FREE WILL ASTROLOGY (Orlando Weekly) ARIES (March 21-April 19) Though one of the closest to our sun, Teegarden?s star was unknown until 2003. Located in the constellation of Aries, it?s a red dwarf with relatively modest heat and luminosity, and moves very fast compared to other stars....more...Free Will Astrology (Metro Pulse) ARIES (March 21-April 19): Though one of the closest stars to our sun, Teegarden's star was unknown to astronomers until 2003. Located in the constellation of Aries, it's a red dwarf with relatively modest heat and luminosity, and moves very fast compared to other stars....more... Smell of old books (The Telegraph) For generations of book-lovers in Calcutta, foraging through books in that mecca of the bibliophile, College Street, carries memories. Once College Street used to be one of the few haunts in the city for books, with Gol Park and Free School Street as alternative venues....more... Free Will Astrology (Horoscope) (City Pages) ...more... Planet hunters spy distant haul (BBC News) Twenty-eight new planets orbiting stars beyond our Solar System are detected by an international team....more... Gamma-ray bursts active longer than thought (Spaceflight Now) Using NASA's Swift satellite, astronomers have discovered that energetic flares seen after gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are not just hiccups, they appear to be a continuation of the burst itself....more... Gamma Ray Bursts active much longer than previously thought (ANI via Yahoo! India News) Washington, May 24 (ANI): New observations by NASA's Swift satellite has revealed that energetic bursts seen after gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are not hiccups, but a continuation of the burst itself. Swift's X-ray Telescope (XRT) discovered that the initial pulse of gamma-rays, known as prompt emission, is often followed minutes to hours later by short-lived but powerful X-ray flares. As ......more... Gamma Ray Bursts active much longer than previously thought (New Kerala) Washington, May 24 : New observations by NASA's Swift satellite has revealed that energetic bursts seen after gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are not hiccups, but a continuation of the burst itself....more... Gamma-Ray Bursts Active Longer Than Thought (SpaceDaily) by Staff Writers Greenbelt, MD (SPX) May 23, 2007 Using NASA's Swift satellite, astronomers have discovered that energetic flares seen after gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are not just hiccups, they appear to be a continuation of the burst itself....more... |