Our weekly roundup of the latest science in the news, as well as a few fascinating articles to keep you entertained over the ...
Students learn how to work together through a STEM experience that had them create floating hearts and temporary tattoos.
The paper was published today in Nature Communications.
Sea-based launches are hitting their stride. That could lead to a lot more space missions with a lot less red tape.
Eco-friendly alternatives to fossil fuels are venturing beyond Earth—and into space.
Astronauts on China's Tiangong station used artificial photosynthesis to turn COâ‚‚ and water into oxygen and rocket fuel.
The Shenzhou-19 crew’s experiment marks the first in-orbit application of this method, supporting China’s goal of a crewed ...
Though the first of two Monday Falcon 9 rocket launches failed to materialize, the evening mission's first-stage booster is still expected to generate window-rattling sonic booms across North and ...
Can water really power a rocket? Scientists are exploring ways to use water as fuel, from splitting it into hydrogen and oxygen to steam propulsion. It might just be the key to the future of space ...
In the last 18 months, North Florida has dealt with three hurricane landfalls, two convective straight-line wind events, and a destructive tornado outbreak. For weather shutdown No. 7, it was time for ...
Astronauts on board China's "heavenly palace" space station have demonstrated a new way of making rocket fuel products and breathable oxygen by mimicking a chemical reaction in plants. The technology ...
Over the past decade, SpaceX has also emerged as a key vendor to the U.S. Department of Defense, seen most recently with a $733.5 million contract for projects such as launching defense ...