Antarctica’s Ice Losses Increased to Twice


Over 160 billion tons of ice sheets and floes are being lost by the frozen continent towards the South Pole each year. These semi-solid ice blocks separate from the mainland of Antarctica and float...

World’s largest ground based telescope in works!!


The images from the Hubble Space Telescope have been released and some of them can be viewed on the internet now. If there is one word to describe the jaw dropping space phenomenon captured by this...

ExoPlanet Covered With Clouds Detected in Outer Space


Planets midway between the size of our home, Earth and Neptune, are ideal for supporting life (if it exists in outer space). This has been proved by transmission spectroscopy. The planet GJ1214b is a...
    






Satellite Falling to Earth may Cause Damage


The unpredictable has always been a source of apprehension and anxiety. Take the Gravity Field and Steady State Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) which was a product of the ESA. It is hurtling...

Albert Einstein Launched in Space


Kourou, French Guiana was the site of launch for the ATV-4 Craft which is supposed to venture into outer space. In about a dozen days or so it will dock at the International Space Station. Sometime...
    


Astronaut Abby to Attend Soyuz Launch


High School Sophomore and Astronaut-in-Training, Abigail Harrison (Abby), will be the only American teenager in attendance at the Russian Soyuz launch, Soyuz-TMA-09M, in Kazakhstan on May 28, 2013....


Alt-week 27.10.12: ancient texts, super-Earths and special-ops mice

Alt-week peels back the covers on some of the more curious sci-tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek ancient texts, super earths and specialops mice

If, like us, you struggle to read the front of the Corn Flakes box of a morning, you likely gave up any hope of cracking ancient codes long ago. If you didn't, however, then your time might be now -- as one of the oldest scripts know to man is still up for grabs. Prefer just to observe? No problem, as we've got super-Earth-searching satellites, military mice and vertical farms, all for your viewing reading pleasure. If you hadn't guessed already, this is alt-week

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Alt-week 27.10.12: ancient texts, super-Earths and special-ops mice originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Oct 2012 17:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ESA team builds self-piloting rover in six months, tests it in Chilean desert

ESA team builds self-piloting rover in six months, tests it in Chilean desert

Chile's Atacama Desert might not be true Martian territory, but it's close enough for the European Space Agency's new rover. Built by a crack engineering team in just six months, the Seeker rover was created to autonomously roam 6 km of Mars-like terrain and trace its way back. The Seeker just wrapped up a two week gauntlet in the Chilean wasteland using ol' fashioned dead reckoning and stereoscopic vision to find its way, compiling a 3D map of its surroundings as it puttered along. The full-scale rover wandered the arid terrain on its lonesome until temperatures forced it to stop after trekking 5.1 km. The red planet won't welcome an ESA rover until 2018, but those jonesin' for news from Martian soil should keep their eyes peeled for Curiosity's August touchdown.

ESA team builds self-piloting rover in six months, tests it in Chilean desert originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 Jun 2012 05:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motrr Goes over Funding Goal on Kickstarter for Galileo IPhone Platform


A company called Motrr unveiled a cool camera tripod that has robotic platform for the iPhone called Galileo. The company was seeking $100,000 in funding to bring the product to market and ended up...

Space travel coming to an airport near you? Maybe, if Skylon keeps its cool

reaction-engines-spaceplane-skylon-critical-cooling-tests

Want to get from New York to Perth in under 4 hours, or maybe just head to outer space on a lark? Reaction Engines' "Skylon" mach 5 spaceplane might be your chariot -- or not. Its scheme of ingesting oxygen from the atmosphere instead of stowing it like a 50-year old modern multi-stage rocket sounds good, but the project's fate may hang on critical new tests. Failure is still a possibility, but if the high-speed, superhot gases can be cooled enough for the hybrid Sabre engines to work, and if Reaction Engines Limited can secure another round of funding, punching your space-ticket could soon be a very real possibility.

Space travel coming to an airport near you? Maybe, if Skylon keeps its cool originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Apr 2012 23:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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