Does Pluto’s heart have a pulse? Peculiar polygons suggest activity on dwarf planet0
- From Around the Web, Space
- June 3, 2016
Pluto’s distinctive heart-shaped feature may appear still, but it’s actually made up of churning icy cells, scientists say.
Pluto’s distinctive heart-shaped feature may appear still, but it’s actually made up of churning icy cells, scientists say.
Scientists finally have a theory as to why comet 67P—also known as Rosetta’s comet—has two distinct lobes.
An international team of astronomers has discovered a possible connection between the magnetic fields of supernova remnants and that of our own Milky Way Galaxy.
The asteroid Phaethon makes an unusual orbit around the sun, as it flies following us around it.
Who exactly are the “adversaries in space”?
At a distant star called Kepler-223, four gas giant planets orbit close in to their sun. It couldn’t be more different from our own solar system today, where all the big planets hang out far away. But could Kepler-223 be how our solar system was long ago?
A new study has suggested that the universe is likely to be teeming with extraterrestrial life forms.
Jupiter’s moon Io has a very different way of acquiring mountains than Earth does.
How did life start on Earth? Scientists believe that the solar flares from the sun four billion years ago was enough to trigger a spark of life.
Our red neighboring planet is not as red as we think as Hubble takes a picture that gives us a better view of Mars.