Leading British scientist Dame Maggie Aderin-Pocock says that we must not be alone in the universe and that it is 'human ...
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope made a captivating discovery in the area of planets beyond Earth. A unique planet named 55 ...
The on road price of Yamaha FZ-S Fi Hybrid in Malappuram is Rs 1.75 Lakh onwards in Mar 2025. Check FZ-S Fi Hybrid on-road ...
An incredible £50m nuclear fusion rocket developed by British scientists over the past decade has been unveiled for the very ...
Imagine cutting a trip to Mars in half. That’s the promise of Sunbird, a groundbreaking nuclear fusion rocket concept unveiled by Pulsar Fusion. Developed in complete secrecy over the past decade, ...
UK startup Pulsar Fusion just revealed a nuclear fusion-powered rocket that could halve travel time across the solar system. The spacecraft, called ‘Sunbird’, is designed to remain in orbit for quick ...
On Feb. 28, a stellar alignment of planets will illuminate the night sky for the last time in a decade Space Frontiers/Hulton Archive/Getty Calling all stargazers and astronomy enthusiasts ...
"We are able to measure the local dark matter density using direct acceleration measurements for the first time." Dark matter, widely known as the universe's most mysterious stuff, is rarer on ...
On any given night, weather permitting, you can spot at least one bright planet in the sky, and lineups of four or five planets, seen by the naked eye, typically occur every few years, according ...
Most are expected to be visible to the naked eye, though not all seven. The alignment is known as a planet parade — a planetary lineup in space from Earth’s perspective. The alignment takes ...
This stunning photo shows every single planet in the solar system at the same time during a rare alignment that won’t happen again until 2040. Taken from a field in Somerset, the groundbreaking ...
Picture: iStock Make a date with the night skies this Friday when all seven planets in our solar system will briefly align in what astronomers refer to as the “Great Planet Parade”.