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'Doctor Who' Season 2 premieres this week with a robot revolution and AI terrors
LIVE NOW: Live Close Up Video Of The Sun = Backyard Astronomy Sunday 6th April
Lyrid meteor shower 2025 peaks this month: Could we be in for a surprise outburst this year?
NASA website removes 'First Woman' graphic novel — but here's where you can still find it
Blue Origin faces backlash ahead of historic all-female spaceflight with Katy Perry
How bacteria could help build and maintain cities on the moon
SpaceX launches 28 Starlink satellites to orbit from Florida's Space Coast (video, photos)
Dennis Gaitsgory Wins Breakthrough Prize for Solving Part of Math’s Grand Unified Theory
By solving part of the Langlands program, a mathematical proof that was long thought to be unachievable, Dennis Gaitsgory snags a prestigious Breakthrough Prize
A New Graduate Project Plans to Make Martian Water Drinkable
Mars exploration technology has seen a lot of recent successes. MOXIE successfully made oxygen from the atmosphere, while Ingenuity soared above the red planet 72 times. However, to date, no one has ever achieved one thing that will be absolutely critical to any long-term presence on Mars - making drinkable water. There have been plenty of ideas on how to do that. Still, NASA recently started funding a Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) graduate student named Lydia Ellen Tonani-Penha to look into the problem under their Space Technology Graduate Research Opportunities (NSTGRO) funding program. Her Project Tethys will examine ways to purify the frozen or liquid brine that Mars is infused with.
Perseverance Watched a Dust Devil Eat Another
NASA's Perseverance was scanning the rim of Jezero Crater when it spotted a Martian dust devil overtake and consume another smaller one. The rover was about a kilometer away from the larger dust devil, which was about 65 meters wide. The smaller one was about 5 meters wide. This isn't Perseverance's first encounter with dust devils. It's seen clusters dancing around it and even captured audio of a dust devil on Mars for the first time.
The Wildgate reveal trailer looks like Sea of Thieves in space, with more interesting progression (video)
Fram2 astronaut mission's West Coast splashdown opens new era for SpaceX
Celebrate 'Star Trek' and help feed the hungry for First Contact Day today
This Week In Space podcast: Episode 155 — Space News You Can Use
The moon joins Mars and Jupiter in a 'mini planet parade' tonight. Here's how to see it
Meet 'Nighthawk': Mars helicopter mission could be big leap for exploration
Want to Know How to Survive in Space? Ask a Tardigrade
Tardigrades are some of the most durable animals ever found. They can handle temperature ranges from -271°C to over 150°C, pressures above 1,200 atmospheric levels, extreme drying, and intense ionizing radiation. Researchers have been studying some of the adaptations that can keep tardigrades alive in extreme environments and consider how they could apply to human space exploration, as well as insights into extraterrestrial life.