An almost impossible engineering project lets us time travel to the start of the universe0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology, Space
- March 21, 2017
Time travel is possible, in a way.

Time travel is possible, in a way.

The odds of life spreading between the worlds of the newly-discovered seven-planet TRAPPIST-1 system are up to 1,000 times greater than in our own solar system. That’s the conclusion of a new analysis posted March 2 to the arXiv, an online repository of scientific papers.

Photo by biologist Bert Willaert captures group of tadpoles from the underneath, looking up at the clouds and trees

On the dwarf planet Ceres, volcanoes rage — but instead of hot lava coming out of them as on Earth, they spew brine and ice.

As British royal families fought the War of the Roses in the 1400s for control of England’s throne, a grouping of stars was waging its own contentious skirmish — a star war far away in the Orion Nebula.

Many believe that FOXP2 gene alone is responsible for language. The problem? There is absolutely no evidence of origin from the animal kingdom towards us.

Samples of rock harvested in Canada are thought to contain parts of Earth’s crust dating back to more than 4.3 billion years ago.
The above photo is a close up of another obvious saw cut in basalt on the Giza Plateau, proving that some kind of Ancient Machining Technology was used in ancient times.

For the first time, scientists using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope have witnessed a massive object with the makeup of a comet being ripped apart and scattered in the atmosphere of a white dwarf, the burned-out remains of a compact star.





























































