Renders show off both Blue Origin's proposed cargo lunar lander as well as
SYRACUSE, N.Y. - There will be a full moon tonight at 7:48pm, although the moonrise doesn't occur until 7:57pm. The moon will be the highest in the sky at arou
April's 'pink' full moon happens this week, but don't expect a Barbie pink
While Microsoft is gearing up for its Windows on ARM event on May 20, Qualcomm is preparing the processors that will power that revolution. The flagship in that new line of silicon is the Snapdragon X Elite but it has a sidekick - the Snapdragon X Plus. Today, we have our first solid information about the latter chip. The Snapdragon X Plus surfaced in a Geekbench DirectML benchmark on a device codenamed OEMMN. There's no room for interpretation on the chip's part - it's plainly named - the...
The April 2024 firmware update is now available for the Surface Pro X Wi-Fi and the second-generation Surface Studio. The release brings patches for security vulnerabilities and stability improvements
To celebrate Earth Day, National Geographic produced an amazing new series
Moon is not in the starting lineup for Sunday's Game 1 against Dallas, Law
NASA's Juno spacecraft has been orbiting Jupiter since 2016. The craft's primary missions involving studies of the gas giant itself were completed in 2018, but the project was extended to include the moons of Ganymede, Europa, and Io. Recently, the craft passed within 930 miles of the surface of Io and captured close-up images of the moon's highly volcanic northern latitudes. — Read the rest
Certified results from the April 2 election don't show all the candidates who received write-in votes for the County Board's District 11.
A new moon atlas is the most detailed ever produced, based on data from the Chang'e-1 mission and published by the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The Geologic Atlas of the Lunar Globe, which took more than 100 researchers over a decade to compile, reveals a total of 12,341 craters, 81 basins and 17 rock types, along with other basic geological information about the lunar surface. — Read the rest
Scientists detected the first long-predicted gravitational wave in 2015, and since then, researchers have been hungering for better detectors. But the Earth is warm and seismically noisy, and that will always limit the effectiveness of Earth-based detectors.