Space.com on MSN
Geminid meteor shower 2025 peaks next week. Here's what you need to know about this year's best meteor shower
The Geminids return with near-perfect viewing conditions, offering skywatchers up to 150 meteors an hour under dark December ...
The Geminids are one of the best meteor showers of the year—and the weirdest. Here’s how to see them
This December's dazzling display comes from a strange asteroid with comet-like behavior—and a tail of debris that astronomers ...
A popular science TikToker explained discoveries on the asteroid Bennu after NASA brought samples back to Earth from 39 ...
Several sugars have been found on a sample of the asteroid Bennu, which may provide scientists with clues about our early ...
NASA has unveiled a series of new discoveries that make the possibility of alien life elsewhere in the universe more ...
1don MSN
Asteroid hurtling toward Earth found to be teeming with building blocks of life: researchers
Scientists discovered ribose — in addition to “all five nucleobases used to construct both DNA and RNA” — on asteroid Bennu, ...
Studying samples from the Bennu asteroid, researchers have found sugars essential for biology, stardust and ... something ...
Space.com on MSN
NASA discovers 'space gum' and sugars 'crucial to life' in asteroid Bennu samples brought to Earth (video)
Analyzing pristine fragments of the asteroid delivered to Earth by NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft in 2023, a team led by ...
Four near-Earth asteroids are set to make close approaches to Earth within a 24-hour period, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) has confirmed. Scientists stress that all four objects will pass ...
Samples collected from the asteroid Bennu are continuing the shed light on the origins of the solar system and how life ...
Potential impactors are most likely to have low velocities and the highest likelihood of hitting Earth during the winter.
Boulder Daily Camera on MSN
Flashes on the moon: CU Boulder experts explain asteroid strikes and why they matter
“Impact flashes on the moon are very common,” University of Colorado Boulder astrophysical and planetary sciences professor Paul Hayne said. “In fact, they happen more or less every night, and it’s a ...
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