Ron Cowen

All Stories by Ron Cowen

  1. Astronomy

    Alien Light: Taking the spectra of extrasolar planets

    Astronomers have for the first time recorded the spectra of light emitted by two extrasolar planets.

  2. Planetary Science

    Solar craft reaches a new low

    The Ulysses spacecraft passed directly below the sun on Feb. 7, looking up at its south pole, a feat the craft has done only twice before.

  3. Astronomy

    Studies of Light and Shadow

    Two new surveys of the night sky examine the two facets of galaxy formation: the glitter and the gloom.

  4. Astronomy

    On the Trail of Dead Planets: Dust ring around a white dwarf

    Infrared observations have depicted the dusty vestiges of a planetary system dancing around a dead star.

  5. Planetary Science

    Titan’s organic cloud

    The Cassini spacecraft has imaged a huge cloud that engulfs most of the north pole of Saturn's icy moon Titan and could be a source of the moon's hydrocarbon lakes.

  6. Astronomy

    Tiny shutters for new observatory

    A recently developed device, known as a microshutter, will allow the proposed James Webb Space Telescope to simultaneously record the spectra of light from 100 galaxies.

  7. Planetary Science

    Solar craft get into position

    With the assist of gravitational boosts from the moon, twin spacecraft have completed a series of maneuvers that will enable them to take three-dimensional images of the sun.

  8. Astronomy

    Kaput: Hubble’s main camera stops working

    The sharpest, most sensitive camera on the aging Hubble Space Telescope has stopped working.

  9. Astronomy

    Magnificent McNaught

    Flaunting a majestic tail over southern skies, Comet McNaught became in mid-January the brightest comet in more than 40 years.

  10. Planetary Science

    Stellar death may spawn solar system

    Material shed by a dying star might give birth to planets.

  11. Astronomy

    Astronomers discover smallest galaxy ever

    Astronomers have found the smallest galaxy yet recorded, about one-sixteenth the diameter of the Milky Way.

  12. Physics

    Solving a 400-year-old supernova riddle

    Astronomers have determined that Kepler's supernova, the last stellar explosion witnessed in our galaxy, belongs to the class known as type 1a.