Meet Hippocamp! Neptune’s Smallest Moon Has a Name (and a Violent Past)0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 21, 2019
A faint and frigid little moon doesn’t have to go by “Neptune XIV” anymore.
A faint and frigid little moon doesn’t have to go by “Neptune XIV” anymore.
The gaseous layer that wraps around Earth reaches up to 630,000 kilometers away, or 50 times the diameter of our planet, according to a new study based on observations by the ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, SOHO, and published in AGU’s Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics.
Virgin Galactic plans to conduct a fifth test flight Feb. 20 of its suborbital spaceplane SpaceShipTwo.
‘After reviewing CCTV at town beach of last nights storm, it appears we were not alone’
Attempt to become fourth country to send spacecraft to the surface blasts off this week
Since the end of the Apollo-era, one of the main goals of NASA, Roscosmos and other space agencies has been the development of technologies that will enable a long-term human presence in space.
Say you need to prepare to shoot bullets into an asteroid and suck up the debris kicked up from the blast, then tuck it away for safekeeping. There’s no better way than to shoot bullets into a fake asteroid here on Earth and watch what happens in slow motion.
Scientists try to explain how a body of water could remain liquid in such a cold environment
Doctors could use Crispr tool to inject benign virus into foetus’s brain to ‘switch on’ key genes
Is Bigfoot in Ontario? The folks at Seeking Ontario’s Bigfoot have found plenty of evidence of Bigfoot and made a map about their findings.