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'Roasting marshmallow' exoplanet is so hot, it rains metal. How did it form? "The climate of this planet is extreme and nothing like that of Earth. The planet's dayside is so hot that elements typically thought of as 'metal' are vaporized into the atmosphere." Comments (0). When you purchase through links on our site, ...
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New record coming? 5 rockets scheduled to launch in next 24 hours SpaceX, Blue Origin, Rocket Lab and the Russian space agency Roscosmos all have missions slated for liftoff today. They are spread across a total of about 20 hours, with several hours of waiting between each.
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UN monitors asteroid with a tiny chance of hitting Earth The probability that the asteroid, called 2024 YR4 may impact Earth on 22 December 2032 is currently estimated to be 1.3%. Dr Robert Massey of the Royal Astronomical Society, says that he is "not ...
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Astronauts on the ISS share their 'life-changing' view | The Excerpt Four Americans who do so currently are Expedition 72 Commander Suni Williams, and Flight Engineers Butch Wilmore, Nick Hague, and Don Pettit. They joined The Excerpt to share what folks on the Earth should know about ...
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Nearby Habitable-Zone Exoplanet May Be a World of Fire and Ice An artist's concept of an exoplanet that might resemble HD 20794 d, a world orbiting a sunlike star about 20 light-years from Earth. Hypersphere/Science Photo Library/Getty Images.
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'Roasting marshmallow' exoplanet is so hot, it rains metal. How did it form? Astronomers may have inadvertently complicated the mystery of how strange "roasting marshmallow" planets form. Using the Gemini South telescope, researchers found that the "hot and puffy" ultra-hot Jupiter planet WASP-121b ...
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NASA's InSight Finds Marsquakes From Meteoroids Go Deeper Than Expected Meteoroids striking Mars produce seismic signals that can reach deeper into the planet than previously known. That's the finding of a pair of new papers comparing marsquake data collected by NASA's InSight lander with impact craters spotted by the agency's ...
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Bonobos Can Tell When a Human Doesn't Know Something An experiment shows that bonobos can understand when a human lacks knowledge and point them in the right direction. By Jack Tamisiea edited by Gary Stix. Female bonobo looking at camera. Female bonobo. Anup Shah/Getty Images. Cognition.
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Printable molecule-selective nanoparticles enable mass production of wearable biosensors A team of Caltech engineers has developed a technique for inkjet printing arrays of special nanoparticles that enables the mass production of long-lasting wearable sweat sensors. These sensors could be used to monitor a variety of biomarkers, ...
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Mysterious 'Chirping' Waves Detected 100000 Miles Above Earth Are Surprising Scientists Chorus waves, quick bursts of energy known to occur relatively close to Earth and around other planets, were found in an unexpected part of the magnetosphere, according to a new study. Sara Hashemi. Daily Correspondent. February 3, 2025 2:57 p.m. ...
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