LATEST NEWS
Mystery radio signal could be from universe's first stars
04:13 08 January 2009
A balloon-borne experiment has turned up mysterious radio static that could come from the universe's first stars
Black holes grew up before galaxies
21:08 07 January 2009 | 3 comments
A study of four distant quasars suggests that supermassive black holes may have matured long before the galaxies that surround them
Runaway stars carve eerie cosmic sculptures
19:54 07 January 2009
Hubble has found 14 stars that are shooting through interstellar gas, creating 'bow shocks' that resemble the waves at the bow of a boat
Danger ahead as the Sun goes quiet
18:00 07 January 2009 | 29 comments
The Sun is about to go into a period of low sunspot activity and could let more harmful cosmic rays enter the solar system
Many pulsars sport gamma-ray belts
17:20 07 January 2009 | 1 comment
Pulsars are not simply lighthouses that beam out radio waves from their poles - many also emit gamma rays from their equators
Supernova's ghost caught expanding in new video
10:00 07 January 2009 | 5 comments
A time-lapse movie suggests the supernova remnant Cassiopeia A may be channelling its energy into creating high-speed cosmic rays
Alien asteroid dust hints at Earth-like planets
17:22 06 January 2009 | 24 comments
Dust with a similar composition to the Earth has been found swaddling six stars, suggesting rocky planets may be common
Sharpest infrared image of Milky Way's core unveiled
23:48 05 January 2009 | 45 comments
The sharpest infrared picture yet taken of the roiling furnace at the galaxy's centre reveals a new population of massive stars
Space experiment has a sting in the tail for newts
11:46 05 January 2009 | 15 comments
Newts aren't normally fazed by having their tails chopped off – they just grow a new one – but microgravity plays havoc with the process
Desktop atom smashers could replace LHC
10:50 05 January 2009 | 18 comments
The next generation of particle smashers might be considerably smaller than the Large Hadron Collider – and made almost literally out of thin air
Mystery stone circles may point to water on Mars
22:12 02 January 2009 | 40 comments
Circles of rocky material sorted by size suggest that the local Martian climate was once much warmer than thought
Top 10 space stories of 2008
11:01 02 January 2009 | 6 comments
The most popular space stories of the year include a gallery of spooky cosmic images and an exploration of whether the universe existed before the big bang
2008: The year in astronomy
23:03 01 January 2009 | 1 comment
Astronomers observed the most powerful explosion ever recorded, detected what may be dark matter and found hints of a fractal universe
2008: The year in the solar system
18:57 31 December 2008 | 3 comments
Astronomers glimpsed unseen swathes of Mercury, found a space rock heading for Earth and landed a probe squarely on a patch of Martian ice
NASA says Columbia crew had no chance to survive
03:45 31 December 2008 | 25 comments
The shift from what appeared to be a normal descent on 1 Feb 2003 into disaster happened so fast that the crew didn't have time to close their visors
Commentary: Reasons to be jolly about 2008
00:01 31 December 2008 | 3 comments
After a year in which the much-anticipated Large Hadron Collider has been delayed, you might think particle physicists don't have much to be jolly about – not so...
Most extreme news stories of 2008
11:07 28 December 2008 | 6 comments
Explore the limits of science and technology from the past year, from the deepest living fish to the roundest spheres
2008: The year in spaceflight
01:00 28 December 2008
China performed its first spacewalk and India sent a probe to the Moon, while NASA faced the space shuttle's looming retirement
News review 2008: Reality returns to the White House
11:30 27 December 2008 | 75 comments
Barack Obama may have an impossible burden of expectation on his shoulders, but one fervent wish of many US scientists should be easy to fulfil: lead the nation back into the "reality-based community"
Bye-bye boojums: Scientific names lose their sparkle
10:00 27 December 2008 | 18 comments
Will we ever see the like of MACHOs and WIMPs, cheap date and Sonic hedgehog again? New Scientist investigates
News review 2008: Asia's space race takes off
12:15 26 December 2008 | 1 comment
China carried out its first space walk, while India's launch of its first moon probe heralded a new era in space
Top blogs from 2008
08:00 26 December 2008 | 9 comments
From a nano-sized Barack Obama, to calls for a 'Gaian dictator' to save the world, the blogs have been buzzing this year – here we round up a few of our favourites
News review 2008: The year NASA's star began to wane
14:12 25 December 2008 | 6 comments
It's been a turbulent 50th anniversary year for the space agency, with its successes marred by uncertainty over the shuttle's replacement, problems with Hubble, and serious budget woes
NASA gives space cargo contracts to start-up firms
14:09 24 December 2008 | 8 comments
The agency has awarded $3.5 billion in contracts to SpaceX and Orbital Sciences to ship cargo to and from the space station beginning in 2010
News review 2008: The year in science
13:00 24 December 2008
It was a year when everything seemed to fall apart. Fuel, food, finance all had their crises &ndash but it wasn't all doom and gloom...
Space station upgraded to spot threatening electric fields
15:52 23 December 2008 | 1 comment
A new device will monitor electrical charges that may have caused Soyuz space capsules returning from the station to land off course
Gallery: Top 10 objects that have flown in space
00:37 23 December 2008 | 9 comments
Forget spacesuits, solid rocket boosters and robot arms – more sentimental and whimsical objects have reached escape velocity
Burrowing black holes devoured first stars from within
18:05 19 December 2008 | 86 comments
The digested end-product of this cosmic feast could be the ancestors of the supermassive black holes that sit at the centre of galaxies like the Milky Way
US investigation into gravity weapons 'nonsense'
13:19 19 December 2008 | 90 comments
Physicists are surprised to find that military intelligence has been investigating whether elusive gravitational waves could pose a threat to US security
Holes in Earth's magnetic cloak let the solar wind in
10:24 19 December 2008 | 2 comments
The Earth's protective magnetosphere often develops two large holes that let in the largest leaks of solar wind













