The outer solar system awaits—but getting there may not be as easy as we’d like0
- From Around the Web, Space
 - November 20, 2018
 
We’re under a time crunch.

We’re under a time crunch.

A scarily large meteorite crater has just been discovered in Greenland. It hit the world with the force of 700,000,000 nuclear bombs.

ASTRONOMERS at Columbia University may have discovered the first ever exomoon, which is thought to be orbiting a planet system 8,000 light-years away, using NASA’s Kepler and Hubble Space Telescopes.

An event known as ‘Cow’ that has rocked astronomy since June likely offers a close look at the birth of a neutron star or black hole.

A large planet appears to be orbiting out near the system’s snow line.

Giving our solar system a “slap in the face.”

It is the first impact crater discovered under one of Earth’s ice sheets, according to the scientists who found it.

The tiny particles provide an independent test of some of the planet’s key properties

ESA’s Gaia mission has made a major breakthrough in unravelling the formation history of the Milky Way.

One Chinese mission will bring back the first lunar rock samples in more than four decades



