Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

Gus Grissom And Liberty Bell 7 - 50 Years Ago Today

12 years ago from

The 50th anniversary of Alan Shepard's flight, the first American in space, was something of a big deal in pop culture.  The 50th anniversary of John Glenn orbiting the Earth,...

Russia Launches Long-Delayed Deep Space Radio Telescope

12 years ago from Live Science

Russia's new Spektr-R radio telescope is designed to study black holes, pulsars and other deep space objects.

Possibly the most distant object known

12 years ago from Physorg

The most distant objects in the universe are also the oldest -- or at least that is how they appear to us, because their light has had to travel for...

Iowa State physicist to test next-generation neutrino detector for major experiment

12 years ago from Physorg

Hundreds of physicists from around the world are making plans to shoot the world's most intense beam of neutrinos from Illinois, underground through Iowa, all the way to a former...

Moon May Outshine Perseid Meteor Shower in August

12 years ago from Space.com

Bad news for fans of the annual Perseids meteor shower.

Whither astronauts? Corps shrinks as shuttles stop

12 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- NASA's mighty astronaut corps has become a shadow of what it once was. And it's only going to get smaller.

Flag Soared to the Moon, but Not Bids for 3 Scraps

12 years ago from NY Times Science

A NASA engineer who designed the flag planted on the moon by Neil Armstrong got $45,000 for his collector’s item, less than he had sought.

Asteroid Bound: Animated Look at NASA's New Mission

12 years ago from Space.com

Take a look at the NASA's new vehicles as they approach a near-Earth asteroid, dock with it, spacewalk it and return to Earth. Vehicles include the Multi-Mission Space Exploration Vehicle...

Vote Now! Best Space Stories of the Week - July 17, 2011

12 years ago from Space.com

The last spacewalk of the shuttle era, space-time warps and what happens when a space toilet gets clogged, vote for your favorite space story this week.

Beyonce serenades shuttle crew

12 years ago from UPI

HOUSTON, July 16 (UPI) -- Astronauts on the final U.S. space shuttle mission got a surprise wake-up call Saturday from singer Beyonce.

Obama dials for pizza, gets space station

12 years ago from Physorg

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station got a very long-distance call Friday from US President Barack Obama, who joked that he thought he was dialing out for pizza.

India Launches New Communications Satellite

12 years ago from Space.com

India launched the new GSAT-12 satellite into space Friday, July 15.

NASA in Australia for Mars research

12 years ago from UPI

KIMBERLEY, Australia, July 15 (UPI) -- NASA says it is using a remote region of Australia's outback as a training ground for planetary scientists preparing to send a new...

President Obama Reveals Astronauts' Secret Souvenir on Final Shuttle Mission

12 years ago from Space.com

Obama asks Atlantis astronauts about an American flag that has a long space legacy.

Sesame Street's Elmo Talks Future with SPACE.com

12 years ago from Space.com

SPACE.com's Tariq Malik and Elmo converse about living in space, shuttle launches, and NASA's asteroid bound future.

New ways to measure magnetism around the sun

12 years ago from Science Daily

NASA researchers have made use of old mathematical techniques and new insights on how coronal mass ejections travel to devise a fresh way to measure this magnetic environment in the...

Typhoon Ma-on's eye seen in NASA satellite Images

12 years ago from Physorg

The eye of a tropical cyclone is an indication of a strong storm, and Typhoon Ma-on's eye was apparent in visible and infrared imagery captured by NASA's Aqua satellite. Ma-on...

Astronauts May Benefit from Red Wine in Orbit

12 years ago from Space.com

NASA may want to rethink its anti-alcohol policy for long-duration space trips.

The Pending Space Weather Catastrophe

12 years ago from

Fact #1: There will be a solar event in the next five years that wipes out the electrical grid for the US.Fact #2: Solar and space weather prediction is about...

Search engines are supplanting our memories

12 years ago from CBC: Technology & Science

It's official. The internet has become part of our extended intelligence, and we are coming to depend on it.

Physics student awaits espionage trial in Iran

12 years ago from Physics World

Omid Kokabee will appear before judge tomorrow, say close sources

Dark energy spotted in the cosmic microwave background

12 years ago from Physics World

Gravitational lensing focuses directly on the dark sector

Two new brown dwarf Solar neighbors discovered

12 years ago from Physorg

Scientists from the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP) have discovered two new brown dwarfs at estimated distances of only 15 and 18 light years from the Sun. For comparison:...

Hunting the unseen

12 years ago from Physorg

A better knowledge about the composition of sub-atomic particles such as protons and neutrons has sparked conjecture about, as yet, unseen particles. A tool based on theoretical calculations that could...

Stripped down discovery rolls towards retirement at Kennedy Space Center

12 years ago from Physorg

Space Shuttle Discovery was briefly on public display on Wednesday July 13 as she emerged from the hanger at the Kennedy Space Center where she has been undergoing processing for...

End of U.S. Space Shuttle Program Not Necessarily Bad for Research, Biochemist Says

12 years ago from Newswise - Scinews

A biochemist whose diabetes-related protein experiment is orbiting earth on Space Shuttle Atlantis' final flight insists the outlook on American research in a near-zero gravity environment is far from bleak.

Reflections of NASA's Last Shuttle to Fly

12 years ago from Live Science

NASA photographer Bill Ingalls caught this serene view of shuttle Atlantis awaiting launch on July 7, 2011.

Photo Confirms First Grizzly Bear Spotting in 15 Years

12 years ago from Live Science

First grizzly report in Washington's North Cascades called 'significant event.'