Dinosaurs were thriving before asteroid strike that wiped them out

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Dinosaurs were unaffected by long-term climate
changes and flourished before their sudden demise by asteroid strike.

Scientists largely agree that an asteroid impact,
possibly coupled with intense volcanic activity, wiped out the dinosaurs at the
end of the Cretaceous period 66 million years ago.

Posted in News


Crater Hunters Score Meteoric Hole-in-One

Curtin University planetary scientists have
announced the discovery of two new large cosmic ‘hole-in-one’ meteorite impact
structures, located in Western Australia and Central America.

The research was published in two separate papers
in leading journal Meteoritics and Planetary Science.

Posted in News


Asteroids are stronger, harder to destroy than previously thought

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A popular theme in the movies is that of an
incoming asteroid that could extinguish life on the planet, and our heroes are
launched into space to blow it up. But incoming asteroids may be harder to
break than scientists previously thought,

Posted in News


Were dinosaurs killed off by asteroid or volcanoes? It’s complicated

Every school child knows the dinosaurs were killed off by an asteroid smashing into the Earth some 66 million years ago.

But scientists
say the story may not be quite that simple, and that massive volcanic eruptions
over hundreds of thousands of years may have contributed to the dinosaurs’

Posted in News


Touchdown: Japan probe Hayabusa2 lands on distant asteroid

A Japanese probe sent to collect samples from an
asteroid 300 million kilometres away for clues about the origin of life and the
solar system landed successfully on Friday, scientists said.

Hayabusa2 touched down briefly on the Ryugu
asteroid,

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Close encounters: planning for extra Hera flyby

ESA’s proposed Hera mission will already visit two
asteroids: the Didymos binary pair. The Hera team hopes to boost that number by
performing a flyby of another asteroid during the mission’s three-year flight.

The opportunity arises because Hera will be flying
out to match Didymos’

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Carbonaceous chondrites provide clues about the delivery of water to Earth

An international study led by researchers from the
Institute of Space Sciences, from the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC)
and the Institut d’Estudis Espacials de Catalunya has discovered that
carbonaceous chondrites, a class of meteorites, incorporated hydrated minerals
along with organic material from the protoplanetary disk before the formation
of planets.

Posted in News


Meteorite source in asteroid belt not a single debris field

A new study published online in Meteoritics and
Planetary Science finds that our most common meteorites, those known as L
chondrites, come from at least two different debris fields in the asteroid
belt.

The belt contains many debris fields created from
former dwarf planets,

Posted in News


New research finds possible second impact crater hiding under Greenland ice

Scientists have
discovered a possible second impact crater buried under more than a mile of ice
in northwest Greenland.

This follows the
finding, announced in November 2018, of a 19-mile-wide crater beneath Hiawatha
Glacier – the first meteorite impact crater ever discovered under Earth’s ice
sheets.

Posted in News


Asteroid from ‘Rare Species’ Sighted in the Cosmic Wild

Astronomers have discovered an asteroid looping
through the inner solar system on an exotic orbit. The unusual object is among
the first asteroids ever found whose orbit is confined almost entirely within
the orbit of Venus. The asteroid’s existence hints at potentially significant
numbers of space rocks arcing unseen in uncharted regions nearer to the sun.

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Visit Us

The Spaceguard Centre is a working observatory, and the main source of information
about near Earth objects in the UK.

We are open Wednesday to Sunday, so why not Visit Us?

Contact Us

The Spaceguard Centre,
Llanshay Lane,
Knighton, Powys,
LD7 1LW. United Kingdom.

Tel: 01547 520247 mail@spaceguardcentre.com