Home / News Astronomy news

first back 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 next last total: 555 | displaying: 101 - 110

Astronomy news

NASA Mars Rover Ready For Descent Into Crater

NASA's Mars rover Opportunity is scheduled to begin a descent down a rock-paved slope into the Red Planet's massive Victoria Crater. This latest trek carries real risk for the long-lived robotic explorer, but NASA and the Mars Rover science team expect it to provide valuable science.
Full story

Thinking Big about Space Telescopes

0 comments
NASA's next moon rocket is still on the drawing board, but already scientists are dreaming up big new things to do with it.

The Dwarf Planet Known as Eris is More Massive than Pluto

0 comments
Die-hard Pluto fans still seeking redemption for their demoted planet have cause for despair this week. New data shows that the dwarf planet Eris is 27 percent more massive than Pluto, thereby strengthening the decree last year that there are eight planets in the solar system and a growing list of dwarf planets.

Researchers find evidence of oceans on Mars

0 comments
A team of Canadian and U.S. researchers have uncovered evidence that ragged, kilometre-high undulating features on the surface of Mars were shorelines of massive ancient oceans that once covered one-third of the planet in water.

Spitzer Searches for the Origins of Life of Earth

0 comments
Astronomers suspect the early Earth was a very harsh place. Temperatures were extreme, and the planet was constantly bombarded by cosmic debris. Many scientists believe that life's starting materials, or building blocks, must have been very resilient to have survived this tumultuous environment.

Astronomers Measure Mass of Largest Dwarf Planet

0 comments
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has teamed up with the W.M. Keck Observatory to precisely measure the mass of Eris, the largest member of a new class of dwarf planets in our solar system. Eris is 1.27 times the mass of Pluto, formerly the largest member of the Kuiper Belt of icy objects beyond Neptune.

Free from the Atmosphere

0 comments
In order to counteract the blurring effect of Earth's atmosphere, astronomers use the adaptive optics technique. This requires, however, a nearby reference star that has to be relatively bright, thereby limiting the area of the sky that can be surveyed. To surmount this limitation, astronomers now use at Paranal a powerful laser that creates an artificial star, where and when they need it.

Running Rings Around the Galaxy

0 comments
An astronomer at the Spitzer Science Center has discovered three giant stellar streams arcing high over the Milky Way. Remnants of cannibalized galaxies and star clusters, the streams are between 13,000 and 130,000 light-years distant from Earth and extend over much of the northern sky. The new results are being presented by Carl Grillmair at this week's meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Venus Flyby

0 comments
Picture this: A spaceship swoops in from the void, plunging toward a cloudy planet about the size of Earth. A laser beam lances out from the ship; it probes the planet's clouds, striving to reach the hidden surface below. Meanwhile, back on the craft's home world, scientists perch on the edge of their seats waiting to see what happens.

Lighting Up the Dark Universe

0 comments
For most of the 20th century, everything that cosmologists observed in the heavens confirmed the laws of physics we know on Earth.

Advertisement

Poll: Like Our New Look?
Do you like our new Hypography look & feel?