Space News
ViaSat's Latest Lawsuit May Have Driven Wedge Between SSL's Current and Former Owners
Space News - 13 Nov 2013 17:17
Unlike the first lawsuit, in which SSL and its then-owner, Loral Space and Communications of New York, were both named, the second is aimed solely at SSL.
We're Up All Night To Get Data: The Next Great Science Parody
Scientific American - 13 Nov 2013 22:56
You all must know by now that Joanne Manaster and I are suckers for excellent science music video parodies. This one, by the folks at UCSD Neuroscience, is our latest favourite. Set to the tune of... --
Curiosity Out of Safe Mode
PTTU - 13 Nov 2013 00:50
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory News and Features: NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Project received confirmation from Mars Sunday that the Curiosity rover has successfully transitioned back into nominal surface operation...
Meet Yves Rossy: The man who flew over Mt. Fuji with a homemade jetpack
Tech Times - 13 Nov 2013 19:55
Yves Rossy, an ex-pilot, has flown over Mt. Fuji, using his own invented jetpack.
DARPA's XS-1 Experimental Spaceplane Call for Proposals Eyes a 2018 Liftoff
Space News - 13 Nov 2013 19:20
XS-1 aims to develop a reusable first stage -- DARPA is open to winged and nonwinged designs -- that could carry an expendable upper stage capable of placing payloads weighing up to 1,800 kilograms into orbit.
Just what is going on in that magnificent Cassini image of Saturn?
Planetary Society - 13 Nov 2013 23:58
It took months of work (and no wonder) but the wait was worth it: here is Cassini's spectacular view of Saturn, captured on July 19, 2013, as Cassini passed through Saturn's shadow. If you're a little confused by the ima...
Contractors Pitch SLS as Everybody's Rocket
Space News - 13 Nov 2013 23:31
Major contractors for the SLS heavy-lift rocket NASA is building for astronaut missions beyond Earth orbit joined the agency's top human-spaceflight official here to pitch the multibillion-dollar launcher as a jack-of-al...
Solar Siblings Hint at Our Sun's Turbulent Youth
Discover - 13 Nov 2013 23:30
The sun's sister stars may be far more numerous than scientists had previously thought.
Alien Life May Thrive in Impact Craters
SPACE.com - 13 Nov 2013 23:09
An asteroid or comet smashing into the surface of a planet can spell doom for living creatures, but if the impact isn't large enough to completely decimate a planet's inhabitants, then the crater can ultimately provide a...
Orbital to Launch First Satellite Designed and Built by High School Students
SpaceRef - 13 Nov 2013 22:36
Orbital Sciences Corporation (NYSE: ORB), one of the world's leading space technology companies, will launch the first satellite designed and built by high school students into Earth orbit aboard a Minotaur I rocket next...
Snow melts faster under trees than in open areas in mild climates
Phys.org - 13 Nov 2013 21:51
It's a foggy fall morning, and University of Washington researcher Susan Dickerson-Lange pokes her index finger into the damp soil beneath a canopy of second-growth conifers. The tree cover is dense here, and little ligh...
Strange 'Elephant Trunk' Space Clouds Surround Star Cluster (Video)
SPACE.com - 13 Nov 2013 21:23
A telescope in Chile has captured the most detailed views ever of odd clouds of interstellar dust that are being sculpted into strange shapes by the wind from nearby stars.
The 1st Spacecraft Panorama of Saturn --Along With Earth, Venus, Mars
The Daily Galaxy - 13 Nov 2013 21:20
NASA's Cassini spacecraft took this natural-color portrait on July 19, 2013, which is the first image to show Saturn, its moons and rings, plus Earth, Venus and Mars, all together. Cassini does not attempt many images of...
NASA Helps Melt Secrets of Great Lakes Ice
PTTU - 13 Nov 2013 20:33
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory News and Features: NASA and NOAA scientists have developed a new technique for monitoring ice cover on the Great Lakes that's so accurate it can spot the track of an icebreaker -- even at...
"Mars Once had Long Flowing Rivers that Emptied into Lakes and Shallow Seas" --What Happened?
The Daily Galaxy - 13 Nov 2013 20:29
From a NASA spacecraft Mars today looks like a dead, rusted hulk of a world . But, billions of years ago when the planets of our solar system were still young, it was a very different world. Liquid water flowed...
NASA sees a re-awakening of ex-Depression 30W in a different ocean
Phys.org - 13 Nov 2013 20:27
The former tropical storm known as 30W that moved from the western North Pacific Ocean basin into the northern Indian Ocean appears to be ramping up for a short stint at depression status again. NASA's TRMM satellite not...
Craters in the Caloris Basin on Mercury
SpaceRef - 13 Nov 2013 20:06
This image features several craters near the eastern edge of the Caloris basin. The larger craters have excavated low reflectance material, and both have hollows forming within their floors....
Guts of Superfast Black Hole Jets Revealed
SPACE.com - 13 Nov 2013 20:01
Scientists found evidence of nickel and iron in the superfast jets emitted by a relatively small black hole, suggesting that "normal" matter plays a bigger role in these enigmatic structures than does exotic antimatter.
Astronomers reveal contents of mysterious black hole jets
Phys.org - 13 Nov 2013 20:00
An international team of astronomers has answered a long standing question about the enigmatic jets emitted by black holes, in research published today in prestigious journal Nature.
Black hole boasts heavyweight jets
PTTU - 13 Nov 2013 20:00
ESA Space Science: Astronomers studying a black hole in our Galaxy with ESA's XMM-Newton observatory have made a surprising discovery about the cocktail of particles that are ejected from its surroundings.
UN: Besides Haiyan, 2013 storm season near average
Phys.org - 13 Nov 2013 19:40
Apart from Typhoon Haiyan, which has devastated the Philippines, it's been an average year for tropical cyclones, the U.N. weather agency said Wednesday in its annual climate report.
NASA Hails Success of Commercial Space Program Private Space Station Resupply Underway, Plans Readied for Astronauts
PTTU - 13 Nov 2013 18:55
NASA Breaking News: NASA Administrator Charles Bolden Wednesday hailed the success of the agency's public-private partnership with American companies to resupply the International Space Station and announced the next pha...