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Fish can recognize a face based on UV pattern aloneFish can recognize a face based on UV pattern alone

Ancient DNA from rare fossil reveals that polar bears evolved recently and adapted quicklyAncient DNA from rare fossil reveals that polar bears evolved recently and adapted quickly

'Anaconda' meets 'Jurassic Park': Study shows ancient snakes ate dinosaur babies'Anaconda' meets 'Jurassic Park': Study shows ancient snakes ate dinosaur babies

Scientists locate apparent hydrothermal vents off AntarcticaScientists locate apparent hydrothermal vents off Antarctica

Artificial bee silk a big step closer to realityArtificial bee silk a big step closer to reality

Predicting the fate of stem cellsPredicting the fate of stem cells

Artificial foot recycles energy for easier walkingArtificial foot recycles energy for easier walking

New fiber nanogenerators could lead to electric clothingNew fiber nanogenerators could lead to electric clothing

What drives our genes? Researchers map the first complete human epigenomeWhat drives our genes? Researchers map the first complete human epigenome

Juggling enhances connections in the brainJuggling enhances connections in the brain

Tracking down the human 'odorprint'Tracking down the human 'odorprint'

Fill 'er up - with algaeFill 'er up - with algae

Scientists discover quantum fingerprints of chaosScientists discover quantum fingerprints of chaos

Researchers help identify cows that gain more while eating lessResearchers help identify cows that gain more while eating less

Astronomy News and Research - October 2007 Archives


Massive Black Hole Smashes Record (10/31/2007)

Massive Black Hole Smashes RecordUsing two NASA satellites, astronomers have discovered a black hole that obliterates a record announced just two weeks ago. The new black hole, with a mass 24 to 33 times that of our Sun, is the heftiest known black hole that orbits another star. ...> Full Article


Mars With Ice, Shaken, Not Stirred (10/30/2007)

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. That's the global picture literally and figuratively coming into much sharper focus as various Mars-orbiting cameras send back tomes of unprecedented super high-resolution imagery of ever vaster tracts of the planet's surface. ...> Full Article


Old Comet Still Kicks Up Its Heels! (10/29/2007)

Comet 17P/Holmes may be old, but it can still kick up its heels and go dancing with the stars! It was discovered more than 100 years ago, and since then has made 16 loops around the Sun. It should have fizzled long ago, but just this week Comet Holmes surprised sky watchers with a stunning outburst, becoming brighter than any comet in the past decade. ...> Full Article


First Known Belt Of Moonlets In Saturn's Rings Detected (10/29/2007)

First Known Belt Of Moonlets In Saturn's Rings DetectedA narrow belt harboring moonlets as large as football stadiums discovered in Saturn's outermost ring probably resulted when a larger moon was shattered by a wayward asteroid or comet eons ago. ...> Full Article


Supernovae Not What They Used To Be; Distant Supernovae Distinctly Brighter (10/28/2007)

Supernovae Not What They Used To Be; Distant Supernovae Distinctly BrighterExploding stars that light the way for research on dark energy aren't as powerful or bright, on average, as they once were. ...> Full Article


Hubble Spies Shells of Sparkling Stars around Quasar (10/28/2007)

Hubble Spies Shells of Sparkling Stars around QuasarNew images taken with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope - part of a research project led by UC Riverside's Gabriela Canalizo - have revealed the wild side of an elliptical galaxy, nearly two billion light-years away, that previously had been considered mild-mannered. ...> Full Article


Selecting Next Mars Rover Landing Site With Minerals In Mind (10/27/2007)

Selecting Next Mars Rover Landing Site With Minerals In MindScientists scouting potential landing sites for NASA's next Mars rover mission are using new data from a powerful mineral-mapping camera to narrow the site selection. ...> Full Article


Astronomers unmask missing black holes (10/27/2007)

Astronomers unmask hundreds of black holes hidden in galaxies billions of light-years away. ...> Full Article


Mystery Comet Explodes into Brightness (10/26/2007)

Mystery Comet Explodes into BrightnessA once-faint comet has made a sudden leap from obscurity to center stage. Comet 17P/Holmes, now visible to northern hemisphere residents, increased its brightness by a factor of one million this week, going from magnitude 17 to 2. This makes it visible to the unaided eye as well as binoculars and telescopes, offering a unique viewing opportunity for sky watchers. ...> Full Article


Possible Cosmic Defect May Be a Window into the Early Universe (10/26/2007)

Possible Cosmic Defect May Be a Window into the Early UniverseAn unusual cold spot in the oldest radiation in the universe, the cosmic microwave background, may be caused by a cosmic defect created just after the Big Bang, a Spanish and U.K. research team reports in Science Express. ...> Full Article


Dwarf galaxies need dark matter too, astronomers say (10/25/2007)

Stars in dwarf spheroidal galaxies behave in a way that suggests the galaxies are utterly dominated by dark matter, astronomers have found. ...> Full Article


Massive Star's Afterlife: A Supernova Seeds New Planets (10/25/2007)

Massive Star's Afterlife: A Supernova Seeds New PlanetsA spectacular new image shows how complex a star's afterlife can be. ...> Full Article


Solar Telescope Reaches 120,000 Feet on Jumbo-Jet-Sized Balloon (10/24/2007)

Solar Telescope Reaches 120,000 Feet on Jumbo-Jet-Sized BalloonIn a landmark test flight a team of research partners this month successfully launched a solar telescope to an altitude of 120,000 feet, borne by a balloon larger than a Boeing 747 jumbo jet. The test clears the way for long-duration polar balloon flights beginning in 2009 that will capture unprecedented details of the Sun's surface. ...> Full Article


Boosting the accuracy of Rosetta's Earth approach (10/23/2007)

Boosting the accuracy of Rosetta's Earth approachSpace craft lines up for 2nd Earth flyby to help gain speed for trip to comet. ...> Full Article


Columbus hatch closed for last time (10/22/2007)

Columbus hatch closed for last timePreparations of the European Columbus laboratory took an important step earlier this week with the final closure of the module's hatch ahead of the December launch to the International Space Station. ...> Full Article


Double Star TC-1 Completes Its Mission (10/21/2007)

Double Star TC-1 Completes Its MissionTC-1, one of the two satellites of the CNSA/ESA Double Star mission, was decommissioned on 14 October as its designed orbit lifetime came to an end. The satellite re-entered Earth's atmosphere and turned to dust during its descent. ...> Full Article


Heaviest Stellar Black Hole Discovered In Nearby Galaxy (10/20/2007)

Heaviest Stellar Black Hole Discovered In Nearby GalaxyAstronomers have located an exceptionally massive black hole in orbit around a huge companion star. This result has intriguing implications for the evolution and ultimate fate of massive stars. ...> Full Article


Scientists Uncover First Evidence of Water Still On Mars (10/19/2007)

Physicists have detected the first "on-the-spot" evidence of significant amounts of water still existing on Mars. ...> Full Article


$1 Million in Funding for Construction of Innovative POLARBEAR Telescope (10/18/2007)

$1 Million in Funding for Construction of Innovative POLARBEAR TelescopeTelescope will allow scientists to get a first look back at the birth of the universe ...> Full Article


Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence: Allen Telescope Array Begins Scientific Observations (10/18/2007)

Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence: Allen Telescope Array Begins Scientific ObservationsAstronomers have announced that the first 42 radio dishes of the Allen Telescope Array (ATA) have been activated and collecting scientific data from the far reaches of the universe. This is the first phase of a planned 350 radio dishes that will advance the capabilities of radio astronomy research. ...> Full Article


Making tracks towards understanding exploding stars and the origin of the elements (10/18/2007)

Scientists have helped to design and create a pioneering instrument that will provide clues that could help to understand the origins of the elements in the Universe. ...> Full Article


Long-lost, Dangerous Asteroid Is Found Again (10/17/2007)

Long-lost, Dangerous Asteroid Is Found AgainEchoing the re-discovery of America by the Spanish long after an earlier Viking reconnaissance, astronomers have learned that a recently observed asteroid - one that could potentially hit the Earth - was actually first observed nearly a half-century ago. Researchers at the Minor Planet Center of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, MA have confirmed work by SETI Institute astronomer Peter Jenniskens that the recently discovered asteroid 2007 RR9 is in fact the long-lost object 6344 P-L. ...> Full Article


Drizzly Mornings On Xanadu -- Saturn's Moon Titan (10/15/2007)

Drizzly Mornings On Xanadu -- Saturn's Moon TitanNoted for its bizarre hydrocarbon lakes and frozen methane clouds, Saturn's largest moon, Titan, also appears to have widespread drizzles of methane, according to a team of astronomers at the University of California, Berkeley. ...> Full Article


Dark Matter Of The Universe Has A Long Lifetime (10/15/2007)

Dark Matter Of The Universe Has A Long LifetimeNew research from the Niels Bohr Institute presents new information that adds another piece of knowledge to the jigsaw puzzle of the dark mystery of the universe -- dark matter. ...> Full Article


Astronomers get their hands dirty as they lift the veil on galactic dust (10/13/2007)

There is more to a grain of dust than meets the eye, at least for astronomers as they attempt to probe deeper into distant galaxies. Until now dust has been a nuisance because it has obscured galaxies, and the stars within them, by absorbing the radiation they emit. But more recently dust has started to present opportunities because it emits radiation itself as a consequence of being heated up by nearby stars. Aided by new observing instruments and sophisticated computer software, this radiation enables astronomers to reconstruct what lies behind the dust. Furthermore the dust itself plays a vital role in star formation within galaxies. ...> Full Article


Astronomers help locate obscure galaxies (10/12/2007)

Researchers helped to locate what they call the 'Lego building blocks of galaxies.' They did so by looking in a place that other astronomers already had looked, but with fresh eyes. ...> Full Article


Cassini's new view of land of lakes and seas (10/12/2007)

Cassini's new view of land of lakes and seasThe best views of the hydrocarbon lakes and seas on Saturn's moon Titan taken by the Cassini spacecraft are being released today. ...> Full Article


Testing Einstein: Is Dark Energy Constant? (10/12/2007)

Nearly a decade ago, astronomers discovered the surprising existence of dark energy-a mysterious force that pushes galaxies apart and accelerates the expansion of the universe. Also known as the energy density of the vacuum, dark energy is a property of space itself. Scientists have many questions about the nature of dark energy. One question that soon may be answered: Is the energy density of the vacuum constant over cosmic time? ...> Full Article


New isotope molecule may add to Venus' greenhouse effect (10/11/2007)

New isotope molecule may add to Venus' greenhouse effectNew isotope molecule may add to Venus' greenhouse effect ...> Full Article


Pluto-bound Spacecraft Sees Changes In Jupiter System (10/11/2007)

Pluto-bound Spacecraft Sees Changes In Jupiter SystemThe voyage of NASA's Pluto-bound New Horizons spacecraft through the Jupiter system earlier this year provided a bird's-eye view of a dynamic planet that has changed since the last close-up looks by NASA spacecraft. ...> Full Article


Origin Of Cosmic Rays Illuminated (10/11/2007)

Origin Of Cosmic Rays IlluminatedRecent observations from NASA and Japanese X-ray observatories have helped clarify one of the long-standing mysteries in astronomy -- the origin of cosmic rays. ...> Full Article


Cassini on the trail of a runaway mystery (10/10/2007)

Cassini on the trail of a runaway mysteryScientists are on the trail of Iapetus' mysterious dark side, which seems to be home to a bizarre 'runaway' process that is transporting vaporised water ice from the dark areas to the white areas of the Saturnian moon. ...> Full Article


Undergrads discover more than 1,300 asteroids (10/9/2007)

Undergraduate astronomy students at the University of Washington combing through images from a specialized telescope have discovered more than 1,300 asteroids that had never before been observed. That is about one out of every 250 known objects in the solar system. ...> Full Article


New deep space images of distant strip of sky to be available on Google Sky (10/7/2007)

A global project to map a distant strip of the universe is releasing its data today to scientists and the public to be used as part of Google Sky, a new feature of Google Earth. ...> Full Article


Sign Of 'Embryonic Planets' Forming In Nearby Stellar Systems (10/6/2007)

Sign Of 'Embryonic Planets' Forming In Nearby Stellar SystemsAstronomers are pointing to three nearby stars they say may hold "embryonic planets"—a missing link in planet-formation theories. ...> Full Article


Scientists study tiny galaxy halfway across the universe (10/5/2007)

Scientists study tiny galaxy halfway across the universeA tiny galaxy nearly halfway across the universe, the smallest in size and mass known to exist at that distance, has been identified and studied by an international team of over a dozen scientists. ...> Full Article


Supernovae not what they used to be (10/5/2007)

Supernovae not what they used to beDistant supernovae an average of 12 per cent brighter ...> Full Article


Small Explorer Mission to Detect Black Holes Scheduled for 2011 Launch (10/4/2007)

Small Explorer Mission to Detect Black Holes Scheduled for 2011 LaunchNASA has given the go-ahead to restart an astrophysics mission that will provide a greater capability for using high-energy Xrays to detect black holes than any existing instrument has. ...> Full Article


From Sputnik to Sat Nav (10/4/2007)

From Sputnik to Sat NavThe launch of the world's first satellite 50 years ago today (THURS OCT 4) kick started a technological revolution which is benefiting life on Earth today, a leading Durham University expert has said. ...> Full Article


Chance encounter with comet nets surprising results (10/2/2007)

Chance encounter with comet nets surprising resultsComets are made of the most primitive stuff in the solar system. As hunks of rock and ice that never coalesced into more planets, they give researchers clues to the evolution of solar systems. ...> Full Article


Venus, Saturn and Regulus cluster before dawn in October (10/2/2007)

Venus, Saturn and Regulus cluster before dawn in OctoberVenus, Saturn and Regulus will dance a pas de trois low in the eastern sky an hour before sunrise during October, with the crescent moon joining them on Oct 7. ...> Full Article


Gamma Ray Delay May Be Sign of 'New Physics' (10/1/2007)

Gamma Ray Delay May Be Sign of 'New Physics'Delayed gamma rays from deep space may provide the first evidence for physics beyond current theories. ...> Full Article


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New Articles
Lava likely made river-like channel on MarsLava likely made river-like channel on Mars

Biggest, deepest crater exposes hidden, ancient moonBiggest, deepest crater exposes hidden, ancient moon

Phobos flyby successPhobos flyby success

The cosmic batThe cosmic bat

First signal received by future telescopeFirst signal received by future telescope

NASA's Fermi probes 'dragons' of the gamma-ray skyNASA's Fermi probes 'dragons' of the gamma-ray sky

How to hunt for exoplanets

Astronomically large lenses measure the age and size of the universeAstronomically large lenses measure the age and size of the universe

First of missing primitive stars discoveredFirst of missing primitive stars discovered

Mars Express heading for closest flyby of PhobosMars Express heading for closest flyby of Phobos

Widening the search for extraterrestrial intelligence

New 'alien' invaders found in the Milky Way: Queen's University astronomer

First measurement of the age of cometary materialFirst measurement of the age of cometary material

Light, wind and fireLight, wind and fire

Torn apart by its own tides, massive planet is on a 'death march'Torn apart by its own tides, massive planet is on a 'death march'



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