Astronomers detect sugar in Interstellar space
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Astronauts require extensive training in order to operate the equipment, and the technique relies on soundwave transmission—something particularly difficult to maintain in a cramped, loud environment.
Calling all budding environmentalists, space enthusiasts, and Earth-bound innovators! Science Friday is excited to offer our Down To Earth program—a free educational experience designed to ignite a curiosity for science that’ll burn brighter than a ...
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS and its unusual gas-to-dust chemistry Crewed and robotic lunar missions advancing sustained exploration Asteroid characterization and deflection studies supporting planetary defense High-cadence sky surveys and next-generation ...
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California Science Center announces opening date to view Space Shuttle Endeavour in launch position
On Nov. 13, the California Science Center's Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center will open to visitors as the final phase of its 33-year-long master plan.
Multi-million-dollar investment advances scientific instrument development and supports critical milestone toward completion of one of the world's most powerful telescopes
Metal spheres recently found on a beach in northern Queensland, Australia, draw attention to the worsening issue of space pollution.
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Space science has come a long way since July 4, 1776. Here's a look back at the saga
Celebrating America's 250th birthday, Space.com looks back at what our understanding of space was like in 1776 and what major developments occurred to change our thinking.
Congress established committees on space exploration in 1958, in response to the Soviet Union's launching of Sputnik in October 1957. Both Senate and House committees held hearings on the creation of the new civilian space agency National Aeronautics and ...
5 Delhi government school students were selected to attend a US space science workshop, earning the opportunity through outstanding STEM performance.
The space economy is real and growing. And SpaceX isn’t the only way to invest, says Stifel’s Jonathan Siegmann.