NASA sending robotic geologist to Mars to dig super deep0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 3, 2018
Six years after last landing on Mars, NASA is sending a robotic geologist to dig deeper than ever before to take the planet’s temperature.
Six years after last landing on Mars, NASA is sending a robotic geologist to dig deeper than ever before to take the planet’s temperature.
By passing a small ring through a larger ring, researchers have created a rotaxane with a fundamentally new motion that could be used in future molecular machines.
Breaking down into its initial building blocks is the key to the polymer’s reusability
Sunspots are becoming scarce. Very scarce. So far in 2018 the sun has been blank almost 60% of the time, with whole weeks going by without sunspots.
The “Godfather of Canadian Ufology” Adds Toronto to his Farewell Tour
On June 27, 1996, NASA’s Galileo spacecraft made humanity’s first flyby of Ganymede, Jupiter’s largest moon, discovering that it is the only moon known to possess an internally generated magnetic field.
New paper explains how we might go about looking for evidence of earlier civilizations.
A study of the most recent near-reversals of the Earth’s magnetic field by an international team of researchers, including the University of Liverpool, has found it is unlikely that such an event will take place anytime soon.
Yellowstone National Park’s Steamboat Geyser just erupted for the third time in two months, and scientists aren’t sure why.
This weird sky anomaly/UFO was captured on the 12th of April 2018 over Taoyuan City and the footage was released on the 29th of April 2018.