News

NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft has observed atmospheric sputtering on Mars for the first time, confirming how solar wind stripped the Red Planet’s thick atmosphere and transformed its climate.
What did we really see when we looked at Mars for the first time with human-made eyes? In this powerful visual journey, we ...
Jared Isaacman wasn't a perfect NASA nominee, but his passion for the agency's scientific missions will be missed.
As for today, the environments on Mars that could potentially support life are few and far between, and it's all about ...
A new European study out Monday throws into question conventional wisdom that the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies are on a ...
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access ...
NASA scientists have discovered evidence that could help answer questions surrounding the history of water loss on Mars.
NASA’s MAVEN finally sees sputtering—an escape process that stripped Mars of its atmosphere and ancient water.
Using computer models, students Mohammad Afzal Shadab and Eric Hiatt estimated how long it would have taken water to seep ...
Scientists have been arguing about the origin of strange streaks on Mars since the earliest missions to the Red Planet.
NASA 's Curiosity rover captured this extremely wide snapshot as it traversed its extraterrestrial stomping grounds in Gale ...
NASA's Phoenix Mars lander touched down on the Red Planet on May 25, 2008, and spent 161 days (156 Martian days) collecting a variety of data, before suddenly going offline.