Astronomy
Six Of Ingenuity's Successors Could Be Exploring Mars In 4 Years
Ingenuity marked a number of milestones in space exploration. Arguably most importantly, it proved that powered flight was possible on another planet. However, it did have some limitations, such as being tied to the Perseverance rover and there only being one copy of the helicopter itself. AV Inc, one of the sub-contractors for Ingenuity, hopes to fix those problems with a proposed new mission called Skyfall that would involve six helicopters and no rover.
'Olympus' the 4-legged robot could help astronauts explore Mars someday (video)
SpaceX's Crew-10 astronauts return to Earth after nearly 5 months in space (video)
Astronaut arrives at ISS, longs to be on the moon or Mars | On the International Space Station Aug. 4-8, 2025
Is that wildfire smoke plume hazardous? New satellite tech can map smoke plumes in 3D for better air quality alerts at neighborhood scale
Oddly viscous stars could be impersonating black holes
Oddly viscous stars could be impersonating black holes
Scientists capture bridge of stray stars being sucked from one galaxy to another
Can you name the 12 Apollo astronauts who walked on the moon?
Jim Lovell, commander of NASA's Apollo 13 moon mission, dies at 97
A planet the size of Saturn could orbit the nearest sun-like star
A planet the size of Saturn could orbit the nearest sun-like star
AI-Designed Hydrogel Inspired by Nature Creates Ultra-Strong Underwater Adhesive
Today this material can seal pipes and brave the ocean. But someday it could be used in surgery or underwater repairs
'A Quiet Place Part III' is confirmed for 2027 with John Krasinski back in the director's chair
Two sneaky viruses may be messing with honeybee flight
Two sneaky viruses may be messing with honeybee flight
Spacecraft headed to DART asteroid crash site images 2 faint space rocks to boost planetary defense tactics
Satellites watch France's largest wildfire in 75 years burn an area larger than Paris
Scientists find oldest-known black hole in the universe: 'This is about as far back as you can practically go'
Rogue Planets Can Spawn Their Own Planetary Systems
New research from the University of St Andrews has found that giant free floating planets have the potential to form their own miniature planetary systems without the need for a star.