Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

1968 Science Fiction is Today’s Reality

16 years ago from Science Blog

The futuristic epic 2001: A Space Odyssey influenced many to fall in love with the limitless possibilities of space exploration. The movie sparked imaginations and provided a realistic preview of...

Swedish Space Gym Being Tested By Astronauts

16 years ago from Science Daily

The crew of the International Space Station (ISS) is presently testing a Swedish space gym. The aim is to counteract muscle atrophy and osteoporosis in astronauts. Astronauts who spend a...

Private Space Station Prototype Hits Orbital Milestone

16 years ago from Space.com

Space station prototype passes orbital milestone.

Japan set to open up defense use of space

16 years ago from Reuters:Science

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan cleared the way for a law allowing non-aggressive military use of space on Friday, overturning a decades-old policy of limiting space development to peaceful uses.

Scientists Revisit Mars Sample Return Plans

16 years ago from Space.com

Planning is under way to reinvigorate a Mars sample return mission.

Conservationists, developer reach major Calif. land deal

16 years ago from AP Science

LEBEC, Calif. (AP) -- A group of environmentalists and the owners of a large stretch of wilderness have reached a deal that would set aside the largest parcel of land...

Planets by the Dozen

16 years ago from Science @ NASA

A NASA-funded survey set to begin in 2008 could dramatically increase the number of known planets outside our solar system.

Cosmic Log: What’s waiting on Mars?

16 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: The weather outlook for this month's touchdown of the Phoenix Mars Lander calls for a spring thaw — and maybe Martian mini-tornadoes as well.

First Space Lawyer Graduates

16 years ago from Space.com

The first lawyer to earn a degree specifically in space law graduates Saturday.

Solar Variability: Striking a Balance with Climate Change

16 years ago from Physorg

The sun has powered almost everything on Earth since life began, including its climate. The sun also delivers an annual and seasonal impact, changing the character of each hemisphere as...

Exhaling for Exploration: Scientists Test Lunar Breathing System

16 years ago from Physorg

Exhaling for Exploration: Scientists Test Lunar Breathing System HOUSTON -- Imagine yourself hip-to-hip, shoulder-to-shoulder, inside a room the size of a walk-in closet for eight hours with five...

ESA, NASA to share space achievement award

16 years ago from UPI

PARIS, May 8 (UPI) -- The Ulysses observatory, a U.S.-European mission, has won an international award for the scientific productivity of the spacecraft, now orbiting the sun.

Saturn's atmosphere 'waves' to Earth

16 years ago from UPI

PASADENA, Calif., May 8 (UPI) -- U.S. space agency scientists say they've observed a wave pattern, or oscillation, in Saturn's atmosphere that's only visible from Earth every 15...

The Best (And Worst) Mars Landings

16 years ago from Space.com

Reaching Mars is an unforgiving endeavor, with little room for error.

Students to call long distance to the ISS

16 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, May 8 (UPI) -- Students from New York and California will make a really long long-distance phone call next week to speak with an International Space Station's...

Researchers demonstrate for the first time how light squeezes through small holes

16 years ago from Physorg

How does light pass through a tiny hole" For the first time, Dr Aurele Adam and Prof. Paul Planken of Delft University of Technology, in conjunction with two South Korean...

Epilepsy Site Hacked With Seizure Images

16 years ago from CBSNews - Science

Hackers bombarded the Epilepsy Foundation's Web site with hundreds of pictures and links to pages with rapidly flashing images. The breach triggered severe migraines and near-seizure reactions in some site...

NASA's New Science Chief Settles in for Long Haul

16 years ago from Space.com

NASA's new science chief Ed Weiler is settling into the position for long-term.

NASA starts artifact loan project

16 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, May 8 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency has announced the start of a new artifact loan program for museums, planetariums and other organizations.

Nasa set to join petaflop elite

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

Nasa has unveiled a plan to boost its supercomputer power to help plan and model future missions.

'No bias' against UK astronauts

16 years ago from BBC News: Science & Nature

UK government opposition to human spaceflight will be no bar to its citizens becoming astronauts, Esa says.

Alien Life-Searching Techniques Tested

16 years ago from Space.com

Signs of life on Mars can be spotted using instruments on robotic probes.

Telescopes search for signals from space

16 years ago from UPI

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., May 7 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists, searching for signs of life from faraway planets, are building hundreds of radio telescopes in Northern California, their leader...

Iron 'snow' helps maintain Mercury's magnetic field, scientists say

16 years ago from Physorg

New scientific evidence suggests that deep inside the planet Mercury, iron “snow” forms and falls toward the center of the planet, much like snowflakes form in Earth`s atmosphere and fall...

A Super Solar Flare

16 years ago from Physorg

At 11:18 AM on the cloudless morning of Thursday, September 1, 1859, 33-year-old Richard Carrington—widely acknowledged to be one of England's foremost solar astronomers—was in his well-appointed private observatory. Just...

Shuttle Flights Should be Extended, Space Pioneer John Glenn Says

16 years ago from Space.com

Space pioneer John Glenn called for a shuttle fleet extension while unveiling NASA archival video.

NASA-TV to televise ISS cargo ship arrival

16 years ago from UPI

HOUSTON, May 7 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says it will televise the arrival of an unpiloted cargo spacecraft when it docks at the International Space Station.

X-rays power discoveries at Chicago's Field Museum

16 years ago from Physorg

Digital medical imaging and information technology from Carestream Health, Inc., is playing a key role in helping The Field Museum of Chicago discover and analyze secrets hidden within its world-class...