Kamis, 27 Desember 2018

Google Alert - Science

Google
Science
As-it-happens update December 27, 2018
NEWS
There'll be something for everybody in 2019, with total, annular, and partial solar eclipses - and total and partial lunar eclipses to look forward to.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The New Horizons spacecraft will reach faraway Kuiper Belt object 2014 MU69 in the first minutes of 2019. Will the body informally known as Ultima Thule be as mysterious and exciting as Pluto?
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
There isn't much contest for the most bizarre space news story of the year. If anyone were to give away such an award it would definitely be handed to the bizarre saga of the leak that spontaneously appeared in the hull of a Soyuz spacecraft that was ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The year 2018 saw a wide range of milestones in spaceflight, stretching all the way from the sun to the edge of interstellar space.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
If you happened to tune into NASA TV on December 11th, you'd have been treated to a sight perhaps best described as "unprecedented": Russian cosmonauts roughly cutting away the thermal insulation of a docked Soyuz spacecraft with a knife and ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
This Christmas season marks the 50th anniversary of one of humankind's most memorable spaceflights: the Apollo 8 moon mission.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
SpaceX's futuristic Starship interplanetary craft may embody the golden age of sci-fi in more ways than one: in addition to (theoretically) taking passengers from planet to planet, it may sport a shiny stainless steel skin that makes it look like the ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Scientists used intracluster light (visible in blue) to study the distribution of dark matter within the cluster. NASA/ESA/M. Montes/UNSW.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
It's only been about a week since three of the crew members aboard the International Space Station flew back down to Earth aboard Russia's Soyuz spacecraft.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Of all the modern miracles enabled by spaceflight, global positioning satellites are among the most useful and ubiquitous. Military and civilian users across the globe depend on the 31 satellites, in six different orbital planes above Earth, to provide ...
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

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar