IFLScience on MSN
"Major Anomaly" As Interstellar Object 3I/Atlas Measured To Be Over 33 Billion Tons
A new study has attempted to pin down the properties of interstellar comet 3I/Atlas, finding it is "anomalously massive" at around 33 billion tons.
Dr. V.P. Nguyen has found that many of the tools used to monitor human health could also be used to track environmental ...
Vibe coding is the next evolutionary step in how generative AI is impacting coding and the software development lifecycle.
In our own solar system, there are pretty good odds that you could stand on the surface of an asteroid and not even be able ...
Some things we see in space appear to outpace light. Now we are learning to harness these bizarre optical illusions to ...
Physics and Python stuff. Most of the videos here are either adapted from class lectures or solving physics problems. I really like to use numerical calculations without all the fancy programming ...
Asteroid ‘Families’ Reveal Hidden Histories and Impact Risks across the Solar System ...
IFLScience on MSN
Interstellar Comet 3I/Atlas Is About To Be Hit By A Coronal Mass Ejection. What Will Happen Next?
While we haven't seen an interstellar comet being struck by a coronal mass ejection before, we have seen it happen to others. This happened on April 20, 2007, when NASA's STEREO A spacecraft saw Comet ...
Astronomers use simulations to discover how globular clusters form and reveal a new type of star system near the Milky Way.
The formation of Mercury remains an unsolved mystery. The planet closest to the sun has a disproportionately large metallic ...
How we focus our attention before we even see an object matters. For example, when we look for something moving in the sky, ...
The main working hypothesis for the Mercury problem says that the planet is the victim of a collision with a different-sized object. The cataclysmic collision stripped much of the planet's mantle and ...
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