New data has confirmed that asteroid 2011 AG5 will not hit the Earth in 2040.
You can relax: New data has confirmed that asteroid 2011 AG5 will not hit the Earth in 2040.
You can relax: New data has confirmed that asteroid 2011 AG5 will not hit the Earth in 2040.
The day of reckoning looms: Seven charts that outline the true and terrible state of the economy.
The Soyuz capsule with ISS’s new crew of three astronauts has successfully docked with the station.
NASA successfully completed a set of tests of the parachutes for the Orion capsule on Thursday.
We’re here to help you: A zoning board and the LAPD have shut down a thirty-year-old successful burger stand, apparently because they think it attracts crime.
Watch the video at the link. The result of this brain-dead action will be an abandoned building in an abandoned neighborhood. Good going, California!
Two teams competing for the Google Lunar X-Prize have now merged.
Moon Express had been considered by some to be in the lead to win the $30 million prize. With this merger I suspect their chances have improved considerably.
An evening pause: One of the most beautiful songs ever written, sung by one of the world’s best singers.
More bad news for Al Gore: A new dataset of global hurricanes since 1970 shows absolutely no trend, up or down.
Another IPCC failure, revealed in the leaked report: Not only have the models failed to predict global temperature, they also have failed to predict the amount of methane in the atmosphere.
The graph at the link is just like the temperature graph I posted on Monday. It compares actual observations with the predictions of the computer models, which all called for a hefty rise in atmospheric methane. All the models got it wrong.
Senate Democrats in action: “We are not going to do anything.”
But of course, it will be the Republicans’ fault, even though their proposed bill is one that Harry Reid himself considered acceptable earlier this year.
More details on Virgin Galactic’s first glide test of SpaceShipTwo with its rocket motor attached.
An meteorite that crashed in the Sierra Nevada mountains in April was traveling at the fastest speed on record for an meteorite, almost 18 miles per second.