24/7 News Coverage
May 15, 2019
MARSDAILY
How the Sun pumps out water from Mars into space



Moscow, Russia (SPX) May 15, 2019
Russian and German physicists have offered an explanation for the new data obtained by Martian satellites, capturing the "escape" of hydrogen atoms from the upper Martian atmosphere into outer space. The developed model fits well with the observations and explains a number of puzzling phenomena related to the atmosphere of Mars. The research was published in the journal Geographical Research Letters. The atmosphere of Mars is cold and rarefied, like the Earth atmosphere at high altitudes. Under su ... read more

SPACE TRAVEL
NASA Awards $106 Million to US Small Businesses for Technology Development
Washington DC (SPX) May 15, 2019
Managing pilotless aircraft and solar panels that could help humans live on the Moon and Mars are among the technologies NASA is looking to develop with small business awards totaling $106 million. ... more
EARTH OBSERVATION
How Venus and Mars can teach us about Earth
Paris (ESA) May 14, 2019
One has a thick poisonous atmosphere, one has hardly any atmosphere at all, and one is just right for life to flourish - but it wasn't always that way. The atmospheres of our two neighbours Venus an ... more
MARSDAILY
New water cycle on Mars discovered
Gottingen, Germany (SPX) May 10, 2019
Approximately every two Earth years, when it is summer in the southern hemisphere of Mars, a window opens: only there and only in this season can water vapor efficiently rise from the lower into the ... more
MARSDAILY
Why this Martian full moon looks like candy
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 10, 2019
For the first time, NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter has caught the Martian moon Phobos during a full moon phase. Each color in this new image represents a temperature range detected by Odyssey's infrare ... more
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MARSDAILY
For InSight, dust cleanings will yield new science
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 07, 2019
The same winds that blanket Mars with dust can also blow that dust away. Catastrophic dust storms have the potential to end a mission, as with NASA's Opportunity rover. But far more often, passing w ... more
MARSDAILY
Lockheed Martin completes testing milestone for Mars 2020 heat shield
Denver CO (SPX) May 05, 2019
Protecting against the extremes of space travel is critical to the success of any mission. Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) has successfully completed the flight hardware structure of the heat shield, va ... more
MARSDAILY
Martian Dust Could Help Explain Water Loss, Plus Other Learnings From Global Storm
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 03, 2019
Dust is not just a household nuisance; it's a planetary one, particularly on Mars. Before astronauts visit the Red Planet, we need to understand how the dust particles that often fill the atmosphere ... more
MARSDAILY
ESA to Lose Member State Support if ExoMars Launch Postponed - Director-General
Washington DC (Sputnik) Apr 26, 2019
The European Space Agency (ESA) and Russia's Roscosmos should not consider postponing the launch of the ExoMars mission as its rescheduling will lead to the loss of support from European member coun ... more
MARSDAILY
InSight lander captures audio of first likely 'quake' on Mars
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 24, 2019
NASA's Mars InSight lander has measured and recorded for the first time ever a likely "marsquake." The faint seismic signal, detected by the lander's Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure ... more
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MARSDAILY
All-woman engineering team heads to NASA Mars competition
Boulder CO (SPX) Apr 23, 2019
NASA has named a University of Colorado Boulder team a finalist in a competition to design a greenhouse for use on Mars. The annual NASA BIG Idea Challenge is set for April 23-24 in Hampton, V ... more
MARSDAILY
A small step for China: Mars base for teens opens in desert
Jinchang, China (AFP) April 17, 2019
In the middle of China's Gobi desert sits a Mars base simulator, but instead of housing astronauts training to live on the Red Planet, the facility is full of teenagers on a school trip. ... more
MARSDAILY
Things Are Stacking Up for NASA's Mars 2020 Spacecraft
Pasadena CA (JPL) Apr 19, 2019
For the past few months, the clean room floor in High Bay 1 at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, has been covered in parts, components and test equipment for the Mars 2020 sp ... more
MARSDAILY
Curiosity Tastes First Sample in 'Clay-Bearing Unit'
Pasadena CA (JPL) Apr 12, 2019
Scientists working with NASA's Curiosity Mars rover have been excited to explore a region called "the clay-bearing unit" since before the spacecraft launched. Now, the rover has finally tasted its f ... more
MARSDAILY
Tests for the InSight 'Mole'
Bremen, Germany (SPX) Apr 12, 2019
A blue box, a cubic metre of Mars-like sand, a rock, a fully-functional model of the Mars 'Mole' and a seismometer - these are the main components with which the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Z ... more


First results from the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter

MARSDAILY
ExoMars carrier module prepares for final pre-launch testing
Paris (ESA) Apr 08, 2019
The module that will carry the ExoMars rover and surface science platform from Earth to Mars has arrived in Italy for final integration preparations. The module, along with electrical ground s ... more
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MARSDAILY
Martian soil detox could lead to new medicines
Paris (ESA) Apr 09, 2019
Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is one of humankind's major long-term health challenges. Now research into helping humans live on Mars could help address this looming problem. Dennis Claes ... more
MARSDAILY
British instruments help reveal secrets of Mars atmosphere
London (ESA) Apr 10, 2019
The 2016 ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter is the first in a series of Mars missions to be undertaken jointly by the two space agencies, ESA and Roscosmos. A key goal of this mission is to gain a better und ... more
SPACE TRAVEL
NASA selects two new space tech research institutes for smart habitats
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 09, 2019
As exploration missions venture beyond low-Earth orbit and to the Moon - and eventually Mars - NASA must consider automated technologies to keep habitats operational even when they are not occupied ... more
MARSDAILY
NASA's MAVEN Uses Red Planet's Atmosphere to Change Orbit
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Apr 08, 2019
NASA's MAVEN spacecraft achieved a tighter orbit around Mars to act as a telecommunications relay. The two-month campaign began February 11 and ended April 5. MAVEN's navigation team slowed th ... more
MARSDAILY
Mysterious Martian Methane Bursts Confirmed
Tucson AZ (SPX) Apr 05, 2019
Martian methane releases are rare, episodic, and often debated, but scientists have discovered evidence of a methane emission in June 2013, which constitutes the first confirmation of a methane rele ... more
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Lunar tunnel engineers excited by boring Moon colonies
Naples, Italy (AFP) May 10, 2019
As space agencies prepare to return humans to the Moon, top engineers are racing to design a tunnel boring machine capable of digging underground colonies for the first lunar inhabitants. "Space is becoming a passion for a lot of people again. There are discussions about going back to the moon, this time to stay," US-Iranian expert Jamal Rostami told AFP at this year's World Tunnel Congress ... more
+ Study finds new Luna wrinkles
+ Shrinking Moon may be generating moonquakes
+ Jeff Bezos says Blue Origin will land humans on moon by 2024
+ Lunar Power System Team Wins President's Award
+ NASA dubs 2024 Moon mission 'Artemis,' asks for $1.6 billion
+ Amazon's Bezos unveils lunar lander project 'Blue Moon'
+ Magma is the key to the moon's makeup
China's Yuanwang-7 departs for space monitoring missions
Nanjing (XNA) May 03, 2019
China's spacecraft tracking ship Yuanwang-7 is sailing to the Pacific Ocean, beginning its first maritime space monitoring mission this year. The ship departed from a port in eastern China's Jiangsu Province Wednesday. As a part of China's new generation of spacecraft tracking ships, Yuanwang-7 is about 220 meters long, 40 meters high and has a displacement of nearly 30,000 tonnes. I ... more
+ China's tracking ship Yuanwang-2 starts new mission after retirement
+ China to build moon station in 'about 10 years'
+ China to enhance international space cooperation
+ China opens Chang'e-6 for international payloads, asteroids next
+ China's commercial carrier rocket finishes engine test
+ China launches new data relay satellite
+ Super-powerful Long March 9 said to begin missions around 2030


'Extreme Crunch' Looming if No Limits Put on Space Mining 'Gold Rush'
Washington DC (Sputnik) May 15, 2019
Researchers have been proposing to set a special "tripwire" that would issue a warning once humanity is close to mining one eighth of the solar system, which has been preliminarily estimated to occur in just a few hundred years. At that point, there would only be 60 years left to try to offset the detrimental effects. A team of scientists have come up with a proposal, whereby a so-called " ... more
+ First planetary defense technology demonstration to collide with asteroid in 2022
+ Hera's APEX CubeSat will reveal the stuff that asteroids are made of
+ Killer asteroid flattens New York in simulation exercise
+ Hera's CubeSat to perform first radar probe of an asteroid
+ Scientists Planning Now for Asteroid Flyby a Decade Away
+ ASU researchers find water in samples from asteroid Itokawa
+ Asteroid impact exercise offers practice for NASA, ESA scientists, engineers
Brazilian scientists investigate dwarf planet's ring
Sao Paulo, Brazil (SPX) May 08, 2019
Discovered in 2004, Haumea is a dwarf planet located beyond Pluto's orbit in a region of the Solar System called the Kuiper Belt. Pluto was demoted from the category of fully fledged planets in 2006 because of the discovery of Haumea and other dwarf planets. Haumea was officially recognized as a dwarf planet in 2008. Its ellipsoidal shape resembles that of the ball used in rugby or America ... more
+ Next-Generation NASA Instrument Advanced to Study the Atmospheres of Uranus and Neptune
+ Public Invited to Help Name Solar System's Largest Unnamed World
+ Europa Clipper High-Gain Antenna Undergoes Testing
+ Scientists to Conduct Largest-Ever Hubble Survey of the Kuiper Belt
+ Jupiter's unknown journey revealed
+ A Prehistoric Mystery in the Kuiper Belt
+ Ultima Thule in 3D
Researchers find ice feature on Saturn's giant moon
Tucson AZ (SPX) May 01, 2019
Rain, seas and a surface of eroding organic material can be found both on Earth and on Saturn's largest moon, Titan. However, on Titan it is methane, not water, that fills the lakes with slushy raindrops. While trying to find the source of Titan's methane, University of Arizona researcher Caitlin Griffith and her team discovered something unexoldpected - a long ice feature that wraps nearl ... more
+ Giant planets and big data: What deep learning reveals about Saturn's storms
+ Deep learning takes Saturn by storm
+ NASA's Cassini Reveals Surprises with Titan's Lakes
+ New close-ups of the mini-moons in Saturn's rings
+ Scientist sheds light on Titan's mysterious nitrogen atmosphere
+ Cassini data show Saturn's Rings relatively new
+ Scientists Finally Know What Time It Is on Saturn
What does Earth's core have in common with salad dressing? Maybe this
New Haven CT (SPX) May 08, 2019
A Yale-led team of scientists may have found a new factor to help explain the ebb and flow of Earth's magnetic field - and it's something familiar to anyone who has made a vinaigrette for their salad. Earth's magnetic field, produced near the center of the planet, has long acted as a buffer from the harmful radiation of solar winds emanating from the Sun. Without that protection, life on E ... more
+ Space Station science looking at Earth
+ Joining forces on Earth science to benefit society
+ How Venus and Mars can teach us about Earth
+ Spotlight on the pulse of our planet
+ Arianespace to launch ESAIL satellite for exactEarth on Vega SSMS POC flight
+ At least 300 Himalayan yaks starve to death in India
+ Orbiting NASA instrument to examine Boston's carbon emissions, plant life


NASA awards ATLAS Space Operations space operations partnership
Traverse City MI (SPX) May 07, 2019
ATLAS Space Operations, Inc., a leading innovator in communications for the space industry, today announced NASA has awarded it a contract for the Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) Program's Space Relay Partnership and Services Study. Prime contractor ATLAS partnered in its proposal with Laser Light Communications, Inc, a leader in advanced optical communications and data distribution v ... more
+ Space plants project could be astronaut game changer
+ LightSail 2 set to launch next month
+ Trump, NASA want another $1.6 billion to return America to the moon
+ Robotics used to restore full power for the Space Station
+ The Axiom Space tests key space station acrylic sample on ISS in Alpha Space's MISSE facility
+ NASA Awards $106 Million to US Small Businesses for Technology Development
+ NISTex-II instrument successfully launched on May 4th
Gravitational forces in protoplanetary disks may push super-Earths close to their stars
University Park PA (SPX) May 10, 2019
The galaxy is littered with planetary systems vastly different from ours. In the solar system, the planet closest to the Sun - Mercury, with an orbit of 88 days - is also the smallest. But NASA's Kepler spacecraft has discovered thousands of systems full of very large planets - called super-Earths - in very small orbits that zip around their host star several times every 10 days. Now, rese ... more
+ Small, hardy planets can survive stellar end sequence
+ Rare-Earth metals in the atmosphere of a glowing-hot exoplanet
+ Cosmic dust reveals new insights on the formation of solar system
+ Planetary Habitability? It's What's Inside That Counts
+ Rapid destruction of Earth-like atmospheres by young stars
+ Slime mold memorizes foreign substances by absorbing them
+ Necrophagy: A means of survival in the Dead Sea


Northrop Grumman awarded $163.6M to support Army's Hunter drone
Washington (UPI) May 13, 2019
Northrop Grumman has been awarded a $163.6 million contract for support services on the U.S. Army's fleet of MQ-5B Hunter drones. The company will operate, engineer, reconfigure and maintain the unmanned aerial systems as part of the new contract, the Department of Defense said Friday. Work will be performed at Northrop Grumman's plant in Sierra Vista, Ariz., with the contract es ... more
+ Hummingbird robot uses AI to soon go where drones can't
+ Obstacles to overcome before operating fleets of drones becomes reality
+ Ascent AeroSystems Announces New Industrial Grade Drone and Launch Customer
+ Iris Automation offers turnkey collision-avoidance solution for commercial drones
+ Boeing's MQ-25 refueling drone moved to air base for flight testing
+ Ballard Launches Turnkey Fuel Cell Solutions to Power Commercial Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
+ Europe's First Hydrogen Drone Doubles Flying Times with AMS Cylinders
NASA Scientist Receives Patent for Innovative Technique for Measuring Space Weather Phenomena
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 15, 2019
A NASA expert in space-weather phenomena has won a patent for an idea that, if fully implemented, would create the world's largest scientific instrument for detecting a condition that has caused power outages in the past. Antti Pulkkinen, a scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and his team have started implementing the idea. They've installed scientific s ... more
+ Strong Magnetic Storm May Cause Satellites to Deorbit - Russian Academy
+ Scientists discover what powers celestial phenomenon STEVE
+ Indian Scientists Make Deepest Radio Images of the Sun
+ New model accurately predicts harmful space weather
+ NASA launches two rockets studying auroras
+ Jupiter's Atmosphere Heats up under Solar Wind
+ And the Blobs Just Keep on Coming


SpaceX Falcon Heavy launch for Air Force set June 22
Orlando FL (UPI) May 15, 2019
SpaceX's Falcon Heavy is set for its third-ever launch June 22, carrying 24 payloads for the U.S. Air Force and other government clients, from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. It's the first time the U.S. military will use a Falcon Heavy rocket, and it will reuse the two boosters that launched Falcon Heavy's Arabsat-6A mission in April. According to an Air For ... more
+ SpinLaunch Breaks Ground for New Test Facility at Spaceport America
+ Rocket Lab to launch rideshare mission for Spaceflight
+ SpaceX's Dragon Cargo capsule docks with Space Station
+ Ariane 6 series production begins with first batch of 14 launchers
+ Rocket Crafters Chooses RUAG Space as Preferred Supplier
+ Apollo Fusion, Inc. Lands NASA JPL License and Manufacturing Contract
+ Air Force releases proposal request for the Phase 2 Launch Service Procurement Contract
Observations that question dark matter disproved
Trieste, Italy (SPX) Apr 30, 2019
As fascinating as it is mysterious, dark matter is one of the greatest enigmas of astrophysics and cosmology. It is thought to account for 90% of the matter in the Universe, but its existence has been demonstrated only indirectly and recently called into question. New research conducted by SISSA removes the recent doubts on the presence of dark matter within the galaxies, disproving the em ... more
+ Our history in the stars
+ A new filter to better map the dark universe
+ Star formation burst in the Milky Way 2-3 billion years ago
+ SKA Consortium completes design of Science Data Processor
+ What a dying star's ashes tell us about the birth of our solar system
+ 10 years ago, Hubble's final servicing mission made it better than ever
+ Precise temperature measurements with invisible light


UCLA students touch space with a microgravity experiment
Los Angeles CA (SPX) May 10, 2019
It took only 10 minutes and a ride aboard the Blue Origin New Shepard reusable rocket for 11 students in the Bruin Spacecraft Group to make history. At 6:32 a.m. on May 2, their experimental pump designed for use in zero-gravity environments, named "Blue Dawn ," completed its flight into a low-Earth orbit and freefall - thereby becoming the first space payload developed and built entirely ... more
+ Gravitational waves leave a detectable mark, physicists say
+ LIGO and Virgo Detect Neutron Star Smash-Ups
+ Scientists Find More Evidence the Universe Is a Violent Place
+ What Earth's gravity reveals about climate change
+ Ten years before the detection of gravitational waves
+ Upgraded Detectors to Resume Hunt for Gravitational Waves
+ Taking gravity from strength to strength
Explosions of universe's first stars spewed powerful jets
Boston MA (SPX) May 09, 2019
Several hundred million years after the Big Bang, the very first stars flared into the universe as massively bright accumulations of hydrogen and helium gas. Within the cores of these first stars, extreme, thermonuclear reactions forged the first heavier elements, including carbon, iron, and zinc. These first stars were likely immense, short-lived fireballs, and scientists have assumed tha ... more
+ Hubble Astronomers Assemble Wide View of the Evolving Universe
+ New Clues About How Ancient Galaxies Lit up the Universe
+ 'Fire streaks' ever more real in the collisions of atomic nuclei and protons
+ New material also reveals new quasiparticles
+ Telescopes in space for even sharper images of black holes
+ Scientists get to the bottom of a 'spitting' black hole
+ IAS researchers detect evidence of 6 new binary black hole mergers within LVC data


Space robotics market worth over $3.5bn by 2025
London, UK (SPX) May 07, 2019
According to a new research report by the market research and strategy consulting firm, Global Market Insights, Inc, the Space Robotics Market worth over $3.5bn by 2025. The space robotics market is experiencing a rapid technical development owing to the integration of AI technologies into the systems developed for space exploration. Several companies are developing AI-based robots that provide ... more
+ Beyond the Metal: Investigating Soft Robots at NASA Langley
+ In robotics classes, Armenian teens dream of high-tech future
+ DIH-HERO - a medical robotics network
+ Training AI to win a dogfight
+ SIS advances smart multi-robot autonomy
+ An army of micro-robots can wipe out dental plaque
+ FEDOR Space Rescuer: Roscosmos 'Trains' Anthropomorphic Robot for Manned Mission
China's Yuanwang-7 departs for space monitoring missions
Nanjing (XNA) May 03, 2019
China's spacecraft tracking ship Yuanwang-7 is sailing to the Pacific Ocean, beginning its first maritime space monitoring mission this year. The ship departed from a port in eastern China's Jiangsu Province Wednesday. As a part of China's new generation of spacecraft tracking ships, Yuanwang-7 is about 220 meters long, 40 meters high and has a displacement of nearly 30,000 tonnes. I ... more
+ China's tracking ship Yuanwang-2 starts new mission after retirement
+ China to build moon station in 'about 10 years'
+ China to enhance international space cooperation
+ China opens Chang'e-6 for international payloads, asteroids next
+ China's commercial carrier rocket finishes engine test
+ China launches new data relay satellite
+ Super-powerful Long March 9 said to begin missions around 2030
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