Space changes your brain in bigger ways than we thought0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 1, 2019
We are already aware of many of the dangers that spaceflight can inflict on the human body.
We are already aware of many of the dangers that spaceflight can inflict on the human body.
For the first time ever, astronomers have detected a 1.3 km radius body at the edge of the Solar System. Kilometer sized bodies like the one discovered have been predicted to exist for more than 70 years. These objects acted as an important step in the planet formation process between small initial amalgamations of dust and ice and the planets we see today.
Rock under the rover’s wheels is more like soil than cement, a clue to how Mount Sharp formed
“Our results are consistent and repeatable.”
In December 2018, NASA’s Voyager 2 spacecraft reached interstellar space, following the example of its sister, Voyager 1. Right now, only five spacecraft have been launched capable of making such a grand exit, including the Voyagers. The remaining three are Pioneers 10 and 11, and New Horizons. Which one will be the next to make a great escape?
YouTube user spacebret says he was trying to film birds when he “noticed a strange flashing light in the sky near an airplane.” He thought he’d missed recording it but later saw footage with an object that was “pill shaped with bullet headed ends.”
This presentation shows we do not know the whole truth about human origins.
One world, two species and Tartarian DNA all point towards the real reasons behind why mainstream archaeology seems to ignore worldwide evidence of ancient artifacts and masonry they cannot and will not explain.
Interplay of twisting magnetic field, ‘negative-energy’ particles
At the largest conference of astronomers in the United States, the biggest astronomy mission under development was virtually a no-show.