New research reveals Earth's ancient 'breath'
An international team of scientists have uncovered an important link between Earth's early atmosphere and the chemistry of its deep mantle.
The study, which was led by researchers at the University of Portsmouth and University of Montpellier, sheds new light on the evolution of life on our planet and the rise of atmospheric oxygen.
The team investigated magmas formed in ancient subdu Korean lunar space environment payload ships to US for 2024 launch
The Ministry of Science and ICT (Minister Jong-Ho Lee, hereinafter referred to as 'MSIT') and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (Director Young-Deuk Park, hereinafter referred to as 'KASI') announced the beginning of the transfer of the lunar space environment monitor, 'LUSEM'(Lunar Space Environment Monitor) that will be aboard United States' unmanned lunar lander in 2024, has beg Dreaming of waves
Ocean waves are easy on the eyes, but hard on the brain. How do they form? How far do they travel? How do they break? Those magnificent waves you see crashing into the shore are complex.
"I've often asked this question," the eminent wave scientist Walter Munk told MIT Professor Stefan Helmreich several years ago. "If we met somebody from another planet who had never seen waves, could [they Quantum science: shaken, driven, dropped, and flown
As quantum technology continues to shape our future, quantum entanglement remains a crucial element in unlocking valuable space applications, but how robust is it?
Chinese Ceres-1 rocket reaches orbit with first sea launch


Chandrayaan-3 success to boost India’s space ambitions, global standing


Project Kuiper partners with Vodafone in Europe and Africa


Firefly selected to launch three L3Harris satellites




