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Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 397

Mar 31, 2022

2,500-year-old burial mound found in Siberia’s ‘Valley of the Kings’

Posted by in category: space

A 50-year-old woman was buried with a unique “male” pendant.


Archaeologists have discovered a large burial mound in the Siberian “Valley of the Kings” dating to more than 2,500 years ago. The ancient tomb holds the remains of five people, including those of a woman and toddler who were buried with an array of grave goods, such as a crescent moon-shaped pendant, bronze mirror and gold earrings.

The mounds were made by the Scythians — a term used to describe culturally-related nomadic groups that lived on the steppes between the Black Sea and China from about 800 B.C. to about A.D. 300.

Mar 31, 2022

After 355 days aboard the ISS, astronaut Mark Vande Hei returns to Earth a changed man

Posted by in category: space

As humanity’s spaceward expansion accelerates in the coming decades, somebody’s going to have to keep all those commercial astronauts alive.

Mar 31, 2022

Physicists: We Are On The Verge Of Discovering Fifth Dimension And It Will Change Everything We Know About Physics

Posted by in categories: physics, space

What a time to be alive… We are on the verge of discovering the fifth dimension and it will change everything we know about the Universe.


Scientists are sometimes questioned if they conduct fresh experiments in the lab or continue to repeat previous ones for which they have certain outcomes. While most scientists undertake the former, scientific advancement also relies on conducting the latter and validating whether what we think we know remains true in light of fresh knowledge.

Mar 31, 2022

Guy Snaps Photo of Space Station So Detailed You Can See Spacewalking Astronauts on Exterior

Posted by in category: space

In a new photo of the International Space Station, you can actually make out two astronauts clambering on its exterior during a space walk.

Mar 30, 2022

Meet Earendel, the Most Distant Star Astronomers Have Observed

Posted by in category: space

The Hubble Space Telescope has revealed a single star whose light has traveled for 12.9 billion years to Earth, having come from a universe just 900 million years old. It’s currently the most distant star known, and the team has dubbed it Earendel*.

The discovery is a huge jump, as the previous record-holder for more distant star existed in a universe 4 billion years old.

The iconic observatory had some help from nature’s own optics: The vast mass of a foreground cluster of galaxies, sitting just so between us and the distant star, acts like a lens, its gravity magnifying the star’s light thousands-fold. The discovery is published in the March 31st Nature.

Mar 30, 2022

New Malware Loader ‘Verblecon’ Infects Hacked PCs with Cryptocurrency Miners

Posted by in categories: cryptocurrencies, cybercrime/malcode, space

Hackers using a “complex and powerful” malware loader with the ultimate objective of deploying cryptocurrency miners on compromised systems.


Researchers have uncovered a new malware campaign spreading Mars info-stealer via Google ads.

Mar 30, 2022

Researchers Expose Mars Stealer Malware Campaign Using Google Ads to Spread

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, space

Researchers have uncovered a new malware campaign spreading Mars info-stealer via Google ads.

Mar 30, 2022

Space tourism: Huge balloon with a bar to take tourists to space for $125,000 a ticket

Posted by in category: space

Imagine gliding into space in a pressurized capsule via a huge balloon the size of a football stadium. That’s how one startup plans to take tourists on suborbital journeys 100,000 feet above Earth.

Passengers will be able to observe stunning views during a six hour journey. They will also be able to sip on cocktails from a bar aboard the vessel. (Yes, there’s a bathroom.)

The voyage will happen “very gently and smoothly” and provide passengers “the quintessential astronaut experience,” Jane Poytner, co-founder and co-CEO of Space Perspective, told Yahoo Finance Live.

Mar 30, 2022

A Mars city will need to overcome this tiny obstacle to survive

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

Now, though, new research is helping us understand this strange dusty environment and paving the way for safer Mars missions in the future — like a crewed landing and possibly even a permanent settlement.

The problem of dust

Mars’s surface is covered in fine particles of dust. With its smaller size than Earth, it has lower gravity – around one-third of the gravity here – and a thinner atmosphere, which is around one percent of the density of Earth’s atmosphere. That means it is easy for winds to form and to pick up those dust particles, blowing them into a dust storm.

Mar 30, 2022

‘Cannibal’ coronal mass ejection will hit Earth at nearly 2 million mph, scientists say

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

The sunspot, called AR2975, has been shooting out flares of electrically charged particles from the sun’s plasma soup since Monday (March 28). Sunspots are areas on the sun’s surface where powerful magnetic fields, created by the flow of electrical charges, knot into kinks before suddenly snapping. The resulting release of energy launches bursts of radiation called solar flares, or explosive jets of solar material called coronal mass ejections (CMEs).

Related: Strange new type of solar wave defies physics

Cannibal coronal mass ejections happen when fast-moving solar eruptions overtake earlier eruptions in the same region of space, sweeping up charged particles to form a giant, combined wavefront that triggers a powerful geomagnetic storm.

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