Jun 11, 2012 | Ask the Expert, Asteroid Exploration, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, Hubble Space Telescope, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Space and Science
When you look up at the Earth’s moon – it’s obvious that it was on the receiving end of impacting objects. New research is also showing that Mars too is a beaten up and battered world. Here’s the count, according to scientists identifying impact craters on the red...
Jun 6, 2012 | Asteroid Exploration, Blog, Education Station, International Cooperation, Kids Space, NASA, Our Solar System, Space and Science
A new video from NASA’s Dawn mission has been issued that shows the giant asteroid Vesta in colorful terms. This newly issued visualization enables a detailed view of the variation in the material properties of Vesta in the context of its topography. The colors were...
May 28, 2012 | Ask the Expert, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, International Cooperation, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Space and Science
WASHINGTON, D.C. — NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) is drawing closer to a red planet touchdown at Gale Crater. That early August landing, if successful, will open a new chapter of investigating Mars in preparation for eventual human visits. The keys to...
May 17, 2012 | Education, International Space Station, NASA, Roscosmos, Space and Science
A Russian Soyuz spacecraft reached the International Space Station early Thursday, safely delivering a pair of cosmonauts and a NASA astronaut to the orbiting science laboratory. New arrivals Gennady Padalka, Sergei Revin and Joseph Acaba were greeted by...
May 15, 2012 | Asteroid Exploration, Benefits of Space Exploration, Blog, Book Reviews, China, Commercial Space, Education Station, European Space Agency, Exploration, International Space Station, Kids Space, Mars, NASA, Space and Science, Why Space
Space Chronicles – Facing the Ultimate Frontier by Neil deGrasse Tyson (Edited by Avis Lang); W.W. Norton & Co., New York; $26.95 (hardcover); 2012. This delightful read comes courtesy of a thoughtful, charismatic astrophysicist and renowned popular speaker – an...
May 15, 2012 | International Cooperation, International Space Station, NASA, Roscosmos, Space and Science
A three-man U. S.and Russian crew successfully lifted off for the International Space Station from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan late Monday. The Soyuz capsule with Joseph Acaba, of NASA, and cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin...
May 11, 2012 | Ask the Expert, Blog, Education Station, European Space Agency, Exploration, Hubble Space Telescope, International Cooperation, Kids Space, Space and Science
Since 1995, when the first extrasolar planet was reported, the number of detections has increased to roughly 750 newly found worlds. All of these planets orbit stars. But a very few, if any, have been deemed potential candidates for life. New work by an international...
May 9, 2012 | Blog, Education Station, Exploration, International Cooperation, Kids Space, NASA, Space and Science
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) project has reached yet another milestone. The first instrument to be completed for JWST has been transferred from the European Space Agency to NASA – the Mid InfraRed Instrument, or MIRI for short. This month’s handover comes at...
May 4, 2012 | Benefits of Space Exploration, Planet Earth, Space and Science, Uncategorized
The nation’s NASA and NOAA administered Earth observation program is on shakey ground, the National Research Council, a Congressionally-chartered think tank, concluded in a report issued this week. A 21-member panel of scientists and engineers assembled...
May 3, 2012 | Ask the Expert, Benefits of Space Exploration, Blog, Education Station, Exploration, International Space Station, Kids Space, NASA, Space and Science
NASA astronaut and space station crew member, Don Pettit, is cranking out video that examines how microgravity affects scientific principles. The series is called “Science Off the Sphere” – physics experiments performed on the International Space Station using...