August 11, 2009
In 1918, magician extraordinaire Harry Houdini created a sensation when he made a 10,000 pound elephant disappear before a mystified audience of over 5,200 at New York's famed Hippodrome theatre. But a vanishing pachyderm is nothing compared to the magnificent illusion to be performed by our solar system's own sixth rock from the sun on Aug. 11. On that day, the planet Saturn, with no help from either Jupiter or Uranus, will make its 170,000-mile-wide ring system disappear.img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/sciencedaily/~4/-vtkkK-E_9A" height="1" width="1"/
Although the tyrannosaur made news, other fossils sold at auction may also have been looted.
Paleontologists have a simple reason to believe the fossils came illegally from Mongolia.
The dinosaur tentatively sold at auction is known as Tarborsaurus to most scientists.
Opportunity was perched at the rim of Mars' Endeavour Crater when it took the picture.
Researchers are trying to understand the origins of the beautiful planetary nebula Sharpless 2-71.
Decades of rigorous research, testing and development performed in the Entry Systems and Technology Division at NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., has garnered Ames' thermal protection engineers the respect of not just other government agencies, but also commercial entities. The successful re-entry in late May or early June ...
We’ve all heard earthquakes described in terms of their magnitude number. But what does this scale really mean? This video illustrates the variation of energy released in easy-to-understand terms.
[...] Saturn To Pull Celestial Houdini On August 11 [...]