January 10, 2009 Space News from SpaceDaily.com SpaceDaily Advertising Kit
France to supply technology for Vietnam satellite: state media
Hanoi (AFP) Jan 8, 2009
Vietnam has chosen France to supply the technology for its second satellite, state media reported Thursday. Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung said France will also provide aid for the VNREDSat-1 project, which would be worth an estimated 100 million dollars, according the English-language Vietnam News daily. Vietnam last April celebrated the launch of its first satellite, the 300 million do ... read more

First asteroids found with Earthlike crust
College Park, Md. (UPI) Jan 8, 2009
Two meteorites found in Antarctica are from an asteroid with an outer layer or crust similar to the Earth's continents, U.S. scientists said Thursday. The finding is the first from an asteroid with an Earthlike crust, the University of Maryland geochemists and other researchers reported in the journal Nature. The discovery also represents the oldest example of rock with this comp ... more

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Loud noise permeates cosmos, NASA says
Greenbelt, Md. (UPI) Jan 8, 2009
A mysterious extra-loud radio noise permeates the universe, preventing astronomers from observing heat from the first stars, U.S. scientists at NASA said. The noise, picked up by a balloon-borne instrument, makes no sense, based on science's current understanding of the cosmos, the scientists at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said. "The universe really threw us ... more

Study: Pebbles can move against wind
Calgary, Alberta (UPI) Jan 8, 2009
Pebbles that become part of clastic rocks in places like Arizona's Lower Antelope Canyon don't move with the wind but against it, a geosciences professor said. Rather than being pushed into formations, the pebbles, or clasts, have the loose sand around them removed by the wind, Andrew Leier of the University of Calgary said in the journal Geology. The sand removal causes scour-pi ... more

Star Light, Star Bright, Its Explanation Is Out Of Sight
Baltimore MD (SPX) Jan 09, 2009
A mysterious flash of light from somewhere near or far in the universe is still keeping astronomers in the dark long after it was first detected by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope in 2006. It might represent an entirely new class of stellar phenomena that has previously gone undetected in the universe, say researchers. Astronomers commonly observe intense flashes of light from a variety of ... more

Spacehab To Support Pre-Launch Preparations For Russian Module
Houston TX (SPX) Jan 09, 2009
Spacehab, has reached an agreement in principal with RSC Energia, Russia's largest manufacturer of aerospace and space equipment, to provide facilities and support services for its Mini Research Module (MRM1). The MRM1 will be readied for its journey aboard the U.S. Space Shuttle at the Spacehab Cape Canaveral payload processing location. Manifested to fly on STS-132 during the Space Shu ... more

 

  • Lunar Rock-Like Material May Someday House Moon Colonies


  • Jupiter-Like Planets Could Form Around Twin Suns


  • Human Spaceflight To Mars Proposed Using Combination Of Space Shuttles


  • Hubble Images Galactic Core in Unprecedented New Detail
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    DLR Scholarship For Interdisciplinary Space Research
    Bonn, Germany (SPX) Jan 09, 2009
    The "SpaceLife" programme of the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) is the winning entry in response to a call for proposals by the Helmholtz Association (Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft) for research scholarship programmes for early-stage researchers, beating competing entries from other Helmholtz Centres. The programme proposed by the DLR Institute of Aerospa ... more

    Study Reveals Hazards Of Severe Space Weather
    Washington DC (SPX) Jan 08, 2009
    A NASA-funded study describes how extreme solar eruptions could have severe consequences for communications, power grids and other technology on Earth. The National Academy of Sciences in Washington conducted the study. The resulting report provides some of the first clear economic data that effectively quantifies today's risk of extreme conditions in space driven by magnetic activity on ... more

    Sagittarius offers planet clues
    Rochester, N.Y. (UPI) Jan 6, 2009
    U.S. astronomers say planets may be able to form around certain types of binary star systems. Joel Kastner of the Rochester Institute of Technology said a disk of molecules discovered orbiting a pair of twin young suns in the constellation Sagittarius suggests binary systems host planets. "We think the molecular gas orbiting these two stars almost literally represents 'smoking gu ... more

     

  • Physicist Offers Foundation For Uprooting A Hallowed Principle Of Physics


  • NASA Seeks Concept Proposals For Ares V Heavy Lift Rocket


  • Milky Way bigger, denser than thought
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  • Kogod Students Pioneer Branding Potential Of International Space Station
  • Indian Farmers To Consult Scientists Via Satellite
  • ISRO To Launch Four Foreign Satellites This Year
  • Fermi Telescope Unveils A Dozen New Pulsars
  • Sony debuts pocket-sized notebook computer
  • Cassiopeia A Comes Alive Across Time And Space
  • Wall crumbling between televisions and computers
  • Windows 7 beta available worldwide on Friday

  • Ariancespace Celebrates Year Of Successes
  • A Change Of Seasons On Mars
  • Stevie Wonder looking for gadgets for the blind
  • Millions isolated as northwest US deluged by flooding
  • Mexico City launches emergency water plan
  • Despite deep chill, global warming is still a peril: scientists
  • Intel warns of big slump in revenues
  • China's Foton to form 930-mln-dlr truck partnership with Daimler

  • Cathay Pacific books 7.6 billion HK dollar loss over oil hedging
  • Outside View: Internet threats -- Part 6
  • 'Cybergeddon' fear stalks US: FBI
  • Australian military warns of climate conflict: report
  • 'Scrawny' gene keeps stem cells healthy
  • Study: Pterosaurs used 4 legs to lift off
  • Ten dead in Mozambique storm: report
  • China-Russia Mars mission set for takeoff



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