Thursday, November 17, 2016

Here's how to see the biggest supermoon since 1948 and other top stories.

  • Here's how to see the biggest supermoon since 1948

    Here's how to see the biggest supermoon since 1948
    Bigger in fact, than it has appeared at any point in the last 68 years, say scientists. This month's supermoon, the penultimate of the year, will be the biggest so far of the 21st century. We won't see its like again until 2034, so make sure you get a look. A "supermoon" occurs when the moon becomes full on the same days as its perigee, which is the point in the moon's orbit when it is closest to Earth. The term is borrowed from the pseudoscience of astrology but has been adopted by popular cul..
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  • NASA's Largest Space Telescope Completed, Launch Scheduled For 2018

    NASA's Largest Space Telescope Completed, Launch Scheduled For 2018
    The largest space telescope built by NASA so far is finally complete, 20 years after the project began. The James Webb Space Telescope will now undergo testing and is scheduled to be launched in October 2018.Compared to its predecessor, the Hubble Space Telescope — which has a 2.4-meter diameter mirror — Webb’s primary mirror has a diameter of 6.5 meters. The telescope can see in both visible light and in infrared. The mirror is comprised of 18 hexagonal segments, made of ultra-lightweight beryl..
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  • Antarctic marine reserve creation hailed 'a milestone for conservation'

    Antarctic marine reserve creation hailed 'a milestone for conservation'
    The creation of the world’s biggest marine reserve in Antarctica, covering an area more than six times the UK, has been hailed as a “milestone for conservation”. Agreement was reached by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) – which is made up of 24 countries, including the UK, and the EU – to protect 600,000 square miles of the Ross Sea.The protected area, which will come into force in December 2017, will curb damaging activities such as fishing to p..
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  • A Global Climate Deal Was Reached. Next Up Is Pollution Monitoring.

    A Global Climate Deal Was Reached. Next Up Is Pollution Monitoring.
    Photo A ministerial meeting in Marrakesh, Morocco, in October, held before COP22, the United Nations climate change summit conference. The gathering hopes to build on a remarkable period of progress on climate issues going well beyond the Paris agreement. Credit Agence France-Presse — Getty Images The Paris climate agreement is, obviously, a very big deal: Last year, nearly 200 nations agreed to take on the challenge of a warming world. Their stated goal was to hold the..
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  • Finding Life On Mars Through Smell? New NASA Instrument Could Do That

    Finding Life On Mars Through Smell? New NASA Instrument Could Do That
    The sense of smell has come a long way in science. First plants that can smell explosives and now machines that can smell Martian life.Yes, you read that right. NASA is working on an instrument, which when fitted onboard a rover, will allow it to “sniff” for life on Mars and even on other planets. Called Bio-Indicator Lidar Instrument (BILI), the sensor is based on technology currently used by the U.S. military to remotely check the air in public places for potentially lethal chemicals and toxin..
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  • [ November 2, 2016 ] Fly through the International Space Station in Ultra HD Mission Reports

    [ November 2, 2016 ] Fly through the International Space Station in Ultra HD Mission Reports
    VIDEO Take a maze-like journey through the International Space Station in this fisheye 4K Ultra HD video recently recorded aboard the orbiting research outpost. The tour begins inside the space station’s cupola, a windowed extension where astronauts control the research lab’s Canadian-built robotic arm. The Italian-built cupola, launched aboard the shuttle Endeavour’s STS-130 mission in February 2010, gives station crews panoramic views of Earth and an unrivaled view of approaching supply ships..
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  • Baby, It's Cold Inside: Mount St. Helens Has No Magma

    Baby, It's Cold Inside: Mount St. Helens Has No Magma
    Nov 03, 2016 04:00 AM EDT A research published in Nature Communications has revealed the unthinkable: instead of finding a chamber of hot magma below the volcano, scientists discovered a cool wedge of serpentine rock. The volcano responsible for the most destructive eruption in the history of the United States of America is literally cold inside. This is yet another reason for scientists to consider Mount St. Helens as an anomaly. For a volcano that contains no magma, Mount St. Helens had cau..
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  • Canary Islands Selected as Alternate Site for Thirty Meter Telescope

    Canary Islands Selected as Alternate Site for Thirty Meter Telescope
    HONOLULU รข€” The nonprofit organization that wants to build a giant telescope atop a Hawaii mountain has selected another site in case it can't be built on land many Native Hawaiians consider sacred. A mountain in the Canary Islands, Spain, is the primary alternative to Hawaii, Thirty Meter Telescope officials announced Monday. This 2011 file artist rendering was provided by Thirty Meter Telescope atop Mauna Kea. Anonymous / AP The TMT International Observatory Board of Governors..
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  • Explore the 'Jacuzzi of Despair,' a lake so salty it kills almost everything inside

    Explore the 'Jacuzzi of Despair,' a lake so salty it kills almost everything inside
    They call it the “Jacuzzi of Despair.”The underwater lake, discovered 3,300 feet below the surface of the Gulf of Mexico, is a pit of super-salty water and dissolved methane that kills any critter unlucky enough to fall inside. The discovery was made last year by a San Pedro-based research vessel, the E/V Nautilus.In the video, scientists excitedly navigate a remotely operated vehicle, the Hercules, above the circular pool. They point out the “pickled crabs” that succumbed to the “Jacuzzi of D..
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  • SpaceX fueling proposal sparks concern for NASA advisory panel

    SpaceX fueling proposal sparks concern for NASA advisory panel
    An eight-person group called the International Space Station Advisory Committee is reportedly apprehensive about a SpaceX proposal to fuel rockets while astronauts are present.  SpaceX and Boeing have contracts with NASA to eventually fly astronauts up to the International Space Station, but SpaceX was rocked by a powerful explosion that destroyed one of its unmanned rockets on the launchpad while it was being fueled on Sept. 1. "This is a hazardous operation," the committee’s chairman and a fo..
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Christie to appear in court over misconduct complaint .Will WikiLeaks Catch Up With Hillary Clinton in the Finale Presidential Debate? .
LeBron James said the Cavs are 'uptight,' even if they don't show it .Calais 'Jungle': Aid groups warn of children with nowhere to go .

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