Spooky Discovery on Mars Looks Just Like an Alien Doorway0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 20, 2022
The surface of Saturn’s moon Titan looks a bit like Earth and a new study finally explains why.
The surface of Saturn’s moon Titan looks a bit like Earth and a new study finally explains why.
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has determined the size of the largest icy comet nucleus ever seen by astronomers. The estimated diameter is approximately 80 miles across, making it larger than the state of Rhode Island. The nucleus is about 50 times larger than found at the heart of most known comets. Its mass is estimated to be a staggering 500 trillion tons, a hundred thousand times greater than the mass of a typical comet found much closer to the Sun.
“We would expect temperatures to be slowly growing warmer, not colder.”
The most recent reversal of Earth’s magnetic field may have been as recent as 42,000 years ago, according to a new analysis of fossilised tree rings. This flip of the magnetic poles would have been devastating, creating extreme weather and possibly leading to the extinction of large mammals and the Neanderthals.
Electron downpours can contribute to the aurora and damage spacecraft, the researchers said.
In the last 260 million years, dinosaurs came and went, Pangea split into the continents and islands we see today, and humans have quickly and irreversibly changed the world we live in.
A premier scientific conference dealing with anomalous aerospace phenomena reported in U.S. military airspace and elsewhere is set to occur this summer, according to a leading scientific group that studies such aerial mysteries.
A MYSTERIOUS set of waves have been identified moving within the Sun travelling at a speed that the physicists who revealed them have said presently “defies explanation”.
Astronomers have detected a cloud of dust the size of a whole star, 330 light-years away. Its cause? A colossal smash-up between two exoplanets that were still just forming.
There is a new kind of mystery object in space, and after capturing their best image yet, astronomers are one step closer to understanding these celestial oddballs.
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