Latest science news in Astronomy & Space

Space official: "220-mile-high club." only rumor

14 years ago from CBSNews - Science

Rumors have long swirled that astronauts may have hooked up in orbit, perhaps even as part of secret sex-in-space experiments

See what Earth looked like 500 million years ago

14 years ago from CBSNews - Science

Here's what the ancient Earth looked like during the Cambrian Period as viewed from outer space

CERN marks advance in universe mysteries search

14 years ago from Reuters:Science

GENEVA (Reuters) - Scientists at the CERN physics research center reported on Friday that they had smashed particles together at a record intensity in a key advance in their program...

Lackluster Lyrid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight

14 years ago from Space.com

The Lyrid meteor shower will peak tonight, but experts are warning skywatchers not to expect a stunning show.

Pope to call space station in papal first

14 years ago from Physorg

(AP) -- Pope Benedict XVI will be in satellite contact with two Italian astronauts aboard the International Space Station in what would be the first papal call to space.

NASA prepares satellite for a new era of Earth observation

14 years ago from Physorg

On Christmas Eve in 1968, Apollo 8 astronauts orbiting the moon snapped an ethereal photo of our cloud-speckled blue planet rising over the lunar horizon with a hand-held camera.

Lifelong pursuit of the secrets of the cosmos

14 years ago from Physorg

In a small room at Caltech, space physicist Ed Stone and four of his colleagues puzzle over a trove of data that has just arrived from the bulbous edge of...

Ultraviolet spotlight on plump stars in tiny galaxies

14 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Astronomers using NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer may be closer to knowing why some of the most massive stellar explosions ever observed occur in the tiniest of galaxies.

Roomba-maker iRobot clears path for robotics

14 years ago from Physorg

Top scientists around the world are trying to improve upon robots, which can already detect bombs, perform surgery and even go into battle.

Telescope will track space junk

14 years ago from News @ Nature

US Air Force unveils instrument to catalogue debris and protect satellites from collisions.

Did Atlas Just See The Higgs ?

14 years ago from

It seems I am late on this one -an internal note by the Atlas collaboration seems to contain the discovery of a bump in the diphoton mass distribution from data...

See the Bright Yellow Star Arcturus in the Night Sky

14 years ago from Space.com

The bright yellow star Arcturus is putting on a dazzling show in the night sky.

Florida Braces for Huge Crowds for Next Week's Space Shuttle Launch

14 years ago from Space.com

Hotels in the area have been booked for months, and near record turnout is expected to come watch the liftoff.

Earth From Space: An Astronaut's Quest to Protect Our 'Fragile Oasis'

14 years ago from Live Science

NASA astronaut Ron Garan's blog, Fragile Oasis, aims to inspire people to cherish the beauty and wonder of our planet Earth.

Huge dry ice deposit on Mars: NASA orbiter reveals big changes in Red Planet's atmosphere

14 years ago from Science Daily

NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has discovered the total amount of atmosphere on Mars changes dramatically as the tilt of the planet's axis varies. This process can affect the stability of...

Mars' Thick Dry Ice Sheet Points to Planet's Wetter Past

14 years ago from Live Science

The amount of dry ice on at the south pole of Mars could fill Lake Superior in the United States.

Deep Freeze: Mars Orbiter Finds Massive Stores of Buried Dry Ice

14 years ago from Scientific American

Buried under the south pole of Mars are the makings of one heck of a Halloween party. [More]

'Time machine' made to visually explore space and time in videos: Time-lapse GigaPans provide new way to access big data

14 years ago from Science Daily

Researchers have leveraged the latest browser technology to create GigaPan Time Machine, a system that enables viewers to explore gigapixel-scale, high-resolution videos and image sequences by panning or zooming in...

Astronomers peer into the dark

14 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Astronomers from the Scottish Universities Physics Alliance (SUPA) have produced a completely new catalogue of ~15,000 groups of galaxies that gives a new insight into dark matter, the...

How to Celebrate Earth Day with NASA

14 years ago from Space.com

NASA is hosting a variety of online activities to celebrate Earth Day 2011 on Friday (April 22).

School pupils to study space radiation belts

14 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- The Van Allen radiation belts are a hazardous environment, full of 'killer' electrons that can be lethal to orbiting satellites. And when those electrons sometimes hit the atmosphere,...

Dry ice lake suggests Mars once had a 'Dust Bowl'

14 years ago from Physorg

If you think Mars is a hostile place now, it was harsher 600,000 years ago.

Underwater robots at work in Japan

14 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Cosmic Log: Underwater robots equipped with imaging sensors that can see through murky waters are at work inspecting bridges, docks, and pipelines in port areas of the earthquake and tsunami...

Calling all candidates for Concordia

14 years ago from European Space Agency

They are more cut off than the crew of the International Space Station. They are at Concordia in Antarctica, and one of them is ESA researcher Eoin Macdonald-Nethercott. If you...

Uranus and Venus Visible at Dawn on Saturday

14 years ago from Space.com

The two planets will experience an unusual conjunction, offering rare views for skywatchers.

Wounded red-tailed hawk found in Pasadena gets a new lease on flight

14 years ago from LA Times - Science

Harry the Hawk had a mangled wing when he was found Feb. 11 outside the Pasadena Senior Center. After recuperating at a wildlife facility, he was set free Wednesday.Michael Hayes...

Weatherwatch: How do you measure sunshine?

14 years ago from The Guardian - Science

How many minutes of sunshine did we have today? Nowadays meteorological stations measure the amount of time that the Sun shines with an electronic sensor, but until very recently a Campbell-Stokes sunshine recorder...

Another universe tugging on ours? Maybe not: Data from exploding stars contradicts earlier study

14 years ago from Science Daily

In 2008, researchers announced a startling discovery: Clusters of galaxies far apart from one another appeared to be traveling in the same direction. Maybe another universe existed beyond the bounds...