Space
Is NASA falling out of love with Mars?
Editor in chief Nancy Shute discusses NASA's rocky relationship with Mars exploration.
By Nancy Shute
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Editor in chief Nancy Shute discusses NASA's rocky relationship with Mars exploration.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
Over more than a decade at Mars, the orbiter revealed how the solar wind strips away the planet’s atmosphere — and why the world lost its water.
New observations suggest the supermassive black hole at the Milky Way’s core is blowing gas away from the central behemoth.
The debate could reopen in 2030 when NASA’s Europa Clipper spacecraft gets the closest view of the icy moon’s surface.
Scientists spotted patterns hours before a major solar flare, a discovery that could help forecast dangerous eruptions.
Neptune’s oddball moon Nereid may be the sole remnant of an earlier system, formed near the planet rather than being pulled in from afar.
Water droplets on soap films orbited and merged like colliding galaxies, a technique that could help scientists study the cosmos.
At some 60 billion times the mass of the sun, this dark void could be home to a pair of black holes that are due for a cosmic collision.
A link between particle physics and gravity equations, called the double copy, applies to Hawking radiation, creating a new way into black hole puzzles.
On the International Space Station, a cube holding a diamond-based sensor revealed the potential for quantum magnetometers.
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