Science | ||||||||
NEWS | ||||||||
Chinese Space Station Is Tumbling Toward an Easter Sunday Crash ARLINGTON, Va. - The falling Chinese space station Tiangong-1 is tumbling in orbit and may crash back to Earth early Easter Sunday (April 1), experts say.
| ||||||||
Iridium boss senses shift in SpaceX rhythm with another launch set for Friday The Falcon 9 rocket set to launch Iridium's fifth batch of new-generation voice and data relay satellites stands on its launch pad at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California.
| ||||||||
Michigan activates emergency operations for falling Chinese space station A photo of the giant screen at the Jiuquan space center shows the Tiangong-1 module is seen via a camera in the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft before the automatic docking on July 18, 2012.
| ||||||||
Michigan EOC Monitoring Re-Entry of Chinese Space Station Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder has activated the state's Emergency Operations Center to monitor the re-entry of China's Tiangong-1 space station into the Earth's atmosphere.
| ||||||||
Researchers find a galaxy without dark matter "It's so rare, particularly these days after so many years of Hubble, that you get an image of something and say, 'I've never seen that before.
| ||||||||
China's Tiangong-1 space lab set to fall to Earth this weekend (CNN) A Chinese space lab could plummet back to earth as early as Saturday, authorities say, in a fiery end to one of the country's highest profile space projects.
| ||||||||
Uncontrolled space station crashing to Earth probably won't hit California. Probably. An unmanned, uncontrolled Chinese space station is hurtling toward Earth and will probably come crashing through the atmosphere sometime this weekend, experts say.
| ||||||||
NASA's Next Mars Lander Will Look Deep to Understand the Red Planet — and Earth NASA's InSight lander will set three main instruments on the Red Planet's surface, including burying a probe up to 16 feet (5 meters) down to measure the flow of heat.
| ||||||||
Humans walked on a Canadian beach 13000 years ago Archaeologists find some of the oldest evidence of humans this far north on Pacific Coast. Kiona N. Smith - 3/29/2018, 11:44 AM. Enlarge / Track #20, showing a slip mark.
| ||||||||
China's failing satellite is just one example of a massive space debris problem BERLIN - If you want to catch a last glimpse of Chinese satellite Tiangong-1, you better hurry. Circling the Earth at a speed of 17,500 miles per hour every 90 minutes, the 19,000-pound satellite will probably have vanished by the end of this weekend ...
| ||||||||
See more results | Edit this alert |
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
Receive this alert as RSS feed |
Send Feedback |
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar