depends on access to a reliable source of energy. An ESA Discov ... more
MOON DAILY
Angelic halo orbit chosen for humankind's first lunar outpost
Paris (ESA) Jul 22, 2019
Mission planners at NASA and ESA's Operations Centre (ESOC) have spent months debating the pros and cons of different orbits, and have now decided on the path of the lunar Gateway. Like the In ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage
24/7 War News Coverage



Jupiter's auroras powered by alternating current
Washington (UPI) Jul 11, 2019
New analysis of Juno mission data suggests Jupiter's auroras are powered by alternating current, not direct current. Jupiter, a the largest planet in the solar system, boasts an aurora with a radiant power of 100 terawatts, or 100 billion kilowatts. It's the brightest aurora in the solar system. Like Earth's auroras, Jupiter's light shows are centered around its poles. The aurora ... more
+ Kuiper Belt Binary Orientations Support Streaming Instability Hypothesis
+ Study Shows How Icy Outer Solar System Satellites May Have Formed
+ Astronomers See "Warm" Glow of Uranus's Rings
+ Table salt compound spotted on Europa
+ On Pluto the Winter is approaching, and the atmosphere is vanishing into frost
+ Neptune's moon Triton fosters rare icy union
+ Juno Finds Changes in Jupiter's Magnetic Field


ELSI scientists discover new chemistry that may help explain the origins of cellular life
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Jul 24, 2019
Before life began on Earth, the environment likely contained a massive number of chemicals that reacted with each other more or less randomly, and it is unclear how things as complex as cells could have emerged from such chemical chaos. Now, a team led by Tony Z. Jia of the Earth-Life Science Institute (ELSI) at the Tokyo Institute of Technology and Kuhan Chandru of the National University of Ma ... more
+ Scientists deepen understanding of magnetic fields surrounding Earth and other planets
+ Super salty, subzero Arctic water provides peek at possible life on other planets
+ Astronomers expand cosmic "cheat sheet" in hunt for life
+ Ejected moons could help solve several astronomical puzzles
+ A desert portal to other worlds
+ Discovering Exoplanets with Gravitational Waves
+ Planet Seeding and Panspermia
ExoMars radio science instrument readied for Red Planet
Paris (ESA) Jul 23, 2019
An ambitious instrument for ESA's ExoMars 2020 mission has passed its testing in conditions resembling those on the Red Planet. It will now be transported to Russia for its acceptance review, followed by integration onto the Kazachok Surface Platform, scheduled for launch this time next year. At about 8 x 8 x 20 cm plus a trio of antennas, ESA's Lander Radioscience experiment, or LaRa for ... more
+ Mars 2020 Rover: T-Minus One Year and Counting
+ Red wine compound could help protect astronauts on trip to Mars
+ Red wine's resveratrol could help Mars explorers stay strong
+ A material way to make Mars habitable
+ Aerogel could be a key building material for Mars
+ Sustaining Life on Long-Term Crewed Missions Will Require Planetary Resources
+ InSight Uncovers the 'Mole' on Mars
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

India launches historic bid to put spacecraft on Moon
Sriharikota, India (AFP) July 22, 2019
India launched a bid to become a leading space power Monday, sending up a rocket to put a craft on the surface of the Moon in what it called a "historic day" for the nation. Chandrayaan-2 - or Moon Chariot 2 - took off on time at 2:43 pm (0913 GMT) from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre on an island off the coast of Andhra Pradesh state. Applause broke out in the mission control room as t ... more
+ After Chandrayaan-m Mission India needs to improve satellite launcher capacity
+ India launches spacecraft on Moon-landing mission
+ NASA seeks input from US industry on Artemis Lander development
+ Lunar Surface Trash or Treasure?
+ Building a toolkit for the Moon
+ Three original NASA moon-walk videos auctioned off for $1.82M
+ Polar Moon water not as invincible as expected, scientists argue
The early days of the Milky Way revealed
Santa Cruz, Spain (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
The universe 13,000 million years ago was very different from the universe we know today. It is understood that stars were forming at a very rapid rate, forming the first dwarf galaxies, whose mergers gave rise to the more massive present-day galaxies, including our own. However the exact chain of the events which produced the Milky Way was not known until now. Exact measurements of positi ... more
+ NASA Delivers Hardware for ESA Dark Energy Mission
+ NASA's Webb Telescope Shines with American Ingenuity
+ Coupled exploration of light and matter
+ First Calculations of Magnetic Activity in "Hot Jupiters"
+ Astronomers Map Vast Void in Our Cosmic Neighborhood
+ Spectrum X-Gamma Rockets into Space with X-ray Vision
+ IceCube Antarctic Neutrino Detector to Get $37M Upgrade


Second laser boosts Aeolus power
Paris (ESA) Jul 24, 2019
ESA's Aeolus satellite, which carries the world's first space Doppler wind lidar, has been delivering high-quality global measurements of Earth's wind since it was launched almost a year ago. However, part of the instrument, the laser transmitter, has been slowly losing energy. As a result, ESA decided to switch over to the instrument's second laser - and the mission is now back on top form. ... more
+ Tracking Smoke From Fires to Improve Air Quality Forecasting
+ Commercial Space Ride Secured for NASA's New Air Pollution Sensor
+ Chaos theory produces map for predicting paths of particles emitted into the atmosphere
+ Earth's Shining Upper Atmosphere - From the Apollo Era to the Present
+ Animal observation system ICARUS is switched on
+ PlanetiQ secures $18.7M Series B financing round
+ First new DoD NEXRAD weather radar installed at Cannon Air Force Base
What gives meteorites their shape
New York NY (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
Meteoroids coming from outer space are randomly shaped, but many of these, which land on earth as meteorites, are found to be carved into cones. Scientists have now figured out how the physics of flight in the atmosphere leads to this transformation. The progression, discovered through a series of replication experiments in New York University's Applied Mathematics Lab, involves melting an ... more
+ MASCOT Confirms What Scientists Have Long Suspected
+ Speeding up science on near-earth asteroids
+ ESA confirms asteroid will miss Earth in 2019
+ Hayabusa-makes completes second asteroid touchdown to collect samples
+ Japan's Hayabusa2 probe makes 'perfect' touchdown on asteroid
+ Japan's asteroid probe Hayabusa2 set for final touchdown
+ Zwicky Transient Facility Spots Asteroid with Shortest Year
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

Details of Solar Science Mission Revealed at UK Astronomy Meeting
London, UK (SPX) Jul 05, 2019
Named after a Celtic goddess of the Sun, SULIS is a UK-led solar science mission, designed to answer fundamental questions about the physics of solar storms. The mission consists of a cluster of small satellites and will carefully monitor solar storms using state-of-the-art UK technology, as well as demonstrating new technologies in space. Lead Investigator on the project, Dr. Eamon Scullion of ... more
+ Citizen scientists discover cyclical pattern of complexity in solar storms
+ UK-led solar science mission to use cubesats
+ Research details response of sagebrush to 2017 solar eclipse
+ NASA selects missions to study our sun, its effects on space weather
+ Northern lights' social networking reveals true scale of magnetic storms
+ UK scientists to work with NASA on new mission to study the Sun
+ NASA Selects PUNCH Mission to Image Beyond the Sun's Outer Corona
Chinese scientists say goodbye to Tiangong-2
Beijing (XNA) Jul 23, 2019
After helping scientists complete many significant experiments such as growing rice and vegetables in space, observing the strongest explosions in the universe and setting up the most precise clock in space, China's first space lab Tiangong-2 ended its mission and reentered the atmosphere under control Friday night (Beijing Time). With deep attachment, Chinese scientists recalled the exper ... more
+ China's space lab Tiangong 2 destroyed in controlled fall to earth
+ From Moon to Mars, Chinese space engineers rise to new challenges
+ China plans to deploy almost 200 AU-controlled satellites into orbit
+ Luokung and Land Space to develop control system for space and ground assets
+ Yaogan-33 launch fails in north China, Possible debris recovered in Laos
+ China develops new-generation rockets for upcoming missions
+ China's satellite navigation industry sees rapid development


The early days of the Milky Way revealed
Santa Cruz, Spain (SPX) Jul 23, 2019
The universe 13,000 million years ago was very different from the universe we know today. It is understood that stars were forming at a very rapid rate, forming the first dwarf galaxies, whose mergers gave rise to the more massive present-day galaxies, including our own. However the exact chain of the events which produced the Milky Way was not known until now. Exact measurements of positi ... more
+ NASA Delivers Hardware for ESA Dark Energy Mission
+ NASA's Webb Telescope Shines with American Ingenuity
+ Coupled exploration of light and matter
+ First Calculations of Magnetic Activity in "Hot Jupiters"
+ Astronomers Map Vast Void in Our Cosmic Neighborhood
+ Spectrum X-Gamma Rockets into Space with X-ray Vision
+ IceCube Antarctic Neutrino Detector to Get $37M Upgrade
Stone tool changes may show how Mesolithic hunter-gatherers responded to changing climate
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 22, 2019
The development of new hunting projectiles by European hunter-gatherers during the Mesolithic may have been linked to territoriality in a rapidly-changing climate, according to a study published July 17, 2019 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Philippe Crombe from Ghent University, Belgium. As a result of warming occurring at a rate of ca. 1.5 to 2C per century, hunter-gatherers in Eur ... more
+ Working memory in chimpanzees, humans works similarly
+ Out of Africa and into an archaic human melting pot
+ Machine-meshed super-humans remain stuff of fantasy
+ Huge Neolithic settlement unearthed near Jerusalem
+ Early human ancestors were breastfed for the first year of life
+ Call for green burial corridors alongside roads, railways and country footpaths
+ Neanderthals made repeated use of the ancient settlement of 'Ein Qashish, Israel
Daily Newsletters - Space - Military - Environment - Energy

NASA seeks ideas from US firms on future lunar lander
Washington (AFP) July 22, 2019
US space agency NASA on Monday asked American aerospace companies to offer detailed ideas for vehicles that could bring two astronauts to the Moon by 2024, an American objective that was reconfirmed on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission. NASA called the request for input a "major step" forward for its new Moon mission, dubbed Artemis - who in Greek mythology was Apollo's twin sis ... more
+ Former NASA flight director Chris Kraft dies at 95
+ Japan's Noguchi to Be 1st Foreign Astronaut to Join New US Spacecraft Crew for ISS Mission
+ US spacecraft's solar sail successfully deploys
+ Aiming higher: Airmen contribute to human spaceflight from Apollo to tomorrow
+ Indigenous Congo foragers learn early to use sun for orientation
+ French inventor to hover across English Channel on 'flyboard'
+ Trump pits Apollo 11 astronauts against NASA chief
Long-term measurements document sea level rise in the Arctic
Munich, Germany (SPX) Jul 22, 2019
Over the past 22 years, sea levels in the Arctic have risen an average of 2.2 millimeters per year. This is the conclusion of a Danish-German research team after evaluating 1.5 billion radar measurements of various satellites using specially developed algorithms. "The Arctic is a hotspot of climate change," explains Prof. Florian Seitz of the German Geodetic Research Institute at the Techn ... more
+ Alpine climbing routes crumble as climate change strikes
+ West Antarctic ice collapse may be prevented by snowing ocean water onto it
+ Snow cannons could stabilize West Antarctic ice sheet
+ Climate change threatens Greenland's archeological sites: study
+ Antarctic ice instability could yield rapid melting, dramatic sea level rise
+ Giant iceberg on the move in Antarctica
+ Iceland glacier national park named World Heritage site


Navy seeks proposals for unmanned surface vessel
Washington (UPI) Jul 17, 2019
A U.S. Navy request for proposals calls for a new class of unmanned surface vessels. While the Navy floated performance specifications in February for a fleet of "medium unmanned surface vehicles," the request was officially announced Tuesday. It seeks developers for a craft of up to 164 feet long, to function as a sensor and communications relay in part of a family of unmanned surface ... more
+ Great Barrier Reef agency breaks with Australia gvt in climate warning
+ More Basra water crises unless Iraq govt fixes 'failures': HRW
+ Despite monsoon havoc, India monsoons below baseline amid water crisis
+ EU bans cod fishing in Baltic Seaw
+ Thirty years of unique data reveal what's really killing coral reefs
+ Algae-killing virus stimulates nutrient recylcing in the oceans
+ Thirty-year study reveals cause of coral bleaching crisis
Chameleon Theory Could Change How We Think About Gravity
Durham UK (SPX) Jul 09, 2019
Supercomputer simulations of galaxies have shown that Einstein's general theory of relativity might not be the only way to explain how gravity works or how galaxies form. Physicists at Durham University, UK, simulated the cosmos using an alternative model for gravity - f(R)-gravity, a so called Chameleon Theory. The resulting images produced by the simulation show that galaxies like our Mi ... more
+ Artificial gravity breaks free from science fiction
+ Researchers find quantum gravity has no symmetry
+ Development of a displacement sensor to measure gravity of smallest source mass ever
+ Gravitational waves leave a detectable mark, physicists say
+ UCLA students touch space with a microgravity experiment
+ LIGO and Virgo Detect Neutron Star Smash-Ups
+ Scientists Find More Evidence the Universe Is a Violent Place
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