Recent UFO activity should inspire us to take better care of the Earth0
- From Around the Web, Space
- June 11, 2021
Regardless if they are really extraterrestrials, there’s much we can learn from recent sightings.
Regardless if they are really extraterrestrials, there’s much we can learn from recent sightings.
Jupiter, Saturn and numerous giant exoplanets discovered to date consist mostly of hydrogen and helium. In 1977, planetary scientists predicted the existence of helium rain layer inside such planets. However, achieving the experimental conditions necessary to validate this hypothesis hasn’t been possible — until now.
The Pentagon, along with other federal agencies, is expected to release a report on unidentified flying objects (UFOs) this month that includes a detailed analysis of UFO data as well as plans to centralize future data collection.
Satellite images of the field recently got The Internet’s attention, but it’s been a fixture at the secretive facility for more than 50 years.
Some chromosomes look like crumpled balls while others resemble flat sheets of paper, heat maps show
Australian scientists develop a microscope that works with 35% more clarity, raising hope for improvements in medical imaging
“WE DON’T KNOW IF IT’S EXTRATERRESTRIAL.”
The same physics could give rise to auroras on Jupiter and Saturn
Juno passed within 645 miles of Ganymede, the closest any spacecraft has come to the moon since 2000
Sometimes in landscape photography, nature smiles at your camera and surprises you with much more than you were hoping to capture. This photo is one example of that. While photographing an erupting volcano, the photographer saw a shooting star flash across the sky and steal the spotlight in the frame.