A big failed Russian rocket just came crashing back to Earth out of control0
- From Around the Web, Space
- January 11, 2022
The test of a new upper-stage booster didn’t go as planned.
The test of a new upper-stage booster didn’t go as planned.
The cause of a mysterious cosmic kaboom – so bright it led to the classification of a new type of space explosion – may have now been revealed.
On November 15, 2021, Russia destroyed one of its own old satellites using a missile launched from the surface of Earth, creating a massive debris cloud that threatens many space assets, including astronauts onboard the International Space Station.
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Although the Southern Ocean is a remote part of the planet, scientists say that the warming occurring in this region could have impacts on the global climate.
Let’s start with some well-known facts about the Earth – it’s the fifth-largest planet in the solar system, 70 per cent of its surface is covered in water, and it’s the only planet known to have life on it.
If not for clouds, the half-tonne fireball would have been easily visible in the day, maybe about 100 times the brightness of a full moon
Astronomers used the odd behaviour of a star to locate a black hole ‘hiding’ in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
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It’s the largest hole in more than a decade and shows that, while the ozone layer is healing, it’s a long road to full recovery.