July 06, 2007 24/7 News Coverage our time will build eternity
Summer Moon Illusion
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 29, 2007
On Saturday night, June 30th, step outside at sunset and look around. You'll see a giant moon rising in the east. It looks like Earth's moon with the usual craters and seas, but something's wrong. This full moon is strangely inflated. It's huge! You've just experienced the Moon Illusion. Sky watchers have known for thousands of years that low-hanging moons look unnaturally big. Cameras don't see ... read more
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    NASA Selects Reynolds To Design Emergency Egress System For Orion Astronauts
    Jacksonville FL (SPX) Jun 28, 2007
    Reynolds, Smith and Hills, a leading facilities and infrastructure consulting firms whose client-centered program structure provides value-added solutions to clients around the world, announced it has been selected by NASA to design the Emergency Egress System for Orion, the next generation space exploration vehicle that is expected to launch in 2014. The new escape system will allow astronauts ... more

    Thinking Big About Space Telescopes
    Washington DC (SPX) Jun 27, 2007
    How big? Consider the following: Ares V will be able to place almost 130,000 kg (284,000 lbs; 8% more than the Saturn V rocket of the 1960s) into low Earth orbit. Designed to deliver cargo to the Moon, the rocket would be large enough to carry primary mirrors 8+ meters wide. For comparison, Hubble's mirror measures 2.4 m. "How does a typical astrophysicist work?" Stahl asks. ... more

    Moon Jobs May Crater Suggests Rutgers-Camden Researcher
    Camden NJ (SPX) Jun 25, 2007
    Think your job is tough? Can't wait for summer vacation to "get away from it all"? Just wait, says a Rutgers University-Camden researcher. In the not-too-distant future, some jobs will challenge workers placed far, far away from it all. On the moon, in fact. According to Chester Spell, an associate professor of management at the Rutgers School of Business-Camden, the lunar settlements of tomorrow ... more

    NASA Plans New Era Of Suitcase Sized Lunar Science
    Washington DC (SPX) Jun 22, 2007
    NASA has selected proposals, including two from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., for future lunar science activities. In addition, the agency has established two new programs that will enhance research made possible by the Vision for Space Exploration. The proposals and programs are part of an effort by NASA to develop new opportunities to conduct important science investigation ... more

    X PRIZE Announces Competitors For Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge
    Santa Monica CA (SPX) Jun 21, 2007
    A real rocket race is on the horizon with the return of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge (NG-LLC) -- the centerpiece of the Wirefly X PRIZE Cup and Holloman Air and Space Expo. In the Challenge's second year, the number of teams competing for the $2 million purse has increased from four teams to nine. The NG-LLC, sponsored by NASA's Centennial Challenges Program, is designed to ... more

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    Vignette Helps NASA Make Giant Leap To The Moon And Beyond
    Austin TX (SPX) Jun 11, 2007
    Vignette's Next-Generation Web solutions are helping NASA engineers and scientists connect and share information online, as the federal agency designs its next generation of space vehicles for the Constellation Program. The Constellation Program is responsible for developing crew exploration and launch vehicles that will send humans back to the moon and then to Mars. ... more

    Testing Technique For Gravitomagnetic Field Is Ineffective
    Columbia, MO (SPX) Jun 05, 2007
    Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity has fascinated physicists and generated debate about the origin of the universe and the structure of objects like black holes and complex stars called quasars. A major focus has been on confirming the existence of the gravitomagnetic field, as well as gravitational waves. A physicist at the University of Missouri-Columbia recently argued in ... more

    Building Our New View Of Titan
    Paris, France (ESA) Jun 05, 2007
    Today, two and a half years after the historic landing of ESA's Huygens probe on Titan, a new set of results on Saturn's largest moon is ready to be presented. Titan, as seen through the eyes of Huygens still holds exciting surprises, scientists say. On 14 January 2005, after a seven-year voyage on board the NASA/ESA/ASI Cassini spacecraft, ESA's Huygens probe spent 2 hours and 28 minutes ... more

    A Climate Monitoring Station On The Moon
    Ann Arbor, MI (SPX) May 30, 2007
    Poets may see "a face of plaintive sweetness" or "a cheek like beryl stone" when they look at the moon, but Shaopeng Huang sees something else altogether: the ideal location for a network of observatories dedicated to studying climate change on Earth. Using data from an Apollo 15 experiment whose original intent was thwarted by unanticipated lunar surface conditions, the University of Michigan ... more

      solarscience
  • Magnetic Field Uses Sound Waves To Ignite Solar Ring Of Fire

    lunar
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    Coasts And Drowned Mountains
    Pasadena CA (JPL) May 24, 2007
    On May 12, 2007, Cassini completed its 31st flyby of Saturn's moon Titan, which the team calls T30. The radar instrument obtained this image showing the coastline and numerous island groups of a portion of a large sea, consistent with the larger sea seen by the Cassini imaging instrument. Like other bodies of liquid seen on Titan, this feature reveals channels, islands, bays, and other fea ... more

    Out Iapetus Way And Back Again
    Cameron Park (SPX) May 19, 2007
    Thanks both to Earth observations and Voyager 2, Hyperion was known to be a first-class little oddball of a moon even before Cassini examined it closeup. It orbits just 260,000 km beyond Saturn's huge moon Titan, and it has drifted somehow into an "orbital-period resonance" with Titan such that it circles Saturn exactly three times for Titan's four. It's shaped rather like a thick hamburger pat ... more

    First China Mission To Moon To Launch By Year End
    Beijing (Xinhua) May 22, 2007
    China was "losing no time" in preparing its first lunar orbiter, Chang'e I, which will most likely be launched in the second half of 2007, a space official said here on Sunday. "The moon probe project is the third milestone in China's space technology after satellite and manned spacecraft projects, and a first step for us in exploring deep space," said Sun Laiyan ... more

    Oresme Crater Show Many Signs Of The Early Lunar Heavy Bombardment
    Paris, France (ESA) May 22, 2007
    This image, taken by the Advanced Moon Imaging Experiment (AMIE) on board ESA's SMART-1 spacecraft, shows the Oresme crater on the Moon. AMIE obtained this picture on 30 August 2006 - only 4 days before SMART-1's final impact on the lunar surface. It was taken from a distance of 1 100 kilometres over the surface, with a ground resolution of 110 metres per pixel. Oresme is located on the Moon's farside ... more

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