Cryosleep: It’s not just science fiction anymore0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- January 19, 2018
Putting astronauts into short-term hibernation could make space travel more efficient.
Putting astronauts into short-term hibernation could make space travel more efficient.
Rare lights seen near earthquakes had long been called UFOs.
This is the honest to God reply from the Canadian Department of Defense to the Canadian Broadcasting Company in reply to the request for an interview on the just released secret UFO investigation by the United States government.
A new filter material may be better at straining contaminants from water than the activated carbon in your faucet filter—and may be cheaper and easier to clean, to boot.
It’s not just us humans who get sleepy after big meals. Black holes do, too.
David Fravor, commander of a Navy squadron aboard the USS Nimitz, had an encounter with a UFO that is hard to explain.
In NASA’s efforts to explore the endless expanse of space, the agency eventually came to a realization: there is simply too much data. Missions like the one embarked upon in 2009 by the Kepler space telescope yield such a tremendous amount of data that there’s no efficient way for an individual scientist or even a team of scientists at NASA to pour through it all. That’s when they made a realization — instead of handling everything internally, NASA could make this data publicly available so that citizen scientists all over the world would be able to dig in.
The night sky briefly lit up in Michigan on Tuesday night, with a bright flash of light and a loud noise that startled residents.