Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

E. coli closes 3rd restaurant in southern Ontario

15 years ago from CBC: Health

A 50s-style diner in Burlington, Ont., has voluntarily closed as health officials investigated two confirmed and three possible cases of E. coli connected to the restaurant on Friday.

Volcanoes may be original womb of life

15 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Fifty years ago, a chemist named Stanley Miller conducted a famous experiment to investigate how life could have started on Earth.

Listening to dark matter

15 years ago from Science Blog

A team of researchers in Canada have made a bold stride in the struggle to detect dark matter. The PICASSO collaboration has documented the discovery of a significant difference between...

Fermi Telescope Discovers First Gamma-Ray-Only Pulsar

15 years ago from Science Blog

About three times a second, a 10,000-year-old stellar corpse sweeps a beam of gamma-rays toward Earth. Discovered by NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, the object, called a pulsar, is the...

Building a safer space together

15 years ago from European Space Agency

The conference ‘Building a Safer Space Together’, taking place in Rome from 21 to 23 October, is an invitation to reflect and exchange information on the essential aspects of space...

Miller’s legacy: new clues to origins of life

15 years ago from Chemistry World

Stashed vials from Stanley Miller’s iconic ‘primordial soup’ experiments re-examined

ESA Council meeting at ministerial level: The Hague, 25/26 November 2008

15 years ago from European Space Agency

ESA PR 42-2008. The next ESA Council meeting at ministerial level will take place on 25/26 November in The Hague, the Netherlands, at the World Forum, Churchillplein 10, 2517 JW.

Impact Crater Exhumed from Mars Ice

15 years ago from Live Science

An ice mound imaged in the north polar region of Mars indicates a crater underneath.

Mysterious Mars Moon a Pile of Rubble

15 years ago from Live Science

New observations of Mars' moon Phobos show the object is more like a pile of rubble than a single solid body.

2 Japanese, 1 American Share Physics Nobel

15 years ago from CBSNews - Science

Two Japanese citizens and an American won the 2008 Nobel Prize in physics for discoveries in the world of subatomic physics, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced.

Gamma-ray Bursts: The Mystery Continues

15 years ago from Science @ NASA

More than four decades after they were discovered, gamma-ray bursts continue to mystify astrophysicists. Next week, experts from 25 countries will converge on Huntsville, Alabama, to discuss and debate...

Space Expectations [Slide Show]

15 years ago from Scientific American

German rocket physicist and astronautics engineer Wernher von Braun played a crucial role in developing the rocket technology, including the Saturn 5 , that put U.S. astronauts on the surface...

New NASA advisory council chairman named

15 years ago from UPI

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says NASA Advisory Council Chairman Harrison "Jack" Schmitt is resigning, with Kenneth Ford to succeed him as chairman.

South Asia News in brief: 2–15 October

15 years ago from SciDev

India prepares for renewable energy cash injection, Sri Lanka looks to nuclear for energy production, Pakistan eyes crops from satellites, and more.

J.J. Abrams Gives Glimpse of New 'Star Trek' Film

15 years ago from Space.com

J.J. Abrams is no Trekkie, but he's got big plans for the new 'Star Trek' film.

GOCE launch postponed

15 years ago from European Space Agency

The foreseen 27 October launch date of GOCE has had to be postponed to allow the enquiry board time to conclude its work. A new launch date will be announced...

CSIRO to help provide 'live' video of Mars mission

15 years ago from Physorg

When the Americans eventually send a manned mission to Mars, the whole world will be able to watch 'live' television coverage of the event courtesy of CSIRO know-how.

NASA's Party Over

15 years ago from CBSNews - Science

NASA"s long-standing practice of honoring retirees and contractors with lavish award ceremonies costing millions of dollars a year may be over.

'Waterless' Concrete Seen as Building Block on Moon

15 years ago from Newswise - Scinews

Houssam Toutanji, a professor at The University of Alabama in Huntsville, wants to demonstrate a concept of creating concrete structures on the lunar surface without water. Astronauts can turn to...

Expedition 18 Crew Launches from Baikonur

15 years ago from Science Blog

Commander Edward Michael "Mike" Fincke and Flight Engineer Yury Valentinovich Lonchakov of the 18th International Space Station crew launched in their Soyuz TMA-13 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at...

Clouds have a metal, not silver, lining

15 years ago from MSNBC: Science

It's not a silver lining that causes night-shining clouds to bounce radar , but that's close, claims plasma physicist Paul Bellan.

Phoenix Mars Mission Honored by Popular Mechanics

NASA's Phoenix Mars Mission is being honored with a Breakthrough Award by Popular Mechanics magazine today in New York City.

VIDEO: Huge Church Rotated 90 Degrees

15 years ago from National Geographic

With hundreds of wheels attached to it, a cathedral in China is being rotated, as if on a turntable, to make way for a new road.

Space shuttle Atlantis ready for rollback

15 years ago from UPI

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., Oct. 15 (UPI) -- The U.S. space agency says space shuttle Atlantis is ready to be moved from Launch Pad 39A to the Kennedy Space...

Star Count Goes Global

15 years ago from Science Daily

Schoolchildren, families and citizen scientists around the world will gaze skyward after dark from Oct. 20 to Nov. 3, 2008, looking for specific constellations and then sharing their observations through...

Ghostly Glow Reveals Galaxy Clusters In Collision

15 years ago from Science Daily

Astronomers have detected long wavelength radio emission from a colliding, massive galaxy cluster which, surprisingly, is not detected at the shorter wavelengths typically seen in these objects.

21st century detective work reveals how ancient rock got off to a hot start

15 years ago from Physorg

A new technique using X-rays has enabled scientists to play 'detective' and solve the debate about the origins of a three billion year old rock fragment.

Particle physics: Sam Ting's last fling

15 years ago from News @ Nature

The International Space Station's one chance of scientific greatness rests on a high-profile refugee from the world of the particle accelerator #20; but is it too long a shot to...