Jokers please: first human Mars mission may need onboard comedians0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 16, 2019
Researchers are working with Nasa to see if clowns help team cohesion on long space missions
Researchers are working with Nasa to see if clowns help team cohesion on long space missions
The NASA rover’s surprisingly long mission moved Mars science past ‘follow the water’
A closer look at some unimaginably ancient fossils suggests complex life may have evolved much earlier and more quickly than scientists previously thought.
NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter snapped the newest machine on Mars. You can even see the solar panels.
X-rays at CHESS, novel techniques combine to visualize internal structures
A New York witness at Mechanicville reported watching a silent, hovering light that shined a light onto the street below, according to testimony in Case 89364 from the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) witness reporting database.
Privacy experts are waiting for the other shoe to drop on connected kicks.
Imagine going to live on a planet where the sun never moves in the sky. No sunrise, no sunset.
Two of the planets which are orbiting the star Kepler 107 could be the result of an impact similar to that which affected the Earth to produce the moon.
The robotic trailblazer’s mission comes to an end after more than 14 years on Mars. Goodnight, Oppy.