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# astronomy - Tuesday 1 May, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Super Moon

# astronomy - Thursday 19 April, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Celestial Fireworks

# astronomy - Thursday 29 March, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Mars This post contains videos

# astronomy - Monday 26 March, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Heavens Above

# astronomy - Monday 12 March, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Planets This post contains videos

# astronomy - Tuesday 28 February, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Night Skies

# astronomy - Monday 20 February, 2012

# astronomy - Saturday 4 February, 2012

Planetwatch This post contains videos

# astronomy - Friday 27 January, 2012

# astronomy - Thursday 19 January, 2012

# astronomy - Tuesday 17 January, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Life On Mars

# astronomy - Tuesday 6 December, 2011

From TheJournal.ie New Earth

# astronomy - Friday 25 November, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Out Of This World

# astronomy - Monday 14 November, 2011

End Of The World This post contains videos

# astronomy - Thursday 20 October, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Take 5

# astronomy - Thursday 13 October, 2011

From TheJournal.ie 9 At 9

# astronomy - Tuesday 4 October, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Nobel Prize

# astronomy - Monday 12 September, 2011

From TheJournal.ie New Neighbours?

# astronomy - Wednesday 31 August, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Fireball

# astronomy - Monday 29 August, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Take 5
From TheJournal.ie A Star Is Born This post contains videos

# astronomy - Saturday 27 August, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Stargazing

# astronomy - Friday 26 August, 2011

Space Bling This post contains videos

# astronomy - Friday 12 August, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Meteor Shower This post contains videos

# astronomy - Tuesday 9 August, 2011

From TheJournal.ie SKIES

# astronomy - Thursday 16 June, 2011

Lunar Eclipse This post contains images

# astronomy - Friday 13 May, 2011

Friday The 13th This post contains videos

# astronomy - Thursday 5 May, 2011

# astronomy - Saturday 23 April, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Astronomy

# astronomy - Wednesday 16 February, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Solar Flare

# astronomy - Tuesday 4 January, 2011

Solar Eclipse This post contains images
From TheJournal.ie Solar Eclipse

# astronomy - Monday 20 December, 2010

From TheJournal.ie Solstice

# astronomy - Sunday 12 December, 2010

# astronomy - Wednesday 17 November, 2010

# astronomy - Tuesday 16 November, 2010

# astronomy - Wednesday 6 October, 2010

# astronomy - Saturday 18 September, 2010

From TheJournal.ie Astronomy This post contains videos

# astronomy - Tuesday 7 September, 2010

From TheJournal.ie Astronomy

# astronomy - Friday 20 August, 2010

US SCIENTISTS HAVE announced that the moon is shrinking, after spotting wrinkles on the surface of the satellite.

Meanwhile, scientists say the universe is going to continue expanding until it becomes a cold, dead wasteland.

Contraction marks were spotted by scientists examining photographs of the lunar surface taken by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO).

The moon was formed “in a chaotic environment of intense bombardment by asteroids and meteors”, according t0NASA.

The moon then cooled down as it aged, but scientists believe it has shrank during this process, especially during its early years. But, it could still be shrinking today.

Here’s a video of NASA’s footage.

This NASA image shows:

[A] fault cut across and deformed several small diameter (~40-m diameter) impact craters (arrows) on the flanks of Mandel’shtam crater (6.5°N, 161°E). The fault carried near-surface crustal materials up and over the craters, burying parts of their floors and rims.

About half of the rim and floor of a 20 m-in-diameter crater shown in the box has been lost. Since small craters only have a limited lifetime before they are destroyed by newer impacts, their deformation by the fault shows the fault to be relatively young.

NasaMoonShrinking

Separately, NASA scientists are saying that the fate of the universe has been revealed by light travelling from distant stars. And it doesn’t look good.

The team calculated that the distribution of dark energy (a force that speeds up the universe’s expansion) in the universe will cause it to continually expand until it becomes a cold, dead wasteland.

How cold? Temperatures will approach ‘absolute zero’ – the temperature at which all atomic motion stops.

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