
Copernical Team
Space scientists solve a decades-long gamma-ray burst puzzle

A wrinkle to the origins of matter in the Milky Way

When testing Einstein's theory of general relativity, small modeling errors add up fast

How a supermassive black hole originates

SpaceML.org aims to accelerate AI application in space science and exploration

Researchers discover orbital patterns of trans-Neptunian objects

Study of young chaotic star system reveals planet formation secrets

Orchids in orbit: Seeds tested in space

Turkey invites Russia to take part in construction of country's spaceport

Scientists detect signatures of life remotely

It could be a milestone on the path to detecting life on other planets: Scientists under the leadership of the University of Bern and of the National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) PlanetS detect a key molecular property of all living organisms from a helicopter flying several kilometers above ground. The measurement technology could also open up opportunities for remote sensing of the Earth.
Left hands and right hands are almost perfect mirror images of each other. But whatever way they are twisted and turned, they cannot be superimposed onto each other. This is why the left glove simply won't fit the right hand as well as it fits the left. In science, this property is referred to as chirality.
Just like hands are chiral, molecules can be chiral, too. In fact, most molecules in the cells of living organisms, such as DNA, are chiral. Unlike hands, however, that usually come in pairs of left and right, the molecules of life almost exclusively occur in either their "left-handed" or their "right-handed" version.