
Kanyini Releases Its First Images As A Dirtier Space Station Might Aid Astronaut Health
It’s the end of the third week of March 2025. Here’s the science and space headlines from the week that was… Kanyini phones home, shows
From the original 5 year mission cut short after three, to exploring new horizons on Saturday mornings and going further than ever before with The Next Generation, Star Trek has been a franchise like no other spanning over decades since it first premiered in 1966.
When Voyager was lost in the Badlands just a few years after the discovery of the Bajoran wormhole and the Federation administration of Deep Space Nine began we learnt more about our beloved universe. Then Enterprise took us on a journey before anything we had known.
Our intrepid senior staff of starships Enterprise also shared big screen adventures before everything ground to a halt in 2005. Then a streaming revolution would create a new corporate hunger for content and we’d meet the Discovery, a new Captain Pike and two endearing animated casts…
It’s the end of the third week of March 2025. Here’s the science and space headlines from the week that was… Kanyini phones home, shows
Astronauts often experience immune dysfunction, skin rashes, and other inflammatory conditions while travelling in space, and international researchers believe these issues are likely due to
Australia’s first state government funded satellite, Kanyini, has delivered its first images from space, marking a significant milestone for the space mission. Mission Director Peter
Data from NASA’s InSight mission suggest Mars has a liquid core similar to Earth’s, but European scientists say the core may be solid, at least
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It’s the end of the third week of March 2025. Here’s the science and space headlines from the week that was… Kanyini phones home, shows
Astronauts often experience immune dysfunction, skin rashes, and other inflammatory conditions while travelling in space, and international researchers believe these issues are likely due to the overly sterile nature of the International Space Station.
Australia’s first state government funded satellite, Kanyini, has delivered its first images from space, marking a significant milestone for the space mission. Mission Director Peter
Data from NASA’s InSight mission suggest Mars has a liquid core similar to Earth’s, but European scientists say the core may be solid, at least below a certain temperature.
Scientists have successfully used lasers to identify microbe fossils in rocks from Earth, which are like the rocks found on Mars, opening up the possibility of searching for fossils on the Red Planet.
International scientists, including an Australian, say they’ve found evidence of the highest-energy neutrino detected to date. The result suggests the particle came from beyond our Milky Way, they say, although its precise origin remains mysterious.
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