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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
The Ultimate, Indisputable Ranking of Planets in the Solar System
Recently, my colleagues at Deadspin posted a ranking of the planets. But it was mostly incorrect. After extensively researching and writing about our solar neighborhood, I feel I’m fairly qualified to take a stab at ranking these bad boys once and for all. Here is the one true ranking of planets in our solar system, … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
A NASA Spacecraft Will Slingshot Past Earth Today
Right now, NASA’s Origins Spectral Interpretation Resource Identification Security – Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx) spacecraft is hurtling through the void in order to link up with an asteroid named Bennu in 2018. While the intrepid spacecraft still has a way to go until its big rendezvous, today it’ll casually fly by Earth. Unfortunately, it poses no … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Brainless Jellyfish Are Making Us Rethink Our Understanding of Sleep
If you’ve ever seen a jellyfish in the wild, at an aquarium, or in one of those 11-minute-long relaxation videos on YouTube, you’ve probably wondered: What are jellyfish trying to do? What is their goal? The answer is not entirely obvious, as these barely sentient blobs seem to senselessly ferry themselves from one place to … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Trump’s NASA Nominee Wants to Study Climate Change on Mars—But Not on Earth
Earlier this month, President Donald Trump nominated Jim Bridenstine—a Republican representative in Oklahoma—as NASA’s new leader. Like most people in this administration, Bridenstine actively supports ideas antithetical to his (soon-to-be) agency: he’s an avid supporter of private space companies and denies that human activity impacts climate change. Now, Bridenstine wants to take a seemingly good … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Hopeful Martians Emerge From 8-Month Experiment To Find Earth Horrific As Ever
Before Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and other space enthusiasts can ship humans to Mars as easily as an Amazon Prime delivery, we need to figure out they’ll fare on a foreign planet. Luckily, NASA and the University of Hawaii have been all over this, funding several successful iterations of an experiment called Hawaii Space Exploration … Continued
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Tech NewsGadgets
The Anti-Rape Gadgets That Never Delivered
It’s like clockwork: every month or so, you’ll be scrolling through your Facebook feed and stumble across a video about a new ring or underwear, color-changing straws or color-changing nail polish, or “smart stickers” that claim to help prevent sexual assault. There’s the inevitable swarm of uncritical media coverage that garners hundreds of thousands of views … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
The Last Photo Cassini Took Was Its Forever Home on Saturn
For those who’ve followed NASA’s Cassini mission these past 20 years, it’s still a bit hard to believe it’s gone. On Friday, September 15th, the spacecraft plunged itself into Saturn’s atmosphere, becoming part of the planet it had studied tirelessly for 13 years. While Cassini’s mission is over, there’s plenty of data and imagery from … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceBiology
Screaming Hairy Armadillos Articulate Our Existential Dread
Adulthood is kind of like the Olympics where the main event is trying not to fall apart under the weight of your own ennui. Sometimes, you’ve just got to let that internal tension out by screaming into the open air. Or a pillow. Or the frozen foods section at Whole Foods. But honestly, no creature … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
A Few Last Words On The Best Spacecraft of Our Lives, Before It Dies
Space has a funny way of making us feel both incredibly small yet infinitely lucky for being part of such a vast cosmic sorority. Of course, humans have barely scratched the surface of the final frontier—we’ve never even sent people beyond the Moon. While many uncrewed spacecraft have done an incredible job of revealing our … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceBiology
Researchers Discover ‘Atlantis’ For Octopuses Off Australian Coast
Since hermit crabs are actually extremely social, octopuses typically earn the reputation as the true hermits of the ocean. These highly intelligent recluses that seem prefer a lonely life in the wild, or if they’re in an aquarium, one in which they can cleverly, constantly toy with their human captors. But new research suggests octopuses … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Cassini’s Last Look at Titan Is Breathtaking and Bittersweet
The end is nigh for NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, the intrepid probe that’s been studying the Saturn system for the last 13 years. On Friday, September 15th, Cassini will plunge itself into Saturn’s atmosphere with its antenna pointed toward Earth, becoming part of the place it’s called home all these years. Even in its final hours, … Continued
By Rae Paoletta -
ScienceBiology
How Manatees, Gators, and Flamingos Are Surviving Hurricane Irma
Over the past week, Irma has redefined our expectations of how powerful a hurricane can be and left devastation in its wake: the once-Category 5 cyclone roared through the Caribbean, leaving 1 million people in Puerto Rico without power, and caused significant flooding in Miami, Naples, and many other parts of Florida. It was difficult … Continued
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Tech News
Is This the Beginning of the End for Goop?
Around the turn of the 20th century, American entrepreneur Clark Stanley sold an allegedly healing “rattlesnake oil” out of his stage coach. Stanley marketed his product as a Western interpretation of some ideas he supposedly gathered from Eastern medicine, claiming the product could cure a whole host of illnesses. The problem was, a federal investigation … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Cassini Dropped Its Most Mind-Blowing Look At Saturn’s Rings Yet
Though Cassini only has a few days left to study Saturn before it dies, it’s seriously making them count. Today, NASA released what it says are “the highest-resolution color images of any part of Saturn’s rings.” In true Cassini fashion, they’re absolutely mesmerizing. The above image, taken on July 6th, 2017, is a natural color … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Pluto’s Features Just Got Some Seriously Metal Names From Mythology
We all know space is goth. Pluto, however, is the obvious metal baby of the solar system, shrouded in darkness at a distance of up to 4.67 billion miles (7.5 billion kilometers) from Earth. It’s only fitting that everyone’s favorite dwarf planet—named after the Roman god of the underworld—gets some seriously metal names for its … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
You Can Use Your Solar Eclipse Glasses to See Another Awesome Sun Feature
If you’ve managed to hang onto your solar eclipse glasses since August 21st, don’t throw them away! If you haven’t already donated your shades to Astronomers Without Borders, you can use them to stare at the Sun and actually learn something cool. According to NASA, safe solar eclipse glasses can be used to check out … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
SpaceX Just Launched a Mysterious Space Plane Right Before a Monster Hurricane
SpaceX has pulled off some exhilarating launches and landings in the past, but today’s mission ranks among its most suspenseful. Today, sometime between right now and about 3pm ET, the company will send a Falcon 9 rocket carrying a US Air Force X-37B space plane from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, just days … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Curiosity Has Discovered Something That Raises More Questions About Life on Mars
Everyone from David Bowie to astrobiologists to tinfoil hat believers has pondered the question: is there life on Mars? While we’ve found direct evidence of liquid water on the Red Planet, we have yet to find any microbes there. But not all hope is lost—new discoveries from NASA’s Curiosity rover have brought forth more compelling … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Relive the Mind-Blowing Photos From the Voyager Missions
The universe is very good at making us feel both extremely insignificant and lucky enough to be part of something huge. No missions have made this clearer than NASA’s Voyager spacecraft, which have been exploring the cosmos for 40 years. Today, Voyager 1 officially turns the big 4-0, which it’s celebrating by cruising through interstellar … Continued
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ScienceSpace & Spaceflight
Uranus’ Moons Are Unluckier Than We Thought
Uranus can’t seem to catch a break these days. Besides spinning on its side like the drunkard of the solar system and being the butt of everyone’s jokes, new research suggests several of its tiny moons will collide in a million years. According to research submitted recently to ArXiv by a team of astronomers, one … Continued
By Rae Paoletta