Spacewatch: James Webb telescope finally ready for launch0
- From Around the Web, Space
- September 7, 2021
Successor to Hubble has been hit by delays and a ballooning budget since work began on it in 1996
Successor to Hubble has been hit by delays and a ballooning budget since work began on it in 1996
It’s not quite a star, and it’s not quite a planet — but it’s soaring through the Milky Way, much closer than we thought.
The past few years have seen a big change in how UFOs are perceived, both by the public and by government officials.
Excerpt from the August 28, 1971 issue of Science News
The internet outage could cost $7.2 billion per day!
This is a technological triumph.
Radio telescopes have uncovered quasars and pulsars, and offered up the first pic of a black hole
If you believe in the existence of aliens, some might consider you a crackpot with a tinfoil hat. If you’re a Harvard professor with a PhD who believes in the existence of aliens … well, let’s just say that might raise even more eyebrows. One academic, however, dared to fly in the face of everything to study alien abduction cases. That would be John E. Mack, whose fascinating story takes center stage in the fourth and final episode of Showtime’s UFO docu-series, which aired earlier this evening.
Whether you choose to kill insects or not, there is one bug across the northeastern United States health officials want you to take care of immediately: the spotted lanternfly.
Most of Mars is extremely inhospitable to life, but there may be a workaround. The areas near the entrances to caves should, in theory, be shielded from some of the harmful radiation that bombards the planet’s surface.