The weird, repeating signals from deep space just tripled0
- From Around the Web, Space
- August 21, 2019
Fast radio bursts are getting more attention from scientists, who can now detect more of them.
Fast radio bursts are getting more attention from scientists, who can now detect more of them.
A team of researchers from Germany, Austria and Australia has found traces of the radioactive isotope iron-60 — the tell-tale signature of a supernova explosion — within fresh snow in Antarctica.
Mission that could shed light on possibility of life on icy rock is expected to lift off in 2025
America’s largest impact crater wreaked havoc on the land and water. Scientists are just beginning to understand it.
The molecule called cyclocarbon joins other carbon forms, like buckyballs and carbon nanotubes
Starman’s orbit will soon keep him very far from the Earth, until 2047.
Elon Musk has taken to Twitter to re-hash a theory he had a few years ago: dropping nuclear bombs on Mars to release trapped carbon dioxide and heat up the planet.
Certain nerve cells sync their firing just before a recollection resurfaces
The incredible space event happened about 900 million years ago.
Supersolids, solid materials with superfluid properties (i.e., in which a substance can flow with zero viscosity), have recently become the focus of numerous physics studies. Supersolids are paradoxical phases of matter in which two distinct and somewhat antithetical orders coexist, resulting in a material being both crystal and superfluid.