24/7 News Coverage
December 11, 2019
IRON AND ICE
OSIRIS-REx engineers pull off a daring rescue of asteroid mission



Greenbelt MD (SPX) Dec 11, 2019
On Friday, Oct. 11, the OSIRIS-REx team should have been preparing to point their spacecraft cameras precisely over the asteroid Bennu to capture high-resolution images of a region known as Osprey. It is one of four sites scientists are considering from which the spacecraft can safely collect a sample in late 2020. But early that morning, the team learned that a telecommunications facility near Madrid had suffered an unexpected network outage. Part of NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN) of global spac ... read more

EXO WORLDS
Hidden giant planet around tiny white dwarf star
Coventry UK (SPX) Dec 05, 2019
The first evidence of a giant planet orbiting a dead white dwarf star has been found in the form of a disc of gas formed from its evaporating atmosphere. The Neptune-like planet orbits a star ... more
EXO WORLDS
Scientists figure out how accumulating dust particles become planets
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 09, 2019
Scientists have developed a working theory for how small clumps of dust become big balls of debris and begin to form young planets. ... more
TECH SPACE
ESA to fund world's first space debris removal mission
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 09, 2019
The European Space Agency has agreed to fund a mission to remove a piece of space debris - the first of its kind - as part of the agency's new Space Safety program. ... more
TECH SPACE
ESA commissions world's first space debris removal
Paris (ESA) Dec 10, 2019
ClearSpace-1 will be the first space mission to remove an item of debris from orbit, planned for launch in 2025. The mission is being procured as a service contract with a startup-led commercial con ... more
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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Russian astrophysicists discovered a neutron star with an unusual magnetic field structure
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
Scientists from Moscow Institute for Physics and Technology, Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IKI), and Pulkovo Observatory discovered a unique neutron star, the magnetic ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
How to shape a spiral galaxy
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 11, 2019
Our Milky Way galaxy has an elegant spiral shape with long arms filled with stars, but exactly how it took this form has long puzzled scientists. New observations of another galaxy are shedding ligh ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Stardust from Red Giants
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
Some of the Earth's building material was stardust from red giants, researchers from ETH Zurich have established. They can also explain why the Earth contains more of this stardust than the asteroid ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Second stellar population found in Milky Way's thick disk
Rome, Italy (SPX) Dec 11, 2019
A new study led by Dr. Daniela Carollo - researcher of the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics - on the kinematics and chemical composition of a sample of stars in the vicinity of the Sun, r ... more
IRON AND ICE
KinetX team helps in understanding particles ejected from the surface of Asteroid Bennu
Simi Valley CA (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
Carrying out a precise navigation operation involving images of newly discovered particles being ejected from the surface of the active asteroid (101955) Bennu, the KinetX Aerospace Space Navigation ... more
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IRON AND ICE
OSIRIS-REx mission explains Bennu's mysterious particle events
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Dec 06, 2019
Shortly after NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft arrived at asteroid Bennu, an unexpected discovery by the mission's science team revealed that the asteroid could be active, or consistently discharging pa ... more
EXO WORLDS
How planets may form after dust sticks together
New Brunswick NJ (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
Scientists may have figured out how dust particles can stick together to form planets, according to a Rutgers co-authored study that may also help to improve industrial processes. In homes, ad ... more
SATURN DAILY
How Enceladus got its stripes
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
Saturn's icy moon Enceladus is of great interest to scientists due to its subsurface ocean, making it a prime target for those searching for life elsewhere. New research led by Carnegie's Doug Hemin ... more
EXO WORLDS
Exoplanet axis study boosts hopes of complex life, just not next door
Atlanta GA (SPX) Dec 09, 2019
"They're out there," goes a saying about extraterrestrials. It would seem more likely to be true in light of a new study on planetary axis tilts. Astrophysicists at the Georgia Institute of Te ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Scientists find further evidence for a population of dark matter deficient dwarf galaxies
Beijing, China (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
Researchers from the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Science (NAOC), Peking University and Tsinghua University have found a special population of dwarf galaxies that co ... more


Signs of life: New field guide aids astronomers' search

SOLAR SCIENCE
NRL, NASA combine to produce Solar imagery with unprecedented clarity
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 06, 2019
Early returns from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory's camera on NASA's latest mission to study the Sun's corona revealed on Dec. 4 a star more complex than ever imagined. NRL's Wide-field Im ... more
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TIME AND SPACE
Weizmann physicists image electrons flowing like water
Rehovot, Israel (SPX) Dec 11, 2019
Physicists at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel have imaged electrons flowing viscously through a nanodevice, just like water flowing through a pipe. Long predicted but only now visualized ... more
TECH SPACE
Storing data in everyday objects
Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
Living beings contain their own assembly and operating instructions in the form of DNA. That's not the case with inanimate objects: anyone wishing to 3D print an object also requires a set of instru ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Simple experiment explains magnetic resonance
Riverside CA (SPX) Dec 09, 2019
Physicists at University of California, Riverside, have designed an experiment to explain the concept of magnetic resonance. The project was carried out by undergraduate students in collaboration wi ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
Parker Solar Probe traces solar wind to its source on sun's surface: coronal holes
Berkeley CA (SPX) Dec 05, 2019
A year ago, NASA's Parker Solar Probe flew closer to the sun than any satellite in history, collecting a spectacular trove of data from the very edge of the sun's million-degree corona. Now, t ... more
SOLAR SCIENCE
Closest-ever approach to the sun gives new insights into the solar wind
London, UK (SPX) Dec 05, 2019
The Parker Solar Probe spacecraft, which has flown closer to the Sun than any mission before, has found new evidence of the origins of the solar wind. NASA's Parker Solar Probe was launched in ... more
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The PI's Perspective: What a Year, What a Decade!
Boulder CO (SPX) Dec 08, 2019
New Horizons is healthy and performing well as it flies ever onward, at nearly one million miles per day! This month we're collecting new data on the Kuiper Belt's charged particle and dust environment, and observing two distant Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) to learn about their surface properties, shapes and rotation periods, and to search for satellite systems. Much more is in store for thi ... more
+ Reports of Jupiter's Great Red Spot demise greatly exaggerated
+ Aquatic rover goes for a drive under the ice
+ NASA scientists confirm water vapor on Europa
+ NASA finds Neptune moons locked in 'Dance of Avoidance'
+ New Horizons Kuiper Belt Flyby object officially named 'Arrokoth'
+ NASA renames faraway ice world 'Arrokoth' after backlash
+ Juice cast in gold


Exoplanet axis study boosts hopes of complex life, just not next door
Atlanta GA (SPX) Dec 09, 2019
"They're out there," goes a saying about extraterrestrials. It would seem more likely to be true in light of a new study on planetary axis tilts. Astrophysicists at the Georgia Institute of Technology modeled a theoretical twin of Earth into other star systems called binary systems because they have two stars. They concluded that 87% of exo-Earths one might find in binary systems should ha ... more
+ Hidden giant planet around tiny white dwarf star
+ Scientists figure out how accumulating dust particles become planets
+ How planets may form after dust sticks together
+ Signs of life: New field guide aids astronomers' search
+ Meteorite-loving microorganism
+ Astronomers propose a novel method of finding atmospheres on rocky worlds
+ Animal embryos evolved before animals
Two rovers to toll on Mars Again in 2020
Pasadena CA (JPL) Dec 11, 2019
Curiosity won't be NASA's only active Mars rover for much longer. Next summer, Mars 2020 will be headed for the Red Planet. While the newest rover borrows from Curiosity's design, they aren't twins: Built and managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, each has its own role in the ongoing exploration of Mars and the search for ancient life. Here's a closer look at what s ... more
+ Mars: we may have solved the mystery of how its landslides form
+ Solving fossil mystery could aid quest for ancient life on Mars
+ Global storms on Mars launch dust towers into the sky
+ Glaciers as landscape sculptors - the mesas of Deuteronilus Mensae
+ NASA updates Mars 2020 Mission Environmental Review
+ Human Missions to Mars
+ Mars scientists investigate ancient life in Australia
China's lunar rover travels over 345 meters on moon's far side
Beijing (XNA) Dec 05, 2019
China's lunar rover Yutu-2 has driven 345.059 meters on the far side of the moon to conduct scientific exploration of the virgin territory. Both the lander and the rover of the Chang'e-4 probe have ended their work for the 12th lunar day, and switched to dormant mode for the lunar night, the Lunar Exploration and Space Program Center of the China National Space Administration (CNSA) said W ... more
+ India's Vikram lunar lander found in LRO images
+ NASA finds Indian Moon lander with help of amateur space enthusiast
+ NASA Shares Mid-Sized Robotic Lunar Lander Concept with Industry
+ China's Chang'e-4 probe resumes work for 12th lunar day
+ Small satellites key to NASA's lunar search for water
+ Israel's next attempt at lunar lander within 3 years says SpaceIL founder
+ NASA certifies SLS Rocket Laboratory to test flight software for Artemis I
Second stellar population found in Milky Way's thick disk
Rome, Italy (SPX) Dec 11, 2019
A new study led by Dr. Daniela Carollo - researcher of the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics - on the kinematics and chemical composition of a sample of stars in the vicinity of the Sun, revealed that the stars that make up the thick disk of our galaxy, the Milky Way, belong to two distinct stellar populations with different characteristics and not to a single one, as has been thought ... more
+ Twenty years of X-ray astronomy with XMM-Newton
+ How to shape a spiral galaxy
+ Stardust from Red Giants
+ Swiss space telescope CHEOPS launch set for 17 December
+ Russian astrophysicists discovered a neutron star with an unusual magnetic field structure
+ Scientists find further evidence for a population of dark matter deficient dwarf galaxies
+ Star-quake vibrations lead to new estimate for Milky Way age


Green light for BRICS satellite amid space arms race fears
New Delhi (Sputnik) Dec 06, 2019
The plan was first mooted by China to improve co-operation around natural disasters. But it took shape later when BRICS space agencies agreed to build a "virtual constellation of remote sensing satellites". The Indian space ministry has indicated major progress in terms of establishing a BRICS satellite for various applications including natural resources management and disaster management ... more
+ China releases first 3D images based on Earth observation satellite
+ China improves space-based observation of Earth
+ China launches new optical remote sensing satellite
+ How saving the ozone layer in 1987 slowed global warming
+ SubX shows promise for improved monthly weather forecasts
+ Scientists deploy ocean floats to peer into Earth's interior
+ Geostationary satellite an alternative to monitor land surfaces
OSIRIS-REx engineers pull off a daring rescue of asteroid mission
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Dec 11, 2019
On Friday, Oct. 11, the OSIRIS-REx team should have been preparing to point their spacecraft cameras precisely over the asteroid Bennu to capture high-resolution images of a region known as Osprey. It is one of four sites scientists are considering from which the spacecraft can safely collect a sample in late 2020. But early that morning, the team learned that a telecommunications facility ... more
+ KinetX team helps in understanding particles ejected from the surface of Asteroid Bennu
+ OSIRIS-REx mission explains Bennu's mysterious particle events
+ NASA's OSIRIS-REx in the midst of site selection
+ TESS catches a natural comet outburst in unprecedented detail
+ Researcher calls on amateur astronomers to help with mission to prevent future asteroid impacts
+ Impact crater data analysis of Ryugu asteroid illuminates complicated geological history
+ Amateur astronomers: help choose asteroid flybys for Hera


NRL, NASA combine to produce Solar imagery with unprecedented clarity
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 06, 2019
Early returns from the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory's camera on NASA's latest mission to study the Sun's corona revealed on Dec. 4 a star more complex than ever imagined. NRL's Wide-field Imager for Parker Solar Probe, or WISPR, the only imaging instrument aboard the NASA Parker Solar Probe mission, is now 84 percent of the way to the Sun. WISPR produced multiple scientifically rel ... more
+ Parker Solar Probe traces solar wind to its source on sun's surface: coronal holes
+ Parker Solar Probe: 'We're missing something fundamental about the sun'
+ First NASA Parker Solar Probe results reveal surprising details about our Sun
+ NASA's Parker Solar Probe sheds new light on the Sun
+ Sun's close-up reveals atmosphere hopping with highly energetic particles
+ Closest-ever approach to the sun gives new insights into the solar wind
+ Detecting solar flares, more in real time
China sends six satellites into orbit with single rocket
Taiyuan, China (XNA) Dec 08, 2019
China sent six satellites into space from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in northern Shanxi Province at 4:52 p.m. Saturday (Beijing Time). They were launched by a Kuaizhou-1A (KZ-1A) rocket and have entered the planned orbit successfully. It was the second launch from the Taiyuan launch center in less than six hours after another KZ-1A rocket sent the Jilin-1 Gaofen 02B satellit ... more
+ China launches satellite service platform
+ China plans to complete space station construction around 2022: expert
+ China conducts hovering and obstacle avoidance test in public for first Mars lander mission
+ Beijing eyes creating first Earth-Moon economic zone
+ China conducts simulated weightlessness experiment for long-term stay in space
+ China plans more space science satellites
+ China's absence from global space conference due to "visa problem" causes concern


Second stellar population found in Milky Way's thick disk
Rome, Italy (SPX) Dec 11, 2019
A new study led by Dr. Daniela Carollo - researcher of the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics - on the kinematics and chemical composition of a sample of stars in the vicinity of the Sun, revealed that the stars that make up the thick disk of our galaxy, the Milky Way, belong to two distinct stellar populations with different characteristics and not to a single one, as has been thought ... more
+ Twenty years of X-ray astronomy with XMM-Newton
+ How to shape a spiral galaxy
+ Stardust from Red Giants
+ Swiss space telescope CHEOPS launch set for 17 December
+ Russian astrophysicists discovered a neutron star with an unusual magnetic field structure
+ Scientists find further evidence for a population of dark matter deficient dwarf galaxies
+ Star-quake vibrations lead to new estimate for Milky Way age
Narcissism changes during a person's life span
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 10, 2019
New research suggests narcissism isn't static - it changes over time. Previous studies on narcissism have mostly focused on small groups and cross-sectional population samples across short periods of time. Until now, there was little information on how narcissism changes across the adult life span. For the new study, published in the journal Psychology and Aging, scientists anal ... more
+ Secrets of orangutan 'language' revealed
+ Habsburg jaw likely caused by inbreeding, study finds
+ Scientists slam Chinese CRISPR babies research after manuscript released
+ Neanderthal extinction may have occurred without environmental pressure or modern humans
+ Neuroscientists build model to identify internal brain states
+ A monkey's balancing act
+ Skull study suggests pre-humans weren't as bright as modern apes


Novel camera gives scientists "Night Vision" from ISS
El Segundo CA (SPX) Dec 10, 2019
The Near Infrared Airglow Camera (NIRAC) uses an Aerospace-patented orbital motion compensation system to take long-exposure, smear-free images at night. Motion compensation from a fast-moving, low Earth orbiting platform can be difficult, but NIRAC's custom optical system enables imaging at a spatial resolution of 80 meters, even as the ISS travels more than 10 kilometers during the camera's 1. ... more
+ Russian cargo ship docks at International Space Station
+ Child's play: Coding booms among Chinese children
+ Child's play: Coding booms among Chinese children
+ ISS-bound Progress MS-13 lifts off from Baikonur Cosmodrome
+ SMAC in the DARQ: the tech trends shaping 2020
+ NASA awards UbiQD 2nd contract to "Tailor the Solar Spectrum for Enhanced Crop Yield for Space Missions"
+ AFRL technology set for launch to International Space Station
GOCE reveals what's going on deep below Antarctica
Paris (ESA) Dec 10, 2019
Despite having completed its mission in orbit over six years ago, ESA's GOCE gravity mapper continues to yield new insights into our planet. Thanks to this extraordinary satellite, scientists now have a much clearer view of the secrets that lie deep below one of the most remote parts of the world: Antarctica. And while the vast expanse of white ice above may appear relatively uniform, it is a ve ... more
+ Can Arctic 'ice management' combat climate change?
+ Could we cool the Earth with an ice-free Arctic
+ Satellites capture decades of change across the Arctic
+ Development of the Patagonian Ice Fields reveals the enormous complexity of physical interactions
+ Last remaining glaciers in the Pacific will soon melt away
+ The Antarctic: study from Kiel provides data about the structure of the icy continent
+ Rescuers search for Chilean plane missing near Antarctica


35-year data record charts sea-temperature change
Paris (ESA) Dec 09, 2019
Four trillion satellite measurements, taken over four decades from 1981 to 2018, have been merged to create a continuous global record that will help to understand the science behind Earth's climate. A paper published recently in Nature Scientific Data describes how this new dataset of global sea-surface temperature is one of the longest satellite climate data records available. The datase ... more
+ Could dark carbon be hiding the true scale of ocean dead zones
+ Built on sand: Dutch find unlikely ally against water
+ Stormquakes: Powerful storms cause seafloor tremors
+ Asian water towers are world's most important and most threatened
+ Storms, erosion a costly problem at NASA's Kennedy Space Center
+ Marine life under threat from plummeting oxygen levels
+ Seal takes ocean heat transport data to new depths
New instrument extends LIGO's reach
Boston MA (SPX) Dec 06, 2019
Just a year ago, the National Science Foundation-funded Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory, or LIGO, was picking up whispers of gravitational waves every month or so. Now, a new addition to the system is enabling the instruments to detect these ripples in space-time nearly every week. Since the start of LIGO's third operating run in April, a new instrument known as a quant ... more
+ Astronomers use giant galaxy cluster as X-ray magnifying lens
+ The violent history of the big galaxy next door
+ UN offers use of ESA's hypergravity centrifuge to researchers worldwide
+ A key piece to understanding how quantum gravity affects low-energy physics
+ Fastest eclipsing binary, a valuable target for gravitational wave studies
+ Chameleon Theory Could Change How We Think About Gravity
+ Artificial gravity breaks free from science fiction
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