This Antarctic glacier dramatically retreated. Then, its ice shelf totally collapsed (satellite image)
This Antarctic glacier retreated, then totally collapsed | Space Quiz! Scientists think Dark Matter could account for what percentage of the mass of the universe? | United Launch Alliance rocket to send CEO's DNA to space
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Using satellite images and in-situ oceanographic measurements to track Cadman Glacier for more than three decades, a team of scientists has reported a dramatic glacial retreat of 5 miles (8 kilometers).
Memorial space burial company Celestis Inc. plans to fly the DNA of United Launch Alliance (ULA) CEO Tory Bruno, along with the DNA of his wife Rebecca, on the first-ever mission for the Vulcan Centaur rocket on Dec. 24.
The second to last full moon of 2023 has risen and set, brightening the November night skies and giving photographers and moon enthusiasts across the globe the opportunity to capture some truly stunning images.
This will be the 42nd launch for the Electron rocket, which has been grounded since September when a malfunction led to the loss of a mission payload during a launch.
A new search for dark matter has turned up empty handed - but, in a silver lining, the effort provided important limits that will help future experiments narrow down the hunt for this elusive substance.
Matching astronomical objects is critical for space scientists because different surveys supply different information, whether that be wavelength data, exposure times, or even the date the survey was done. With so much data, it is often hard to match objects to one another across surveys. That's why one group at Johns Hopkins University turned to data science to develop a new method of making such matches.
One of the primary tasks of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is to scan the atmospheres of exoplanets for signs of habitability. And, as far as we know, water is necessary for life. So naturally, detecting the presence of water in and around alien worlds is a high priority for planetary scientists. There is, however, one problem.
The European Space Agency's Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE), which blasted off for the Jovian system on April 14, has now got its very own documentary chronicling the latter stages of the mission's development, capturing the challenges of assembling a spacecraft during a pandemic and the exultation of a tricky launch.
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