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Riccardo Giacconi to Receive National Inventors Hall of Fame's Lifetime Achievement Award

Riccardo Giacconi, founding director of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Md., will receive the 2008 Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Inventors Hall of Fame, Inc. on May 3 at the Hall's headquarters in Akron, Ohio. The annual Lifetime Achievement Award is given to an individual who has fostered innovation throughout his or her lifetime. The Hall honors those who have demonstrated an extended commitment to progress in technical innovation and the protection of that innovation. Each year a new class of inventors is inducted into the Hall of Fame in recognition of their patented inventions that make human, social, and economic progress possible.

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Spring Symposium 2008

Spring Symposium 2008 The universe is more complex than we imagined it to be a decade ago. Observations now indicate that the expansion of the universe is accelerating. It is as if the universe is filled with a sea of "dark energy," the pressure of which counteracts the pull of gravity on large scales. The past decade marked the discovery of dark energy and the revelation of our profound ignorance of the cosmos, and dark-energy research over the next decade may well lead the way to a deeper understanding of the laws of physics. The Space Telescope Science Institute's 2008 Spring Symposium, "A Decade of Dark Energy", will focus on cutting-edge issues in the study of dark energy.  Read more...

Hubble Servicing Mission 4

HST Captured for Servicing Hubble precisely measured the age of the universe. It found evidence of dark energy. It brought you images of distant galaxies in the young universe. And now, with the state-of-the-art instruments delivered by Servicing Mission 4 (SM4), the Hubble Space Telescope will look onto the universe with new eyes, surpassing even its previous vision. Hubble was designed to be repaired and upgraded by astronauts, and these servicing missions have occurred several times since Hubble’s launch in 1990. NASA has selected a crew for the upcoming servicing, and the astronauts have begun training.  Read more...

IAU Symposium 258: The Ages of Stars

IAU Symposium 258 How old is that star? That is one of the most difficult questions to answer in galactic astrophysics. Stellar ages lie at the heart of astrophysics, and stellar evolution is all about time and how stars change with time. Stellar and galactic evolution cannot be understood without some knowledge of ages. Now is an appropriate time to examine the problem of stellar ages in detail. IAU Symposium 258 will bring together astronomers from the around the world to discuss the current state of the problem of estimating ages of individual stars and of populations, where the advances are now being made, and what the near future offers.  Read more...

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