Astronomy
Lunar Strike is a hard sci-fi adventure game about preserving humanity's legacy on the moon (exclusive)
Our brain doesn't actually reorganise itself after an amputation
Could lacing food with fat-trapping microbeads help us lose weight?
A partial solar eclipse is coming: 1 month until the moon takes a 'bite' out of the sun
Artemis 2 astronauts suit up for nighttime moon launch dress rehearsal (photos, video)
Test your true terrestrial trivia with our Earth quiz!
US Space Force's secretive X-37B space plane will test quantum alternative to GPS navigation
Forget Galactus, 'Strange New Worlds'' ancient scavenger ship is the real 'destroyer of worlds' (exclusive)
How Gecko Feet Could Save Space Travel
Space is getting dangerously crowded. More than 50,000 pieces of debris larger than 10 centimetres are currently hurtling around Earth at breakneck speeds, turning Earth orbits into veritable minefields. Dead satellites, rocket fragments, and collision debris pose such a serious threat that the International Space Station regularly performs emergency manoeuvres to dodge potential impacts. Now, an international team of researchers thinks they've found an elegant solution to this growing crisis and it's inspired by a humble house gecko's amazing ability to walk on walls.
New Theory Points to the Universe's Greatest Fireworks Show
What if the universe began with a fireworks show? A new theory suggests that supermassive black holes, the mysterious giants found at the heart of galaxies, were born from the universe's very first stars in a spectacular flash of light that ionised all of space before vanishing forever. This dramatic "Pop III.1" model could finally explain how these giant stellar remnants grew so impossibly large so quickly after the Big Bang, while potentially solving several major puzzles plaguing modern astronomy, from the Hubble Tension to the nature of Cosmic Dawn itself.