The International Space Station is crawling with bacteria and some may be harmful0
- From Around the Web, Space
- December 4, 2018
Don’t worry, no one has gotten sick yet.
Don’t worry, no one has gotten sick yet.
A new series of daytime images of Europa from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) has helped astronomers create first global thermal maps of this icy moon.
Researchers have discovered that ancient Europeans represented star constellations within depictions of wild animals.
Scientists hope the probe will reveal if such space rocks helped kick-start life on Earth
A key witness in a 1966 mass UFO sighting in Melbourne claimed the object was “playing games” with local planes in chilling rare audio.
Stars have radiated 4×10^84 photons since the universe begun with formation peaking 11bn years ago
New study shows that the genetic makeup of northern Europe traces back to migrations from Siberia that began at least 3,500 years ago and that, as recently as the Iron Age, ancestors of the Saami lived in a larger area of Finland than today.
A pair of researchers at Temple University has found evidence that suggests Neanderthals mated and produced offspring with anatomically modern humans multiple times—not just once, as has been suggested by prior research.
NASA’s asteroid-chaser will reach its target, Bennu, on Dec. 3 and you don’t want to miss a thing.
When the tension rises, unexpected things can happen — not least when it comes to gold atoms. Researchers from, among others, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have now managed, for the first time, to make the surface of a gold object melt at room temperature.