Extrasolar Planet Current Events | Extrasolar Planet News | 9
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Mars Express discovers aurorae on Mars ESA's Mars Express spacecraft has for the first time ever detected an aurora on Mars. This aurora is of a type never previously observed in the Solar System. view more (2005-06-10)
Discovery of a new planet in the outer solar system A team of researchers from the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, CA, Yale University in New Haven, CT, and Gemini Observatory in Hilo, HI, report the discovery of a new planet in the outer solar system. view more (2005-08-02)
Mars With Ice, Shaken, Not Stirred Mars, like Earth, is a climate-fickle water planet. The main difference, of course, is that water on the frigid Red Planet is rarely liquid, preferring to spend almost all of its time traveling the world as a gas or churning up the surface as ice. view more (2007-10-26)
Sea level stargazing: Astronomers make key sighting with Fla. telescope This summer, University of Florida astronomers inaugurated the world's largest optical telescope on a nearly 8,000-foot mountaintop 3,480 miles away. view more (2009-09-29)
Jupiter`s Electric Aurora The planet Jupiter has spectacular rings of auroras around each pole but until now scientists have not been able to explain how they form. All auroras are caused by energetic charged particles crashing into the top of the atmosphere and making it glow. In the Earth's auroras, these particles come from the Sun in a flow of charged particles known... view more... (2002-03-26)
Over £1m to support science in under-achieving schools The Planet Science Outreach Programme, managed by NESTA (the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts) for DfES (Department for Education and Skills), has brought its total support for schools with low levels of attainment in science to over £1 million with its final round of awards. Five final awards will enable a series of... view more... (2004-09-02)
Hi-tech science kit for schools - Twigg Education Minister Stephen Twigg today welcomed the donation from The Royal Society of nearly £600k worth of free science and design & technology equipment to secondary schools. The donation is being made in celebration of Planet Science, the Government's initiative to raise the profile of science in schools. It is being supported by the... view more... (2002-10-15)
Separation Day Arrives for Mars Express and Beagle 2 After a joint journey of 250 million miles (400 million km), the British-built Beagle 2 spacecraft and the European Space Agency's Mars Express orbiter should now have parted and gone their separate ways. At 8.31 GMT, software on Mars Express was scheduled to send the command for the Beagle 2 lander to separate from the orbiter. This would fire a... view more... (2003-12-19)
Watching how planets form With the VISIR instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope, astronomers have mapped the disc around a star more massive than the Sun. The very extended and flared disc most likely contains enough gas and dust to spawn planets. view more (2006-09-29)
Record-setting laser may aid searches for Earthlike planets Scientists at the University of Konstanz in Germany and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated an ultrafast laser that offers a record combination of high speed, short pulses and high average power. view more (2008-05-08)
Environmental researchers propose radical 'human-centric' map of the world Ecologists pay too much attention to increasingly rare "pristine" ecosystems while ignoring the overwhelming influence of humans on the environment, say researchers from McGill University and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). view more (2007-11-27)
Study highlights role of hit-and-run collisions in planet formation Hit-and-run collisions between embryonic planets during a critical period in the early history of the Solar System may account for some previously unexplained properties of planets, asteroids, and meteorites. view more (2006-01-12)
Scorched Earth millenium map shows 'fire scars' A geographer from the University of Leicester has produced for the first time a map of the scorched Earth for every year since the turn of the Millennium. view more (2008-05-23)
Where are the other `Earths` beyond the Solar System? One of the most fascinating areas of astronomical research in recent years has been the search for other `Earths` circling Sun-like stars far beyond our Solar System. In recent years nearly 100 planets have been discovered in orbits around other stars, but none of these `exoplanets` remotely resembles the Earth. However, according to the latest... view more... (2002-04-03)
Glaciers Reveal Martian Climate Has Been Recently Active The prevailing thinking is that Mars is a planet whose active climate has been confined to the distant past. About 3.5 billion years ago, the Red Planet had extensive flowing water and then fell quiet - deadly quiet. It didn't seem the climate had changed much since. view more (2008-04-24)
Research suggests we may be genetically programmed to care about the long-term future Humans may be programmed by evolution to care about the future of the environment, suggests research published today. view more (2009-05-28)
Complex meteorology at Venus In its relentless probing of Venus's atmosphere, ESA's Venus Express keeps revealing new details of the Venusian cloud system. Meteorology at Venus is a complex matter, scientists say. view more (2006-10-16)
Rebecca boldly goes from star-gazing to space research A Kingston University graduate is about to set off on an academic mission to discover if there is life on other planets. Earth and planetary science specialist Rebecca Blackhurst hopes to land a research job at America's National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) at the end of her trek through the academic world. First she intends to... view more... (2003-06-27)
Planet Orbiting a Giant Red Star Discovered with Hobby-Eberly Telescope A planet orbiting a giant red star has been discovered by an astronomy team led by Penn State's Alex Wolszczan, who in 1992 discovered the first planets ever found outside our solar system. view more (2007-08-03)
Cold climate produced by algae contributed to onset of multicellular life The rise of multicellular animals about 540 million years ago was a turning point in the history of life. A group of Finnish scientists suggests a new climate-biosphere interaction mechanism for the underlying processes in a new study. view more (2007-02-14)
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