Speeding up science on near-earth asteroids0
- From Around the Web, Space
- July 23, 2019
Modeling the shape and movement of near-Earth asteroids is now up to 25 times faster thanks to new Washington State University research.
Modeling the shape and movement of near-Earth asteroids is now up to 25 times faster thanks to new Washington State University research.
The South Atlantic Anomaly’s high radiation causes ISS computers to crash and telescopes shut down, dubbing it the “Bermuda Triangle of space.”
Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have spotted a circumplanetary disk around a still-forming gaseous exoplanet called PDS 70c.
There are some obvious similarities.
What started as an internet joke has generated a stern military warning after more than a million people “signed up” to “raid” Area 51—a secretive military installation in Southern Nevada long fancied by conspiracy theorists to be hiding evidence of a crashed UFO with aliens. The purpose of the planned raid is in order to “see them aliens.”
NASA has released a breathtaking photograph showing the space station silhouetted against our solar neighbor.
July 19, 2019, marks the day that Chinese space station Tiangong-2 falls back down to Earth.
Governments could stop the West Antarctic Ice Sheet from sliding into the ocean and submerging coastal cities by launching a last-ditch engineering project to blanket its surface with “artificial snow”, according to a study released on Wednesday.
Japanese astronomers actively searching for extraterrestrial life have not found any evidence that aliens have visited Earth, a professor at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Hitoshi Yamaoka, claimed.
Excerpt from the July 5, 1969 issue of Science News