News about space, physics, archaeology, animals, health, and more
Read next
Woven textiles from an archaeological site in Turkey weren’t made from wool or linen as suspected, but from something else entirely.
The rover's main science mission is chugging along, which means careful inspection of rocks in Jezero Crater.
As if you need another reminder to keep your cat inside.
The 200-foot-wide Kamoʻoalewa shines like lunar rocks do, leading a research team to think it is one.
Experts warn another 100,000 Germans could die from the disease if immediate action isn't taken.
Launch of the Falcon 9 rocket is scheduled for 9:03 p.m. ET on Wednesday.
An underground experiment in South Korea has turned up nothing, suggesting an intriguing observation from 2017 was a red herring.
A fragment from a Chinese weather satellite will come to within 2,000 feet of the ISS, prompting the orbital relocation.
The unique buzzing only happens when giant hornets threaten the hive, showing the complexities of bee communication.
The Artemis lunar landing was supposed to happen in 2024, but recent litigation and other factors had made that timeline increasingly unlikely.
The accelerating expansion of the universe could be affecting the size of black holes, according to a team of astrophysicists.
The NASA helicopter will travel to the site of its first flight, a spot known as Wright Brothers Field.
Dust grains traveling in excess of 7,000 miles per hour are now smashing into the probe around once every 15 seconds, sparking unexpected reactions.
The willfully unvaccinated are a huge drain on health care resources worldwide.
They’re calling it an “apogee kick motor,” but the object’s true identity and purpose remain unknown.
Paleontologists were surprised by the discovery of 500-million-year-old fossils that reveal penis worms inside shells.
Ongoing launch delays are forcing NASA and SpaceX to get creative with their scheduling.
The 40-year-old woman experienced vomiting, hives, and lightheadedness after taking an NSAID painkiller soon into a training run.
Unadulterated gibberish snuck into Springer Nature’s Arabian Journal of Geosciences, and not for the first time.
An instrument not used since 2010 was turned on in an attempt to source the problem.
Mode
Follow us