Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

What'll Be Hot In Tech In '09?

14 years ago from CBSNews - Science

CNET-TV's Natali Del Conte looked ahead, on The Early Show Saturday Edition.

The Energy Challenge: Houses With No Furnace but Plenty of Heat

14 years ago from NY Times Science

“Passive houses,” pioneered in Germany, are encased in such an airtight shell that barely any heat escapes.

Green energy thwarted by winter

14 years ago from UPI

NEW YORK, Dec. 26 (UPI) -- Winter's bitter cold can stall wind turbine blades, congeal biodiesel and render solar panels useless, say U.S. power developers.

Robot endures Antarctic cold to prepare for space mission

14 years ago from Physorg

A NASA robot tested last winter in an icy Wisconsin lake will complete a monthlong underwater mission in Antarctica on Thursday, having successfully explored dark, deep waters frozen off from...

Russia launches three new navigation satellites: report

14 years ago from Physorg

A Russian Proton-M rocket was launched into space Thursday with three new satellites for Moscow's GLONASS navigation system, aimed at competing with US and European systems, a report said.

Astronauts Send Christmas Wishes from Space

14 years ago from Space.com

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station send Christmas wishes to Earth.

Mystery Of Hexagonal Column Formations Such As Giant's Causeway Solved With Kitchen Materials

14 years ago from Science Daily

Physicists have cracked the mystery behind the strange and uncannily well-ordered hexagonal columns found at such popular tourist sites as Northern Ireland's Giant's Causeway and California's Devil's Postpile, using water,...

Sparkling Spray Of Stars Seen

14 years ago from Science Daily

NGC 2264 lies about 2600 light-years from Earth in the obscure constellation of Monoceros, the Unicorn, not far from the more familiar figure of Orion, the Hunter. The image shows...

Christmas Star Mystery Continues

14 years ago from National Geographic

Astronomers have long argued over what the Star of Bethlehem was—if it existed at all. Today, two theories fight it out: a single planetary conjunction vs. a series of meaningful...

Orbital, SpaceX to resupply space station

14 years ago from UPI

HOUSTON, Dec. 24 (UPI) -- Orbital Sciences of Dulles, Va., and SpaceX of Hawthorne, Calif., have been tapped to resupply the International Space Station when the space shuttle...

China Launches for Record 11th Time in 2008

14 years ago from Space.com

China launched a new satellite Tuesday for its record 11th launch of the year.

Four Out of Six Apollos

14 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Their names are now part of exploration history - Sea of Tranquility, Ocean of Storms, Frau Mauro, Hadley Rille, Descartes and Taurus-Littrow. They are the sites on the...

THE ROUNDUP: Science and Nature News Around the Web

14 years ago from National Geographic

How spiders evolved; a stinking blossom's secret; a Jupiter moon turns to the dark side.

Does Santa Have a New Sled? Is Rudy Juicing?

14 years ago from PopSci

Santa’s leaving his workshop at the North Pole a little later this year, two hours later to be exact, according to reports out of NORAD. Have that many kids landed...

South Asia News in brief: 11–24 December

14 years ago from SciDev

Satellite rainfall estimation in the Himalayas, India builds its first foreign satellite, arsenic contamination in Pakistan, and more.

Cosmic Log: Vote for the weirdest science

14 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: This year's finalists for the Weird Science Awards include real-life Furbys and the world's oldest pot stash. But which is weirdest? We report, you decide.

Happy Birthday Earthrise

14 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Forty years ago today, the crew of Apollo 8 reached lunar orbit - mankind's first close encounter with another world.

Lopsided universe demands different explanation

14 years ago from Sciencenews.org

Analysis of radiation left over from the Big Bang point to a possible new type of field in early universe

Young active star resembles the young Sun

14 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- The CoRoT satellite, a space mission led by the French Space Agency CNES with the participation of Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Germany, Spain and the European Space Agency, ESA...

Astronomers gaze back in time and map the history of the Universe

14 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- UK astronomers are set to expand our knowledge of the history of our Universe with a new project to map the inception and formation of galaxies.

Botox still hot despite cool economy

14 years ago from UPI

OMAHA, Dec. 23 (UPI) -- Keeping up one's looks appears to be trumping a weak economy, as U.S. doctors report the demand for Botox injections hasn't been pinched.

Top 5 Amazing Astronomy Discoveries in 2008

14 years ago from Space.com

This year was packed with discoveries, from fast-spinning black holes to loads of extrasolar planets.

Scientists to throw light on how galaxies formed in the early Universe

14 years ago from

UK scientists, led by Dr Mark Lacy who is soon to join the University of Southampton, have been successful in obtaining one of the largest-ever awards of observing time on...

Could Deep-Sea Microbes Teach Us About Alien Life?

14 years ago from Newswise - Scinews

James Holden, chief scientist of the latest voyage of the deep-sea research sub, Alvin, and colleagues describe microbes that thrive in 200-degree water and give off methane and hydrogen, in...

Scientist at Work: Robert W. Gaskell: Mapping Celestial Terrains, in All Their 3-D Glory

14 years ago from NY Times Science

Dr. Robert W. Gaskell has developed the software to make mapping distant planets possible.

What Can Swiss Cheese Teach us About Dark Energy?

14 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- About 10 years ago, scientists reached the astonishing conclusion that our universe is accelerating apart at ever-increasing speeds, stretching space and time itself like melted cheese. The force...

Death of a Star Scientist Inflicts Long-Term Damage on Field

14 years ago from Science NOW

Collaborators experience dramatic drop in output that can last decades