NASA Is Funding the Projects of the Future
Last week, NASA's Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program announced grants for 14 teams exploring high-risk, high-reward projects.
Last week, NASA's Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program announced grants for 14 teams exploring high-risk, high-reward projects.
C/2022 E3 (ZTF) comet is visible with the naked eye from certain locations on Tuesday night
ARIES Electric Uranus is plugged into the Full Moon which is bound to light up your life or perhaps it’s a wake-up call. You need to be able to respond immediately – which after all is your super-power so no problem there. Yet you find others so aghast at the prospect of change they try to resist it. Lead the charge. TAURUS For a while now you’ve recognised that a new approach is becoming inevitable. After all, you’ve tried the ‘holding on’ bit and it’s left you tired and frustrated. Having made
Something on the surface of Mars bears a resemblance to a certain animal.
Object will be close enough to see – and could offer Nasa important information about the solar system
SpaceX launched its Falcon 9 rocket with a payload of 49 Starlink satellites from California. The rocket was carrying D-Orbit’s ION SCV009 Eclectic Elena on a low-Earth orbit from Vandenberg Space Force Base. Starlink is Elon Musk’s satellite internet service that is intended to provide high-speed broadband to remote and rural locations.
The research suggests matter is not as “clumpy” as would be expected based on the current best model.
Scientists hope to make plans for clinical trials on human patients in Singapore and Asia Pacific
Colossal Biosciences first announced its ambitious plan to revive the woolly mammoth two years ago, and on Tuesday said it wanted to bring back the dodo bird, too. “The dodo is a symbol of man-made extinction,” said Ben Lamm, a serial entrepreneur and co-founder and CEO of Colossal. The company has formed a division to focus on bird-related genetic technologies.
A bear-shaped rock formation has been spotted on the surface of Mars, images captured by the HiRISE camera shows.The structure was captured on December 12 by the HiRISE camera.In an animation compiled by NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona, a narrator explained: “There’s a hill with a V-shaped collapsed structure – the nose. Two craters – the eyes; and a circular fracture pattern – the head.”“The circular fracture pattern may be due to the settling of a deposit over a buried impact crater. Maybe the nose is a volcanic mud vent, and the deposit could be lava or mud flows,” the narration continued.HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) camera was launched on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2005. It has been capturing images of the planet since 2006. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona via Storyful
Nacreous cloud has been spotted in Scotland by sky-gazers and is known to be a rare 'mother-of-pearl' cloud. Known as one of the highest in our atmosphere - these clouds often come together in cold conditions, BBC reports.
A new image has been taken of the whole Earth 50 years after the first - revealing noticeable changes to its surface.
Close relatives of primates adapted to life in the High Arctic 52 million years ago – this may offer insight into future changes in the Arctic.
Historically, oil and gas companies have monitored pipeline leaks using inefficient, expensive methods: workers equipped with handheld optical gas imaging cameras, for example. Or, as Orbital Sidekick CEO Dan Katz put it in a recent interview with TechCrunch, “a young pilot sticking their head out the window of a crop-duster.” Today, Orbital Sidekick announced the close of a $10 million investment led by Energy Innovation Capital, with additional participation from major North American energy companies Williams and ONEOK.
Such sea scorpions are exceedingly rare worldwide, scientists say
HBO’s hit video-game adaptation has heat-adapted fungus take over humans and turn them into zombies
Fresh alert issued to motorists along Australia’s longest highway to be careful when approaching search parties
A fishing community in southern Brazil has an unusual ally: wild dolphins. Accounts of people and dolphins working together to hunt fish go back millennia, from the time of the Roman Empire near what is now southern France to 19th century Queensland, Australia. In the seaside city of Laguna, scientists have, for the first time, used drones, underwater sound recordings and other tools to document how local people and dolphins coordinate actions and benefit from each other’s labor.
Scientists are puzzled about the number of dead mammals recently discovered on the coastal stretch
Researchers found that exceeding the 2C increase has a 50% chance of happening by mid-century
The princess has long campaigned for more recognition of early years development