On Jan. 22, 1968, NASA launched Apollo 5, marking the first time the Apollo Lunar Module flew in space and a critical step toward landing astronauts on the Moon.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- As more and more space junk comes crashing down, a new study shows how earthquake monitors can better track incoming objects by tuning into their sonic booms.
NEW YORK, Jan. 22, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- The Princeton Review ®, the education services company widely known for its test-prep ...
The sensors used to listen for earthquakes could help protect people from the hazards created by falling spacecraft.
Vast's first platform, Haven-1, is deliberately modest in scale but ambitious in both schedule and purpose. The station is designed as a roughly 15-ton autonomous outpost ...
FAW Group, China’s oldest domestic auto brand, is the latest to announce it has begun testing solid-state EV batteries ...
After the swivel by Helium Inc. towards simply running distributed WiFi hotspots after for years pushing LoRaWAN nodes, many of the associated hardware became effectively obsolete. This led to ...
Scientists have just found a new way to track the uncontrolled reentry of falling space junk. As they punch into the ...
Ashton Blake Donaldson, 22, was indicted on June 3, 2025 for two felony counts of possession and transfer of a machinegun and ...
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.
Learn the NumPy trick for generating synthetic data that actually behaves like real data.