Rocket Lab reveals reusable Neutron launcher with “Hungry Hippo” jaws

Rocket Lab has unveiled its concept for a new reusable launch vehicle called Neutron. Looking like something a Bond villain would deploy, it carries its second stage inside a permanently attached captive “Hungry Hippo” fairing design.Continue ReadingCa… Continue reading Rocket Lab reveals reusable Neutron launcher with “Hungry Hippo” jaws

“Fake flybys” move scientists closer to solving Martian moon mystery

By conducting “flybys” of Phobos when it wasn’t actually there, ESA’s Mars Express orbiter provided researchers with a controlled experiment to learn more about the mysterious, intermittent interaction between the Martian moon and solar winds.Continue … Continue reading “Fake flybys” move scientists closer to solving Martian moon mystery

Chicago to Washington DC flight uses 100% sustainable fuel in one engine

The shift to sustainable fuels in the aerospace sector passed another milestone last week when a United Airlines 737 MAX 8 airliner took to the skies with one of its two LEAP-1B engines running on 100-percent Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF).Continue Re… Continue reading Chicago to Washington DC flight uses 100% sustainable fuel in one engine

Rare Antarctic total solar eclipse to shed light on space weather

A rarely seen total eclipse of the Sun in Antarctica on December 4 is drawing the attention of an international partnership of scientists who hope to learn more about the effects of such eclipses on space weather. The eclipse begins at 0700 GMT and can… Continue reading Rare Antarctic total solar eclipse to shed light on space weather

US Air Force upgrades in-flight bladder relief systems for aircrews

The US Air Force is fielding an improved “in-flight bladder relief device” (to put it politely) called the Omni Generation 3 Skydrate that will allow male and female pilots to fly long air missions with greater safety and comfort.Continue ReadingCatego… Continue reading US Air Force upgrades in-flight bladder relief systems for aircrews

Asteroid analysis suggests some of Earth’s water came from the Sun

Accounting for where all of the Earth’s water came from is a longstanding puzzle, but an international team of scientists led by the University of Glasgow has proposed that the Sun may be a major source of our planet’s H₂O, by way of hydrogen from the … Continue reading Asteroid analysis suggests some of Earth’s water came from the Sun

Campaign to drill for the oldest continuous Antarctic ice core begins

To learn more about the Earth’s climate and environmental history, a research team has begun an €11-million (US$12.9-million) project with the hopes of collecting the oldest continuous ice core in Antarctica, providing a record of the climate spanning … Continue reading Campaign to drill for the oldest continuous Antarctic ice core begins

Study finds ancient ocean life helped build the great mountain ranges

Scientists led by the University of Aberdeen have concluded that the great mountain ranges of the world produced by the collision of Earth’s tectonic plates reached their great heights thanks to lubricating graphite, which resulted from an abundance of… Continue reading Study finds ancient ocean life helped build the great mountain ranges

New nanochip reprograms cells in the body to perform different functions

A team of researchers led by Chandan Sen at the Indiana University School of Medicine, is moving a new nanochip device, which can reprogram skin cells in the body to become new blood vessels and nerve cells, out of the prototype phase.Continue ReadingC… Continue reading New nanochip reprograms cells in the body to perform different functions