Scientists have calculated the Earth to be 4.54 billion years old, with an uncertainty of 50 million years on either side.
On December 7, 1972, Apollo 17 astronauts captured a now-iconic image of Earth, sometimes called the “blue marble.” Our National Air and Space Museum explains how it became an inspiration and symbol ...
"Andor" Season 2, which arrives on Disney+ on Apr. 22, 2025, delivers a first-look glimpse of this spinoff prequel series ...
For nearly 40 years, scientists have generally agreed that Earth’s Moon formed from debris after a massive collision with our ...
Thanks to photographs from the Apollo space missions of the late 1960s and early 1970s, all of us Earthlings gained the ...
The fireworks exploded the moment Walker Buehler struck out Alex Verdugo to win the Series. Inside Paradise, “I Love L.A.” ...
The father-daughter team of Ken and Keli Chaffin successfully decoded the message in July of 2024 by running simulations of ...
Happy New Year's on Mars. Martian years are almost twice as long as Earth years. Nov. 12 is the day to celebrate the start of a new red planet orbit around the sun.
The term “Black Marble” is a counterpart to NASA’s famous Blue Marble images, which show Earth during the daytime.
The Blue Marble - Earth from space, December 7, 1972. This famous photograph, known as The Blue ... [+] Marble, was captured by the Apollo 17 astronauts on the same day that they left Earth on a ...
Samantha Harvey's 2024 Booker Prize-winning novel Orbital explores the raw reality of life in space, devoid of fantasy.
Judges praise ‘beautiful and miraculous’ novel that tells the story of astronauts on the International Space Station ...