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.
Astronomers have long searched for life within a rather narrow ring around a star, the "habitable zone," where a planet ...
To land on the right foot on the Red Planet, European engineers have been dropping a skeleton of the four-legged ExoMars ...
geological signatures indicate that around 3.4 billion years ago, a connected oceanic system existed on a planetary scale, ...
Nearly 14 years ago, NASA’s Curiosity rover landed on Mars for a mission to explore the red planet and discover if it had an ...
Mars is famous for its volcanoes, canyons and ancient river valleys, but some of its most active geology happens in slow ...
Spacecraft orbiting the Red Planet have helped researchers map out an ancient coastline that surrounded a large ocean billions of years ago ...
Mars may have once possessed an ocean at least as large as Earth's Arctic Ocean, a new study suggests. Previous research ...
A rover recently captured sounds of lightning crackling on Mars, over a decade after scientists uncovered the first evidence ...