Why losing Arecibo is a big deal for astronomy0
- From Around the Web, Space
- December 5, 2020
The giant radio telescope had special features that aren’t easily replaced
The giant radio telescope had special features that aren’t easily replaced
The Debrief has learned of the leak of an unclassified photo, said to have been widely distributed in the Intelligence Community, which purportedly shows what the DoD has characterized as “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena.”
Japanese craft collected dust from the asteroid Ryugu that scientists hope could shed light on the origins of life
Not long after a similar structure was discovered in a Utah desert, a silvery column has been found in Atascadero
The missing dark matter in certain galaxies can be explained by the effects of tidal disruption: the gravity forces of a neighboring massive galaxy, literally tearing the smaller galaxy apart.
New study offers new theory on faint young Sun paradox.
A mysterious object temporarily orbiting Earth is a 54-year-old rocket, not an asteroid after all, astronomers confirmed Wednesday.
A sonic boom apparently accompanied this basketball-sized visitor from space.
How does a space rock make such an impressive display of shooting stars?
China successfully landed a spacecraft on the moon’s surface on Tuesday in a historic mission to retrieve lunar surface samples, Chinese state media reported.