UK wants continued EU Copernicus participation
- 20 July 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
The UK has given the clearest statement yet of its desire to stay within the European Union's Copernicus Earth observation programme after Brexit.
EU member states are building the most advanced ever satellite system for monitoring the state of the planet - with Britain playing a major role.
Business Secretary Greg Clark says he wants that participation to continue.
His comments came as Airbus UK debuted the latest satellite for Copernicus known as Sentinel-5 Precursor.
This spacecraft will make global maps of gases and particles in the atmosphere to track pollution and climate change. It is set to launch on a Russian rocket in September.
Read full article UK wants continued EU Copernicus participation
Earth is becoming 'Planet Plastic'
- 19 July 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
US scientists have calculated the total amount of plastic ever made and put the number at 8.3 billion tonnes.
It is an astonishing mass of material that has essentially been created only in the last 65 years or so.
James Webb: Swallowing the biggest space telescope
- 11 July 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
The door has closed on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).
The successor to Hubble has been locked tight inside a giant chamber where it will undergo a series of tests to simulate conditions off Earth.
Read full article James Webb: Swallowing the biggest space telescope
Antarctic iceberg: Giant 'white wanderer' poised to break free
- 5 July 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
Everybody is fascinated by icebergs. The idea that you can have blocks of frozen water the size of cities, and bigger, sparks our sense of wonder.
British astronaut Tim Peake photographed one from orbit that would just about fit inside Central London's ring road. But at 26km by 13km (16 miles by 8 miles), it was a tiddler compared with the berg that is about to break away from the eastern side of the Antarctic Peninsula.
Read full article Antarctic iceberg: Giant 'white wanderer' poised to break free
The rock that records how we all got here
- 1 July 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
You're going to want to touch it; you're definitely going to want to run your fingers over its wavy lines.
This 2.5-tonne lump of rock will be one of the new star exhibits when London's Natural History Museum re-opens its front entrance-space in a couple of weeks' time.
Satellite mega-constellation production begins
- 27 June 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
European aerospace giant Airbus and its partner, OneWeb, have begun the production of a satellite mega-constellation.
The network will comprise at least 600 spacecraft in the first instance, but could eventually encompass more than 2,000.
Read full article Satellite mega-constellation production begins
Whaling's 'uncomfortable' scientific legacy
- 25 June 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
It's a curious thing to see a group of early whale foetuses up close - to see beings so small that have the potential to become so big.
But what really strikes you, especially in those initial developmental stages, is how familiar the forms look. How like an early human foetus, they appear.
Read full article Whaling's 'uncomfortable' scientific legacy
Full thrust on Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket
- 22 June 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
Manufacturers say they are making rapid progress in the development of Europe's new rocket - the Ariane 6.
The vehicle is due to enter service in 2020, gradually replacing the existing workhorse, the Ariane 5.
Read full article Full thrust on Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket
Galileo contract faces Brexit crunch
- 20 June 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
The contract will be signed on Thursday giving a German-UK consortium the go-ahead to build another eight satellites for Galileo - Europe's version of GPS.
OHB System of Bremen and SSTL of Guildford have so far produced all of the fully operational satellites in the constellation.
Whales reached huge size only recently
- 24 May 2017
- From the section Science & Environment
Blue whales are the biggest animals that have ever existed on Earth but they only recently* got that way.
This is the extraordinary finding from a new study that examined the fossil record of baleens - the group of filter feeders to which the blues belong.