Today

Search

ALS, Alexander Language Schools Franchise


Oct 15, 2010

Chile miners: San Jose mine and Camp Hope could be turned into museum attraction

Chile miners: San Jose mine and Camp Hope could be turned into museum attraction
Tourist agencies are keen to capitalise on the new-found global attention on the country following the dramatic rescue on Wednesday.

Oct 14, 2010

Video: evangelical preacher is one of 33 miners rescued in Chile | News | The Christian Institute

Wearing t-shirts proclaiming “Thank you, Lord” in Spanish and English, the miners gradually surfaced one by one as their rescue from the collapsed mine was completed.

They're all out: 33 miners raised safely in Chile - Yahoo! News

SAN JOSE MINE, Chile – The longest underground nightmare in history ended safely — and faster than anyone expected.

Yahoo News


MER Update 093010 - Spirit Snoozes, Opportunity Bolts Past Halfway Mark to Endeavour Crater

Mars Exploration Rovers
Mars Exploration Rovers
Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Maas Digital
As Opportunity picked up the pace to Endeavour Crater this month and crossed the halfway point on the long journey from Victoria Crater and Spirit continued sleeping in hibernation mode, the Mars Exploration Rovers chalked up their 81st month of what was supposed to have been just a three-month tour of the Red Planet.“There’s been no word from Spirit,” ....

NASA - NASA's Hubble Captures First Images of Aftermath of Possible Asteroid Collision

These four Hubble Space Telescope images, taken over a five-month period, show the odd-shaped debris that likely came from a collision between two asteroids. These four Hubble Space Telescope images, taken over a five-month period, from January to May 2010 with Wide Field Camera 3, show the odd-shaped debris that likely came from a collision between two asteroids. Illustration Credit: NASA, ESA, and Z. Levay (STScI) Science Credit: NASA, ESA, and D. Jewitt (UCLA) WASHINGTON -- NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has captured the first snapshots of a suspected asteroid collision. The images show a bizarre X-shaped object at the head of a comet-like trail of material.

Exploding Clays Drive Geminids Sky Show? - Breaking Orbit

geminids-georgia.jpg
The Geminid meteor shower, which peaks each year in December, is one such rule-breaker. Unlike every other known meteor shower, the Geminids are *not* caused by debris left behind from an active comet.
A Geminid meteor cuts across star trails over Georgia in 1985.
—Image courtesy Jimmy Westlake via NASA

(See "Intense Geminid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight" [2009].)
Instead, scientists have traced the Geminids to an object called 3200 Phaethon. This bizarre body has all the mineral makings of an asteroid, but, like a comet, it left behind a stream of dust that follows along in its orbit.
Thanks to gravitational interactions, this dusty trail regularly crosses Earth's orbit. The particles then burn up in our atmosphere, creating the Geminids meteor shower.
Until recently, the favored view of Phaethon was that it's a dead comet—the rocky core of  ..

Bombing Earth-bound Asteroids a Viable Option, Experts Say

The asteroid Itokawa.
The asteroid Itokawa, as seen by the Hayabusa spacecraft in 2005.
Sensor data courtesy JAXA, processed by National Geographic News

Saturn's Largest Moon Has Ingredients for Life?

Sunlight glints off Kraken Mare, a lake on Titan's northern hemisphere, in a July 2009 Cassini spacecraft picture.
Sunlight glints off Kraken Mare, a lake on northern Titan's northern hemisphere, in a July 2009 picture.
Picture courtesy NASA/JPL/University of Arizona/DLR

Victoria Jaggard in Pasadena, California
Published October 8, 2010
The chemical "letters" used to write the basic code for life on Earth might exist on Saturn's largest moon, according to new research presented Thursday.

Last Chilean rescuer back to surface

SAN JOSE MINE, Oct. 14 (Xinhua) -- The last Chilean rescuer was brought back to surface early Thursday, completing the rescue operation for the 33 trapped miners who had been staying underground for more than 2 months.