Part of a battery pack discharged by the International Space Station hits Florida home, damaging the roof and flooring.
Update (April 17): NASA has confirmed that a piece of hardware survived re-entry through Earth's atmosphere and impacted a house in Naples, Florida last month. Analysis conducted at Kennedy Space Center in Florida verified the homeowner's suspicions that the object belonged to the International Space Station.Read Entire Article
If this isn’t ballsy, then what is?
The Tigers overcame starting the final rotation in third place to win the title. In what is likely her final collegiate gymnastics meet, Dunne goes out on top. DailyMail.com
THIS is the moment a £2million hypercar ploughed through Dubai’s floods after roads were completely submerged. Video shows the Pagani Utopia tentatively braving the recent flooding as the gli
Japanese TV station TV Asahi recently asked international anime fans what their top 20 anime openings are, and the results have me convinced no one actually watches anime. Back in March, it was announced on TV Asahi's Sosenkyo Twitter account that they'd be hosting a special program going into the top 20 anime openings ranked by international anime fans. The program apparently polled 1740 people, from all across the world, in order to find out which are the best of the best according to...
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The 12P/Pons-Brooks comet will reach the brightest point in its orbit on April 21. As the month goes on it will be harder to see as the evenings become lighter. READ MORE:
The most gentle doggy introduction you’ll ever see.
I feel fortunate to have witnessed two total solar eclipses in my lifetime. The first was at Center Hill Lake in central Tennessee in 2017, then this year’s (April 8) eclipse from Paducah, Kentucky. Given my age (68), I doubt I will see another. For those who have not witnessed one, many look at the […]
Space exploration is exciting. But is it worth it? There seem to be more than enough important problems worth solving here on earth. In light of that, should we rpend resources exploring beyond our olanet? (The Prindle Institute for Ethics) With a promising topic of discussion, the Prindle Institute successfully hosted a lunch panel on
Voyager photographs the homeworld from two distinct angles. For the first time in history, a single frame captured the entirety of the Earth and Moon in 1977 at a distance of 7.3 million miles (11.7 million kilometers). Earth appears as a small blue dot in a ray of sunshine in the second photo, which was shot in 1990 as part of a family portrait of our solar system from 4 billion miles (6.4 billion kilometers). This is the well-known Pale Blue Dot picture that Carl Sagan immortalized. (Image...