Earthly Microbes Might Survive on Mars for Hundreds of Millions of Years0
- From Around the Web, Space
- November 8, 2022
An organism nicknamed “Conan the Bacterium” may have what it takes to live on Mars
An organism nicknamed “Conan the Bacterium” may have what it takes to live on Mars
When it comes to dramatic and awe-inspiring pictures of space, few can contend with what appears to be a pic of, well, nothing at all: a fascinating image of what seems to be a hole in the fabric of space, taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.
Liquid helium, the coldest element on Earth, is needed to keep the magnets in MRI machines running. Without it, doctors would lose a critical medical tool.
Five years ago a very strange object—maybe a thousand feet long, oblong, shiny and fast—streaked across space, tens of millions of miles from Earth. Its course and speed indicated it had come from outside the solar system. A visitor from another star.
Black holes come in a variety of sizes, from stellar black holes a few times the mass of the sun all the way up to supermassive black holes, which are millions of times the mass of the sun and lurk at the heart of galaxies.
In recent decades several whistleblowers started sharing claims about alleged secret projects dealing with alien technology in famous Area 51. This topic gained a lot of attention when the documentary about Bob Lazar was released.
The asteroid’s upper size estimate is just short of the world’s tallest building.
THAT CAN’T BE RIGHT.
A group of 16 researchers will spend the next nine months studying unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), also known as UFOs, as part of a team for NASA.
Scientists are baffled that black holes consume stars, then eject material later from that consumed star.