Menu

Blog

Page 9106

Feb 18, 2019

Biggest supermoon of the year is here this week

Posted by in category: space

Stargazers will get a close-up look at Earth’s natural satellite this week thanks to the brightest supermoon event of the year.

A supermoon phenomenon occurs when a full moon, on its oval-shaped orbit, is at its closest to us, known as perigee, which is about 356,000 kilometres as measured from the centre of the Earth to the centre of the moon.

It takes place when the moon’s orbit brings it to the closest point to Earth while at the same time bathed in sunlight, giving the moon its bright appearance.

Continue reading “Biggest supermoon of the year is here this week” »

Feb 18, 2019

Asteroid the size of Big Ben is hurtling towards Earth, NASA warns

Posted by in categories: asteroid/comet impacts, existential risks

Uh oh…

(Via Mirror Tech)


The space rock, dubbed 2013 MD8 will make a ‘close approach’ to our planet tomorrow afternoon.

Continue reading “Asteroid the size of Big Ben is hurtling towards Earth, NASA warns” »

Feb 18, 2019

Plans for first Chinese solar power station in space revealed

Posted by in categories: energy, space, sustainability, transportation

Electric cars could be charged at any time and any place.

It could reliably supply energy 99 per cent of the time, at six-times the intensity of solar farms on earth, he said.

Chinese scientists first plan to build and launch small to medium-sized solar power stations to be launched into the stratosphere to generate electricity, between 2021 and 2025.

Continue reading “Plans for first Chinese solar power station in space revealed” »

Feb 18, 2019

AI system four times better at predicting ovarian cancer patient survival than other methods

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

An international team of researchers, from Imperial College London and the University of Melbourne in Australia, has demonstrated a new AI system that can effectively predict survival rates from ovarian cancer better than any current conventional method available to doctors.

Read more

Feb 18, 2019

First private Israel lunar mission to be launched this week

Posted by in category: space travel

RAMAT GAN, Israel (AP) — A nonprofit Israeli consortium said Monday that it hopes to make history this week by launching the first private aircraft to land on the moon.

SpaceIL and state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries told a news conference that the landing craft — dubbed “Beresheet,” or Genesis — will take off from Florida, propelled by a SpaceX Falcon rocket on its weekslong voyage to the moon.

The launch is scheduled late Thursday in the United States, early Friday in Israel. It had been originally slated for last December.

Read more

Feb 18, 2019

Ahmedabad: MSU researcher gets global grant for vesicular trafficking study

Posted by in categories: biological, education, neuroscience

It is the first such research to be undertaken at the university.

IBRO is the global federation of neuroscience organizations that aims to promote and support neuroscience around the world through training, teaching, collaborative research, outreach and advocacy.

The research will be carried out at Sahu’s Cell Biology and Molecular metabolism lab at the Vikram Sarabhai Institute of Cell and Molecular Biology, which is headed by Professor Sarita Gupta.

Continue reading “Ahmedabad: MSU researcher gets global grant for vesicular trafficking study” »

Feb 18, 2019

NASA posts image of ghostly blue objects, deep in the cosmos

Posted by in categories: energy, space

When a star is born, a chaotic light show ensues.

NASA’s long-lived Hubble Space Telescope captured vivid bright clumps moving through the cosmos at some 1,000 light years from Earth. The space agency called these objects clear “smoking gun” evidence of a newly formed star — as new stars blast colossal amounts of energy-rich matter into space, known as plasma.

Seen as the vivid blue, ephemeral clumps in the top center of the new image below, these are telltale signs of an energy-rich gas, or plasma, colliding with a huge collection of dust and gas in deep space.

Read more

Feb 18, 2019

Researchers Developing New Therapy to Treat Parkinson’s Disease

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Cell replacement may play an increasing role in alleviating the symptoms such as movement problems and memory loss of Parkinson’s disease (PD), researchers say. (Photo: iStockphoto)

Read more

Feb 18, 2019

Low altitude spaceplane satellite to harvest own electric engine’s fuel

Posted by in category: space travel

A spaceplane shaped telecommunications satellite could use aerodynamics to stay in orbit at 150 kilometres altitude.

Read more

Feb 18, 2019

Russia’s Private Space Tourism Industry Could Take Off in Five Years

Posted by in category: space travel

Begak told Sputnik news agency the first flights could begin as soon as 2024 and tickets can be purchased for approximately $200,000 to $300,000 a person.

As per Begak, several private companies are presently working on the uncrewed spacecraft known as Selena Space Yacht. The work is being performed with help from the National Technology Initiative (NTI) AeroNet and SpaceNet working groups.

Begak added that the craft lands like a regular aeroplane giving them a chance to land on any airfield. So now they are calculating the best time for space travel and which flight paths would be most comfortable since it’s known that people shouldn’t be in zero-gravity condition for more than 10 minutes. They began working on Selena Space Yacht in 2017.

Continue reading “Russia’s Private Space Tourism Industry Could Take Off in Five Years” »