Talkin’ Lower Decks with Lee Sargent
It may not be out for the world, but we can still talk about it. Star Trek: Lower Decks is the second animated series to be released in the Star Trek franchise and it’s putting a new spin on the 24th century…
It may not be out for the world, but we can still talk about it. Star Trek: Lower Decks is the second animated series to be released in the Star Trek franchise and it’s putting a new spin on the 24th century…
Discovery’s third season trailer drops, but is it coming back to Netflix? Lower Decks mid-season trailer, but still no word on an international release. Strange New Worlds will be episodic – and a fan film not done right
En route to Qo’nos to learn more about the Wardens intentions, several members of the Incursion crew are infected with the pathogen and mutiny. As Refelian gathers loyal officers the ship is captured by a Borg ship…
A faint detection at Ligo and Virgo points to the formation of an intermediate mass black hole. Scientists analysing deep sea samples find evidence of supernova remnants. And the moon’s get rusty, probably because of Earth’s protective magnetotail…
Decrypting information captured on the Leyte Gulf, Admiral Nolotai orders the Incursion back to Earth to eliminate the alien threat at Starfleet Academy and rescue Commander Data at Starfleet Headquarters.
In the beginning the large production companies sought to sell the streaming rights to their content to the highest bidder, but when they realised the power of being able to leverage audience metrics with advertisers they started striking out on their own.
Welcome to our second new podcast series in this premiere week on Trekzone. It’s The News, your weekly bite size wrap up of science fiction production info.
We’re playing missions 2 and 3 of 2001’s Star Trek: Away Team…
New research out this week points to bacteria being able to survive the trip to Mars, and back plus the elements for building water may have been on Earth this whole time – not brought in by other meteorites. We’re Talkin’ Science.
We’re bringing you something different – playthroughs of all the retro games we remember from our childhood. First up, Star Trek: Away Team.
Catch our new weekly look at the headlines you need to know about from our favourite scifi tv shows and movies… in our first ep, we’re focusing on the Star Trek universe.
In 2018 we premiered our next live action Star Trek fan film called Once More With Feeling. It “Trek-ifed” the heroic story of the Australian Navy’s HMAS Sydney who valiantly fought a German raider in the Indian Ocean during the second world war. On today’s livestream, we’re taking you back to that fan film.
A tiny asteroid is on it’s way as another one narrowly missed us and French scientists have managed to bounce a laser off the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.
Just before Nichelle Nichols retires after a stellar career, Renegades are giving her a fitting send off with Walter Koenig.
It turns out Ceres is geologically active with a salty ocean beneath the surface… It’s National Science Week and Brad and the team are posing for some satellite selfies…. and Crew-1 delayed again as NASA continues to pour over Demo-2’s mission data.
International researchers suggest that water might have formed a mere 100-200 million years after the Big Bang, far earlier than previously thought, and it might have been a key part of the formation of our universe’s first galaxies.
An accomplished international photographer, Charles Brooks, has captured dazzling new images of one component of the main ring at the Australian Synchrotron and provided an inside view of the electron’s path when it is used. A synchrotron engineer converted radio waves produced in the vacuum chamber into sound files.
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.
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International researchers suggest that water might have formed a mere 100-200 million years after the Big Bang, far earlier than previously thought, and it might have been a key part of the formation of our universe’s first galaxies.
The Varda Space Industries W-2 capsule safely returned to Earth at Southern Launch’s Koonibba Test Range at the end of February. I spoke with Varda
An accomplished international photographer, Charles Brooks, has captured dazzling new images of one component of the main ring at the Australian Synchrotron and provided an inside view of the electron’s path when it is used. A synchrotron engineer converted radio waves produced in the vacuum chamber into sound files.
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.
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