The space rock is hurtling through our cosmic backyard at a zippy 26,200 miles per hour, according to the space agency.
Falling space junk is becoming a real-world hazard, and scientists have found a clever new way to track it using instruments ...
On the contrary, large parts of the globe are quite densely dotted with seismic sensors designed to detect earthquakes, and ...
NASA's Artemis II mission plans to see four astronauts venture around the moon, marking the first time humans will have left ...
A growing space debris problem leads scientists to use seismic sensors to follow sonic booms from uncontrolled reentries ...
Forget the chip shortage - the AI revolution is about to break the power grid, and the next big trade isn't on Earth.
Old satellites and other space junk fall toward Earth every day, and the shock waves they create could be used to track their trajectories, according to new research.
Space debris—the thousands of pieces of human-made objects abandoned in Earth's orbit—pose a risk to humans when they fall to ...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — As more and more space junk comes crashing down, a new study shows how earthquake monitors can ...
Jeff Bezos has hatched a plan that will see his rocket company Blue Origin take on Amazon in the satellite Internet market.