
Powering Ahead to 2022 : Gilmour Space’s Big Year Ahead
Queensland rocket company Gilmour Space has seen incredible growth this year and are gearing up for their first launch from the Bowen Launch Complex next year. CEO Adam Gilmour takes
Queensland rocket company Gilmour Space has seen incredible growth this year and are gearing up for their first launch from the Bowen Launch Complex next year. CEO Adam Gilmour takes
Dr Lilli Sun at the ANU is co-leading a study within the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration, postulating the unseen matter making up the universe. We know something has to be out there
Responding to a distress call from the U.S.S. Dallas, the Hazard Team finds her adrift with a skeleton crew on board. Investigating they discover unknown alien lifeforms ravaging the ship…
After forty eight episodes, this is our final regular show for 2021. On the show, Nissan is teaming up with the Japanese Space Agency to build a lunar rover. A
PhD candidate Jennifer Hardwick is leading a research team into understanding the Fall relation – the correlation between stars and the galaxies in which they live…
Following their triumphant return home, the Voyager crew are disbanded and assigned different posts. Two years later, Captain Picard sees merit in the Hazard Team and recalls it’s members to
Continuing our look back at our Star Trek Las Vegas trip, we’re spending some time with the Mum of the convention – Robin Curtis. Catch the interview in full right
Gary Davis of Dreadnought Dominion is beaming in to Trekzone to update us on the year that was for them, and to plug their new fan film that’s been out
Two of the driving forces for Star Trek Fan Films in the UK got together recently to produce a character piece for Captain Hunter of the Starship Intrepid…
Attempting to beam back to Voyager after successfully disabling the tractor beam, Munro is confronted with the biggest, baddest Borg drone we’ve ever seen in Trek!
NASA’s LCDR launches to prove the laser communication concept | Exoplanet Cannonball, an ball of rock filled with iron is orbiting a red dwarf. | And the closest supermassive black
Continuing our look back at our Star Trek Las Vegas trip, we’re chatting with Robert O’Reilly in this hilarious interview… Catch the interview in full right here.
Our Hazard Team continues to work their way through the Borg Sphere with no iMod’s to beat back the relentless drones. Can our heroes find a way to free Voyager
Continuing our look back at our Star Trek Las Vegas trip, this is That Time When we had a chat with Shazad about Ash Tyler, Voq and the future… Catch
We’re kicking off our look back at our time at Star Trek Las Vegas with Rekha Sharma, Commander Landry in the first Discovery season… Catch the interview in full right
We begin a new game as we power towards the end of our 2021 season here at Trekzone. Elite Force II starts where Voyager’s finale crescendo’s – captured by the
The Varda Space Industries W-2 capsule safely returned to Earth at Southern Launch’s Koonibba Test Range completing a dual-purpose mission with payloads from the United States Air Force and NASA at the end of February.
New analysis of marsquakes, which are similar to earthquakes, could offer clues into how Mars has evolved over billions of years, according to new research from The Australian National University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Distant neutron stars typically spin a full 360 degrees within seconds. However, a new type of ‘radio transient object’ – so called as they are detected in radio waves – has emerged that rotate much more slowly. In the time it takes this cosmic lighthouse to rotate you could watch Interstellar twice before it completes a full spin.
An international study led by Australian astronomers has created the most detailed maps of gravitational waves across the universe to date in three new research papers. The study also produced the largest ever galactic-scale gravitational wave detector and found further evidence of a “background” of these invisible yet incredibly fast ripples in space that can help unlock some major mysteries of the universe.
Even though Saturn’s rings appear clean and young, they may be as old as the planet itself according to international researchers. It was previously thought that impacts with small rocky debris travelling through space – called micrometeoroids – would dirty and darken the rings over time, but in 2004 the Cassini spacecraft revealed the rings to be clean and bright suggesting that they are not very old.
Australia’s first sovereign orbital rocket designed and built has finally cleared all regulatory hurdles, and
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The Varda Space Industries W-2 capsule safely returned to Earth at Southern Launch’s Koonibba Test Range completing a dual-purpose mission with payloads from the United States Air Force and NASA at the end of February.
New Marsquake data could help solve one of the solar system’s biggest mysteries, Saturn’s rings might be deceptively old – based on what we thought
New analysis of marsquakes, which are similar to earthquakes, could offer clues into how Mars has evolved over billions of years, according to new research from The Australian National University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Distant neutron stars typically spin a full 360 degrees within seconds. However, a new type of ‘radio transient object’ – so called as they are detected in radio waves – has emerged that rotate much more slowly. In the time it takes this cosmic lighthouse to rotate you could watch Interstellar twice before it completes a full spin.
An international study led by Australian astronomers has created the most detailed maps of gravitational waves across the universe to date in three new research papers. The study also produced the largest ever galactic-scale gravitational wave detector and found further evidence of a “background” of these invisible yet incredibly fast ripples in space that can help unlock some major mysteries of the universe.
Even though Saturn’s rings appear clean and young, they may be as old as the planet itself according to international researchers. It was previously thought that impacts with small rocky debris travelling through space – called micrometeoroids – would dirty and darken the rings over time, but in 2004 the Cassini spacecraft revealed the rings to be clean and bright suggesting that they are not very old.
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