
The Trekzone Breakdown – December 1 2023
The actor’s strike is over, new fan film releases and have you seen Star Wars fan films?!
The actor’s strike is over, new fan film releases and have you seen Star Wars fan films?!
Hypersonix officially welcomes their new manufacturing facility. The CSIRO calls for proposals for telescope time across the country and six sub-Neptunes found, which have likely remained unchanged for a couple
We’re catching up with the three major category winners from The 2023 Trekzone Fan Film Awards … Randy Landers, Jeff Nord and Dave Ellis. Lets check in and reveal the
Oxygen on Venus… an incredible find backed up seventeen times. wearable tech helping astronauts find themselves and a rogue star thought to heading our way now isn’t… the reanalysis that’s
The fan film and Star Trek production news you need to know for the past week…
Australia and the US sign a Technology Safeguards Agreement, the culmination of a whole-of-government effort to secure an important path forward to expanding the Australian Space Industry. Plus SmartSat SRC’s
NASA announces asteroid Bennu contains carbon and water, a comet explosion may have kick started agriculture in Syria and the light pollution from artificial satellites has now reached the point
Potemkin releases, Mr B net V preps a release, some ratings updates and Star Trek news… it’s the all new Fan Film Update merged with SciFi News..
A successful crash landing back to Earth. Seven years and a handful of days after it was launched, OSIRIS-REx returns home with the all important samples of asteroid Bennu. Within
It’s the film that introduced James Kerwin to Star Trek: Continues through on-set connections, both celebrating ten years since their premieres. In this short and sharp Trekzone Conversation our good
Hydrogen surrounding NGC 4632 could make it a rare polar ring galaxy. A bubble of galaxies has been found – measuring a billion light-years across, and Vladimir Putin and Kim
Lee Sargent and Talkin’ Trek are back on Trekzone after forty months away. When we last spoke to Lee, at the beginning of 2020, we’d wrapped up our thoughts on
A new report has revealed the Australian high school curriculum has a gender bias when it comes to teaching children about scientists and scientific discoveries. The study was conducted as
Shawn O’Halloran and Dean Newbury beam in to discuss the never-before-seen police bodycam vision of the Altercation in Atlanta two years ago. This is a Trekzone First. Bodycam Vision 1:
Commander Jara Rydek takes her post as the new First Officer of the U.S.S. Resolute which has spent months in drydock following a devastating warp field experiment. Their first mission
Chandrayaan-3 Takes The Lunar Temperature. A New Report Finds Massive Gender Bias in Australian High Schools and Landslides on Mars Indicate Water Surrounded Olympus Mons It’s Wednesday August 30 2023
61 days to go until The 2025 Trekzone Fan Film Awards are here, and we
It’s the end of the third week of March 2025. Here’s the science and space
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
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.
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61 days to go until The 2025 Trekzone Fan Film Awards are here, and we have reached an important milestone plus more news and thoughts.
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.
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