Space in 2019 will be all about the moon, and one weird asteroid0
- From Around the Web, Space
- January 26, 2019
Fifty years after Neil Armstrong’s historic step, robots from China, India, Israel, the US and elsewhere are heading back.

Fifty years after Neil Armstrong’s historic step, robots from China, India, Israel, the US and elsewhere are heading back.

The world is still celebrating the historic landing of China’s Chang’e-4 on the far side of the moon on January 3. This week, China announced its plans to follow up with three more lunar missions, laying the groundwork for a lunar base.

The newly discovered system could lead to finding even stranger distant planets.

On Jan. 21st at 04:41:43 UT, a meteoroid slammed into the Moon.

The supermassive black hole in the center of the Milky Way seems to be pointing a radio jet directly towards us.

Most of carbon and nitrogen that makes up our bodies probably came from passing planet, researchers believe

The light released from around the first massive black holes in the universe is so intense that it is able to reach telescopes across the entire expanse of the universe.

European Southern Observatory’s Cosmic Gems Programme captures last breath of a dying star

Observations from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft provide evidence of rainfall on the north pole of Saturn’s moon Titan. The rainfall would be the first indication of the start of a summer season in the northern hemisphere of the hazy moon.



