Jul 21, 2012 | Education, International Space Station, NASA, Space and Science
The winning experiments of YouTube’s Space Lab student contest hurtled into orbit late Friday, bound for the International Space Station and the opportunity to break ground on research with bacteria and spiders in the weightlessness of space. Contest proposals...
Jul 20, 2012 | Blog, Education Station, European Space Agency, Exploration, International Cooperation, Kids Space, Our Solar System, Planet Earth, Space and Science
Titan, a moon of Saturn, has been found to be an active mini-world of geological processes. But seeing those phenomena has been blocked by Titan’s thick, methane- and nitrogen-rich atmosphere. Thanks to the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft mission supported by NASA and the...
Jul 19, 2012 | Asteroid Exploration, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, International Cooperation, Kids Space, Space and Science, Space Research, Why Space
The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) project is moving to the final design stage. To be located in Chile, the LSST is a proposed 8-meter wide-field survey telescope that will survey the entire sky approximately twice per week, delivering a large and...
Jul 16, 2012 | European Space Agency, Exploration, Mars, NASA, Planet Earth, Space and Science
NASA’s $2.5 billion Mars Science Laboratory mission, a two year effort to determine whether the neighboring planet hosts, or once hosted, environmental conditions suitable for some form of life, represents the most challenging U. S. planetary mission ever...
Jul 15, 2012 | International Space Station, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), NASA, Roscosmos, Space and Science, Space Research
An all veteran crew of U. S., Russian and Japanese astronauts lifted off for the International Space Station late Saturday and a demanding four month mission filled with multi-national resupply activities, a pair of spacewalks and a challenging research agenda....
Jul 13, 2012 | Ask the Expert, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, International Cooperation, International Space Station, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Planet Earth, Space and Science, The Moon, The Sun
The Sun is acting up again! A huge coronal mass ejection on the Sun was recorded on July 12. Forecasters expect the cloud of energetic particles to arrive at Earth on July 14th. Its impact could spark moderate to severe geomagnetic storms, allowing auroras to be seen...
Jul 12, 2012 | Ask the Expert, Blog, Education, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Programs Online, Kids Space, Mars, Multimedia, NASA, Our Solar System, Space and Science
There’s a great way to study the 3-D nature of NASA spacecraft. Thanks to space specialists at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), a new application can bring robotic spacecraft to life. It’s available for free on the iPhone and iPad…and just in time for the...
Jun 28, 2012 | Ask the Expert, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Kids Space, Mars, Space and Science
Phobos – one of two moons of Mars – could well be the site for life detection beyond Earth. That’s the belief of Purdue University researchers, arguing that Phobos may be an extraterrestrial repository for microbes blasted off of Mars by being on the receiving end of...
Jun 26, 2012 | Asteroid Exploration, European Space Agency, Exploration, International Cooperation, Mars, NASA, Planet Earth, Space and Science
Asteroids are gaining big time on the respect scale. Two years ago, President Obama directed NASA to alter plans for a human lunar return and focus instead on mission that would land U.S. explorers one of the small rocky bodies by 2025. The mission would...
Jun 25, 2012 | Benefits of Space Exploration, NASA, Planet Earth, Space and Science
As surely as they bring high temperatures, summers in the United States bring Hurricane Season, a five-month stretch that raises the costly spectre of high winds, heavy rains and floods to the millions of people who live in the cities and communities that dot the East...