The Gamma Ray Large Area Telescope (GLAST) is an astounding mission to explore the most extreme environments in the universe, search for signs of new laws of physics, what composes the mysterious dark matter, and secrets found in gamma ray explosions.
So what’s up with our Sun? Is it going through a depression? It seems as if our closest star is experiencing a surprisingly uneventful couple of years. Solar minimum has supposedly passed and we should be seeing a lot more magnetic activity, and we certainly should be observing lots more sunspots.
Until now, astronauts used spacesuits that were designed for floating in space, but Moon missions require a more flexible approach
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It’s been almost 36 years since humans were last on the moon, and under Project Constellation the next journey is planned for 2020. It may seem a long way off, but the timeline is short, given the work that needs to be done for such a monumental task.
A meteorite that landed in Australia in 1969 appears to contain genetic components that formed in space
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A NASA engineer discusses design considerations for a space toilet.
Rising through a billowing cloud of smoke, this Delta II rocket left Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s launch pad 17-B Wednesday at 12:05 pm EDT. Snug in the payload section was GLAST, the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope, now in orbit around planet Earth