Dawn
spacecraft data show a region around the Ernutet crater where organic concentrations have been discovered (labeled «a» through «f»).
Not exact matches
As the $ 3 billion Cassini
spacecraft orbits Saturn, it is broadcasting a stream of images and other
data to Earth, some 850 million miles away, that
show a ring architecture even more convoluted than expected.
Analysis of
data from the
spacecraft once communication was restored at 10:29,
showed that from around 8:51, the craft had been disturbed and started spinning.
SIMILARLY SIZED
Data collected by the Kepler
spacecraft,
shown in this artist's rendering, indicate that the Milky Way is home to billions of potentially habitable Earth - sized planets.
Data from the first pass of NASA's Juno
spacecraft over the incessant storm
show that its clouds stretch at least 350 kilometers down into the planet's atmosphere.
This illustration
shows how the researchers used
data from NASA's Wide - field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
spacecraft to determine the nucleus sizes of several of these distant comets.
The MESSENGER
data showed an increase in the number of — not electrically charged — neutrons at Mercury's orbit hours before the large number of charged particles reached the
spacecraft.
This result, combined with the
spacecraft data,
showed there is activity around Earth for more than an hour leading up to wedge formation, a process that has been hotly debated in the past.
Based on
data obtained with the Gamma Ray and Neutron Detector aboard the Dawn
spacecraft, Prettyman et al. (p. 242, published online 20 September)
show that Vesta's reputed volatile - poor regolith contains substantial amounts of hydrogen delivered by carbonaceous chondrite impactors.
Jupiter's light
shows aren't sparked by the same process that generates Earth's flashiest polar auroras, say Barry Mauk at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland and his team, who have been studying
data from NASA's Juno
spacecraft.
The moon is younger than we thought according to
data from the Rosetta
spacecraft that
shows 22 per cent of our atmospheric xenon came from comets
New
data from the Cassini - Huygens
spacecraft orbiting the planet
shows their shadow can actually change the planet's atmosphere.
New
data from the Pluto flyby of the New Horizons
spacecraft showed that nitrogen is escaping from the dwarf planet and into space at a much lower rate than expected due to a cooling effect in the atmosphere.
Working with
data returned by NASA's Cassini Orbiter
spacecraft, Benson has created a series of works
showing Saturn and its extraordinary ring system.
Data from the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN)
spacecraft point in this direction,
showing that a CME can compress the Martian magnetosphere, spinning off effects in the ionosphere and below.
«I do hope to use the mission's image
data to composite an image of Pluto for the Otherworlds
show, though it will take many months for the
spacecraft to trickle the full resolution images to Earth.
Data from NASA's Juno
spacecraft are revealing new details of Jupiter, from swirling cyclones at the planet's poles (south pole,
shown) to its great white ovals, storms and stripes of gas.
Ultraviolet
data collected by NASA's MAVEN
spacecraft was used to construct these images
showing ultraviolet emissions before (left) and during (right) the storm
Initial
data from the Cassini - Huygens
spacecraft, which began exploring the Saturnian system in 2004,
show that methane is indeed a minor atmospheric constituent but a very important one, possibly playing a role analogous to that of water vapour in Earth's troposphere.
Using infrared
data from NASA's Juno
spacecraft, scientists have assembled a 3D map of Jupiter's north polar region,
showing details of a huge central cyclone and eight surrounding storms.
Data from the Cassini
spacecraft show that the gas giant didn't always have those iconic icy bands
Yet according to this study: http://www.ucar.edu/news/releases/2006/brightness.shtml «
Data collected from radiometers on U.S. and European
spacecraft show that the Sun is about 0.07 percent brighter in years of peak sunspot activity, such as around 2000, than when spots are rare (as they are now, at the low end of the 11 - year solar cycle).
BBC News reports that
data from Europe's Cryosat
spacecraft shows that Arctic sea ice coverage was nearly 9,000 cubic kilometers (2,100 cubic miles) by the end of this year's melting season, up from about 6,000 cubic kilometers (1,400 cubic miles) during the same time last year.