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Asteroid smash turned Mars into takeaway pizza planet Premium content: related news
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Kaboom! When a giant impact whacked into a young Mars around 4 billion years ago, the impact made such a huge dent in the northern hemisphere that it left the entire planet lop-sided.
in Space Science
via Nature @ 16:24 2nd Jul
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An asteroid the size of Pluto that slammed into the Northern hemisphere of Mars created the Borealis basin, based on the latest survey of NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Global Surveyor.
in Space Science
via Wikinews @ 11:21 28th Jun
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Hugh Pickens writes "A new study at the Jet Propulsion Labs shows that weak gravitational pull of a "gravity tractor" could deflect an Earth-threatening asteroid if it was deployed when the asteroid was at least one orbit away from potential impact with Earth. First a spacecraft would be crashed directly into the asteroid, similar to the Deep Impact mission that impacted a comet in 2005. This would provide a big change of direction, but in a less controllable fashion that could push the path of the asteroid into a dangerous keyhole. But then a second spacecraft, the gravity tractor, would come into play, hovering about 150 meters away from the asteroid, to exert a gentle gravitational force, changing the asteroid's velocity by only 0.22 microns per second each day.
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 12:31 5th Aug
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WASHINGTON, July 16 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Two studies based on data from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have revealed that the Red Planet once hosted vast lakes, flowing rivers and a variety of other wet environments that had the potential to support life. One study, published in the July 17 issue of Nature, shows that vast regions of the ancient highlands of Mars, which cover about half the planet, contain clay minerals, which can form only in the presence of water. Volcanic lavas buried the clay-rich regions during subsequent, drier periods of the planet's history, but impact craters later exposed them at thousands of locations across Mars. The data for the study derives from images taken by the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars, or CRISM, and other instruments on the orbiter.
in Space Science
via Financials.com @ 20:47 16th Jul
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NEW YORK, Aug. 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Atari, Inc., one of the world's most recognized brands and a third-party video game publisher and distributor, has unleashed Smash Court Tennis(TM) 3 for the Xbox 360(R) video game and entertainment system from Microsoft, the latest star-packed tennis smash in the renowned series from NAMCO BANDAI Games. Featuring many of the biggest names in tennis including Roger Federer and Maria Sharapova, highly realistic visuals, a host of gameplay enhancements and online play via Xbox LIVE(R) online entertainment network, Smash Court Tennis(TM) 3 has smashed its way into North American retailers. Smash Court Tennis(TM) 3 is rated E for Everyone and available for a suggested retail price of $39.99 for the Xbox 360 and available on Xbox LIVE.
in Computer Games
via PR Newswire @ 14:31 19th Aug
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Next week, Boulder, Colorado will play host to the eleventh annual Mars Society conference. There will be a huge array of speakers, lectures and workshops anyone can get involved in to learn more about the future of manned exploration on Mars. The Mars Society is an international organization working to raise public awareness about the opportunities we have on Mars and push for eventual manned settlements. Primarily, the Mars Society is pushing for better governmental spending in planetary missions, but there is an increasing awareness that many aims can only be achieved through private enterprise. The organization doesn't limit itself to political activities. For years the organization has managed a series of "Mars Analogues," isolated habitats where volunteers carry out extended experiments, studying everything from human psychology in
in Space Science
via Universe Today @ 10:38 9th Aug
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DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla., July 24 /PRNewswire/ -- Myxer, the leader in ad-supported mobile content, today announced the new Myxer Select program for mobile handset manufacturers, wireless network operators, and web destinations. The program provides them with the ability to create a customized mobile content store, selecting content from the world's largest assembled collection of mobile content, with over one million items. Myxer Select partners can be up and running with their own mobile content download site (on the web and/or mobile web) in a matter of days. Myxer Select is delivered over the award-winning Myxer Mobile Platform, a robust, scalable and proven mobile content delivery platform that currently delivers over 22 million downloads per month, at a rate of over 8 mobile downloads per second.
in XML & Metadata
via Financials.com @ 1:07 25th Jul
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In the early days of the World Wide Web, the battle cry of successful sites was "Content is king!" Web pages needed to be content heavy to gain rankings on the search engines and draw visitors, and the content needed to be updated regularly to bring those visitors back. As the technology evolved and business models changed, functionality and interactivity gained importance in capturing clicks. Portals provide the most manageable framework for organizing and presenting both functionality and content. But, "most manageable" isn't the same is "easily manageable" and content is still a key part of a successful portal. For portal developers and administrators, this means that the content for a portal will grow, both in source and type.
in Developer
via Developer.com @ 6:24 22nd Jul
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Mars Express is ESA's Mars mission and also the name of the spacecraft that will transport the Beagle 2 Mars lander and act as an orbiting probe and telecommunications relay satellite for Beagle 2 and other landers due to land on the Red Planet between 2003 and 2007. The mission's main objectives are to deposit the lander on the surface and search for sub-surface water from orbit. The spacecraft contains a range of remote sensing scientific instruments to collect data concerning the planet's atmosphere, structure and geology.
in Space Science
via Aerospace Technology @ 23:36 2nd Jul
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The Mars Surveyor '98 Programme comprised of two spacecraft launched separately, the Mars Climate Orbiter (formerly the Mars Surveyor '98 Orbiter) launched in 1996 and the Mars Polar Lander (formerly the Mars Surveyor '98 Lander).
in Space Science
via Aerospace Technology @ 22:11 26th Jul
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The Mars Surveyor '98 Programme was comprised of two spacecraft launched separately: the Mars Climate Orbiter (formerly the Mars Surveyor '98 Orbiter) launched in 1996, and the Mars Polar Lander (formerly the Mars Surveyor '98 Lander).
in Space Science
via Aerospace Technology @ 23:36 2nd Jul
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There are lots of different types of websites out there - product sites, marketing brochure sites, educational sites, etc. But the ones that people keep coming back to are content driven websites. As Website-Content-Providers.com explains, content driven sites are websites that are filled with content about a specific theme. And the more content you have on that theme the more interesting your site will be to readers.
in Webmaster Tips
via About @ 1:12 23rd Aug
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Atari, Inc., one of the world's most recognized brands and a third-party video game publisher and distributor, has unleashed Smash Court Tennis 3 for the Xbox 360 video game and entertainment system from Microsoft, the latest star-packed tennis smash in the renowned series from Namco Bandai Games. Featuring many of the biggest names in tennis including Roger Federer and Maria Sharapova, highly realistic visuals, a host of gameplay enhancements and online play via Xbox Live online entertainment network, Smash Court Tennis 3 has smashed its way into North American retailers. Smash Court Tennis 3 is rated E for Everyone and available for a suggested retail price of $39.99 for the Xbox 360 and available on Xbox Live.
in Computer Games
via GameInfoWire @ 3:42 20th Aug
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Should we be looking for penguins on Mars, rather than little green men? Just a week after finding definitive signs of water ice just beneath the surface, news of another remarkable scientific discovery has been beamed back to Earth by the Mars lander Phoenix.
in Space Science
via Nature @ 16:24 2nd Jul
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Remember the amazing images of an avalanche on Mars back in March of this year from the HiRISE camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter? If not for two geologists studying landforms in Alaska, MRO scientists might not have been on the lookout for such an event, or may not have known what they were seeing. A serendipitous week-long trip to Alaska by Craig Kochel and Jeffrey Trop, geology professors at Bucknell University, helped them predict one of the most important, and breathtaking planetary observations ever made. Witnessing an avalanche, or landslide in action on Mars has helped us realize the Red Planet is still a dynamic, ever-changing planet.
in General Science
via Universe Today @ 20:05 17th Jul
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A full circle panoramic view of Mars taken by NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander is shown in this undated handout photo released to Reuters July 31, 2008. NASA scientists said on Thursday they had definitive proof that water exists on Mars after further tests on ice found on the planet in June by the Phoenix Mars Lander. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
in General Science
via People's Daily Online @ 2:51 1st Aug
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NASA scientists say photos sent from Mars by the Phoenix Lander confirm ice on the red planet. The presence of water is crucial for research because it helps answer questions on whether life forms, perhaps microbes, exist or existed on Mars. Phoenix dug a trench near Mars' north pole and a sequence of photos shows eight white chucks slowly vanishing. Over the next few weeks Phoenix will analyse the Martian soil and look for organic material. In 2002 another unmanned craft, the Mars Odyssey Orbiter first detected what's thought to be a vast sheet of ice under the barren polar surface.
in Space Science
via Deutsche Welle @ 22:16 21st Jun
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An asteroid may have flipped Mars' magnetic field on and off like a light switch around 4 billion years ago, says a group of scientists researching on the Red Planet.
in Space Science
via NetIndia123.com @ 10:30 21st Jul
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CAN you flip a planet's magnetic field on and off like a light switch? An asteroid could have done just that to Mars 4 billion years ago.
in Space Science
via New Scientist @ 16:51 16th Jul
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London, July 20 : An asteroid may have flipped Mars’ magnetic field on and off like a light switch around 4 billion years ago, says a group of scientists researching on the Red Planet.
in Space Science
via Topnews.in @ 13:25 20th Jul
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This artistic representation of a giant impact on Mars was created from simulations by Marinova et al. (Nature, 2008). Mars is shown using a combination of Viking color images and shaded relief from the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA). Credit: Jeff Andrews-Hanna
in General Science
via Space.com @ 22:46 2nd Jul
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dotMobi, .mobi domain provider, has included Mobizoft video content adaptation data into DeviceAtlas, a source of mobile handset information for mobile content developers.
in Domain Names
via Computer Business Review @ 9:54 27th Aug
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While not enough people recognize it, the real purpose of copyright law is to provide an incentive for the creation of more content. The government felt that there was a market failure, where not enough "content" would be produced without a limited monopoly, and thus, copyright was born. However, that happened back in the day when creating content wasn't easy. You pretty much had to go through a professional process. These days, thanks to new technologies, creating content is exceptionally easy -- and thus, a big part of the very basis for copyright no longer makes sense. We're drowning in content -- and it's not because of the "incentive" of copyright. There are plenty of incentives for creating content these days and very few have anything to do with copyright.
in IP & Patents
via Techdirt @ 5:36 9th Aug
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An asteroid the size of Alaska slammed into Mars about 4.4 billion years ago, creating a 70,000-trillion-kiloton blast that forever deformed the Red Planet, suggest three studies out Wednesday.
in General Science
via Sci-Tech Today @ 1:23 28th Jun
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MySpace is to launch the first branded radio show on its site, having signed a strategic content partnership with Mars Planets. The weekly MySpace Mars Planets Radio show will launch next month, featuring DJ and TV presenter Alex Zane. Users can upload video reports on the show's Mars-branded profile page, for the chance to be selected as a co-presenter.
in Space Science
via Red Orbit @ 6:31 14th Aug
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