Sign In
to Vote &
Create Storyboards.
 

Space News

Location American Space News for 30 July 2014
Scientists Discover 101 Geysers Erupting at Saturn's Intriguing Icy Moon Enceladus Scientists analyzing the reams of data from NASA's Cassini orbiter at Saturn have discovered 101 geysers erupting from the intriguing icy moon Enceladus and that the spewing material of liquid water likely originates fro...
Read More
4
0
Huge European Cargo Ship Launches Its Last Delivery Flight to Space Station The European Space Agency's fifth Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV-5) blasted off from French Guiana Tuesday evening (July 29), kicking off the final mission for this line of unmanned spacecraft, which has been resupplyin...
Read More
2
0

Early Tidal and Rotational Forces Helped Shape Moon

Universe Today - 30 Jul 2014 23:05
Early Tidal and Rotational Forces Helped Shape Moon The shape of the moon deviates from a simple sphere in a way that scientists have struggled to explain. But new research shows that tidal forces during the moon's early history can explain most of its large-scale topogra...
Read More
1
0
Spaceflight Inc. is getting into the small-satellite operations business.
Read More
1
0
NASA Selects Instruments to Track Climate Impact on Vegetation NASA Breaking News: NASA has selected proposals for two new instruments that will observe changes in global vegetation from the International Space Station. The sensors will give scientists new ways to see how forests an...
Read More
1
0
New Rosetta Images Show Bright Neck of Probe's Target Comet Images taken by a European probe en route to link up with a comet, have revealed a striking feature of the target comet coming into view.
Read More
1
0
Satellites about the size of a loaf of bread may one day explore space, propelled across the vast expanse by an unfurled sail.
Read More
1
0
Intelsat has hired Patricia Cooper as vice president of government affairs and policy.
Read More
1
0

Cooper Leaving SIA for Intelsat Position

Space News - 30 Jul 2014 21:30
Intelsat has hired Patricia Cooper as vice president of government affairs and policy.
Read More
1
0
Going Out with a (Big) Bang: Final ATV Cargo Ship Space Station-Bound Europe's line of space freighters is going out with a (big) bang. Named "Georges LemaƮtre" after the Belgian priest and astronomer who proposed what became the Big Bang theory, the European Space Agency's fifth and fina...
Read More
1
0

Mysterious Molecules in Space Named?

Universe Today - 30 Jul 2014 20:21
Mysterious Molecules in Space Named? It's a well-kept secret that the vacuum of space is not -- technically speaking -- a vacuum. Strong winds generated from supernova explosions push material into the interstellar medium, tainting space with the heavier el...
Read More
1
0
Earth and Mercury are both rocky planets with iron cores, but Mercury's interior differs from Earth's in a way that explains why the planet has such a bizarre magnetic field, UCLA planetary physicists and colleagues repo...
Read More
1
0
Ancient Earth: Pummeled, Cracked and Oozing Magma | Scientific Visualization Earth and Moon in the Hadean epoch were pummeled by large impacts letting magma flow out. But, at the same time, some parts of Earth's surface could have retained liquid water, allowing pre-biotic compounds to form; perh...
Read More
1
0
Weird Orbits of Alien Planets May Be Due to Twin Stars Some of the oddly skewed orbits of many alien worlds may be due to the twin stars they are often found circling, a new study suggests.
Read More
1
0
Early Earth: A Battered, Hellish World with Water Oases for Life Cosmic bombardment of the early Earth repeatedly covered the planet's surface with molten rock during its earliest days, but still may have left oases of water that could have supported the evolution of life, scientists ...
Read More
1
0
Double Star Is Forming Planets At Funky Angles | Video The binary system HK Tauri's 'wildly misaligned' discs of dust and gas may help explain why some exoplanets have eccentric orbits around their Suns. The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) imaged the syst...
Read More
1
0

How the Moon Got Its Lemon Shape

SPACE.com - 30 Jul 2014 19:03
How the Moon Got Its Lemon Shape Tidal forces exerted during the solar system's youth can explain most of the moon's large-scale topography, including its slight lemon shape, reports the study, which was published online today (July 30) in the journal N...
Read More
1
0

James Inhofe Slammed on Global Warming

Bad Astronomy - 30 Jul 2014 19:01
Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) is more than just a global warming denier. He's a conspiracy theorist (calling warming a "hoax") and, shockingly, hugely funded by the oil industry. Reading things he's said about global warmi...
Read More
1
0
The shape of the moon deviates from a simple sphere in ways that scientists have struggled to explain. A new study by researchers at UC Santa Cruz shows that most of the moon's overall shape can be explained by taking in...
Read More
1
0
Young binary star system may form planets with weird and wild orbits Unlike our solitary Sun, most stars form in binary pairs--two stars that orbit a common center of mass. Though remarkably plentiful, binaries pose a number of questions, including how and where planets form in such compl...
Read More
1
0
ALMA Finds Double Star with Weird and Wild Planet-forming Discs ESO Top News: Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have found wildly misaligned planet-forming gas discs around the two young stars in the binary system HK Tauri. These new ALMA obser...
Read More
1
0
Questions remain as to the eventual place in the new company of Finmeccanica, which is widely expected to purchase a majority stake in Avio SpA to give Finmeccanica the heft it needs to be a third pillar in the joint ven...
Read More
1
0

{TITLE}

{PUBLISHER} - {PUBLISHED_DATE}
{TITLE} {CONTENT}
Read More
{VIEWS}
0


Storyboard
Print
{VIEWS}
0
0




Share this Article

Location



Create Storyboard