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When Does the New Year Start On the International Space Station?
If you're on terra firma, it's pretty obvious when you need to grab your make-out partner. But how, Slate's Explainer asks, do you know when to celebrate "when you're hurtling through time zones at 17,500 miles per hour?" More »Mysterious Lunar Base Hole Explained
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Russia's Federal Space Agency may try to deflect Apophis, the 880-megaton asteroid that can bring hell to Earth (for comparison, the total power of the entire deployed US nuclear arsenal is around 1,400 Megatons). There's only one problem. More »This New Year's Eve Brings the Rarest Blue Moon of All
Magical things happen once upon a blue Moon. And this Thursday we get a chance to find out just what those magical things as we watch the rare lunar event coincide with all the beautiful fireworks of New Year's Eve. More »Universe Ring's Tiny Imperfection Is a Model of Everything We Know**DUPE—Jack
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For years, astronomers have been puzzled by the fact that our solar system is crossing a cloud of interstellar hell. One that shouldn't be there at all. Intergalactic plot to keep us isolated or cosmic event? Voyager got the answer. More »The Nutcracker Dance of the Saturn Moons
Nothing is more Christmasy to me than the Nutcracker. OK, and Christmas pudding. Sooooo—nothing is more Christmasy than the Nutcracker and Christmas pudding—and probably eggnog. Maybe Christmas carols too. OK. Nutcracker, Christmas pudding, eggnog, carols, and Saturn's moons. More »Here's the Final Space Shuttle Mission Patch
The shuttle is retiring next year and, according to NASA, the remaining five flights may be the most difficult ever flown. That's why they created this contest for the final space shuttle patch. One of these will be the winner: More »In Space, Even Sharp's Solar Cells Can Generate Energy
Sharp's made no secret of its interest in solar cell technology, but finally they've shown off the fruit of their efforts, the first solar cell capable of surviving in space. More »10 Technologies to Thrust Us Through Deep Space
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Space: The final frontier—for Nikon, anyway. The camera company's relationship with NASA has just got steamier, as they're supplying 11 D3s DSLRs and seven AF-S NIKKOR 14-24mm f/2.8G ED lenses for their space photography. More »The First Picture of a Lake Outside Earth
See that shiny thing? That's a lake. But it's nowhere in Earth. It's in Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, 80% more massive than Earth's moon, and the only satellite with a dense atmosphere. According to Bob Pappalardo, from NASA: More »Prepare to Have Your Brain Exploded by This Known Universe Video
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Joseph Shoer is a Ph.D. candidate in aerospace engineering, studying how modular spacecraft could be assembled, and hoping that they will be the telescopes and human exploration vehicles of the future, and not for crushing the dreams of Martian colonists. More »Unbelievable Hubble Shot Captures the Biggest "Star Nursery" Nearby
This absolutely gorgeous shot is the most detailed ever taken of what HubbleSite describes as the "largest stellar nursery in our local galactic neighborhood." Get ready to pick your jaw up off your lap. More »Spandau Ballet To Be First Intergalactic Band Aboard Branson's SpaceShipTwo Enterprise
Last week I invoked the wrath of trance fans everywhere by suggesting Above & Beyond, rumored to be the first musical act in space, should be kept up there. Turns out Richard Branson chose Spandau Ballet instead. More »NASA Launches New Infrared Telescope to Capture Hidden Space Objects
NASA just launched the new Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, this morning. It'll be used to detect light- and heat-emitting objects that the Hubble might miss. Such as spaceships, I'll bet!!! More »