Scientists reveal strange ‘golf ball’ asteroid0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 13, 2020
Scientists have discovered an asteroid with such a strange surface that they have named it the “golf ball”.
Scientists have discovered an asteroid with such a strange surface that they have named it the “golf ball”.
Four thousand years ago, the last woolly mammoths quietly died on their final bastion – the isolated Wrangel Island, north of Russia in the frozen Arctic. Their demise was sudden, and strange; now, new evidence points to the mammoths themselves as partial agents of their own demise.
Something — or someone — has its deep-space music on repeat.
Over the last seven months, this ufologist set auto-transcription software to work on transcribing two million pages of UFO-related podcasts and videos.
Solar Orbiter, a new collaborative mission between the European Space Agency (ESA) and NASA to study our Sun, launched at 05:03 CET on February 10, 2020 (11:03 p.m. EST on February 9) on an Atlas V 411 rocket from Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. At 06:03 CET (12:24 a.m. EST), mission controllers at the European Space Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany, received a signal from the spacecraft indicating that its solar panels had successfully deployed. In the first two days after launch, Solar Orbiter will deploy its instrument boom and several antennas that will communicate with Earth and gather scientific data.
Scientists studying so-called ‘flammable ice’ in the Sea of Japan have made a startling discovery—the existence of life within microscopic bubbles.
What if Earth were more like its larger cousins?
For months, astronomers have been keeping a wary eye on Betelgeuse, the bright red star in Orion’s shoulder.
Scientists hope the telescope will capture the imagination like ‘science fiction’
A blast of radio waves from deep space appears to be on a 16-day cycle