Clay subsoil at Earth’s driest place may signal life on Mars0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology, Space
- November 6, 2020
Earth’s most arid desert may hold a key to finding life on Mars.
Earth’s most arid desert may hold a key to finding life on Mars.
It is not often that a comedian gives an astrophysicist goose bumps when discussing the laws of physics.
A physics paper proposes neither you nor the world around you are real.
Physicists Just Created the Most Detailed Simulation of the Universe in History
“If we are living in a simulation, then the cosmos that we are observing is just a tiny piece of the totality of physical existence.”
Fictional crash tests the ways that disaster response and space agencies would deal with such a natural disaster
Space experts from several agencies failed to stop an asteroid fragment from wiping out New York City last week.
‘Tabletop exercise’ will ensure US government is ready to respond to any real asteroids that could be on their way to destroy us
‘We have artificially created a state that evolves in a direction opposite to that of the thermodynamic arrow of time,’ researcher says
In films like Armageddon, Hollywood has tried (and failed) to take on the question of what would happen if a comet or asteroid plunged into the oceans on Earth, but what has scientific research actually determined it may look like?