Friday, May 3, 2019

Google Alert - Science

Google
Science
Daily update May 3, 2019
NEWS
Space.com
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — SpaceX is preparing to launch its next resupply mission to the International Space Station (ISS). At 3:11 a.m. EDT (0711 GMT) on Friday (May 3), a shiny new SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will take to the skies here from Cape Canaveral ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
A SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule was indeed destroyed during engine tests that went awry last month, a company representative said today (May 2). On April 20, SpaceX conducted a series of tests on the vehicle — which last month flew a successful ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
Blue Origin's New Shepard spacecraft just took another step toward flying passengers to the final frontier. The reusable rocket-capsule combo aced its 11th test mission today (May 2), an uncrewed jaunt that toted 38 science experiments, a new record for the ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
People are too complacent about the asteroid threat for Bill Nye's liking. The former TV "Science Guy," who currently serves as CEO of the nonprofit Planetary Society, warned that catastrophic impacts like the one that offed the dinosaurs 66 million years ago ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Spaceflight Now
While recovery teams continue combing through the test site at Cape Canaveral where SpaceX's first space-worthy Crew Dragon capsule was destroyed in an explosive accident last month, engineers a few miles away are pressing ahead with the company's ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
Just a month into a new observing round after significant improvements, gravitational-wave detectors have already used ripples in space-time to pinpoint five potential collisions of cosmic proportions — including one that might be the first-ever black hole ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The New York Times
A young ostrich sprints down a path at a Chinese farm. His neck bobs, his legs pump — and the artificial wings attached to his back flap up and down. Alas, this ostrich will not fly. He's filling in for another earthbound creature, a dinosaur called Caudipteryx.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
BBC News
Scientists working to detect gravitational waves switched on their instruments for a third time at the beginning of April and immediately began to register events that could be interpreted as cosmic collisions. All five trigger events still need confirmation.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
Lithium, the light silvery metal used in everything from pharmaceutical applications to batteries that power your smart phone or electric car, could also help harness on Earth the fusion energy that lights the sun and stars. Lithium can maintain the heat and ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Spaceflight Now
Taking another step toward flying space tourists to the edge of space, Jeff Bezos's space company Blue Origin again flew its New Shepard suborbital booster Thursday with a package of microgravity research experiments. The single-stage rocket took off from ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
See more results | Edit this alert
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts.
RSS Receive this alert as RSS feed
Send Feedback

No comments:

Post a Comment