Search by keywords in this category

Atacama (2) Romania (8) NASA (5) Alin Totorean (2) Australia (2) Germany (2) UK (3) IAU (3) IYA (3) USA (4) Catherine Cesarsky (2) IYA2009 (6) Astronomical Institute of the Romanian Academy (2) (6) malaria (2) cancer (2) stress (2)
more keywords...

News in this category : Astronomy

Please help British Council with an important survey

All participants will be entered into a prize draw and for the winner British Council will donate £250 to a charity of his/ her choice.
0 Comments »

The 1st Europlanet Prize for Excellence in Public Engagement with Planetary Science

The first Europlanet Prize for Excellence in Public Engagement with Planetary Science has been awarded to Dr Jean Lilensten of the Laboratoire de Planétologie de Grenoble, France. He will be presented with his award of 4000 Euros at the European Planetary Science Congress 2010, which will take place at the Angelicum Centre – Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Rome, Italy, from 19 – 24 September 2010.
0 Comments »

Astronomers Get First Look at Weather inside the Solar System’s Biggest Storm

New thermal images of the Jupiter’s Great Red Spot obtained with ESO’s Very Large Telescope and other powerful ground-based telescopes enable scientists to make the first detailed interior weather map of the giant storm system. The data allowed linking its temperature, winds, pressure and composition with its colour.
0 Comments »

"Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy - Building Bridges between Cultures"

At the beginning of 2011, the next Oxford International symposium on archeoastronomy will take place at Lima, in Peru. It is the first time when this event is to be held in South America.
0 Comments »

The Sun between Science and Music

University of Michigan researchers have "sonified" the solar wind data that's usually represented visually, as numbers or graphs. They have created a musical representation of the data gathered by NASA's Advanced Composition Explorer satellite.
0 Comments »

The IYA2009 Prize for Excellence in Astronomy Education and Public Outreach goes to FETTU!

The International Year of Astronomy 2009/Mani Bhaumik Prize for Excellence in Astronomy Education and Public Outreach has been awarded to From Earth to the Universe (FETTU). This award recognises FETTU’s important contribution in improving public awareness of astronomical achievements, and in stimulating the use of astronomy for the promotion of scientific education and culture in 2009.
0 Comments »

A cosmic sculpture made of light, wind and fire

European Southern Observatory (ESO) has released a new image of NGC 346, the brightest star-forming region in the Small Magellanic Cloud, our neighbouring galaxy. The cosmic structure looks like a cobweb and astronomers say that the region is a work in progress, and changes as the time pass.
0 Comments »

ESA’s candidates Euclid, PLATO, and Solar Orbiter

Dark energy, habitable planets around other stars, and the mysterious nature of our own Sun. These are the three scientific missions that have been chosen by ESA as candidates for two medium-class missions to be launched no earlier than 2017. The final decision about which missions to implement is foreseen to be made in mid-2011.
0 Comments »

Bareket Observatory organise webcast to an extra solar planet

This weekend, as part of outreach activities, the Bareket Observatory in Israel is organising a special web cast dedicated to the extra solar planet "XO-3b".
0 Comments »

Romanian astronomer contributes to new research on Apophis published in “Nature”

French and American astronomers concluded in an article published in Nature that the Earth can produce a significant impact for the re-surfacing processes of an asteroid if passes a distance of at least 16 Earth radii from the planet. The article is signed by well-known astronomers and among them is the Romanian Dr. Mirel Birlan from the Institut de Mecanique Celeste et de Calcul des Ephemerides (IMCCE), Observatoire de Paris, France.
0 Comments »

NASA is asking public to pick pixels on Mars

Scientists are taking suggestions from the public on where to image the red planet. Pictures will be taken by the most powerful camera aboard a NASA spacecraft orbiting Mars.
0 Comments »

NASA’s next destinations: Venus, an asteroid, or the Moon?

NASA has selected three proposals as candidates for the agency’s next space venture to another celestial body in our solar system. The final project selected in mid-2011 may provide a better understanding of Earth’s formation or perhaps the origin of life on our planet. The proposed missions would probe the atmosphere and crust of Venus; return a piece of a near-Earth asteroid for analysis; or drop a robotic lander into a basin at the Moon’s south pole to return lunar rocks back to Earth for study.
0 Comments »

Love astronomy and writing? Astronomy magazine seeks managing editor

Astronomy magazine is seeking a managing editor. The successful candidate will partner with the editor to manage a professional, dedicated, seven-member editorial staff and report to the editor of the magazine.
0 Comments »

IYA2009 at final but every end is a new beginning: Beyond IYA2009

The official close of the International Year of Astronomy 2009 (IYA2009) will take place on 9 and 10 of January, 2010 in Padova, Italy. The IYA2009 Closing Ceremony concludes one of the world’s grandest science popularization ventures, but also hails the beginning of a new era: Beyond IYA2009.
0 Comments »

Live 24-hour observatory webcast and 100 hours of sidewalk astronomy events

“100 Hours of Astronomy”, one of the IYA2009 Global Cornerstone Projects, ramps up. Project addresses to amateur astronomers, educators, professional astronomers, planetaria, science centres and more to arrange events around the world during this 4-day period and to publicise them now on the project website.
0 Comments »

Astronomy unite India and Bangladesh

IYA2009 star party was taken place at the border between two countries and involved 15 participants from each country.
0 Comments »

A Decadal Global Strategy to follow the International Year of Astronomy 2009

The International Astronomical Union (IAU) has launched a decadal global strategy with the aim of fostering education and capacity building throughout the world. It is just one of the five resolutions approved by vote at the closing ceremony of the IAU XXVIIth General Assembly that took place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
0 Comments »

Celebrate World Space Week 2009

UN-declared World Space Week, Oct. 4-10 annually, is the largest public space event on Earth and the best time each year for teachers to use space to excite students about learning.
0 Comments »

CAP2010

The conference “Communicating Astronomy with the Public 2010 — communicating in IYA2009 legacy era” will take place in Cape Town, South Africa, from 15 to 19 March, 2010.
0 Comments »

Astronomical Institute of the Romanian Academy is participating at NASA Kepler space mission

On the morning of March 7, NASA will launch the Kepler probe to enter an orbit around the Sun. The mission aims to detect planets the size of the Earth that orbit other stars. The spacecraft is equipped with a telescope that will measure the brightness of 170 000 stars simultaneously and continuously for at least three and a half years. It is expected that the information collected during the mission will lead to a better understanding of the evolution of stars. Huge amountsof data will be analyzed by an international scientific consortium called the Kepler Asteroseismic Science Consortium (KASC). The researchers consists of over 200 researchers from 50 institutions around the world, including the Astronomical Institute of the Romanian Academy.
0 Comments »