Space News from SpaceDaily.com
February 27, 2018
SPACE TRAVEL
Florida Poly developing Happy Suit for Astronauts



Lakeland FL (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
Faculty and students at Florida Polytechnic University are developing a critical component for the next generation of spacesuits that will not only make astronauts more comfortable and efficient, but will also keep them happy. Depression is a major problem in space, as astronauts can be adversely affected by factors like insufficient exercise, excessive exposure to light and lack of sleep. With that in mind, Florida Poly professors DR. Arman Sargolzaei and DR. Melba Horton, along with Computer Science student James Holland, are developing a product called Smart Sensory Skin (S3). ... read more

EXO WORLDS
Proxima Centauri's no good, very bad day
Washington, DC (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
A team of astronomers led by Carnegie's Meredith MacGregor and Alycia Weinberger detected a massive stellar flare--an energetic explosion of radiation--from the closest star to our own Sun, Proxima ... more
MARSDAILY
Mars Odyssey Observes Martian Moons
Pasadena CA (JPL) Feb 26, 2018
Phobos and Deimos, the moons of Mars, are seen in this movie put together from 19 images taken by the Mars Odyssey orbiter's Thermal Emission Imaging System, or THEMIS, camera. The images were ... more
MOON DAILY
On second thought, the Moon's water may be widespread and immobile
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
A new analysis of data from two lunar missions finds evidence that the Moon's water is widely distributed across the surface and is not confined to a particular region or type of terrain. The water ... more
SPACEWAR
Airbus-built PAZ radar satellite launched
Madrid, Spain (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
The Airbus-built PAZ radar satellite has been successfully launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, in California, USA. Ten minutes after launch, the satellite separated from the launcher and will s ... more
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SPACEWAR
Maxwell hosts Space Symposium
Maxwell AFB AK (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
Speakers from NASA, Space X, United Launch Alliance and Air University lined up to discuss the future of space at the Space Symposium here, Feb. 16. The topic of discussion for the symposium w ... more
MARSDAILY
Life in world's driest desert seen as sign of potential life on Mars
Pullman WA (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
For the first time, researchers have seen life rebounding in the world's driest desert, demonstrating that it could also be lurking in the soils of Mars. Led by Washington State University planetary ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Beaming with the light of millions of suns
Pasadena CA (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
In the 1980s, researchers began discovering extremely bright sources of X-rays in the outer portions of galaxies, away from the supermassive black holes that dominate their centers. At first, resear ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Remote jets are clearer now
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
Astrophysicists at MIPT's Laboratory of Fundamental and Applied Research of Relativistic Objects of the Universe have developed a model for testing a hypothesis about supermassive black holes that l ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
Shiseido researches stress in closed-off environments to simulate ISS conditions
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
Shiseido and JAXA have conducted a joint research using a closed-off chamber environment training facility ("the isolation chamber") in JAXA's Tsukuba Space Center and observed a disruption in the c ... more
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CARBON WORLDS
Contacting the molecular world through graphene nanoribbons
Usurbil, Basque (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
A single molecule can behave as the smallest electronic component of an electronic system. With this premise in mind, researchers in the field of molecular electronics have endeavoured in the last y ... more
MARSDAILY
Dormant desert life hints at possibilities on Mars
Miami (AFP) Feb 26, 2018
It may rain once a decade or less in South America's Atacama Desert, but tiny bacteria and microorganisms survive there, hinting at the possibility of similar life on Mars, researchers said Monday. ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Powerful flare from star Proxima Centauri detected with ALMA
Charlottesville, VA (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
Space weather emitted by Proxima Centauri, the star closest to our sun, may make that system rather inhospitable to life after all. Using data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array ( ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Stars around the Milky Way: Cosmic space invaders or victims of galactic eviction?
Long Island City NY (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
Astronomers have investigated a small population of stars in the halo of the Milky Way Galaxy, finding its chemical composition to closely match that of the Galactic disk. This similarity provides c ... more
NUKEWARS
Iran's eastern shift shows patience running out with the West
Tehran (AFP) Feb 26, 2018
Iran's supreme leader has signalled a decisive shift in favour of relations with China and Russia, indicating that patience is running out with efforts to improve ties with the West. ... more


Basque researchers turn light upside down

CHIP TECH
UA researchers observe electrons zipping around in crystals
Tucson AZ (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
The end of the silicon age has begun. As computer chips approach the physical limits of miniaturization and power-hungry processors drive up energy costs, scientists are looking to a new crop of exo ... more
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CHIP TECH
New UC Riverside research advances spintronics technology
Riverside CA (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
Engineers at the University of California, Riverside, have reported advances in so-called "spintronic" devices that will help lead to a new technology for computing and data storage. They have devel ... more
TECH SPACE
Atomic structure of ultrasound material not what anyone expected
Raleigh, NC (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
Lead magnesium niobate (PMN) is a prototypical "relaxor" material, used in a wide variety of applications, from ultrasound to sonar. Researchers have now used state-of-the-art microscopy techniques ... more
CHIP TECH
Flexing for the next silicon wave
Thuwal, Saudi Arabia (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
A strategy that uses a screen-printed aluminium circuit to make silicon solar cells extremely flexible could enable them to become portable power sources. Developed by KAUST, such power sources coul ... more
MOON DAILY
SwRI scientist helps characterize water on lunar surface
San Antonio TX (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
A Southwest Research Institute scientist with expertise in how water reacts with lunar soil contributed to a new study that indicates water and/or hydroxyl may be more prevalent on the Moon's surfac ... more
MARSDAILY
A brief history of Martian exploration - as the InSight Lander prepares to launch
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
Roughly every two years Mars and Earth wander a bit closer to each other, making the leap between these two planets a little easier. In July this year, Mars will only be about 58 million kilometres ... more
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Ensuring fresh air for all
Paris (ESA) Feb 20, 2018
A start-up company from an ESA business incubator is offering affordable air-quality monitors for homes, schools and businesses using technology it developed for the International Space Station. "We realised that the problem astronauts face with limited of exchange of air inside the International Space Station is also the case for many people inside buildings that have little or no ventila ... more
+ International team publishes roadmap to enhance radioresistance for space colonization
+ Florida Poly developing Happy Suit for Astronauts
+ Shiseido researches stress in closed-off environments to simulate ISS conditions
+ NASA Wants Ideas from University Teams for Future Human Space Missions
+ Vice President Pence Hosts National Space Council at NASA's Kennedy Space Center
+ Trump's Privatized ISS 'Not Impossible,' but Would Require 'Renegotiation'
+ Japanese, US astronauts end spacewalk to fix robotic arm
SLS Intertank loaded for shipment, structural testing
New Orleans LA (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
A structural test version of the intertank for NASA's new heavy-lift rocket, the Space Launch System, is loaded onto the barge Pegasus Feb. 22, at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans. The intertank is the second piece of structural hardware for the rocket's massive core stage scheduled for delivery to NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for testing. ... more
+ Space-X lobs Spanish military satellite into orbit
+ RS-25 Engine Throttles Up for Deep Space Exploration
+ Millenium tapped for certification of Vulcan space launch systems
+ Russia jails four for embezzling millions from cosmodrome project
+ Launch support contract awarded by 45th Space Wing for Cape Canaveral
+ 140 successful tests and several "firsts" for Vinci, the engine for Ariane 6
+ Russia launches cargo spacecraft after aborted liftoff


Nearly a Decade After Mars Phoenix Landed, Another Look
Pasadena CA (JPL) Feb 22, 2018
A recent view from Mars orbit of the site where NASA's Phoenix Mars mission landed on far-northern Mars nearly a decade ago shows that dust has covered some marks of the landing. The Phoenix lander itself, plus its back shell and parachute, are still visible in the image taken Dec. 21, 2017, by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orb ... more
+ Life in world's driest desert seen as sign of potential life on Mars
+ Mars Odyssey Observes Martian Moons
+ Dormant desert life hints at possibilities on Mars
+ Opportunity Celebrates 5,000 Days on Mars, Snaps First 'Selfie'
+ A brief history of Martian exploration - as the InSight Lander prepares to launch
+ Opportunity Continues to Benefit from Dust Cleaning of the Solar Panels
+ Seven ways Mars InSight is different
China speeds up research, commercialization of space shuttles
Beijing (XNA) Feb 26, 2018
China will accelerate research and commercial use of rocket upper stages, a carrier rocket official said on Friday. "The Yuanzheng rocket upper stage family will have a new member, Yuanzheng-1S, this year, serving launches for low and medium Earth orbit satellites," said Wang Mingzhe, an upper stage architect of the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT). Upper stages are ... more
+ Long March rockets on ambitious mission in 2018
+ Chinese taikonauts maintain indomitable spirit in space exploration: senior officer
+ China launches first shared education satellite
+ China's first X-ray space telescope put into service after in-orbit tests
+ China's first successful lunar laser ranging accomplished
+ Yang Liwei looks back at China's first manned space mission
+ Space agency to pick those with the right stuff
Goonhilly goes deep space
Paris (ESA) Feb 23, 2018
Until now, if you're an entrepreneur planning future missions beyond Earth, you'd have to ask a big space agency to borrow their deep-space antennas. Now, thanks to the UK's county of Cornwall and ESA, you'll have a commercial option, too. If you're planning on flying a robotic or even human mission in the near future to the Moon, an asteroid or even Mars, one indispensable requirement you ... more
+ Lockheed Martin Completes Assembly on Arabsat's Newest Communications Satellite
+ Iridium Certus broadband readies for DOD wsers with COMSAT
+ Airbus and human spaceflight: from Spacelab to Orion
+ Iridium Announces First Land-Mobile Service Providers for Iridium Certus
+ 2018 in Space - Progress and Promise
+ UK companies seek cooperation with Russia in space technologies
+ GovSat-1 Successfully Launched on SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket
Researchers demonstrate promising method for improving quantum information processing
Oak Ridge TN (SPX) Feb 20, 2018
A team of researchers led by the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory has demonstrated a new method for splitting light beams into their frequency modes. The scientists can then choose the frequencies they want to work with and encode photons with quantum information. Their work could spur advancements in quantum information processing and distributed quantum computing. The ... more
+ Atomic structure of ultrasound material not what anyone expected
+ Sixty years of technology in space - what's changed?
+ Silk fibers could be high-tech 'natural metamaterials'
+ Splashdown: Supersonic cold metal bonding in 3-D
+ Engineers develop smart material that changes stiffness when twisted or bent
+ Jordan 3D lab prints limbs for war wounded, disabled kids
+ DARPA Seeks to Expand Real-Time Radiological Threat Detection to Include Other Dangers


Model based on hydrothermal sources evaluate possibility of life Jupiter's icy moon
Sao Paulo, Brazil (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
Jupiter's icy moon Europa is a major target of astrobiology research in light of the possibility that it offers a habitable environment in the Solar System. Under its ice crust, estimated to be 10 km thick, is an ocean of liquid water of over 100 km deep. A huge source of energy deriving from gravitational interaction with Jupiter keeps this water warm. Theoretical research to evaluate the ... more
+ Proxima Centauri's no good, very bad day
+ Asteroid 'time capsules' may help explain how life started on Earth
+ NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite arrives at KSC for launch
+ Humans will actually react pretty well to news of alien life
+ Deep-sea fish use hydrothermal vents to incubate eggs
+ Kepler Scientists Discover Almost 100 New Exoplanets
+ 'Oumuamua has been tumbling about the galaxy for a billion years
New Horizons captures record-breaking images in the Kuiper Belt
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 09, 2018
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft recently turned its telescopic camera toward a field of stars, snapped an image - and made history. The routine calibration frame of the "Wishing Well" galactic open star cluster, made by the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) on Dec. 5, was taken when New Horizons was 3.79 billion miles (6.12 billion kilometers, or 40.9 astronomical units) from Earth - ... more
+ Europa and Other Planetary Bodies May Have Extremely Low-Density Surfaces
+ JUICE ground control gets green light to start development
+ New Year 2019 offers new horizons at MU69 flyby
+ Study explains why Jupiter's jet stream reverses course on a predictable schedule
+ New Horizons Corrects Its Course in the Kuiper Belt
+ Does New Horizons' Next Target Have a Moon?
+ Juno probes the depths of Jupiter's Great Red Spot


Temperatures to keep rising in Pacific Northwest, new climate models confirm
Washington (UPI) Feb 23, 2018
No region will be immune to climate change, and new research suggests the Pacific Northwest is no exception. To better predict how climate change will impact the northwest corner of the United States, scientists at Oregon State University and the U.S. Forest Service localized the predictions of 30 "general circulation" climate models. General circulation models produce outputs at ... more
+ Combating sulphuric acid corrosion at wastewater plants
+ Rising seas could swallow Pacific salt marshes, study suggests
+ Large vessels are fishing 55 percent of world's oceans
+ Stagnation in the South Pacific
+ Expect seas to rise for the next 300 years, new climate models warn
+ Seychelles designates huge new marine reserve
+ Coming decades vital for future sea level rise: study
Why Russia is one step ahead of US Army's plans for future GPS
Moscow (Sputnik) Feb 12, 2018
The Pentagon and Israel's Defense Ministry have launched 'Urban Navigation Challenge', a startup competition to create advanced 'counter-terror' navigation systems which don't use GPS. The project makes no mention of officially designated US "rivals" like Russia or China, but according to Russian experts, it would make no difference even if it did. The project, officially dubbed the Combat ... more
+ Europe claims 100 million users for Galileo satnav system
+ Airbus selected by ESA for EGNOS V3 program
+ Pentagon probes fitness-app use after map shows sensitive sites
+ China sends twin BeiDou-3 navigation satellites into space
+ 18 satellites in exactEarth's real-time constellation now in service
+ 'Quantum radio' may aid communications and mapping indoors, underground and underwater
+ Raytheon to provide GPS-guided artillery shells


On second thought, the Moon's water may be widespread and immobile
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
A new analysis of data from two lunar missions finds evidence that the Moon's water is widely distributed across the surface and is not confined to a particular region or type of terrain. The water appears to be present day and night, though it's not necessarily easily accessible. The findings could help researchers understand the origin of the Moon's water and how easy it would be to use ... more
+ SwRI scientist helps characterize water on lunar surface
+ Laser-ranged satellite measurement now accurately reflects Earth's tidal perturbations
+ NASA's Lunar Outpost will Extend Human Presence in Deep Space
+ NASA's OSIRIS-REx Captures New Earth-Moon Image
+ New study sheds light on moon's slow retreat from frozen Earth
+ India Prepares For Second Lunar Mission with Chandrayaan-2
+ UCF Seeks New Way to Mine Moon for Water
Five Years after the Chelyabinsk Meteor: NASA Leads Efforts in Planetary Defense
Pasadena CA (JPL) Feb 16, 2018
A blinding flash, a loud sonic boom, and shattered glass everywhere. This is what the people of Chelyabinsk, Russia, experienced five years ago when an asteroid exploded over their city the morning of Feb. 15, 2013. The house-sized asteroid entered the atmosphere over Chelyabinsk at over eleven miles per second and blew apart 14 miles above the ground. The explosion released the energy equ ... more
+ Seafloor data point to global volcanism after Chicxulub meteor strike
+ Evidence for a massive biomass burning event at the Younger Dryas Boundary
+ Two Small Asteroids Safely Pass Earth This Week
+ New research suggests toward end of Ice Age, human beings witnessed fires larger than dinosaur killers
+ Asteroid to pass by Earth in Feb.
+ Asteroid 2002 AJ129 to Fly Safely Past Earth February 4
+ NASA, USGS confirm Michigan meteorite strike


Swarm trio becomes a quartet
Paris (ESA) Feb 23, 2018
With the aim of making the best possible use of existing satellites, ESA and Canada have made a deal that turns Swarm into a four-satellite mission to shed even more light on space weather and features such as the aurora borealis. In orbit since 2013, ESA's three identical Swarm satellites have been returning a wealth of information about how our magnetic field is generated and how it prot ... more
+ Tracking the global footprint of industrial fishing
+ New partnership aids sustainable growth with earth observations
+ CloudSat Exits the 'A-Train'
+ Tracking a typhoon's seismic footprint
+ Ball Aerospace Delivers Flight Cryocooler Early for NASA's Landsat Mission
+ Farewell to a Pioneering Pollution Sensor
+ ESA Cluster mission unveils the magnetosphere
NASA's SDO reveals how magnetic cage on the Sun stopped solar eruption
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 26, 2018
A dramatic magnetic power struggle at the Sun's surface lies at the heart of solar eruptions, new research using NASA data shows. The work highlights the role of the Sun's magnetic landscape, or topology, in the development of solar eruptions that can trigger space weather events around Earth. The scientists, led by Tahar Amari, an astrophysicist at the Center for Theoretical Physics at th ... more
+ Towards a better prediction of solar eruptions
+ Pulsating aurora mysteries uncovered with help from THEMIS and ERG missions
+ Where no mission has gone before
+ HINODE captures record breaking solar magnetic field
+ What's behind the most brilliant lights in the sky
+ NASA's newly rediscovered IMAGE mission provided key aurora research
+ GOLD will revolutionize our understanding of space weather


Powerful flare from star Proxima Centauri detected with ALMA
Charlottesville, VA (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
Space weather emitted by Proxima Centauri, the star closest to our sun, may make that system rather inhospitable to life after all. Using data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), a team of astronomers discovered that a powerful stellar flare erupted from Proxima Centauri last March. This finding, published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, raises questions abo ... more
+ Galaxies that feed on other galaxies
+ Remote jets are clearer now
+ Beaming with the light of millions of suns
+ Improved Hubble yardstick gives fresh evidence for new physics in the universe
+ Stars around the Milky Way: Cosmic space invaders or victims of galactic eviction?
+ Amateur astronomer captures rare first light from massive exploding star
+ Astronomy: A rotating system of satellite galaxies raises questions
Magnetic field traces gas and dust swirling around supermassive black hole
London, UK (SPX) Feb 22, 2018
Astronomers reveal a new high resolution map of the magnetic field lines in gas and dust swirling around the supermassive black hole at the centre of our Galaxy, published in a new paper in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. The team, led by Professor Pat Roche of the University of Oxford, created the map, which is the first of its kind, using the CanariCam infrared camera attach ... more
+ Some black holes erase your past
+ "Ultramassive" Black Holes Discovered in Far-Off Galaxies
+ No Relation Between a Supermassive Black Hole and Its Host Galaxy
+ Quantum recurrence: Everything goes back to the way it was
+ A quadrillionth of a second in slow motion
+ Scientists discover atoms inside the orbiting electrons of a 'giant atom'
+ New hole-punched crystal clears a path for quantum light
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