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When checking out Uranus, scientists discovered something exciting: that the planet appears to have a long-term girlfriend.
12h
Amazon S3 on MSNWe Found a Habitable Planet—Can We Ever Get There?NASA has confirmed the discovery of a potentially habitable planet, igniting excitement across the scientific world. The challenge now lies in reaching it, as even our fastest spacecraft would take ...
A rock from Mars that travelled tens if not hundreds of millions of miles before improbably landing on our planet's door step ...
23h
The Daily Galaxy on MSNAstronomers Just Found the Fastest Winds Ever Recorded – And They’re on Another PlanetAstronomers have just made an extraordinary discovery on the exoplanet WASP-127b: winds reaching a staggering 20,500 miles ...
In a cosmic breakthrough, scientists using the James Webb and ALMA telescopes have caught a rare glimpse of a planetary ...
20h
Live Science on MSNWe're within 3 years of reaching a critical climate threshold. Can we reverse course?A report published in June found that the world only has three years before it crosses the 1.5 C climate target. So what ...
It's another meteoric rise for what's called the largest piece of Mars on Earth. The 54-pound rock fetched nearly $5.3 ...
Scientists claim that Uranus has found something they call ‘Girlfriend’, a mysterious celestial dance partner with an orbital ...
Could microbial life be drifting in the clouds of Venus? With unexplained signs of phosphine and ammonia scientists are ...
8h
The Print on MSNA UK health study has collected a whopping 100,000 full-body scans, and Neanderthals had ‘family recipes’ScientiFix, our weekly feature, offers you a summary of the top global science stories of the week, with links to their ...
3h
Free Malaysia Today on MSNRestoring sea floor after mining may not be possible, researchers warnOne of the last wild zones on the planet, the sea floor is a coveted frontier for companies and countries eager to access high-demand minerals found there.
‘We are hoping to unlock all these amazing secrets.’ The new core ice, which was drilled near the Concordia research station in the ‘White Continent,’ beats the previous 800,000-year-old ice, which ...
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