Science | |||||||
NEWS | |||||||
The Canadian Lunar Rover with Peter Visscher I promise I'll rest up so I can be back to share the wonders of space exploration with you in future weeks. Now for some space mission briefings. China's Zhurong Mars Rover appears to be facing challenges. Images from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter ...
| |||||||
Does the moon need its own time zone? We may need to decide soon With the next era of lunar exploration on the horizon, scientists have begun to consider how time should be kept on the moon and how lunar missions will fix their own positions independent from Earth. This rethink culminated in the agreement, ...
| |||||||
SpaceX crew launch scrubbed after concern with engine ignitor system SpaceX scrubbed the launch from Florida of a four-man crew heading to the International Space Station early Monday with less than three minutes remaining in the countdown, delaying the start of a six-month mission to examine a problem with a ground ...
| |||||||
Venus grade: NASA seeks a lander battery tough enough to survive Earth's evil twin Scientists and engineers from NASA and the European Space Agency are gearing up to send three new missions to the second rock from the sun. They want to know a whole lot more about the nearby planet, which resembles Earth in so many ways, and yet is so ...
| |||||||
See Venus and Jupiter get super-close in the sky tonight Venus and Jupiter will approach each other in the night sky on Wednesday (March 1) during a meeting of solar system record breakers, the hottest planet and the largest. According to In the Sky (opens in new tab), during the close approach between the ...
| |||||||
The amazing auroras of February 2023 are a visual feast for stargazers (photos) Earth recently experienced the most powerful solar storm of the current solar cycle, which caused auroras to spread far away from their usual haunts around the poles. Unexpected sightings were reported as far as California and Western Australia.
| |||||||
Sharpshooter Insects Use 'Superpropulsion' to Catapult Their Pee The half-inch-long insects are destructive agricultural pests because of their unquenchable thirsts and splashy bathroom habits: when nature calls, these bugs launch droplets of their watery pee and create puddles of disease-causing waste.
| |||||||
Why the northern and southern lights appear to be so active right now The breathtaking dancing shimmer of the aurora borealis and its counterpart in the southern hemisphere, aurora australis, dazzles those lucky enough to catch a glimpse of Earth's greatest light show. The northern and southern lights, ...
| |||||||
Hubble Space Telescope captured 'movie' of spacecraft slamming into asteroid It was the first time humanity has attempted to change the movement of a celestial object, and the results show how this kinetic impact technology could be used to deflect asteroids that may ever appear to be on a collision course with Earth.
| |||||||
How to Brush Moon Dust Off Your Boots In 2025, NASA plans to land a crew of humans on the moon for the first time since 1972. But before these brave astronauts get there, scientists here on Earth are trying to figure out how to solve one major problem revealed during the agency's wonderful ...
| |||||||
See more results | Edit this alert |
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
Receive this alert as RSS feed |
Send Feedback |
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar