Space News from SpaceDaily.com
March 01, 2018
EXO WORLDS
NASA finds a large amount of water in an exoplanet's atmosphere



Baltimore MD (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
Much like detectives study fingerprints to identify the culprit, scientists used NASA's Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes to identify the "fingerprints" of water in the atmosphere of a hot, bloated, Saturn-mass exoplanet some 700 light-years away. And, they found a lot of water. In fact, the planet, known as WASP-39b, has three times as much water as Saturn does. Though no planet like this resides in our solar system, WASP-39b can provide new insights into how and where planets form around a sta ... read more

MOON DAILY
Research details mineralogy of potential lunar exploration site
Providence RI (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
A detailed study of a giant impact crater on the Moon's far side could provide a roadmap for future lunar explorers. The study, by planetary scientists from Brown University, maps the mineralo ... more
EARTH OBSERVATION
US blasts off another satellite to boost weather forecasts
Miami (AFP) March 1, 2018
A new US satellite that offers speedy, high-resolution images of storms and may save lives by making forecasts more accurate blasted off Thursday from a NASA launchpad. ... more
MARSDAILY
Dyes for 'live' extremophile labeling will help discover life on Mars
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
Researchers from MIPT and their colleagues from Research Center Juelich (Germany) and Dmitry Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia have described a new method for studying microorgan ... more
IRON AND ICE
Watch an asteroid pass between Earth and the moon on Friday
Washington (UPI) Mar 1, 2018
A small asteroid will pass within 70,000 miles of Earth's surface on Friday - a close but safe encounter. ... more
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SPACE TRAVEL
Jemison: 'If you want a seat at the table, you can have one'
Boulder CO (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
More than 1,200 guests-including bright-eyed elementary schoolers who aspire to be astronauts, inspired mid-career female scientists and fellow Star Trek fans-filed into Macky Auditorium Tuesday nig ... more
MARSDAILY
Mars Express views moons set against Saturn's rings
Paris (ESA) Mar 02, 2018
New images and video from ESA's Mars Express show Phobos and Deimos drifting in front of Saturn and background stars, revealing more about the positioning and surfaces of the Red Planet's mysterious ... more
MOON DAILY
Study details new story for how the moon formed
Boston MA (SPX) Mar 01, 2018
Simon Lock wants to change the way you think about the Moon. A graduate student in Harvard's Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Lock is the lead author of a study that suggests the Moon - r ... more
TIME AND SPACE
Quantum recurrence: Everything goes back to the way it was
Vienna, Austria (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
It is one of the most astonishing results of physics: when a complex system is left alone, it will return to its initial state with almost perfect precision. Gas particles, for example, chaotically ... more
EXO WORLDS
Do you know where your xenon is?
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
The paradox of the missing xenon might sound like the title of the latest airport thriller, but it's actually a problem that's stumped geophysicists for decades. New work from an international team ... more
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TIME AND SPACE
Can strongly lensed type 1a supernovae resolve cosmology's biggest controversy
Berkeley CA (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
In 1929 Edwin Hubble surprised many people - including Albert Einstein - when he showed that the universe is expanding. Another bombshell came in 1998 when two teams of astronomers proved that cosmi ... more
EXO WORLDS
Hubble observes exoplanet atmosphere in more detail than ever before
Munich, Germany (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
An international team of scientists has used the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope to study the atmosphere of the hot exoplanet WASP-39b. By combining this new data with older data they created the mo ... more
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Explaining the increasing temperature of cooling granular gases
Leicester UK (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
A Leicester mathematician has developed a theory to explain 'heating by cooling', where the temperature of a granular gas increases while the total energy drops down - a peculiar phenomenon which ca ... more
ROBO SPACE
Snake-inspired robot uses kirigami to move
Boston MA (SPX) Feb 28, 2018
Who needs legs? With their sleek bodies, snakes can slither up to 14 miles-per-hour, squeeze into tight space, scale trees and swim. How do they do it? It's all in the scales. As a snake moves, its ... more
ROBO SPACE
Robo-picker grasps and packs
Boston MA (SPX) Feb 28, 2018
Unpacking groceries is a straightforward albeit tedious task: You reach into a bag, feel around for an item, and pull it out. A quick glance will tell you what the item is and where it should be sto ... more


Berkeley Lab 'minimalist machine learning' algorithms analyze images from very little data

TECH SPACE
Virtual predator is self-aware, behaves like living counterpart
Champaign IL (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
Scientists report in the journal eNeuro that they've built an artificially intelligent ocean predator that behaves a lot like the original flesh-and-blood organism on which it was modeled. The virtu ... more
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DRAGON SPACE
China plans rocket sea-launch
Beijing (XNA) Mar 02, 2018
China is planning its first sea-launch of satellites carried by a Long March rocket, according to an aerospace official. Yang Yiqiang, commander-in-chief of the Long March-11 rockets project o ... more
SPACEWAR
US incentivizes an arms race in space warns analyst
Moscow (Sputnik) Feb 28, 2018
The US would be prepared for any conflict that took place in space, National Security Advisor McMaster said. His comment comes after Vice President Mike Pence said the US should be as dominant in sp ... more
ENERGY TECH
New tech for commercial Lithium-ion batteries finds they can be charged 5 times fast
Warwick UK (SPX) Feb 20, 2018
Researchers at WMG at the University of Warwick have developed a new direct, precise test of Lithium-ion batteries' internal temperatures and their electrodes potentials and found that the batteries ... more
NANO TECH
UT Dallas team's microscopic solution may save researchers big time
Dallas TX (SPX) Mar 01, 2018
A University of Texas at Dallas graduate student, his advisor and industry collaborators believe they have addressed a long-standing problem troubling scientists and engineers for more than 35 years ... more
CHIP TECH
Unconventional superconductor may be used to create quantum computers of the future
Gothenburg, Sweden (SPX) Mar 01, 2018
With their insensitivity to decoherence what are known as Majorana particles could become stable building blocks of a quantum computer. The problem is that they only occur under very special circums ... more
24/7 Nuclear News Coverage
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ISS Expedition 54 crew land safely in Kazakhstan
Houston TX (SPX) Feb 28, 2018
Three members of the Expedition 54 crew aboard the International Space Station (ISS), including NASA astronauts Mark Vande Hei and Joe Acaba, returned to Earth on Tuesday after months of performing research and spacewalks in low-Earth orbit. Vande Hei, Acaba and cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin of the Russian space agency Roscosmos landed at 9:31 p.m. EST (8:31 a.m. Feb. 28 in Kazakhstan) sout ... more
+ Florida Poly developing Happy Suit for Astronauts
+ Cosmonaut, two US astronauts return to Earth from ISS
+ Jemison: 'If you want a seat at the table, you can have one'
+ Aerospace introduces new Senior Advisory Council for space policy
+ International team publishes roadmap to enhance radioresistance for space colonization
+ Alibaba sets up AI research centre in Singapore
+ NASA Wants Ideas from University Teams for Future Human Space Missions
Russia's Energomash tests RD-180 engine made for US Atlas rocket
Moscow (Sputnik) Mar 01, 2018
Tests of a Russian RD-180 liquid-fuel rocket engine have been carried out in the Science and Test Complex of Russia's NPO Energomash, the company said Wednesday in a statement. "According to the head of the complex Andrey Ushkov, the tests went routinely, the test program has been fully implemented," the statement reads. The reliable and relatively cheap RD-180 engine is developed an ... more
+ Arianespace Soyuz set to launch 4 more sats for SES O3b constellation
+ SLS Intertank loaded for shipment, structural testing
+ Space-X lobs Spanish military satellite into orbit
+ Millenium tapped for certification of Vulcan space launch systems
+ RS-25 Engine Throttles Up for Deep Space Exploration
+ Russia jails four for embezzling millions from cosmodrome project
+ Launch support contract awarded by 45th Space Wing for Cape Canaveral


Dyes for 'live' extremophile labeling will help discover life on Mars
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Mar 02, 2018
Researchers from MIPT and their colleagues from Research Center Juelich (Germany) and Dmitry Mendeleev University of Chemical Technology of Russia have described a new method for studying microorganisms that can survive in extreme conditions. The scientists identified a fluorescent dye that enabled them to observe the life cycle of bacteria in real time. Halophiles, which is the ancient Gr ... more
+ Atacama Desert study offers glimpse of what life on Mars could look like
+ Mars Express views moons set against Saturn's rings
+ Curiosity tests a new way to drill on Mars
+ NASA InSight mission to Mars arrives at launch site
+ 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
China plans rocket sea-launch
Beijing (XNA) Mar 02, 2018
China is planning its first sea-launch of satellites carried by a Long March rocket, according to an aerospace official. Yang Yiqiang, commander-in-chief of the Long March-11 rockets project of the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, said that 2018 would see five launches of Long March-11 rockets, with four missions for commercial payloads on land, and one at sea. "Th ... more
+ China speeds up research, commercialization of space shuttles
+ 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
Iridium Certus readies for takeoff with aviation service providers
McLean VA (SPX) Mar 01, 2018
Iridium Communications Inc. reports that Honeywell Aerospace, SKYTRAC, Avitek and Navicom Aviation are the first Iridium Certus service providers to be selected for the aviation industry. As Iridium Certus service providers, each company will be able to offer the new, best-in-class broadband satellite connectivity to its customers. Ideal for commercial airliner flight deck communications, ... more
+ Lockheed Martin Completes Foundation for Satellite Factory of the Future
+ Lockheed Martin Completes Assembly on Arabsat's Newest Communications Satellite
+ Goonhilly goes deep space
+ 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
Latest updates from NASA on IMAGE Recovery
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Mar 01, 2018
Pasadena CA (JPL) Mar 01, 2018 On Feb. 22, 2018, the signal from IMAGE began to break up and has been silent since Feb. 24. The team continues to assess what may be the issue, but it is known that this episode does not mimic the sudden silence that occurred in 2005 when contact was originally lost with the spacecraft. The team continues to make preparations to attempt to bring the attitude dete ... more
+ Virtual predator is self-aware, behaves like living counterpart
+ Radioactive cylinder found on Lebanon coast: authority
+ Researchers demonstrate promising method for improving quantum information processing
+ Silk fibers could be high-tech 'natural metamaterials'
+ Squid skin could be the solution to camouflage material
+ Atomic structure of ultrasound material not what anyone expected
+ Sixty years of technology in space - what's changed?


Alien life in our Solar System? Study hints at Saturn's moon
Paris (AFP) Feb 27, 2018
Humanity may need look no further than our own Solar System in the search for alien life, researchers probing one of Saturn's moons said Tuesday. The icy orb known as Enceladus may boast ideal living conditions for single-celled microorganisms known as archaeans found in some of the most extreme environments on Earth, they reported in the science journal Nature Communications. A methano ... more
+ When do aging brown dwarfs sweep the clouds away?
+ Do you know where your xenon is?
+ Proxima Centauri's no good, very bad day
+ Tesla in space could carry bacteria from Earth
+ NASA finds a large amount of water in an exoplanet's atmosphere
+ Hubble observes exoplanet atmosphere in more detail than ever before
+ Study: Mushrooms became hallucinogenic to keep away insects
Chasing a stellar flash with assistance from GAIA
Paris (ESA) Feb 28, 2018
Last year, ESA's Gaia mission helped astronomers make unique observations of Neptune's largest moon, Triton, as it passed in front of a distant star. This is a preview of the superb quality and versatility of the Gaia data that will be released in April. When a small Solar System body such as a moon or an asteroid passes in front of a star and temporarily blocks its light, the occultation ... more
+ The PI's Perspective: Why Didn't Voyager Explore the Kuiper Belt?
+ New Horizons captures record-breaking images in the Kuiper Belt
+ 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


Italy, China propose solution to Lake Chad's water problem
Abuja (AFP) Feb 28, 2018
It sounds like something from Wakanda, the futuristic African kingdom of the hit movie "Black Panther". But "Transaqua" is a very real proposal for a very real problem - how to replenish the shrinking waters of Lake Chad. It imagines a 2,600-km (1,600-mile) canal from the Democratic Republic of Congo across the Central African Republic to meet the Chari River that feeds into the freshw ... more
+ Chile's Bachelet unveils massive marine parks in legacy move
+ New Zealand FM's 'strategic anxiety' about Pacific
+ Marine animals explore the ocean in similar ways
+ The West Coast is losing its biggest Chinook salmon
+ Better ocean turbulence models to improve climate predictions
+ Stagnation in the South Pacific
+ Temperatures to keep rising in Pacific Northwest, new climate models confirm
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


How does water change the moon's origin story?
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 28, 2018
It's amazing what a difference a little water can make. The Moon formed between about 4.4 and 4.5 billion years ago when an object collided with the still-forming proto-Earth. This impact created a hot and partially vaporized disk of material that rotated around the baby planet, eventually cooling and accreting into the Moon. For years, scientists thought that in the aftermath of the colli ... more
+ The moon formed inside a vaporized Earth synestia
+ Study details new story for how the moon formed
+ Research details mineralogy of potential lunar exploration site
+ On second thought, the Moon's water may be widespread and immobile
+ 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
Watch an asteroid pass between Earth and the moon on Friday
Washington (UPI) Mar 1, 2018
A small asteroid will pass within 70,000 miles of Earth's surface on Friday - a close but safe encounter. They flyby will be streamed live online by the Virtual Telescope Project. Asteroid 2018 DV1 will reach its closest point to Earth at approximately 12:54 p.m. ET. The flyby will mark the 18th time an asteroid has passed between Earth and the moon in 2018. It's possible others ... more
+ Five Years after the Chelyabinsk Meteor: NASA Leads Efforts in Planetary Defense
+ 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


US blasts off another satellite to boost weather forecasts
Miami (AFP) March 1, 2018
A new US satellite that offers speedy, high-resolution images of storms and may save lives by making forecasts more accurate blasted off Thursday from a NASA launchpad. "Three, two, one and liftoff!" said a NASA commentator as the Atlas V rocket rumbled into the blue sky at 5:02 pm (2202 GMT) over Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, carrying the Geostationary Operational Environment ... more
+ NASA joins international science team in exploring auroral cusp from Norway
+ How does GEOS-5-based planetary boundary layer height and humidity vary across China?
+ New partnership aids sustainable growth with earth observations
+ CloudSat Exits the 'A-Train'
+ Swarm trio becomes a quartet
+ Tracking the global footprint of industrial fishing
+ Tracking a typhoon's seismic footprint
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


Study reveals Milky Way stars being evicted by invading galaxies
New York NY (SPX) Feb 28, 2018
An international team of astronomers has discovered that some stars located in the Galactic halo surrounding the Milky Way - previously thought to be remnants of invading galaxies from the past - are instead former residents of the Galactic disk, kicked out by those invading dwarf galaxies. One in a series of scientific papers contributing to this story appears this week in the journal Nat ... more
+ Search for first stars uncovers 'dark matter'
+ Black holes from small galaxies might emit gamma rays
+ Explaining the increasing temperature of cooling granular gases
+ XMM-Newton spies first clear X-Ray flares from massive stellar lighthouse
+ MSU-based scientists found out how to distinguish beams of entangled photons
+ A marriage of light-manipulation technologies
+ Remote jets are clearer now
Quantum recurrence: Everything goes back to the way it was
Vienna, Austria (SPX) Feb 27, 2018
It is one of the most astonishing results of physics: when a complex system is left alone, it will return to its initial state with almost perfect precision. Gas particles, for example, chaotically swirling around in a container, will return almost exactly to their starting positions after some time. This "Poincare Recurrence Theorem" is the foundation of modern chaos theory. For decades, ... more
+ Unlocking the secrets of the universe
+ Astronomers detect earliest evidence yet of hydrogen in the universe
+ A quadrillionth of a second in slow motion
+ Can strongly lensed type 1a supernovae resolve cosmology's biggest controversy
+ Scientists discover atoms inside the orbiting electrons of a 'giant atom'
+ Magnetic field traces gas and dust swirling around supermassive black hole
+ Some black holes erase your past
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