Universe
Unlocking Cancer’s Power In The Workplace: Loyalty, Sensitivity, And Team Spirit Unveiled
When Cancer Loves: The Amazing Quiet Sacrifice And Loyal Heart Of This Zodiac
Astronauts took shelter and prepared to evacuate after air leak on International Space Station
Discover The True Soulmates Of Cancer: Which Zodiac Signs Are Destined For Perfect Love
August 2026 lunar eclipse: Everything you need to know about the 96% 'blood moon'
Deep inside Neptune and Uranus the pressure is thought to crush carbon into diamonds, which then sink slowly through the planet as a glittering rain
Saturn is the only planet in the solar system that is, on average, less dense than water, so in a big enough bathtub it would float
Breakthrough study confirms solar storms can alter weather on Earth within hours
The icy surface of Europa is constantly crystallising and reforming in different places at different rates and the James Webb Space Telescope has only just caught it happening
From Ripples To Giants: The Fascinating Physics Behind Ocean Waves And Their Energy Journey
Scientists find huge ‘magma systems’ inside Mars
When Cancer Becomes A Parent: The Zodiac’s Natural Protectors And Heart Of Family Bonds
Earth’s magnetic field has flipped hundreds of times, swapping magnetic north and south in a switch locked into ancient rock, and it happens on no fixed schedule, yet nothing in the record suggests a single flip ever wiped out life.
Top Dream Destinations For Cancer Signs: Seeking Tranquility And Emotional Rejuvenation
The Moon is so far from Earth that, using its average distance, you could line up every other planet in the solar system between us and still have about 4,400 kilometres left over.
344 steps stood between the James Webb Space Telescope and total failure — any one could have ended it — and the telescope that survived them all now runs on less power than a household kettle, a million miles from Earth
The Apollo astronauts who carried lunar dust back into the cabin kept making the same strange report — fresh Moon dust smelled like spent gunpowder — yet the smell never survived the trip home, and more than fifty years later no one has fully explained what they were breathing in up there.
We tend to imagine the Moon as a barren, resourceless rock, but the permanently shadowed craters near its south pole hold something future astronauts may prize more than gold: water ice, confirmed by NASA missions, that could one day be split into oxygen to breathe and hydrogen for rocket fuel.
In one drilled Martian rock, Curiosity found 21 organic molecules — seven never before detected on Mars — including a nitrogen-bearing ring structure that belongs to the same chemical family as precursors to RNA and DNA.
The popular claim that space tastes like raspberries and smells like rum, repeated in science articles for over fifteen years, is based on a single 2009 detection of one organic molecule in one specific dust cloud at the centre of the Milky Way, and the actual story behind the finding is more interesting than the version that has been circulating