Anyone Need a Hubble Telescope?
Updated: 2012-08-31 20:12:14
: 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 Twin craft head for heart of Earth's magnetic storm 17:35 31 August 2012 Picture of the Day Space Lisa Grossman , reporter Image : NASA Ben Smegelsky and Gary Thompson Cape Canaveral looks eerie at night particularly when spotlights are dancing off the pre-dawn haze . These lights announced the launch of NASA's twin Radiation Belt Storm Probes , on their way to become the first spacecraft to directly study
: 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 shoots a hazy moon past Saturn's rings 14:51 30 August 2012 Space Douglas Heaven , reporter Image : NASA JPL-Caltech SSI Slashed across the hazy face of Titan , Saturn s rings bisect its largest moon . NASA's Cassini spacecraft was inside and just above the plane of the rings on 16 May when it took this natural-colour image , which was released yesterday . A thin sliver of Titan , 3 million kilometres
: : 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 A year on the ISS : Good for tourists and science 12:39 29 August 2012 Space Victoria Jaggard , physical sciences news editor Image : NASA Is the ISS set to get its own phantom Reports are swirling that diva of London's West End Sarah Brightman whose angelic voice lofted her to stardom in the original stage cast of Phantom of the Opera is to begin training to become the next space tourist to visit the
: 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 How cool water eased hurricane Isaac's rage 13:58 29 August 2012 Environment Picture of the Day Caroline Morley , online picture researcher Image : National Environmental Satellite , Data , and Information Service On the eve of Katrina's seventh anniversary , hurricane Isaac made its first landfall in Louisiana last night . But a period spent over cooler water means it will not follow Katrina's destructive
: 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 First mating humpback whale image wins photo prize 14:57 28 August 2012 Life Picture of the Day Caroline Morley , online picture researcher Image : Jason Edwards Jason Edwards has won the New Scientist Eureka Prize for Science Photography for the second year running with this image of a pair of mating humpback whales Megaptera novaeangliae Edwards took the first underwater photograph of humpbacks mating off
: 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 Arctic sea ice set to hit record low within days 15:36 22 August 2012 Environment Michael Marshall , environment reporter As Arctic summers go , 2012 is on track to be a record breaker . Both the sea ice and the Greenland ice sheet are shrinking to new lows this . year We reported last week that the Arctic sea ice is melting more than any previous year on record September 2007 currently holds the record for
: 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 Nonsense data reveal Mars rover's damaged sensor 22:09 21 August 2012 Mars Space Lisa Grossman , physical sciences reporter Image : NASA JPL-Caltech After wiggling its wheels in the Martian soil , the Mars rover Curiosity was pronounced fit to take its first test drive tomorrow . But amidst the fanfare comes news of the rover's first science casualty . nbsp During shakedown tests this week , the team
: 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 Spacecraft builders follow in dinosaurs' footsteps 16:10 21 August 2012 Life Picture of the Day Space Caroline Morley , online picture researcher Image : Ray Stanford It's not often we get a story linking palaeontology to outer space , unless we're discussing the asteroid theory for the mass extinction of dinosaurs . However , dinosaur prints from the Cretaceous period have been discovered on land now
: 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 NASA decides to send robotic seismologist to Mars 23:55 20 August 2012 Mars Space Peter Aldhous , San Francisco bureau chief Image : JPL NASA Do Marsquakes rock the Red Planet How big is its core These and other questions should be answered by the next mission in NASA's Discovery programme which aims to put top-quality science into space on a shoestring budget in relative terms , at . least The 425 million
A story from when the famed comedian joined Bob Hope on his USO tours.
: 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 Bigfoot spider found hiding in Oregon cave 16:01 20 August 2012 Life Picture of the Day Molly Docherty , contributor Images : California Academy of Sciences Bigfoot may still elude us , but its spider counterpart has turned up in a US cave . The creature is so unusual it could transform our understanding of arachnid . evolution Arachnologists from the California Academy of Sciences working with citizen
Want Apollo 13 astronaut Fred Haise to visit your kids’ classroom? That’s currently going for $1,300
How about a pair of closeout gloves from Gemini XII. That’s going for $160.
I’m kind of keen on a collection of matchbooks commemorating the Apollo missions. That’s going for $50, a little more my speed.
These are all items part of [...]
An 1880 balloon jaunt ends with our heroine up a tree.
Right now if NASA wants to send people to space it has to outsource the task to Russia (or actually Kazakhstan). Well now NASA has come up with a plan to stop the outsourcing. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has chosen Space X from California, Boeing from Illinois and Sierra Nevada from Colorado to [...]
Sixty-six years ago this week, Sergeant Lawrence Lambert became the first person in the U.S. to be ejected from a high-speed aircraft.
New cosmonauts brush up on their wilderness skills in Kazakhstan.
“You put an X anyplace in the solar system, and the engineers at NASA can land a spacecraft on it,” so said actor Robert Guillaume in an episode of “Sports Night,” a situation comedy about a team that produced a nightly cable sports broadcast in 2001. Amen brother, the team that landed Curiosity proved the [...]