Clay subsoil at Earth’s driest place may signal life on Mars0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology, Space
- November 6, 2020
Earth’s most arid desert may hold a key to finding life on Mars.
Earth’s most arid desert may hold a key to finding life on Mars.
Area 51 houses America’s military black projects.
Space-based service will alert users to potential collisions between satellites and orbital junk
How likely you are to trust a self-driving car or advice from Siri?
The company provided the bunker’s coordinates, just in case
This interval was about 247 zeptoseconds, or trillionths of a billionth of a second
Different types of atoms fall with the same acceleration due to gravity
A company from Seattle called Ultra Safe Nuclear Technologies (USNC-Tech) has developed a concept for a new type of propulsion unit and delivered details to NASA. The company claims that the new Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP) engine is safer and more reliable than previous designs.
Four years ago, dozens of American officials stationed in Cuba started to hear odd cracks and humming in their ears – punctured by rushes of nausea, headaches, cloudy vision, memory loss, disequilibrium, and lethargy – all critical indicators of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI).
Scientists have created a super white paint that is the yin to Vantablack’s yang.