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Scientists Discover Record Fifth Planet Orbiting Nearby Star
(old news - 10:10AM Wednesday Nov 07 2007)
PASADENA, Calif. - Astronomers have announced the discovery of a fifth planet circling 55 Cancri, a star beyond our solar system. The star now holds the record for number of confirmed extrasolar planets orbiting in a planetary system.

»www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/new···106.html

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Sun's 'twin' an ideal hunting ground for alien life
(old news - 07:58AM Thursday Oct 04 2007)
Astronomers have found the most Sun-like star yet, and they say it is an ideal place to hunt for alien civilisations.
The star, called HIP 56948, lies a little more than 200 light years from Earth. Its size, mass, temperature, and chemical makeup are all so similar to the Sun's that no measurable differences could be found in high-resolution observations made by the 2.7-metre telescope at the McDonald Observatory in Texas, US.

»space.newscientist.com/article.n···ws_rss20

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Is there life out there? Almost definitely, say UK scientists
(old news - 08:55AM Thursday Jun 07 2007)
British scientists expect that the first evidence of primitive alien life, such as microbes and vegetation, will emerge within 10 years, with more substantial finds following future space missions.

»www.guardian.co.uk/space/article···,00.html

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New Telescopes to Scan Earth-Like Planet for Life
(old news - 08:57AM Wednesday May 02 2007)
By Bruce Gain and Kristen Philipkoski

Scientists seeking habitable planets beyond Earth scored a lucky hit last week with the discovery of Gliese 581c, the first yet found with an orbit in the so-called Goldilocks zone (not too hot, not too cold).

But confirming life there, and in other yet-to-be-discovered systems, will require a new generation of space telescopes capable of picking up "signatures" such as water vapor, carbon dioxide, ozone and methane. NASA and the European Space Agency are developing planet finders that will do just that by 2020, assuming funding comes through.

Story Continues

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Billionaire Returns to Earth After Journey to Space
(old news - 06:18PM Saturday Apr 21 2007)
KOROLYOV, Russia (1010 WINS) -- An American billionaire who paid $25 million for a 13-day trip to outer space returned to Earth on Saturday in a space capsule that also carried a cosmonaut and a U.S. astronaut, making a soft landing on the Kazakh steppe.
story continues..

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Geriatric Aliens suffering in dim sunlight?
(old news - 12:48PM Friday Apr 13 2007)
Really Old Stars Perhaps Ideal for Advanced Civilizations

»www.space.com/searchforlife/0704···day.html

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Supersonic bullets shoot through the Orion Nebula
(old news - 06:25AM Friday Mar 23 2007)
David Shiga

Bullet-like clumps of gas hurtle through the Orion stellar nursery at supersonic speed in a new image from the Gemini North observatory. The unusual structures are revealed in unprecedented detail by newly commissioned laser-equipped optics.
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A United Federation of, er, Planet?
(old news - 11:51AM Friday Mar 16 2007)
Agencies mull global plans for space exploration

»www.theregister.co.uk/2007/03/15···oration/

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When Does SETI Throw in the Towel?
(old news - 04:51PM Thursday Jan 18 2007)
By Seth Shostak
SETI Institute

“At what point would you abandon the search?”

That’s a question I get relatively frequently from folks who think that SETI may be a quixotic quest, as futile as searching for the Seven Cities of Gold. After all, modern efforts to find signals from extraterrestrial transmitters are now in their fifth decade.
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For Jill Tarter, the revelation came when she was a child walking on a Florida Keys beach with her father. "I remember just looking and thinking that up there, somewhere around one of those stars, there's another little girl walking on the beach with her dad," Tarter said.

How could there not be, when the stars in the sky are as common as the grains of sand beneath her feet?

More here »www.signonsandiego.com/news/scie···dex.html

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Search begins for 'Earth' beyond solar system
(old news - 12:48PM Wednesday Dec 27 2006)
»www.guardian.co.uk/space/article···00.html

A European spacecraft took off today to spearhead the search for another "Earth" among the stars.

The Corot space telescope blasted off aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan shortly after 2.20pm.

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Ancient astronomical device thrills scholars
(old news - 02:25PM Thursday Nov 30 2006)
LONDON, England (Reuters) -- An ancient astronomical calculator made at the end of the 2nd century BC was amazingly accurate and more complex than any instrument for the next 1,000 years, scientists said on Wednesday.

»www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/space/11/3···dex.html

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Toward the Militarization of Space
(old news - 08:38AM Wednesday Oct 18 2006)
I found this item in my local newspaper. I don't think you have to register to see this article, though the site might like you to.

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Major SETI.org announcement on 10.17.06
(old news - 02:25PM Monday Oct 16 2006)
»www.spaceref.com/calendar/calend···id=4200

...this is not an announcement about finding a signal from ET, the face on Mars, or anything else. It is far more mundane. Details of the announcement were released - under press embargo - to reporters last week...

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Jupiter Tiny Spot Goes From White to Red
(old news - 06:25AM Thursday Oct 12 2006)
By SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer

WASHINGTON Oct 11, 2006 (AP)— Just a little more than a year ago, the small spot on Jupiter was a pale white; now it matches the reddish hue of its bigger sibling, the Great Red Spot, and boasts 400 mph winds, according to new data from the Hubble Space Telescope.

Both spots are actually fierce storms in Jupiter's atmosphere. While the red spot at three times the size of Earth is much more noticeable, strange things are happening to the smaller spot.

Continued here

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Time capsule to be beamed from Mexican pyramid
(old news - 10:01AM Tuesday Oct 10 2006)

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Zero-Gravity Surgery a Success
(old news - 10:10PM Wednesday Sep 27 2006)

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Project Orion: NASA's Next Spaceship Takes Shape
(old news - 10:03PM Wednesday Sep 27 2006)

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Scientists discover giant planet orbiting star
(old news - 12:30PM Thursday Sep 14 2006)
By Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists said on Thursday that they have discovered an unusually large and light planet orbiting a star that could force them to reexamine theories about how planets are formed.

The planet, dubbed HAT-P-1, is roughly one-third larger than Jupiter but only weighs half as much, astronomers with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics said.

The planet is about one-quarter the density of water, Harvard-Smithsonian fellow Gaspar Bakos in a statement.


Original article here

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Server Outage
(old news - 06:15AM Saturday Sep 09 2006)
»setiathome.berkeley.edu/tech_news.php

While most of the BOINC backend functions without any dependency on the science database, the splitters and assimilators do not. The assimilators being off are no big deal - this just means a delay in moving results on disk into the database. But when the splitters are off no new work can be created, and our queue of work to send already ran dry this afternoon.

It is highly unlikely we will get the database back up before the end of the day, or anytime this weekend. Even if we do, our highest priority will be to unload the remaining few database tables before the disks crash again.

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