celestial bodies
Asteroids have been showering the Earth with damages for long. So, NASA thought of searching for these Earth-threatening celestial bodies as small as 140 meters. It has been approved by the US Congress and is awaiting President George W Bush’s...
Related Stories
Most Recent
Most Popular
Most Commented
Simplicity is hard to achieve. While its easy to make a simple thing complicated, molding a complicated idea in a simple manner is hard and when someone achieves just...
made popular Oct 30 2008
The Republicans no longer control the Congress and US President George W Bush is already emanating signs of displeasure and discontent. Now that he no longer controls...
made popular Oct 1 2007
According to a Brazilian newspaper, termites now come to challenge corn and sugar cane-based technology in ethanol-production, a top United Nations environment official...
made popular Mar 7 2007
To curve the global warming, U.S government order to limit the carbon emissions to possible limit, as it has became a threat to the world. While addressing the...
made popular Feb 14 2007
Does this gesture of President George W. Bush herald conversion to a U.N.-led plan to slow climate change? Not at all - though his call to break a U.S. addiction to oil...
made popular Feb 2 2006
The famous Golden Globe’s winner Brokeback Mountain is still in dark for President George W. Bush. During a rapid Q & A session a young man suddenly posed a...
made popular Jan 24 2006
After rejecting the U.N.’s Kyoto Protocol, Washington and Australia want to limit warming by alternate methods - technology. To promote technology like...
made popular Jan 11 2006
All Stories
Most Recent
Most Popular
Most Commented
A chip is developed to track the positions and movements of stars and other celestial bodies. The 111-megapixel CCD (charge coupled device) image sensor is built by...
made popular Jun 20 2006
Related Tags
111-megapixel CCD asteroids DALSA Semiconductor dangerous asteroids Earth Earth-Threatening Asteroids Image Sensor NASA pixels President George W. Bush Smaller Asteroids stars Technology telescopes U.S. Naval Observatory US Congress
Home

RSS













