Google is working on Project Suncatcher, which examines running AI accelerators in orbit and networking them together using ...
The RAMBHA-LP instrument offers the first ground truth of the Moon’s near-surface plasma at southern high latitudes.
Asteroid Bennu, a dark rubble pile that crosses Earth’s orbit every few years, is turning out to be a kind of cosmic pantry ...
Talk about a sugar rush! NASA may have just come a little closer to cracking one of science’s most enduring mysteries — how life on Earth got started. The space agency has reportedly discovered ...
Five years ago, NASA’s OSIRIS-Rex spacecraft briefly touched the surface of Asteroid Bennu and brought back samples of dust and pebbles. Tall as the Empire State Building, the space rock is located at ...
Researchers discovered sugars essential for biology, including glucose, in the asteroid material for the first time. A strange, pliable substance nicknamed "space gum" was also found, which could have ...
How life began on Earth is one of the biggest remaining questions in science. Now, NASA has taken a major step towards answering this query.
The Bennu asteroid, a space rock not too far from Earth that is rich in carbon, continues to be a trove of information for scientists keen to learn about how life may have begun in our solar system.
A team of Japanese and US scientists have discovered the bio-essential sugars ribose and glucose in samples of asteroid Bennu that were collected by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission. This finding builds on ...
New research announced by NASA on Tuesday details a bevy of exciting discoveries from asteroid dust that could provide clues to how life developed in our neck of the cosmos, including the sugars ...