Sen logo
  • home
  • News
  • Solar System
  • Universe
  • Exploration
  • Spaceflight
  • Gov & Business
  • Tech
  • Astronomy
  • Video
  • community
  • search sen
  • Search
  • Latest Videos
  • Video Archive
  • Login
  • Register
  • Solar System
  • Universe
  • Exploration
  • Spaceflight
  • Gov & Business
  • Tech
  • Astronomy
Solar System
Our solar system
Editor's Choice
Our solar system
Sen space exploration network provides an overview of our solar system. Full story
  • Cassini creates the first global topographic map of Titan
    Cassini creates the first global topographic map of Titan
  • NASA's sample return mission to an asteroid moves into development
    NASA's sample return mission to an asteroid moves into development
  • Kepler enters safe mode after failure of orientation system
    Kepler enters safe mode after failure of orientation system
  • How YOU can help grow a Mars garden
    How YOU can help grow a Mars garden
  • Landslide bunched up terrain near massive Mars volcano
    Landslide bunched up terrain near massive Mars volcano
  • Comet ISON pictured on its way to the inner solar system
    Comet ISON pictured on its way to the inner solar system

More news & features

  • Cassini observes meteors colliding with Saturn's rings
    Cassini has provided the first direct evidence of small meteoroids impacting Saturn's rings.
  • Comet brought water to Jupiter
    ESA's Herschel space observatory has found direct proof that 95% of the water present in Jupiter's upper atmosphere was delivered by comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 in 1994.
  • NASA's Sun probe IRIS is readied for launch
    NASA's latest solar mission, called IRIS, is currently being prepared for launch to discover more about what drives the Sun and to help predict space weather.
  • Asteroid tracking sensor passes key test
    A new sensor designed to detect and track potentially hazardous asteroids has passed a key test.
  • Volcanoes on Io puzzle scientists
    Volcanic activity on Jupiter's moon Io, are not where they are expected to be according to researchers models.
  • Ice cloud heralds a change of season at Titan's south pole
    An ice cloud forming over Titan’s south pole marks autumn for the southern hemisphere on Saturn's largest moon.
  • Astronomers find increase in rain falling from Saturn's rings
    Astronomers studying the "rain" of charged water particles flowing into Saturn's atmosphere from the planet's rings have discovered there is more of it, and it falls across larger areas, than previously thought.
  • Curiosity probes Red Planet's missing atmosphere
    Mars Curiosity found strong evidence of escaping atmosphere from Mars.
  • NASA's bid to capture an asteroid to be unveiled
    The US is to spend $100 million planning a mission to snare and visit a small asteroid which astronauts will then visit in 2021.
  • Boost to chances of life on two distant moons
    NASA scientists have been carrying out observations and experiments to help discover whether life might have been able to develop on two distant moons in the Solar System.
  • NASA's Swift satellite examines Comet ISON
    Astronomers have been examining Comet ISON using data from NASA's Swift Ultraviolet Optical telescope.
  • The antiquities of the Saturn system
    Data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft suggest the moons and rings of Saturn are antiquities from the time of our solar system's birth.
  • Moon and asteroids share a common history
    The same high-speed projectiles that impacted the moon four billion years ago, could also have hit the giant asteroid Vesta and perhaps other large asteroids.
  • Voyager 1 yet to reach interstellar space
    NASA have denied a recent report that their Voyager 1 spacecraft has left the Solar System.
  • Sun's temporary block on communications with Mars spacecraft
    NASA plans to suspend most spacecraft work when Mars gets close to the sun, as seen from Earth.
  • Double Moon crash caught on camera
    NASA has released images showing the craters left by their two GRAIL probes Ebb and Flow which were deliberately crashed in December
  • New glitch as NASA rover finds more clues to water
    NASA's Curiosity mission has been hit by another software glitch - as it revealed new information about Mars's watery past.
  • Cassini captures close-up of battered moon Rhea
    Cassini has made the final close flyby of Saturn's second largest moon, Rhea.
More news and features on Solar System
Universe
Planet found in nearest star system to Earth
Editor's Choice
Planet found in nearest star system to Earth
A planet with a mass similar to Earth has been detected in our nearest star system, Alpha Centauri. Full story
  • 'Einstein's planet' discovered by relativistic beaming effect
    'Einstein's planet' discovered by relativistic beaming effect
  • Volunteers will power the search for warps in space
    Volunteers will power the search for warps in space
  • Herschel finds hot gas surrounding the black hole at the heart of our Galaxy
    Herschel finds hot gas surrounding the black hole at the heart of our Galaxy
  • Spitzer puts exoplanets in the lab
    Spitzer puts exoplanets in the lab
  •  Astronomers detect record breaking gamma ray burst
    Astronomers detect record breaking gamma ray burst
  • Planet hunting Kepler faces pointing problem
    Planet hunting Kepler faces pointing problem

More news & features

  • Astronomers examine efficient star making factory
    Astronomers combining data from WISE, Hubble and IRAM have found one of the most efficient star-making galaxies ever observed.
  • Record-breaking pulsar confirms Einstein's theory of general relativity
    The most massive neutron star confirmed so far, orbited by a white dwarf star, are being used to test Einstein's theory of general relativity.
  • Star's two waterworlds may be home to life
    NASA scientists have discovered an alien solar system that they believe has two rocky planets that are completely submerged under water.
  • Maximum starburst in the early Universe
    Astronomers have discovered a galaxy from the very early Universe turning gas and dust into stars more than 2,000 times faster than our own Milky Way
  • Computer simulations show how spiral galaxies get their arms
    New computer simulations are being used to discover how spiral galaxies develop, and hold onto, their distinctive arms.
  • Herschel finds a dust belt surrounding a subgiant planetary system
    ESA's Herchel has obtained the first images of a dust belt orbiting a subgiant star known to host a planetary system.
  • ISS experiment finds a hint of dark matter
    A $2 billion experiment on the outside of the International Space Station may have found fresh clues to the existence of an invisible substance called dark matter.
  • Closest new stars found for a century
    A pair of brown dwarf stars that lie only 6.
  • A new class of supernova has been discovered
    Astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA)have discovered a third type of supernova
  • Exoplanet research draws public support
    Exoplanet research provides opportunities for the public to participate in the work, and in some cases, to informally name planets.
  • Planck sheds new light on the ancient Universe
    A European space mission has peered billions of years back in time to produce the most accurate and detailed map ever of the first light produced by the Universe.
  • Discoveries begin as ALMA officially opens
    The official inauguration of ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, has been marked by discovery as well as ceremony.
  • Alien life may be hard to find or non-existent
    A recent Royal Society talk argued that extraterrestrial life may be hidden from human knowledge, or simply non-existent.
  • Hubble dates oldest known star
    Astronomers using Hubble have managed to more accurately age the oldest known star.
  • Giant planet 'caught in act of forming'
    Astronomers believe that they have spotted for the first time a planet in the act of forming from a disc of dust and gas circling a nearby star.
  • Evidence for extraterrestrial life might come from white dwarf stars
    A new theoretical study suggests that it will be possible to search for oxygen in the atmosphere of a habitable planet orbiting a white dwarf star.
  • NASA's Kepler discovers small planet system
    NASA's Kepler space telescope, which is searching the Galaxy for planets, has discovered a planetary system of with the smallest planet, designated Kepler-37b, so far discovered around a Sun-like star
  • SETI draws a blank in a million to one shot
    SETI's first targeted search of Kepler's confirmed planets has found no sign of intelligent life in our Galaxy.
More news and features on Universe
Exploration
A year in the life of Mars
Editor's Choice
A year in the life of Mars
2012 saw NASA's Curiosity rover land in dramatic style on the Red Planet. Its success led NASA to announce Curiosity Mk II. Meanwhile the European Space Agency and the Russian Space Agency joined forces for ExoMars which is due to launch in 2016. Full story
  • NASA's sample return mission to an asteroid moves into development
    NASA's sample return mission to an asteroid moves into development
  • How YOU can help grow a Mars garden
    How YOU can help grow a Mars garden
  • Planet hunting Kepler faces pointing problem
    Planet hunting Kepler faces pointing problem
  • Asteroid tracking sensor passes key test
    Asteroid tracking sensor passes key test
  • NASA's bid to capture an asteroid to be unveiled
    NASA's bid to capture an asteroid to be unveiled
  • Europe and Russia agree Mars missions
    Europe and Russia agree Mars missions

More news & features

  • Curiosity finds conditions may have been suitable for life on Mars
    Analysis of a rock sample collected by NASA's Curiosity rover shows ancient Mars could have supported living microbes.
  • Europe's Jupiter mission gains scientific eyes and ears
    The European Space Agency picked 11 instruments to fly aboard the JUICE mission to Jupiter.
  • Testing begins on NASA's MAVEN spacecraft
    NASA's next Mars probe, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN), is undergoing environmental testing to ensure the spacecraft will operate correctly in the extreme conditions of space.
  • Curiosity marks six months on Mars with drilling
    Mars Curiosity marked its first half-year on the Red Planet by performing a drill test.
  • Architects' project for ESA is out of this world
    The European Space Agency has enlisted the services of Foster + Partners, one of the world's leading firm of architects, to design a new building - for the Moon.
  • Solar probe untangles riddle of flux ropes
    NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory has finally confirmed to solar scientists the processes that produce massive explosions on the Sun.
  • Where a river once flowed on Mars
    The European Space Agency's Mars Express orbiter has recorded images of the Reull Vallis showing a deep channel carved into the Martian landscape which is believed to have been created by a river in the distant past
  • Opportunity begins its tenth year on Mars
    NASA's Opportunity rover is celebrating the start of its tenth year on Mars
  • IRIS looks to shed light on a solar puzzle
    NASA's IRIS mission to explore why the Sun's atmosphere is hotter than its surface, is now fully integrated and final testing is underway.
  • Deep Space Industries plans robotic fleet to mine asteroids
    Deep Space Industries have outlined their ambitious plan to mine asteroids for fuel and materials.
  • Martian crater holds carbonate clues to an ancient lake
    Researchers using data from NASA's MRO have discovered carbonate and clays in Martian crater that could indicate it once held a groundwater-fed lake.
  • Curiosity gets set to drill as more clues to water flood in
    NASA's Curiosity rover on Mars has uncovered more powerful evidence that Gale Crater was once under water as it prepares to drill for the first time for a sample of rock.
  • Scientists seek a return mission to Uranus
    Planetary scientists are pressing for a space probe to be sent to investigate the distant planet Uranus.
  • Space launch highlights for 2013
    Here are some highlights from the launch schedules of major players in the space industry
  • Cassini spots mini Nile River on Titan
    What appears to be an extraterrestrial Nile River has been spotted on Saturn's largest moon Titan.
  • Golden Spike plans manned Moon missions
    NASA space scientists and engineers have set up Golden Spike, a commercial company that aims to return humans to the Moon.
  • Twin probes reveal Moon's violent past
    NASA's twin GRAIL space probes have produced a detailed gravity field map of the Moon that will provide scientists with a fund of information about its violent history
  • NASA plans new Curiosity for Mars
    NASA has revealed details of plans for further exploration of Mars over the next few years, culminating in another rover based on Curiosity, launching in 2020.
More news and features on Exploration
Spaceflight
Companies building space taxis get funding boost from NASA
Editor's Choice
Companies building space taxis get funding boost from NASA
NASA announced August 3 a further round of funding for three US companies developing astronaut transportation. SpaceX, Boeing and Sierra Nevada Corporation have all been awarded new Space Act Agreements under NASA's Commercial Crew Integrated Capability (CCiCap) program. Full story
  • Dream Chaser completes major safety review
    Dream Chaser completes major safety review
  • Ground Control welcomes home space trio
    Ground Control welcomes home space trio
  • Twin servicing missions end on space station
    Twin servicing missions end on space station
  • Unscheduled spacewalk set to fix space station leak
    Unscheduled spacewalk set to fix space station leak
  • 'Pillownauts' are halfway through bedrest study
    'Pillownauts' are halfway through bedrest study
  • NASA's Orion passes difficult parachute test
    NASA's Orion passes difficult parachute test

More news & features

  • Vega's second launch will deploy multiple payloads into different orbits
    ESA is planning the second launch of its small launcher, Vega, on 3 May 2013 from French Guiana.
  • Virgin Galactic spaceship has first rocket-powered flight
    Virgin Galactic's suborbital space vehicle SpaceShipTwo had its first rocket-powered flight on April 29.
  • Mars One opens doors for astronauts
    If you're prepared to spend the rest of your life on the Red Planet, Mars One wants to hear from you.
  • Cargo spacecraft flight marred by antenna problem
    Progress 51 launched for the International Space Station on Wednesday, with the mission marred by an antenna problem.
  • NASA's Sun probe IRIS is readied for launch
    NASA's latest solar mission, called IRIS, is currently being prepared for launch to discover more about what drives the Sun and to help predict space weather.
  • New commercial rocket reaches orbit
    Orbital Sciences Corporation has become the second commercial space company to send a rocket into orbit with the inaugural flight of its Antares rocket.
  • New moves to tackle growing danger of space junk
    European space company Astrium have been commissioned by the French space agency to come up with the best ways to deal with space debris.
  • Virgin Galactic's feathered spaceship flexes its wings
    SpaceShipTwo successfully flew another glide test last week, adding to Virgin Galactic's database of information as it prepares for the first powered flight.
  • Evolution of the space suit
    The history and evolution of the space suit
  • New planet-hunter gets go-ahead from NASA
    NASA is to launch a new planet-seeking spacecraft called TESS that will seek out planets as small as rocky worlds like the Earth.
  • NASA's bid to capture an asteroid to be unveiled
    The US is to spend $100 million planning a mission to snare and visit a small asteroid which astronauts will then visit in 2021.
  • Swiss shuttle will be new satellite launcher
    New company Swiss Space Systems plans to build a spaceport and unmanned shuttle to offer cheap access to orbit for small satellites
  • Europe's next ATV begins final preparations for June launch
    Europe's next Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) has been undergoing final preparations ahead of its June launch to the International Space Station.
  • XCOR tests new rocket engine for suborbital spaceflights
    XCOR Aerospace has been testing a new type of rocket engine that will power its Lynx suborbital spacecraft.
  • New crew take fast track to the space station
    Three new Expedition 35 crew members have launched on a fast track flight to the ISS, arriving in under 6 hours.
  • Apollo rockets are lifted from the seabed
    Powerful rocket engines that launched Apollo astronauts to the Moon have been recovered from the bottom of the sea more than 40 years later.
  • Planck sheds new light on the ancient Universe
    A European space mission has peered billions of years back in time to produce the most accurate and detailed map ever of the first light produced by the Universe.
  • Double Moon crash caught on camera
    NASA has released images showing the craters left by their two GRAIL probes Ebb and Flow which were deliberately crashed in December
More news and features on Spaceflight
Gov & Business
Moon 2.0
Editor's Choice
Moon 2.0

Lunar exploration has always been exclusively a matter for nation states, but it is now within the reach of private enterprise and a growing number of companies are looking to explore the Moon in the next few years.

Full story
  • Europe's new Earth monitoring probe takes first image
    Europe's new Earth monitoring probe takes first image
  • Deep Space Industries plans robotic fleet to mine asteroids
    Deep Space Industries plans robotic fleet to mine asteroids
  • New company to join the asteroid gold rush
    New company to join the asteroid gold rush
  • Commercial spaceflight showed its ambitions in 2012
    Commercial spaceflight showed its ambitions in 2012
  • A different perspective of Earth
    A different perspective of Earth
  • Golden Spike plans manned Moon missions
    Golden Spike plans manned Moon missions

More news & features

  • Europe unveils plans for future in space
    European ministers have agreed to invest 10 billion euros in future space projects following two days of budget talks in the Italian city of Naples.
  • Europe considers future space programmes
    November 20-21, Ministers representing the 20 Member States that comprise ESA will meet in Naples for The Ministerial Council 2012, to set the future course of Europe’s space programmes.
  • China's next manned spaceflight is set for June
    China's next manned flight to its testbed space station is set to launch in early June, 2013, a leading official from its space programme has revealed.
  • Launch escape system successfully tested by Blue Origin
    Private spaceflight company Bue Origin has taken another big step towards orbit with the successful test of a launch escape system for astronauts.
  • Mars One plans human settlement on the Red Planet by 2023
    Mars One, a private initiative, is aiming to establish a permanent human settlement on the Red Planet.
  • Orbital debris test radar deployed by the European Space Agency
    The European Space Agency (ESA) has deployed its first space debris test radar in Spain.
  • ESA plans to clear up space junk
    The European Space Agency is planning missions to take out space junk.
  • NASA sets launch date for Dragon supply flight
    SpaceX's Dragon is due to blast into orbit on October 7 to make the first commercial delivery of supplies to the International Space Station.
  • Europe launches second Metop weather satellite
    Metop-B was launched on September 17, 2912 and is the second Metop satellite.
  • Bigelow's inflatable space stations
    Bigelow Aerospace has built inflatable spacecraft and is building an inflatable space station called BA 330 that will be capable of accommodating six astronauts.
  • Sea Launch puts TV satellite into orbit
    The Intelsat 21 satellite which will provide television communication services, was put into orbit on Sunday August 19 by Zenit-3SL rocket provided by Swiss based Sea Launch.
  • Obama calls to congratulate NASA's Curiosity team
    President Obama called the Mars team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory yesterday to congratulate them on the landing of Curiosity a week earlier.
  • Chinese rocket to launch Galactic Suite's Moon robot in June 2014
    Galactic Suite, a Spanish based private space company, has signed a launch agreement with the China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC) to launch its robotic Moon vehicle atop a Chinese rocket in June 2014.
  • China to launch lunar rover in 2013
    China plan to launch their third lunar probe, Chang'e-3, in the second half of 2013.
  • Europe ponders future of its launch services
    European space companies have begun work on a study to produce a new roadmap for the future of their spaceflight operations.
  • Moon Express to fly lunar telescope
    Moon Express, one of the leading private companies competing to fly to our natural satellite, is supporting plans to plant a telescope in the lunar soil.
  • Inflatable heat shield tested successfully
    An innovative inflatable heat shield that could protect future returning space missions has been successfully tested after being launched from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility yesterday.
  • COSPAR 2012 addresses the benefit of space for mankind
    The 39th Scientific Assembly of the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR) will be hosted this year by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), and co-hosted by Infosys Technologies Limited.
More news and features on Gov & Business
Tech
Deep Space Industries plans robotic fleet to mine asteroids
Editor's Choice
Deep Space Industries plans robotic fleet to mine asteroids
Deep Space Industries have outlined their ambitious plan to mine asteroids for fuel and materials. Full story
  • Twin servicing missions end on space station
    Twin servicing missions end on space station
  • Space telescopes' new views of the Horsehead
    Space telescopes' new views of the Horsehead
  • New moves to tackle growing danger of space junk
    New moves to tackle growing danger of space junk
  • Swiss shuttle will be new satellite launcher
    Swiss shuttle will be new satellite launcher
  • Apollo rockets are lifted from the seabed
    Apollo rockets are lifted from the seabed
  • SpaceX tests its vertical takeoff and vertical landing rocket
    SpaceX tests its vertical takeoff and vertical landing rocket

More news & features

  • UK funding boost for world's biggest optical telescope
    Plans to build a monster telescope that will become the world's largest optical instrument have been boosted by an £88 million funding pledge by the UK.
  • NASA's Orion will survive a parachute failure
    NASA engineers have successfully demonstrated that the Orion crewed capsule will be able to land safely even if a main parachute fails.
  • Smartphone satellite prepares for launch
    STRaND-1 will be the first satellite controlled by a a smartphone, and will also host innovative technologies such as a part manufactured from a 3-D printer.
  • Architects' project for ESA is out of this world
    The European Space Agency has enlisted the services of Foster + Partners, one of the world's leading firm of architects, to design a new building - for the Moon.
  • Star track - the next generation
    NASA has launched into space TDRS-K, the first in a new generation of communications satellites that will boost a vital support network for missions orbiting the Earth.
  • New company to join the asteroid gold rush
    Deep Space Industries intends to build a fleet of commercial asteroid-prospecting spacecraft that can harvest and process these chunks of space rock
  • Europe's ATV technology will drive NASA's Orion spacecraft
    NASA has agreed a deal with ESA to adapt technology from the ATV spacecraft to drive the new Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle.
  • Reusable rocket makes biggest leap yet
    SpaceX's prototype reusable rocket, known as Grasshopper, took its biggest leap yet on December 17 during a 29 second test flight, launching to a height of 131 feet (40 metres), hovering and then returning to the ground on its legs.
  • Supercomputer boost for world's highest observatory
    A major step forward towards completion of the world's highest telescope, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), has come with installation and testing of its supercomputer.
  • Skylon spaceplane's revolutionary engine passes key milestone
    A revolutionary new engine designed to propel a spacecraft to orbit in a single stage has passed a critical milestone.
  • CubeSat innovation will help reduce space junk
    Engineers at the UK's University of Glasgow have developed a practical solution to help avoid adding to the growing problem of "space junk" debris threatening satellites and spacecraft
  • Europe unveils plans for future in space
    European ministers have agreed to invest 10 billion euros in future space projects following two days of budget talks in the Italian city of Naples.
  • Testing at advanced stage for Europe's new spacecraft
    A series of descent and landing tests are nearing completion for Europe's latest spacecraft designed for low Earth orbit, the IXV Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle.
  • Space agencies test a new interplanetary internet
    NASA astronaut Sunita Williams has helped test a new interplanetary version of the Internet that the European and US space agencies are developing to support the future of spaceflight.
  • Simulated Mars and Moon soil tested for astronaut radiation shields
    The European Space Agency (ESA) is researching materials, which could include simulated Moon or Mars soil, that could be used to shield astronauts from space radiation during missions to the Moon, Mars or an asteroid.
  • Paintballs could deflect an incoming asteroid
    Firing pellets of paint powder at an asteroid heading toward Earth could be sufficient to deflect its trajectory away from a collision, according to an innovative proposal by a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
  • NASA to develop service stations for satellites
    NASA is developing the technology to build Earth-orbiting 'service stations' capable of extending the life of Earth-orbiting satellites.
  • Orbital debris test radar deployed by the European Space Agency
    The European Space Agency (ESA) has deployed its first space debris test radar in Spain.
More news and features on Tech
Astronomy
Discoveries begin as ALMA officially opens
Editor's Choice
Discoveries begin as ALMA officially opens
The official inauguration of ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, has been marked by discovery as well as ceremony. Full story
  • Volunteers will power the search for warps in space
    Volunteers will power the search for warps in space
  •  Astronomers detect record breaking gamma ray burst
    Astronomers detect record breaking gamma ray burst
  • Astronomers examine efficient star making factory
    Astronomers examine efficient star making factory
  • Space telescopes' new views of the Horsehead
    Space telescopes' new views of the Horsehead
  • Hawaii's new giant telescope wins approval
    Hawaii's new giant telescope wins approval
  • Star's two waterworlds may be home to life
    Star's two waterworlds may be home to life

More news & features

  • Herschel finds a dust belt surrounding a subgiant planetary system
    ESA's Herchel has obtained the first images of a dust belt orbiting a subgiant star known to host a planetary system.
  • New NASA mission to probe celestial lighthouses
    NICER will probe how well pulsars can be used as celestial navigation aids.
  • New planet-hunter gets go-ahead from NASA
    NASA is to launch a new planet-seeking spacecraft called TESS that will seek out planets as small as rocky worlds like the Earth.
  • ISS experiment finds a hint of dark matter
    A $2 billion experiment on the outside of the International Space Station may have found fresh clues to the existence of an invisible substance called dark matter.
  • NASA's Swift satellite examines Comet ISON
    Astronomers have been examining Comet ISON using data from NASA's Swift Ultraviolet Optical telescope.
  • Closest new stars found for a century
    A pair of brown dwarf stars that lie only 6.
  • A new class of supernova has been discovered
    Astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA)have discovered a third type of supernova
  • Exoplanet research draws public support
    Exoplanet research provides opportunities for the public to participate in the work, and in some cases, to informally name planets.
  • Hubble dates oldest known star
    Astronomers using Hubble have managed to more accurately age the oldest known star.
  • Third radiation belt surprises NASA scientists
    Twin NASA probes launched last year to study the Earth's protective magnetic shield have surprised scientists by discovering a new radiation belt around our planet.
  • Giant planet 'caught in act of forming'
    Astronomers believe that they have spotted for the first time a planet in the act of forming from a disc of dust and gas circling a nearby star.
  • Space Rocks – Comets, Asteroids, Meteorites and More
    Virtualastro's guide to space rocks - comets, asteroids, meteoroids, meteors and meteorites
  • UK funding boost for world's biggest optical telescope
    Plans to build a monster telescope that will become the world's largest optical instrument have been boosted by an £88 million funding pledge by the UK.
  • Kepler glitch suspends NASA's search for new planets
    Planet-hunting Kepler spacecraft has temporarily suspended operations due to an operating glitch
  • Sedna - eccentric outer world of the Solar System
    Planetary scientists are trying to understand the nature of Sedna, a remote cousin of Pluto in the far Solar System.
  • One hundred billion planets across the Milky Way
    Our Milky Way galaxy contains at least one hundred billion planets, a new scientific study reveals.
  • Sun heads for explosive peak in 2013
    The Sun is expected to reach maximum in its activity cycle in the summer or autumn of 2013.
  • Help Herschel identify holes in space
    Space enthusiasts are being called upon to help professional astronomers analyse results from ESA's Herschel space telescope and find holes in the dust clouds threaded through the Milky Way
More news and features on Astronomy
  • News
  • Latest News
  • News Archive
  • Content
  • Solar System
  • Universe
  • Exploration
  • Spaceflight
  • Gov & Business
  • Tech
  • Astronomy
  • Sen TV
  • Latest Videos
  • Video Archive
  • About Sen
  • About SEN
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Advertising
  • Privacy Policy
  • Charles Black
  • Editorial
  • Contact Us
  • 14 - 18 Old Street
  • LONDON
  • United Kingdom
  • EC1V 9BH
  • Contact Sen
  • Like Sen
  •  
sen logo
© 2009 - 2013 SEN TV LIMITED. SEN is a registered trademark of SEN CORPORATION LIMITED
  • Register
  • Login