'Cassini Spacecraft' Took a Photo of Tethys and Looks Like Star Wars' Death Star!
The "Cassini Spacecraft" of NASA took photos of Saturn's moon and it looks like the "Death Star" from Star Wars. This moon that has been captured is named Tethys.
The "Cassini Spacecraft" of NASA took photos of Saturn's moon and it looks like the "Death Star" from Star Wars. This moon that has been captured is named Tethys.
The Antarctic Peninsula's landscape is in danger as the crack in the ice shelf is continuously growing bigger.
Since 1991, deaths due to cancer have dwindled in the United States. Nonetheless, a new study has found that some counties in the U.S. remain "cancer hot spots." The data suggests that smoking and obesity are two major factors why the cancer death rate is higher in some areas.
"NASA's Opportunity" Rover has just celebrated its 13 years of untiring and continuous adventure in the red planet Mars, sending most valuable video coverage back to Earth since its arrival on Mars back in the night of January 24, 2004 at JPL headquarters.
The first and the great "Solar Eclipse" is coming to pass across America on August 21, 2017 along the states of Oregon and North Carolina, while seven years into the future, another total eclipse is sure to hit America in 2024 but will follow a different path.
"Proxima Centauri", our nearest neighbor is host to a compact dwarf and red star Centauri b, which is found to have almost the same mass as our own planet Earth is orbiting within the "habitable zone" of the Centauri system.
A newly discovered crab has been after the wizards of "Harry Potter." Ex-Marine turned researcher, the late Harry Conley, found the tiny crustacean while digging the shores of Guam, the US territory in the western Pacific Ocean.
Scientists suggest that despite the harsh conditions on Mars, microbes and organisms can survive on the surface of the Red Planet. A team of astrobiologists from the University of Arkansas carried out a multiple year study by growing microbes in test tubes and replicating Martian conditions under laboratory conditions.
SpaceX's next highly anticipated launch is scheduled for Tuesday, January 30. This particular mission will be different from past Falcon 9 launches as Elon Musk will use an expendable, regular rocket and will not attempt another rocket landing.
A European Space Agency satellite is thought to be on a collision course this week with a piece of space debris about 15 centimeters (a half-foot) long, forcing ESA's flight control to plan a rare maneuver.