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   Physics News Archive: September 2003

Gallery of Mars closeups from NASA Orbiter adds 10,232 views
Source: NASA/JPL   Posted: 9/30/2003
Thousands of newly released portraits of martian landscapes from NASA's Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft testify to the diversity of ways geological processes have sculpted the surface of our neighboring planet.
Full story...
MIT team achieves coldest temperature ever
Source: MIT   Posted: 9/27/2003
MIT scientists have cooled a sodium gas to the lowest temperature ever recorded -- only half-a-billionth of a degree above absolute zero. The work, to be reported in the Sept. 12 issue of Science, bests the previous record by a factor of six, and is the first time that a gas was cooled below 1 nanokelvin (one-billionth of a degree).
Full story...
Galileo End of Mission Status
Source: JPL/NASA   Posted: 9/24/2003
The Galileo spacecraft's 14-year odyssey came to an end on Sunday, Sept. 21, when the spacecraft passed into Jupiter's shadow then disintegrated in the planet's dense atmosphere at 11:57 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time.
Full story...
Hurricane Isabel From Space
Source: NASA   Posted: 9/18/2003
If you happened to be in North Carolina, the sight of advancing Hurricane Isabel was surely unwelcome. From space, though, it was a thing of beauty. NASA's Terra satellite took this picture at 11:50 a.m. EDT on Sept. 18th.
Full story...
Sick of Mars?
Source: NASA   Posted: 9/18/2003
If you've been listening to the news for the past two months you've undoubtedly heard a lot about Mars. Mars. Mars. Mars. And just maybe, you're getting sick of Mars. Good news: There are eight other planets in the solar system. And this week you can see the two biggest ones.
Full story...
Historic Galileo mission nears end
Source: NASA   Posted: 9/15/2003
Following eight years of capturing dramatic images and surprising science from Jupiter and its moons, NASA's Galileo mission draws to a close September 21 with a plunge into Jupiter's atmosphere.
Full story...
Silver nanowires used as explosives detector
Source: Berkeley   Posted: 9/14/2003
Minuscule wires a few nanometers across are proving to be versatile electronic components, as demonstrated recently by University of California, Berkeley, chemists who used silver nanowires as key elements of a sensitive explosives detector.
Full story...
Electrons surfing on solar wind?
Source: NASA/GSFC   Posted: 9/13/2003
"Killer" electrons capable of wreaking havoc on orbiting spacecraft may "surf" magnetic waves driven by the solar wind, according to a team of space scientists.
Full story...
Chandra 'hears' a black hole
Source: NASA   Posted: 9/10/2003
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory detected sound waves, for the first time, from a super-massive black hole. The "note" is the deepest ever detected from an object in the universe. The tremendous amounts of energy carried by these sound waves may solve a longstanding problem in astrophysics.
Full story...
Matchbox-sized Atomic Clock
Source: ONR   Posted: 9/3/2003
In October 2003 the Office of Naval Research will unveil the performance of the next-generation, super-accurate clock no bigger than a matchbox. The Ultra-miniature Rubidium (Rb) Atomic Clock, 40 cubic centimeters in volume and using a minuscule one watt of power, doesn’t weigh much more than a matchbox either.
Full story...


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