An orbiter glitch may mean some signs of liquid water on Mars aren’t real0
- From Around the Web, Space
- November 23, 2018
A new analysis of images once thought to show hints of saltwater suggests they actually don’t
A new analysis of images once thought to show hints of saltwater suggests they actually don’t
Billionaire entrepreneurs are trying to create rockets fit for human travel, while government agencies spend billions furthering their explorations. But we are still a long way off from making our way to the red planet
“I believe it was our ancestors trying to tell us that they were in contact with off-world intelligences.”
InSight will tell us about the planet’s interior, but it’s got to stick the landing first.
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) has tuned in another new channel for signals from space.
Archaeologists at a site in what’s now Jordan have found evidence of a cosmic calamity
Vacations come in many shapes and forms. Among the more unusual is the growing trend for cryptotourism, which the International Cryptozoology Museum estimates generates $140million annually in the US alone.
Structures called skyrmions might overcome hurdles in nuclear physics calculations
The ‘tamahagane’ steel used in traditional weapons may be the perfect material to cut through asteroids.
In ancient-Egyptian mythology, Apep was the serpent god of darkness, destruction, and chaos. In contemporary astronomy, Apep is the nickname for a massive, just-discovered star system surrounded by serpentine dust swirls and officially known as 2XMM J160050.7-514245.
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