A super-Earth planet that dips in and out of its star's habitable zone has been discovered just 19.7 light-years away.
BS4 may be anywhere between 17 and 40 feet across, and will approach at about twice the distance between the Earth and moon.
ESA’s decade-long Milky Way Gaia mapping mission still has tons of data to release over the next few years. Expect surprises.
NASA has confirmed that its Parker Solar Probe has survived its record-breaking closest approach to the solar surface. The incident occurred on 24 December where it flew some 6.1 million kilometres ...
After launching in 2018, the Parker Solar Probe used Venus to gravitationally adjust its orbit and boost it closer to the Sun, ultimately bringing it within a close but manageable distance from ...
The Parker Solar Probe, partly designed by students and researchers in Colorado, survived its closest encounter with our sun late last week ... many thousands of times per orbit and any one ...
NASA has confirmed that its Parker Solar Probe is safe and ... closer and closer to the Sun. With its final encounter with Venus in November 2024, it is now in an orbit that not only has brought ...
Operations teams have confirmed NASA’s mission to “touch” the Sun survived its record-breaking ... The spacecraft will remain in this orbit for the remainder of its primary mission. “Parker Solar ...
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe skimmed the sun on Christmas ... and using the planet’s gravity to gradually inch its orbit closer to the sun, making 21 increasingly close flybys along the way.
NASA's mission to "touch" the sun has confirmed that it survived ... The spacecraft will remain in this orbit for the remainder of its primary mission and potentially for many years after that.
NASA’s pioneering Parker Solar ... sun. After its launch in 2018, the probe has been gradually circling closer towards the sun, using flybys of Venus to gravitationally pull it into a tighter orbit.
Here’s what I know about the sun - it’s big, it’s hot and if I stay out in it too long, my skin starts to peel. But there’s so much we don’t know about it. And we’re going to learn so much more thanks ...