Scientific Frontline® On-Site Search Engine by Google Co-op

Current UTC Time
 
News Home, where you will find the "Current Top Stories"The Communication Center contains current news briefs from major Universities, NASA, ESA, and the top three Aviation Mfg.Science section contains all the latest knowledge in Medical Research, Archeology, Biology, and other General Science NewsCurrent Earth Science and Environmental discoveries.The E.A.R., Environmental Awareness Report. E.A.R. will keep you advised of Environmental Alerts, Government, University, and public projects. All the current space discoveries from Hubble, Spitzer, Chandra X-Ray, ESO, Gemini, Subaru, ESA, NASA, and many more. The latest in space theories from leading astronomers and scientist from around the world.The Space Weather Forecast Center by Scientific Frontline, Current up-to-date space weather, forecasts, alerts and warnings. Images from SOHO, GOES, and STEREO. Plus solar observations from Erika RixCurrent space missions newsThe Cassini Main Page. Containing all the latest news from the Cassini Spacecraft around Saturn. Leading into Cassini status reports, The Cassini Gallery of all the latest images from Cassini. Seeing Saturn and all her moons like never before.Daily Sky maps, Celestial Events Calendar.Observatories Gallery, Images from the Great Observatories on Earth and Above. The Stellar Nights  Gallery, An amateur astronomical collection from John Crilly, Richard Handy, Erika Rix, and Paul RixCloudy Nights Telescope Reviews / An Atronomical Community.The latest in Computer, Nanotechnology, and General Technological advancements.The latest in Aviation achievements in civil, military, and space aviationThe World News Report,  news from the Voxant Viral Syndication, known as the Newsroom. Contains the latest videos from major news sources.The news archive from Scientific Frontline's past articles. A world of knowledge at your fingertips.Abstracts, Journals, and Technical papers maintained by Scientific Frontline. The Gateway to all the galleries in the Scientific Frontline collectionPhoenix Rising / Scientific Frontline Docking TeamResearch Department | Staff and Researchers OnlySite Related links from major universities, government and private research labs.Assorted Downloads related to space, science, aviation, including screensavers and ASTROMONY SOFTWARE, and other endorsed programs.Scientific Frontline Forum | HypercubeThe foundation of an online publication by SFL ORG. News Network called Scientific FrontlineContact page to Scientific Frontline / SFL ORG. News NetworkDisclaimer / Legal Notice for use of the SFL ORG. News Network's publication Scientific Frontline
an online publication of the SFL ORG. Educational News Network

Page Bookmarks
Current Top News | Top Article in Comm. Center | Top Article in World News Report | Top Article in E.A.R. | Latest Mission Updates | Latest 4 in the Galleries Latest in Stellar Nights® Gallery | Latest in Space Weather News | Next Celestial Event | Featured Web Site | Hypercube
 
Scientific Frontline® RSS Feeds
Scientific Frontline®
The Comm Center
The E.A.R.®
World News Report
Stellar Nights® Gallery
Cassini Gallery
Mars Gallery
Missions Gallery
Observatories Gallery
Aviation Gallery
Exploration Gallery
Nature Trail Gallery
Space Weather Alerts
Directors Chair
Voxant Feed (SECURED)
Syndication Feed (SECURED)
 
Current Top News
S
c
i
e
n
c
e
Protons, neutrons melt to produce 'quark-gluon plasma' at RHIC

Feb. 15, 2010
Recent analyses from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a 2.4-mile-circumference “atom smasher” at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory, establish that collisions of gold ions traveling at nearly the speed of light have created matter at a temperature of about 4 trillion degrees Celsius — the hottest temperature ever reached in a laboratory, about 250,000* times hotter than the center of the Sun. This temperature, based upon measurements by the PHENIX collaboration at RHIC, is higher than the temperature needed to melt protons and neutrons into a plasma of quarks and gluons.
E
a
r
t
h
The Smell of Salt Air, a Mile High and 900 Miles Inland
NEW
Mar. 10, 2010
The smell of sea salt in the air is a romanticized feature of life along a seacoast. Wind and waves kick up spray, and bits of sodium chloride – common table salt – can permeate the air. It is believed that as much as 10 billion metric tons of chloride enters the air mass through this process each year, but just a tiny fraction – perhaps one-third of 1 percent – does anything but fall back to the surface.
S
p
a
c
e
Saturn's Aurora Offer Stunning Double Show

Feb. 11, 2010
Researchers using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope recently took advantage of a rare opportunity to record Saturn when its rings are edge-on, resulting in a unique movie featuring both of the giant planet's poles. Saturn is only in this position every 15 years and this favorable orientation has allowed a sustained study of Saturn’s almost symmetric northern and southern lights.
T
e
c
h
n
o
l
o
g
y
Absorbing Hydrogen Fluoride Gas to Enhance Crystal Growth

Dec. 10, 2009
Two scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have developed a method to control the buildup of hydrogen fluoride gas during the growth of precision crystals needed for applications such as superconductors, optical devices, and microelectronics. The invention — by Vyacheslav Solovyov and Harold Wiesmann and recently awarded U.S. Patent number 7,622,426 — could lead to more efficient production and improved performance of these materials.
A
v
i
a
t
i
o
n
Lockheed Martin C-5M Super Galaxy Is 'Effective, Suitable And Mission Capable' For USAF Operations
NEW
Mar. 10, 2010
The Air Force Operational Test and Evaluation (OT&E) Center has rated the Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] C-5M as "effective, suitable and mission capable" based on results from OT&E testing completed in January 2010. The OT&E phase spanned four months, evaluating various performance aspects to validate the capability and reliability of the C-5M. These positive test results enable the Super Galaxy to continue to support critical missions flown in support of world-wide operational contingencies.
Top Article in Communication Center
C
o
m
m
U.S. Navy Awards Lockheed Martin $17 Million Contract For MK 41 Vertical Launching System
NEW
Mar. 11, 2010
The U.S. Navy recently awarded Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] a $17 million contract to provide engineering design services for the MK 41 Vertical Launching System (VLS) on the U.S. Navy’s Ticonderoga-class cruisers and Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers.
Top Article in World News Report
W
o
r
l
d

N
e
w
s
Gates Pushes for More Iran Sanctions

Feb. 08, 2010
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates pushes for more sanctions on Iran. Deborah Lutterbeck reports.
Latest from The Environmental Awareness Report®
E
A
R
Conservationists Urge Treaty Panel to Reject Ivory Sale by Tanzania, Zambia
NEW
Mar. 11, 2010
An international convention will meet next week to decide whether to grant requests from Tanzania and Zambia to lower the protection status of their elephants, allowing them to conduct one-time sales of stockpiled ivory. An international team of 27 conservationists, writing in the March 12 edition of Science, says allowing the sale could lead to increased slaughter of elephants for their ivory throughout Africa. The team says there was a sharp increase in poaching even before 2007, when the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species approved a lower protection status for elephants in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe.
Latest Mission Updates
 
The Cassini Mission
Tiny Trio
NEW
Mar. 11, 2010
Three of Saturn's small moons straddle the rings in this image. From left to right are Pandora, Prometheus and, near the top right, Epimetheus. Pandora (81 kilometers, or 50 miles across) and Prometheus (86 kilometers, or 53 miles across) are closest to Cassini. Epimetheus (113 kilometers, or 70 miles across) is on the far side of the rings.
 
The Cassini Mission
Cassini Data Show Ice and Rock Mixture Inside Titan
NEW
Mar. 11, 2010
By precisely tracking NASA's Cassini spacecraft on its low swoops over Saturn's moon Titan, scientists have determined the distribution of materials in the moon's interior. The subtle gravitational tugs they measured suggest the interior has been too cold and sluggish to split completely into separate layers of ice and rock.
Latest 4 in the Galleries
 
Mars Missions Gallery
Northern Hemisphere Gullies with Layers
NEW
Mar. 10, 2010
This observation shows northern hemisphere gullies on a layered crater wall. Many channels are visible emanating from beneath layers suggesting that the layers are permeable and carried water to the slope face via the subsurface. It is also possible that the source of water came from the surface. The gullies that do not originate at a layer likely did at one time and have subsequently experienced headward erosion, eroding the layers upslope of their original location.
 
Mars Missions Gallery
Gullies and... Gullies? in Terra Sirenum

Mar. 04, 2010
This observation shows part of an unnamed crater, itself located inside the much larger Newton Crater, in Terra Sirenum. This unnamed crater is approximately 7 kilometers in diameter (over 4 miles) and some 700 meters (760 yards) deep. Numerous gully systems are visible on the east- and south-facing walls of the crater; their characteristics are astonishingly diverse.
 
Observatories Gallery
ESO 306-17: Bully galaxy rules the neighborhood

Mar. 04, 2010
Located half a billion light-years from Earth, ESO 306-17, is a large, bright elliptical galaxy in the southern sky of a type known as a fossil group. Astronomers use this term to emphasis the isolated nature of these galaxies. However, are they like fossils — the last remnants of a once active community — or is it more sinister than that? Did ESO 306-17 gobble up its next-door neighbors?
 
Observatories Gallery
NGC 1788

Mar. 03, 2010
The delicate nebula NGC 1788, located in a dark and often neglected corner of the Orion constellation, is revealed in this finely nuanced image. Although this ghostly cloud is rather isolated from Orion’s bright stars, their powerful winds and light have a strong impact on the nebula, forging its shape and making it a home to a multitude of infant suns.
Latest in Stellar Nights® Gallery
 
Stellar Nights® Gallery
Pluto Animation

May 21 2009
Two frame animation showing Pluto's movement in relation to background stars over a period of 25 Hours, 17 Minutes.
Taken by Paul Rix at the PCW Memorial Observatory.
Latest in Space Weather News Center
 
SOHO Pick of the Week
CME Lashes Out
NEW
Mar. 08-15, 2010
STEREO (Ahead) watched as a strong coronal mass ejection (CME) and an eruptive prominence rose up and stretched way out above the Sun's surface (Feb. 28, 2010). The composite image and movie show the action in both extreme UV wavelength (orange Sun) near and just above the solar surface overlaid on the frames from STEREO COR1 coronagraph that shows the material as it rises out into the corona.
 
Shocking recipe for making killer electrons
NEW
Mar. 11, 2010
Take a bunch of fast-moving electrons, place them in orbit and then hit them with the shock waves from a solar storm. What do you get? Killer electrons. That’s the shocking recipe revealed by ESA’s Cluster mission. Killer electrons are highly energetic particles trapped in Earth's outer radiation belt, which extends from 12 000 km to 64 000 km above the planet’s surface.
 Next Celestial Event
 
Celestial Events
Venus and the Moon
NEW
Mar. 17, 2010
MAP
Venus, which is beginning its reign as the “evening star,” is to the left of the crescent Moon, low in the west shortly after sunset on the 17th the Moon on the 18th
Featured Web Site
 
International Research Institute for Climate and Society
NEW
Mar. 07-14, 2010
The IRI's mission is to enhance society's capability to understand, anticipate and manage the impacts of seasonal climate fluctuations in order to improve human welfare and the environment, especially in developing countries. The IRI conducts this mission through strategic and applied research, education, capacity building, and by providing forecasts and information products, with an emphasis on practical and verifiable utility and partnership.
The Hypercube
 
Why Do We Assume
NEW
Jan. 02 2010
That all mass and energy is quantized. Many observations of the quantum world suggest the existence of a continuous non-quantized form of mass and energy. For example in 1924 Louis de Broglie theorized that all particle posse wave properties. Science does not question the validity of this concept because it is the foundation of a theory known by the name of wave mechanics, a theory which has utterly transformed our knowledge of physical phenomena on the atomic scale.
 |
 |

Member of


Scientific Frontline®, Stellar Nights®, E.A.R.®, and Environmental Awareness Report®”
Are Registered Trademarks of the
Online Publication of the SFL ORG. Educational News Network
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma USA
A Not-for-Profit Educational News Service
© 2005 - 2010 All Rights Reserved


Home | Comm. Center | Space Weather Center | Galleries | About Us | FAQ | Site Map | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service