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The 55-feet-wide space rock is hurtling through space at a zippy 17,717 miles per hour, according to the space agency.
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Green Matters on MSNNASA Astronauts Are Growing Plants in the International Space Station — but How Do They Water Them?
Space doesn't have the concept of gravity, unlike our planet. So, to guide the water flow while watering a plant, astronauts ...
Researchers propose that vesicles could form in Titan’s hydrocarbon lakes, hinting at a new pathway for life’s precursors.
This new approach, which will mix NASA assets and commercial infrastructure, would gradually replace the patchwork relay ...
NASA’s Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite 2 (ICESat-2) mission recently released a new shallow water bathymetry product ...
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NASA warns Earth’s oxygen will one day vanish: What might happen if it starts sooner than we think?
NASA's forecast of a future "great deoxygenation" has sparked concerns about Earth's oxygen balance. A simulation explored ...
NASA experts explain why a passing asteroid isn't cause for concern, while revealing how often Earth encounters space rocks ...
The exoplanet TRAPPIST-1 d intrigues astronomers looking for possibly habitable worlds beyond our solar system because it is ...
Looking up at the night sky often brings peace. Occasionally, space visitors capture public attention. One such visitor is ...
NASA only labels space rocks as hazardous if they are closer than 7.4 million kilometres and wider than 85 metres.
As NASA sees change, astronaut and Space Force Brig. Gen. Nick Hague expects the agency to remain laser focused on returning ...
"I never saw anything like it. They round a little; they're coming by the capsule, and they look like little stars. A whole shower of them coming by," Glenn said during the mission. "There are ...
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