How to escape a black hole: Simulations provide new clues about powerful plasma jets0
- From Around the Web, Space
- January 30, 2019
Interplay of twisting magnetic field, ‘negative-energy’ particles
Interplay of twisting magnetic field, ‘negative-energy’ particles
At the largest conference of astronomers in the United States, the biggest astronomy mission under development was virtually a no-show.
A new study using data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA’s XMM-Newton suggests that dark energy may have varied over cosmic time, as reported in our latest press release.
A Nevada witness at Las Vegas reported watching three metal objects moving at high speed above a fireworks display, according to testimony in Case 89317 from the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) witness reporting database.
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe has completed its first loop around the sun and entered the second of 24 planned orbits.
Planets orbit stars and moons orbit planets, so it was natural to ask if smaller moons could orbit larger ones
This shift both prevented the protective magnetic field from collapsing and recharged it
These bizarre experiments and programs are the stuff of conspiracy theory. But now it’s been revealed it was true the entire time.
A few years ago, the Hubble Space Telescope did something amazing: over the course of 841 orbits and hundreds of exposures, it imaged a tiny region of space in the constellation of Fornax, peeling back the layers of time by 13 billion years, to just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang.
One of the scientists involved in the study pointed out that although the number of space rocks striking earth is increasing, the probability of an asteroid strike wiping out mankind is extremely low.
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