Today: SCIENCE News, Jul 11, 2011

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Jul 11, 2011

SCIENCE News, Jul 11, 2011

photoCAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - After the U.S. space shuttle program ends this month, NASA will rely on Russia and its Soyuz craft to deliver Americans to the International Space Station -- at a cost of more than $50 million a seat.
 
Factbox: Space shuttle Atlantis' final mission
Fri,8 Jul 2011 10:05 AM PDT
Reuters - CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - Space shuttle Atlantis is due to launch on Friday on the 135th and final flight in NASA's shuttle program. The mission, scheduled to last 12 days, is intended to stockpile a year's worth of supplies on the International Space Station. Full Story1

Analysis: Summer to test Japan resolve over nuclear power
Thu,7 Jul 2011 08:31 PM PDT
Reuters -
photoTOKYO (Reuters) - Two months of baking heat will test Japan's resolve to wean itself off nuclear power and show whether an energy-saving drive set off by meltdowns at the Fukushima plant will bring lasting efficiency gains the way the 1970s oil crisis did.

Shuttle's end a blow to Florida's "Space Coast"
Thu,7 Jul 2011 07:50 PM PDT
Reuters -
photoTITUSVILLE, Florida (Reuters) - The end of the U.S. space shuttle program is the end of the line for Tom Brown and other workers like him at the Kennedy Space Center in central Florida. He is about to join the ranks of the unemployed.

Experts find rogue stem cells in liver cancer
Thu,7 Jul 2011 04:10 AM PDT
Reuters - HONG KONG (Reuters) - Liver cancers are embedded with a type of super cancer stem cells that make them resistant to chemotherapy, spread to other body parts and stage a comeback even after they are surgically removed, researchers in Hong Kong reported on Thursday. Full Story1

Last blastoff from Florida to end space shuttle era
Wed,6 Jul 2011 02:07 PM PDT
Reuters -
photoCAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - Space shuttle Atlantis, carrying a crew of four and food and other supplies critical for the International Space Station, is set to vault into orbit on Friday on the final flight in the 30-year U.S. shuttle program.

NASA's "Final Four" astronauts close out shuttle era
Wed,6 Jul 2011 12:11 PM PDT
Reuters -
photoCAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - It's been 28 years since NASA launched a four-person shuttle crew, but that will be the number of astronauts slated to fly on Atlantis for the program's last flight, a 12-day cargo run to the International Space Station.

Shuttles' end stirs doubts about U.S. space program
Wed,6 Jul 2011 11:48 AM PDT
Reuters -
photoCAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - As the clock ticks down to this week's final space shuttle launch, there is a mounting sense of uncertainty about future U.S. dominance in space.

Final space shuttle flight crew arrives for launch
Tue,5 Jul 2011 09:10 AM PDT
Reuters -
photoCAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - Four veteran astronauts landed at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Monday to prepare for the launch of NASA's last space shuttle on a cargo run to the International Space Station.

photoCAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - I have watched as space shuttles nosedive toward the runway more than 100 times, knowing that there are no engines available to carry them back into the sky if something goes wrong.

U.S. looks to private sector as shuttle program ends
Tue,5 Jul 2011 08:05 AM PDT
Reuters - CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - After the U.S. space shuttle program ends this month, NASA will rely on Russia and its Soyuz craft to deliver Americans to the International Space Station -- at a cost of more than $50 million a seat. Full Story1

Huge rare earth deposits found in Pacific: Japan
Tue,5 Jul 2011 05:58 AM PDT
Reuters -
photoTOKYO (Reuters) - Vast deposits of rare earth minerals, crucial in making high-tech electronics products, have been found on the floor of the Pacific Ocean and can be readily extracted, Japanese scientists said on Monday.

Asia pollution blamed for halt in warming: study
Tue,5 Jul 2011 01:18 AM PDT
Reuters -
photoLONDON (Reuters) - Smoke belching from Asia's rapidly growing economies is largely responsible for a halt in global warming in the decade after 1998 because of sulfur's cooling effect, even though greenhouse gas emissions soared, a U.S. study said on Monday.

Plastic solar cells in 5-10 years, new step forward
Mon,4 Jul 2011 08:16 AM PDT
Reuters - LONDON (Reuters) - Plastic solar cells may be commercially available in five to 10 years, said a British scientist whose group announced on Monday a new understanding of how to produce the cheaper alternative to silicon solar panels. Full Story1

photoTHIRUVANANTHAPURAM, India (Reuters) - Investigators plan to pry open the final vault hidden deep under a centuries-old Indian Hindu temple as police guarded round the clock the shrine where billions of dollars worth of treasure has been discovered.


 

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