An analysis of the most recent Kepler data suggests that Earthlike planets in orbits like our own are extremely rare
An analysis of the most recent Kepler data suggests that Earthlike planets in orbits like our own are extremely rare.
An analysis of the most recent Kepler data suggests that Earthlike planets in orbits like our own are extremely rare.
An evening pause: As my wife Diane said after watching this, “Gee, I wish I had had a cool dad like that.”
Leftwing civility: Numerous death threats have been posted against Rush Limbaugh in numerous places on the internet.
The sun yesterday emitted its second biggest flare since 2006, with two coronal mass ejections heading for the Earth.
None of this will kill us, so stay calm. It is, however, a wonderful opportunity for solar scientists to study an active sun, something that might become rare in the coming decades.
A robotic refueling demo. designed and built by the same people who ran the Hubble Space Telescope repair missions, begins today on ISS, using Dextre.
This demo is designed to prove that a robot, operated from the ground, can refuel a satellite not designed for refueling. The demo satellite on ISS was built to match the design of several climate satellites already in orbit that will end up defunct in a few years if they can’t be refueled.
The USS Monitor gives up the faces of its dead.
A call to impeach Pennsylvania’s Zombie Mohammad judge.
Modern politically correct eduction: “Everybody from Texas is ignorant rednecks.”
The Left’s assault on free speech.
The same media that has done its best to smear any opposition to their agenda is now in overdrive to silence its opponents. This is an issue that goes to the heart of the First Amendment. I may disagree with Mr. Limbaugh, but I will support his right to free speech.
The rail gun: a cheap solution for getting payloads into orbit quickly.
Another state vs federal battle: The Utah legislature is about to pass a law demanding the federal government release to the state almost fifty percent of the state’s federal land.
The context here is that, for most western states, the federal government controls almost all of the real estate, and has in recent years increasingly restricted its use to the detriment of local residents. The legal maneuvering here is a push back by the state.