Mars lander reveals new details about the Red Planet’s strange magnetic field0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 26, 2020
It’s really weird.
It’s really weird.
Astronomers from the University of Warwick have observed an exoplanet orbiting a star in just over 18 hours, the shortest orbital period ever observed for a planet of its type.
The images taken by the HiRISE camera on board the MRO probe in orbit on Mars, seem to indicate intelligent structures and subdivisions designed in such a way that they seem to be of logical proportions of the basic dimensions.
InSight, which touched down in 2018, proves beyond doubt that Mars is seismically active
The Japanese agency’s sample return mission will explore the origin of Mars’ curious moons.
The subsurface offers a protected, and possibly habitable, environment.
LightSail 2 has been orbiting Earth for eight months now, and it has captured some stunning shots of our home planet during that time.
Other attempts by the Soviet Union and Russia have failed, but Japan could be the first to land on Mars’ moon, Phobos.
Data from NASA’s New Horizons mission are providing new insights into how planets and planetesimals — the building blocks of the planets — were formed.
A team of scientists at Leiden University in the Netherlands developed a neural network — called “Hazardous Object Identifier” — that they claim predicts asteroid collisions with Earth.