• live_Dead_5000_lb_satellite,_falling_to_Earth_today_20240221_090948
    Feb 21 2024
    Australian commercial imaging company HEO Robotics was able to capture images of the European Space Agency's (ESA) ERS-2 Earth observation satellite on Feb. 14, 2024 as the satellite made an ungraceful fall towards our planet. ERS-2, or European Remote Sensing 2, launched in 1995 and spent 16 years observing our planet from space until its mission ended in 2011. Over a span of two months that year, ESA performed dozens of deorbiting maneuvers to begin bringing ERS-2 down for a safe demise in Earth's atmosphere. That end is finally due to come this week.
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    20 mins
  • Elan Musk reveals, space object sending out messages
    5 mins
  • live_Elan_Musk_warns_a_huge_object_in_space,_giving_out_signals__20240220_115104
    5 mins
  • live_The_Pole_Shift:The_Adam_and_Eve_theory;_is_this_the_first_ti_20240129_101828
    Jan 29 2024
    The conspiracy theory known as "Adam and Eve" theory has recently resurfaced on TikTok following its appearance on Joe Rogan's podcast. It claims that every 6,500 years, a major disaster occurs on Earth.
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    46 mins
  • live_The_Milky_Way:_Our_Home_in_the_Cosmic_Neighborhood_20240125_173221
    8 mins
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    Jan 25 2024
    12 mins
  • live_NASA_finally_opens_its_prized_asteroid_canister,_don’t_miss_20240123_084233
    Jan 23 2024
    Inside Building 31 at Johnson Space Center, NASA scientists have opened the metal canister holding rocks the agency plucked off a distant asteroid. NASA has spent months trying to release two "stubborn" fasteners on the canister's lid, which was no easy feat. The asteroid receptacle, after parachuting down to Earth from outer space, has been (understandably) isolated inside a specially-designed glovebox, with limited tools and access. Now, the lid is open, and the agency has snapped a picture of the bulk of what it captured from asteroid Bennu, a 1,600-foot-wide asteroid composed of boulders and rubble. It's the prize of the agency's first ever mission to bring pristine pieces of an asteroid back to our planet, an endeavor called OSIRIS-REx (short for Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security – Regolith Explorer). "It’s open! It’s open! And ready for its closeup," NASA wrote on X, formerly Twitter. You can see dark rocks up to about 0.4 inches (1 centimeter) wide, and smaller particles of different sizes. Mashable Light Speed Want more space and science stories in your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter. By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Priva
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    1 hr and 46 mins
  • live_NASA_finally_opens_its_prized_asteroid_canister,_don’t_miss_20240123_084233
    Jan 23 2024
    Inside Building 31 at Johnson Space Center, NASA scientists have opened the metal canister holding rocks the agency plucked off a distant asteroid. NASA has spent months trying to release two "stubborn" fasteners on the canister's lid, which was no easy feat. The asteroid receptacle, after parachuting down to Earth from outer space, has been (understandably) isolated inside a specially-designed glovebox, with limited tools and access. Now, the lid is open, and the agency has snapped a picture of the bulk of what it captured from asteroid Bennu, a 1,600-foot-wide asteroid composed of boulders and rubble. It's the prize of the agency's first ever mission to bring pristine pieces of an asteroid back to our planet, an endeavor called OSIRIS-REx (short for Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security – Regolith Explorer). "It’s open! It’s open! And ready for its closeup," NASA wrote on X, formerly Twitter. You can see dark rocks up to about 0.4 inches (1 centimeter) wide, and smaller particles of different sizes. Mashable Light Speed Want more space and science stories in your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter. By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Priva
    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 46 mins