• Hoyt Davidson, Sunday, 12-30-12

    Updated: 2012-12-31 04:09:30
    Hoyt Davidson, Sunday, 12-30-12 http://archived.thespaceshow.com/shows/1920-BWB-2012-12-30.mp3 Guest:  Hoyt Davidson.  Topics:  Commercial space financing, markets, and risks.  Please direct all comments and questions regarding Space Show programs/guest(s) to the Space Show blog, http://thespaceshow.wordpress.com. Comments and questions should be relevant to the specific Space Show program. Written Transcripts of Space Show programs are a violation of our copyright [...]

  • Receptionist Wanted

    Updated: 2012-12-29 00:18:29
    Job Posting: Mojave Air & Space Port has an excellent career opportunity for an experienced Receptionist. We’re looking for someone with a bubbly personality who will greet visitors and answer phones. In addition to the receptionist role, this position will provide clerical support to the executive team. Must be proficient in Word/Excel/Outlook and type at [...]

  • Shiny Delivery this Holiday Season for the “Time and Navigation” Exhibit

    Updated: 2012-12-28 22:35:41
    Preparation of the upcoming Time and Navigation exhibition is in full swing, and objects are being installed in cases throughout the gallery.  In fact, the gallery became a little more shiny just in time for the holiday season thanks to … Continue reading →

  • Today on New Scientist: 28 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-28 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 28 December 2012 18:00 28 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Best videos of 2012 : Rare view of Challenger tragedy Watch a rare amateur video of the Challenger explosion , our most-viewed video of the year Strong jet stream super-charged US Christmas storms Record snowfall and dozens of tornadoes

  • Mars Curiosity Rover Self-Portrait, Wide View

    Updated: 2012-12-27 17:54:33
    , Home About SpaceRef SpaceRef Business SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia SpaceRef Canada NASA Watch Get Our Daily Newsletter Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Astrobiology Mars Curiosity Rover Self-Portrait , Wide View By Keith Cowing Posted December 27, 2012 12:54 PM View Comments NASA Curiosity On the 84th and 85th Martian days of the NASA Mars rover Curiosity's mission on Mars Oct . 31 and Nov . 1, 2012 NASA's Curiosity rover used the Mars Hand Lens Imager MAHLI to capture dozens of high-resolution images to be combined into self-portrait images of the rover . The mosaic shows the rover at Rocknest , the spot in Gale Crater where the mission's first scoop sampling

  • International Space Station Crew Celebrates Christmas

    Updated: 2012-12-27 15:39:00
    Aboard the orbiting International Space Station, Expedition 34 Commander Kevin Ford, Russian Flight Engineers Oleg Novitskiy, Evgeny Tarelkin and Roman Romanenko, NASA Flight Engineer Tom Marshburn and Canadian Space Agency Chris Hadfield celebrated Christmas on the orbital laboratory Dec. 25, 2012 through song and downlink messages of cheer for flight controllers on the ground. The crew spent Christmas enjoying a joint meal with one another, sharing holiday greetings with their families in private conferences and soaking up the view of the Earth from the outpost.

  • Curiosity Rover Report: Curiosity's Martian Holiday

    Updated: 2012-12-24 14:26:40
    Curiosity will spend the holidays at a location on Mars dubbed "Grandma's House."

  • A Message from the International Space Station to All Humankind

    Updated: 2012-12-24 14:10:00
    NASA Television shares this inspiring production by Italian videomaker, Giacomo Sardelli, about the International Space Station, its inhabitants, and its role in space exploration. Sardelli writes of the video, "I'm not the first one to use NASA's pictures taken from the International Space Station to craft a Timelapse video. You can find many of them on the Internet, that's where my inspiration came from. What I wanted to do, though, was to look beyond the intrinsic beauty of those pictures, and use them to tell a story and share the messages sent by the astronauts who worked on the station in the last 11 years."

  • Enter the Santa Copter

    Updated: 2012-12-24 14:00:57
    The good girls and boys of the Coast Guard Air Station Brooklyn get a visit from Santa, December 1944. Santa’s getting a lift on a Coast Guard HNS-1, the naval version of the Sikorsky R-4, the first helicopter to see … Continue reading →

  • ScienceCasts: Christmas Sky Show

    Updated: 2012-12-24 13:43:35
    The Moon and Jupiter are converging for a heavenly sky show on Christmas 2012. Got a telescope? Something extra-special is happening on Jupiter that makes it an appealing target for backyard optics.

  • SpaceX launches its Grasshopper rocket on 12-story-high hop in Texas

    Updated: 2012-12-24 04:06:31
    SpaceX's prototype Grasshopper rocket took one giant leap last week, rising to a 12-story height and settling back down safely on its landing legs at the company's Texas rocket test facility. Just for fun, the engineers let a dummy cowboy go along for the ride. The Dec. 17 test f hellip;

  • A Note From Ho Chi Minh

    Updated: 2012-12-23 20:24:20
    In 1968, in the midst of war, Apollo 8 offered a glimmer of hope and humanity.

  • All Clear Given on Potential Impact of Asteroid 2011 AG5

    Updated: 2012-12-22 19:32:09
    Home About SpaceRef SpaceRef Business SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia SpaceRef Canada NASA Watch Get Our Daily Newsletter Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Astrobiology All Clear Given on Potential Impact of Asteroid 2011 AG5 By Keith Cowing Posted December 22, 2012 2:32 PM View Comments NASA scientists have announced that new observations of 2011 AG5 show that this asteroid , once thought to have a worrisome potential to threaten Earth , no longer poses a significant risk of . impact The orbital uncertainties of the 140m diameter near-Earth asteroid had previously allowed a 0.2 chance of collision in Feb . 2040, leading to a call for more observations to better

  • A Backlit View Of Saturn

    Updated: 2012-12-22 19:02:56
    Home About SpaceRef SpaceRef Business SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia SpaceRef Canada NASA Watch Get Our Daily Newsletter Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Astrobiology A Backlit View Of Saturn By Keith Cowing Posted December 22, 2012 2:02 PM View Comments NASA Saturn NASA's Cassini spacecraft has delivered a glorious view of Saturn , taken while the spacecraft was in Saturn's shadow . The cameras were turned toward Saturn and the sun so that the planet and rings are . backlit The sun is behind the planet , which is shielding the cameras from direct sunlight . In addition to the visual splendor , this special , very-high-phase viewing geometry lets scientists study

  • Mission Accomplished for Landsat 5

    Updated: 2012-12-21 18:36:59
    Home About SpaceRef SpaceRef Business SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia SpaceRef Canada NASA Watch Get Our Daily Newsletter Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Astrobiology Mission Accomplished for Landsat 5 By Keith Cowing Posted December 21, 2012 1:36 PM View Comments Today the U.S . Geological Survey announced that Landsat 5 will be decommissioned over the coming months , bringing to a close the longest-operating Earth observing satellite mission in . history By any measure , the Landsat 5 mission has been an extraordinary success , providing unprecedented contributions to the global record of land change . The USGS has brought the aging satellite back from the brink

  • Today on New Scientist: 21 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-21 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 21 December 2012 18:00 21 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Cadaver stem cells offer new hope of life after death Stem cells can be extracted from bone marrow five days after death to be used in life-saving treatments Apple's patents under fire at US patent office The tech firm is skating on thin ice

  • Studio sessions show how Bengalese finch stays in tune

    Updated: 2012-12-21 15:52:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Studio sessions show how Bengalese finch stays in tune 15:52 21 December 2012 Life Picture of the Day Julian Richards , deputy editor , newscientist.com Image : Sam Sober Emory University Let's take it from the top again . Human singing stars these days rely on Auto-Tune technology to produce the right pitch , but this songbird does it the old way by listening out for its own mistakes . And it's also smart

  • What Are the Health Requirements for Space Tourism?

    Updated: 2012-12-21 00:28:41
    With space tourism right on the cusp of taking off, one has to wonder what are the health requirements in order to go into low earth orbit (LEO)? This is a question that medical professionals and the space tourism industry is asking right now. According to SFGate, “With space tourism on the cusp of becoming [...]

  • Today on New Scientist: 20 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-20 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 20 December 2012 18:00 20 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Spider builds giant decoy of itself A naturalist trekking in Peru has spotted a spider that builds a huge decoy doppelganger out of leaves and dead insects How to reduce the toll from US gun violence In the wake of last week's massacre at a

  • Science Definition Team for the 2020 Mars Rover

    Updated: 2012-12-20 17:58:20
    Home About SpaceRef SpaceRef Business SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia SpaceRef Canada NASA Watch Get Our Daily Newsletter Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Astrobiology Science Definition Team for the 2020 Mars Rover By Keith Cowing Posted December 20, 2012 12:58 PM View Comments NASA Mars 2020 Rover The National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA invites scientists , technologists , and other qualified and interested individuals at U.S . institutions and elsewhere to apply for membership on the Science Definition Team SDT for the 2020 Mars science rover mission hereafter Mars-2020 Mars-2020 is a strategic mission sponsored by NASA's Planetary Science Division

  • Spider builds giant decoy of itself

    Updated: 2012-12-20 16:30:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Spider builds giant decoy of itself 16:30 20 December 2012 Life Picture of the Day Flora Graham , deputy editor , newscientist.com Image : Phil Torres Hanging out in the jungles of Peru can be a dangerous pastime for a spider how do you dodge predators while casting your web in the open A newly spied type of Cyclosa spider has come up with a solution hide behind a giant , fake version of . yourself Naturalist

  • Brevard family watches nephew fly to ISS FLORIDA TODAY floridatoday.com

    Updated: 2012-12-20 13:01:23
    Continue Reading Advertisement You will be redirected to the page you want to view in seconds . JOBS CARS HOMES RENTALS CLASSIFIEDS LEGAL ADS ADVERTISE WITH US Hi , My account Newsletters Log out Log in Subscribe Activate E-Newspaper Help FAQ Subscribe to FLORIDA TODAY Place an Ad Contact Us Work for Us News Sports Lifestyles Opinions Photos Video Entertainment Obituaries Space News Brevard News Florida News Education News Crime News Business News Nation World Weather News Archives LATEST HEADLINES Palm Bay playground's ship comes in for free Palm Bay neighbors come together to build a pirate playground donated to the . city 7:00 am Brevard Schools rolls out proposed cuts 400+ jobs on the table More than 400 jobs , including many teachers , could be cut under a plan proposed by Brevard

  • NASA communications satellite arrives for January launch FLORIDA TODAY floridatoday.com

    Updated: 2012-12-20 13:01:23
    Continue Reading Advertisement You will be redirected to the page you want to view in seconds . JOBS CARS HOMES RENTALS CLASSIFIEDS LEGAL ADS ADVERTISE WITH US Hi , My account Newsletters Log out Log in Subscribe Activate E-Newspaper Help FAQ Subscribe to FLORIDA TODAY Place an Ad Contact Us Work for Us News Sports Lifestyles Opinions Photos Video Entertainment Obituaries Space News Brevard News Florida News Education News Crime News Business News Nation World Weather News Archives LATEST HEADLINES Palm Bay playground's ship comes in for free Palm Bay neighbors come together to build a pirate playground donated to the . city 7:00 am Brevard Schools rolls out proposed cuts 400+ jobs on the table More than 400 jobs , including many teachers , could be cut under a plan proposed by Brevard

  • Today on New Scientist: 19 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-19 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 19 December 2012 18:00 19 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Cassini captures spectacle in Saturn's shadow Saturn blocks out the sun to reveal its rings in all their splendour in this image from the Cassini spacecraft Fabricated future : The sceptic's guide to 3D printing 3D printing is a

  • Cassini captures spectacle in Saturn's shadow

    Updated: 2012-12-19 14:04:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Cassini captures spectacle in Saturn's shadow 14:04 19 December 2012 Picture of the Day Space Flora Graham , deputy editor , newscientist.com Image : NASA JPL-Caltech SSI Like a Christmas bauble hanging in the night , this view of a backlit Saturn shines in the darkness . The image was taken during a rare chance for NASA's Cassini spacecraft to observe the planet's rings while in Saturn's shadow .

  • Soyuz crew streaks toward International Space Station FLORIDA TODAY floridatoday.com

    Updated: 2012-12-19 13:41:16
    Continue Reading Advertisement You will be redirected to the page you want to view in seconds . JOBS CARS HOMES RENTALS CLASSIFIEDS LEGAL ADS ADVERTISE WITH US Hi , My account Newsletters Log out Log in Subscribe Activate E-Newspaper Help FAQ Subscribe to FLORIDA TODAY Place an Ad Contact Us Work for Us News Sports Lifestyles Opinions Photos Video Entertainment Obituaries Space News Brevard News Florida News Education News Crime News Business News Nation World Weather News Archives LATEST HEADLINES Soyuz crew streaks toward International Space Station Amid frigid conditions , three explorers blasted off from a central Asian spaceport today on a . 7:57 am Brevard legislators : Armed teachers worth considering Should teachers bring guns to school along with their briefcases and lunch bags

  • Soyuz Rocket Launches Expedition 34 to the International Space Station

    Updated: 2012-12-19 00:45:00
    Home About SpaceRef SpaceRef Business SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia SpaceRef Canada NASA Watch Get Our Daily Newsletter Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Astrobiology Soyuz Rocket Launches Expedition 34 to the International Space Station By Marc Boucher Posted December 19, 2012 7:45 AM View Comments NASA Expedition 34 . launch At 7:12 a.m . ET this morning the Soyuz TMA-07M rocket with the Expedition 34 crew of Chris Hadfield Canada Tom Marshburn USA and Roman Romanenko Russia launched to the International Space Station on Expedition 34 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in . Kazakhstan As the sun set in the early evening in Baikonour it was a frigid 18c at launch time

  • A Cosmic Holiday Ornament, Hubble-Style

    Updated: 2012-12-19 00:07:10
    , Home About SpaceRef SpaceRef Business SpaceRef Europe SpaceRef Asia SpaceRef Canada NASA Watch Get Our Daily Newsletter Loading Missions Space Station Calendar News Archives Space Weather Space Quarterly Magazine Mercury Venus Earth Moon Mars Jupiter Saturn Pluto Asteroids Comets Astrobiology A Cosmic Holiday Ornament , Hubble-Style By Keith Cowing Posted December 18, 2012 7:07 PM View Comments STSCI NGC 5189 Tis the season for holiday decorating and tree-trimming . Not to be left out , astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have photographed a festive-looking nearby planetary nebula called NGC 5189. The intricate structure of this bright gaseous nebula resembles a glass-blown holiday ornament with a glowing ribbon . entwined Planetary nebulae represent the final brief stage in

  • Spy Pigeons

    Updated: 2012-12-18 20:59:46
    Unlikely soldiers during World War II: More than 250,000 pigeons deployed by the British.

  • Today on New Scientist: 18 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-18 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 18 December 2012 18:00 18 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Violent polar storms help control the world's weather Without the mini-hurricanes which form over the Arctic , the world could face massive weather disruption Ancient city of Troy rebranded itself after war Changing styles of pottery 3200

  • Colourful claw of tiny ocean predator

    Updated: 2012-12-18 17:08:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Colourful claw of tiny ocean predator 17:08 18 December 2012 Life Picture of the Day Michael Marshall , environment reporter Image : Christian Sardet and Sharif Mirshak Olympus BioScapes 2012 This is the claw of a P hronima a tiny but violent predator that stalks the . oceans Just a few centimetres long , Phronima are crustaceans that feed on jelly-like organisms like salps . They rip their victims to pieces

  • Mark Bray, Monday, 12-17-12

    Updated: 2012-12-18 16:57:24
    Mark Bray, Monday, 12-17-12 http://archived.thespaceshow.com/shows/1916-BWB-2012-12-17.mp3 Guest:  Mark Bray.  Topics:  Commercial space market development.  Please direct all comments and questions regarding Space Show programs/guest(s) to the Space Show blog, http://thespaceshow.wordpress.com. Comments and questions should be relevant to the specific Space Show program. Written Transcripts of Space Show programs are a violation of our copyright and are [...]

  • Today on New Scientist: 17 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-17 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 17 December 2012 18:00 17 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist What leaked IPCC report really says on climate change Last week's leak of an early draft of a major report on climate change gives us an insight into what we can expect when the final version is published in nine months' time

  • BBC interviews David Mackay, Virgin Galactic pilot

    Updated: 2012-12-17 15:21:39
    An interview with David Mackay, Chief Astronaut Pilot with Virgin Galactic: Virgin Galactic: Commercial trips to space by 2014 -- BBC News David Mackay: The pilot who will fly to space -- BBC News

  • UKSEDS welcomes new branches

    Updated: 2012-12-17 15:19:01
    (Source: UKSEDS) The UK Students for the Exploration & Development of Space (UKSEDS) network continues to grow, with the establishment of several new branches: Bath PhySoc, Exeter PhySoc, Edinburgh AstroSoc, Universities of Liverpool AstroSoc, Nottingham Trent University Astronomy and Physics Society (APSoc), QMUL Psistar Society, St Andrews Astronomy Society, UCL Mechanical Engineering Society (MechEngSoc) and Warwick PhySoc. UKSEDS now has nearly 30 branches nationwide.

  • Virgin looking for propulsion design engineer

    Updated: 2012-12-17 15:14:49
    (Source: Twitter) Virgin Galactic is looking for a propulsion design engineer with extensive experience in liquid rocket propulsion. Rocketeer comments: Insert obligatory comment about "we told you about nitrous hybrids but oh no, you wouldn't listen..."

  • Jim Keravala, Shackleton Energy Co., Friday, 12-14-12

    Updated: 2012-12-15 17:35:27
    Jim Keravala, Shackleton Energy Co., Friday, 12-14-12 http://archived.thespaceshow.com/shows/1914-BWB-2012-12-14.mp3 Guest:  Jim Keravala.  Topics:  Shackleton Energy’s cislunar economic development plans.  Please direct all comments and questions regarding Space Show programs/guest(s) to the Space Show blog, http://thespaceshow.wordpress.com. Comments and questions should be relevant to the specific Space Show program. Written Transcripts of Space Show programs are a violation [...]

  • The First Planetary Explorers

    Updated: 2012-12-15 00:04:30
    Fifty years ago today, a JPL team overcame the odds and pulled off the first visit to another planet.

  • CERN becomes first pure physics voice in UN chorus

    Updated: 2012-12-14 22:45:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy CERN becomes first pure physics voice in UN chorus 22:45 14 December 2012 Physics Math Science In Society Lisa Grossman , physical sciences reporter Image : UN Photo Paulo Filgueiras If CERN observes the proceedings of the United Nations , will it change the outcome The international particle physics laboratory , based near Geneva , Switzerland , has been granted observer status in the General Assembly of the

  • Today on New Scientist: 14 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-14 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 14 December 2012 18:00 14 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Global cuteness increased by discovery of new loris Three new species of Bornean slow loris have been discovered , quadrupling the world's cuteness index Time-travelling 3D tour shows birth of Eiffel Tower Watch an ultra-realistic 3D

  • Global cuteness increased by discovery of new loris

    Updated: 2012-12-14 17:46:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Global cuteness increased by discovery of new loris 17:46 14 December 2012 Life Picture of the Day Flora Graham , deputy editor , newscientist.com Image : Ch'ien C . Lee Gaze into this slow loris's adorably furry face and you'll see more than the world's cutest animal . The mask-like colouration of the fur around its eyes and on the top of its head has led it to be recognised as a brand new . species

  • Today on New Scientist: 13 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-13 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 13 December 2012 18:00 13 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Violent beauty at the end of an Alaskan glacier You can almost hear the crash of ice on water in this stunning image of an ice sheet calving off the Chenega glacier in Alaska Overeating now bigger global problem than lack of food The most

  • Violent beauty at the end of an Alaskan glacier

    Updated: 2012-12-13 17:50:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Violent beauty at the end of an Alaskan glacier 17:50 13 December 2012 Environment Picture of the Day Flora Graham , deputy editor , newscientist.com Image : Jon Cornforth Caters You can almost hear the crash of ice on water in this image of an ice sheet shearing off the Chenega glacier in Prince William Sound , Alaska . But when photographer Jon Cornforth pressed the shutter , it was eerily . silent I saw

  • Qi3: The International Space Station is open for business

    Updated: 2012-12-13 00:34:30
    Business development advisory group Qi3 welcomes the UK government investment in microgravity R&D on the International Space Station: The International Space Station is now open for business -- Qi3 Insight

  • Timeshift: The British Space Race [VIDEO]

    Updated: 2012-12-13 00:15:16
    The accomplishments of the British rocket programme in the 1960's, tragically cut short by Government shortsightedness...

  • Today on New Scientist: 12 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-12 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 12 December 2012 18:00 12 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist All-seeing headset gives you 360-degree vision Eyes in the back of your head get them with a system that captures images from all around you and turns them into something human vision can grasp Target faulty brain circuits to treat mental

  • Data art shows what years of computer use looks like

    Updated: 2012-12-12 17:29:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Data art shows what years of computer use looks like 17:29 12 December 2012 Picture of the Day Technology Flora Graham , deputy editor , newscientist.com Image : Marcin Ignac Two-and-a-half years of mouse moves , key presses and application launches are strung together to create Marcin Ignac s art . As a digital designer , he spends a lot of time in front of the computer , and he has covered canvasses with

  • Robert (Bob) Zimmerman, Monday, 12-10-12

    Updated: 2012-12-11 18:01:13
    Robert (Bob) Zimmerman, Monday, 12-10-12 http://archived.thespaceshow.com/shows/1911-BWB-2012-12-10.mp3 Guest:  Robert (Bob) Zimmerman.  Topics:  Apollo 8, launch industry, HSF, SLS, Mars missions, NASA budget, & more.  Please direct all comments and questions regarding Space Show programs/guest(s) to the Space Show blog, http://thespaceshow.wordpress.com. Comments and questions should be relevant to the specific Space Show program. Written Transcripts of Space [...]

  • Today on New Scientist: 11 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-11 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 11 December 2012 18:00 11 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Out-of-season's greetings from the Arctic frost flowers Season's regards from an icy meadow in the Arctic , but it's no winter wonderland and please don't dash out into it How hacking a mosquito's heart could eradicate malaria Watch how a

  • Out-of-season's greetings from the Arctic frost flowers

    Updated: 2012-12-11 17:30:00
    : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Out-of-season's greetings from the Arctic frost flowers 17:30 11 December 2012 Environment Picture of the Day Joanna Carver , reporter Image : Matthias Wietz IGERT NSF Season's regards from an icy meadow in the Arctic , but it's no winter wonderland and please don't dash out into it . These frost flowers generally form in spring , and only on thin ice , so you'd quickly find yourself in freezing water in a

  • Today on New Scientist: 10 December 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-10 18:00:00
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Cookies Privacy Today on New Scientist : 10 December 2012 18:00 10 December 2012 Today on New Scientist Full text RSS You can now subscribe to the full text of Today on New . Scientist Doha summit launches climate damage aid Rich countries have promised to help the poor cope with the inevitable loss and damage caused by climate change , but much remains to be agreed Seeing the Amazon in a new light will help to save it Not

  • The Overview Effect

    Updated: 2012-12-07 21:59:42
    A new film celebrates the perspective that comes with seeing the Earth from afar.

  • GENIE flights rescheduled for early 2013

    Updated: 2012-12-07 19:18:16
    Due to technical delays encountered during flight test operations, the planned C4 and C5 flights of the GENIE system</a on XA-0.1B have been delayed (see original campaign package). The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory and Masten Space Systems, in conjunction with the NASA Flight Opportunities Program, are looking to resume the activity after the holiday season. Please check back here or on Twitter for future updates.

  • Fly me to the moon? Can do, for $1.5B

    Updated: 2012-12-06 20:18:55
    By Mark K. Matthews, Washington Bureau WASHINGTON — The idea sounds so preposterous that even its backers admit it seems lifted from the pages of an Isaac Asimov novel. But the architects of a new aerospace company plan to do what kids have dreamed about since the Apollo age: create a business that can [...]

  • Gorgeous Victorian 4BR 2.5BA, Priced To Ship to Mars ASAP!

    Updated: 2012-12-06 17:45:13
    A realty company wondered what it might cost to launch your house to Mars.

  • Golden Spike promo video

    Updated: 2012-12-06 17:15:45

  • Results of consultation on 1986 Outer Space Act delayed

    Updated: 2012-12-06 13:38:27
    UKSA reports that they have received so many replies to a consultation about changes to the 1986 Outer Space Act that the Government response has been delayed. They expect it some time in the first half of 2013. Reform of the Outer Space Act 1986 consultation update -- UK Space Agency

  • Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo could become science lab

    Updated: 2012-12-06 13:34:43
    Wil Pomerantz promotes the microgravity research applications of the Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo spaceplane at the recent meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU). Virgin spaceship aims to be science lab -- BBC News

  • Countdown to Disaster

    Updated: 2012-12-05 22:06:59
    When it comes to the Fiscal Cliff, says one aerospace executive, “Not only are we running out of time, we’re running out of metaphors.”

  • Golden Spike Announcement: The Future of Lunar Space Travel

    Updated: 2012-12-05 20:26:08
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  • Space Innovation & Growth Strategy: Restack Meeting Nov 2012

    Updated: 2012-12-04 22:07:28
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  • Dr Paul Spudis to speak at Royal Astronomical Society

    Updated: 2012-12-04 21:44:25
    There will be public lectures by Dr Paul Spudis (Lunar and Planetary Institute) on 'Water on the Moon', and Dr Xavier Dumusque (Geneva Observatory) on 'The Planet Next Door: An Earth-Mass World Orbiting Alpha Centauri B' at the Royal Astronomical Society on 14th December. RAS Discussion Meetings 2012

  • Willetts: Harwell to become a 'Space City'; UK third in ESA contributions

    Updated: 2012-12-04 21:37:13
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  • Cambridge Consultants in Iridium NEXT technology development

    Updated: 2012-12-04 21:27:57
    UK technology design specialist Cambridge Consultants is leading development of prototype subscriber communications equipment for the upcoming Iridium NEXT satellite constellation. Cambridge Tech in Nextgen Space Programme -- Business Weekly

  • 4Growth campaign meeting

    Updated: 2012-12-04 09:39:55
    home forum newsfeeds videos calendar Home User login Username : Password : Request new password To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field . empty Navigation Calendar Forums Recent posts Alt.Space News Videos Blue Peter Rocket See the video UK Space Links Airborne Engineering AspireSpace ASTRA AstroEngine.com Bristol Spaceplanes Britain in Space British Interplanetary Society British Reaction Research BSTC Rocket Support Group Cambridge University Spaceflight Celestial Mechanics Centre for Future Air-Space Transportation Technology cFASST new ESERO-UK Excalibur Almaz Observer Institute for Interstellar Studies I4IS International Space Propulsion ISP Group ISIC JBIS new LESEDS Mars Society UK new National Space Centre Orbiting Frog OurSpace Project Icarus Purley Amateur Rocketry

  • Satellite production at SSTL

    Updated: 2012-12-04 09:34:36
    A promotional video from SSTL:

  • MOU signed in Spacefleet project

    Updated: 2012-12-04 09:32:16
    Twitter @spacefleet_ceo: Raymond D. Wright of the Spacefleet RLV demonstrator project reports that an MOU has been signed between the international partners, and now "All we need is the funding (~£2M)".

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