From a 1kg micro-satellite dubbed the “Vietnamese dragon” to silent laboratories and high-level policy resolutions, Vietnam is steadily turning space technology into a pillar of national strategy.
An asteroid the size of a building could collide with the Moon in 2032 and generate a flash visible from Earth.
Greenland loses 200 billion tons of ice per year, lifting the land and lowering nearby sea levels even as global oceans ...
Highly detailed 3D scans of dense tropical rain forest plots are enabling precise estimates of tree structure, volume and ...
Crew members of China's Shenzhou-20 mission recently detailed their reactions upon finding cracks in their spacecraft's ...
In northeast Ethiopia, the rift shoved continental plates apart by 25 feet in just a few days, completely shocking ...
A SpaceX Falcon 9 upper stage belched a massive cloud of lithium and other pollutants roughly 62 miles over Europe upon reentry.
Every winter, thousands of tourists travel to high-latitude regions like Scandinavia, Canada, and Alaska hoping to see the Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights. Vincent Ledvina, an aurora guide and Ph.D ...
Industry first test of compact and energy-efficient satellite laser terminals in orbit aid to pave way for more secure, high-bandwidth and affordable space-to-Earth communication for small satellite ...
Jewish families say a Scottsdale cemetery’s new policy requiring loved ones to leave before a casket is lowered disrupts a ...
From Super Bowl ads to new constellation announcements, satellites are suddenly everywhere. What’s driving this surge in activity, and what should we make of it?
On Feb. 24, 2014, scientists announced that a tiny zircon crystal from Australia, 4.4 billion years old, was confirmed to be the oldest discovered fragment of Earth's crust.