Elon Musk Doesn’t Know Where the Aliens Are (So, Stop Asking)0
- From Around the Web, Space
- October 12, 2019
“If they are here, I hope they’re nice,” Musk says.
“If they are here, I hope they’re nice,” Musk says.
Large galaxies like the Milky Way do not roam the cosmos alone. Instead, they are surrounded by many smaller companion galaxies. The largest satellite of the Milky Way is called the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), and it should be big enough to have its own satellites – but these satellites don’t seem to be there.
On this week’s episode of the Dark Poutine podcast, we learn about one of the most investigated UFO events in Canadian history.
Grainy photos of a shadowy figure standing on the banks of Lake James have reignited talk of one or more Bigfoot living in the mountains northwest of Charlotte.
A lunar rover which will explore the moon on foot in 2021 was unveiled in London on Thursday.
The so-called Russian nesting doll diamond is the first of its kind to ever be found.
Since sprites were discovered in the late 1980s, researchers have photographed thousands of the strange upward-reaching lightning bolts. Their oversized cousins, Gigantic Jets, are far more rare. Only dozens have been photographed. It is no wonder, then, that observers are still seeing new behaviors in this type of powerful “super sprite.” On Oct. 2nd, photographer Frankie Lucena may have recorded the first example of a “double Gigantic Jet.”
A decade after NASA sent a rocket crashing into the moon’s south pole, spewing a plume of debris that revealed vast reserves of ice beneath the barren lunar surface, the space agency is racing to pick up where its little-remembered project left off.
The gas giant has 82 moons, surpassing the 79 known to orbit its larger neighbour
The news headline in a September 2019 issue of the Inquirer caught my interest: “US Navy says UFO videos shot by its pilots are authentic.”