Watch (and hear!) a meteorite impact on doorbell camera video in a world 1st
Watch, hear a meteorite impact on doorbell camera video | Blue Ghost moon lander witnesses an eclipse from space | Partial solar eclipse March 2025: What you need to know
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A sharp crash that sounds like glass shattering or ice cracking has been documented as likely the world's first audio recording of a meteorite crash. It came by chance from a doorbell camera, recorded last July near the front steps of a home in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island.
Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost moon lander is on its way to the moon. The lander completed its first main engine burn during its journey to the lunar surface, which is expected to take a total of 45 days. On Tuesday (Jan. 20), NASA released an update that included a timelapse video showing Earth eclipsing the sun as seen from the perspective of the lander while en route to the moon.
Mark your calendars! On Saturday, March 29, 2025, a deep partial solar eclipse will be visible from the Northern Hemisphere. Although the moon's central shadow will miss Earth and there will be no totality, it will still be a relatively major solar eclipse. While much of Europe will see a big partial solar eclipse, the best views will be for those in extreme eastern regions of North America, where an eclipsed sun will appear on the eastern horizon at sunrise if skies are clear.
Two Chinese astronauts have completed the second spacewalk of their six-month-long mission in Earth orbit. Mission commander Cai Xuzhe and Song Lingdong completed multiple tasks before returning to the Wentian module airlock, according to China's human spaceflight agency, including the installation of space debris protection devices and inspecting the exterior of the space station.
Astronomers have, for the first time, watched the moment a feeding supermassive black hole at the heart of a distant galaxy spat out a jet of material at one-third of the speed of light. Plus, the structure is technically made up of two jets, each about half a light-year across.
Researchers have proposed a new propulsion method that could make covering the vast distances required for interstellar missions feasible within a human lifetime.
From the raw and raucous trailer that was dropped back in December, faithful acolytes of Gene Roddenberry's "wagon train to the stars" have been anxiously anticipating this spinoff TV feature with guarded pockets of optimism that this project might fulfill its promise of a darker, edgier adventure within the expanding framework of the venerable sci-fi property.
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