
Space Wine; Burning Up Space Junk & Aussie Launch License : Talkin’ Science
We’re following three pretty big stories this week on Talkin’ Science. As Japan launches a space junk hunter, French wine that spent a year on the space station gets taste
We’re following three pretty big stories this week on Talkin’ Science. As Japan launches a space junk hunter, French wine that spent a year on the space station gets taste
We finally have a peek into the upcoming teen-aimed animated series Star Trek: Prodigy.
Effective immediately, Trekzone has suspended posting to Facebook and Instagram. Get the latest info on where you can officially find us in this special post.
Thanks largely to politics, it appears Trump’s “creation for the ages” – Space Force is here to stay.
Powering ahead in 2021, SpaceX has performed a courier service for clients wanting to get their satellites into orbit at a fraction of the cost.
Axiom Space in conjunction with SpaceX have assembled the first all private crew to head to the International Space Station in the next year.
The world’s most powerful single-port hybrid rocket engine has been test fired at Gilmour Space’s test lab on the Gold Coast. The engine will power the first and second stages of the Eris orbital vehicle which is slated for a 35-kilo payload launch in 2022.
The Hope Mars mission becomes the first in a series of independent missions to the red planet expected to arrive over the coming months.
On January 31 1961, Ham was the first terrestrial being to be launched into orbit and return safely to the Earth.
A pair of Adelaide-based space companies have partnered with the South Australian government to manufacture and launch it’s first cubesat.
The University of Melbourne is honouring 65, 000 years of astronomy with the first Indigenous Astronomy undergraduate course in Australia.
Following the American space agencies successful landing on asteroid Bennu in October last year, the plans for the return voyage of OSIRIS-REx have been announced.
Welcome to the new look Trekzone. The recent server move and upgrade took us down a very bumpy, very long road but we’ve emerged out the other side all the better for the experience.
Several countries sign on to NASA’s Artemis Accords, a new study suggests the moon helped Earth survive the sun’s teenage years and a very close call for two bits of space junk over Antarctica.
Southern Launch Australia is one of a bunch of companies pioneering the Aussie Space Industry and they’re gearing up for a massive 2021. Launch director Alexander Linossier joins Matt for a chat about what the future holds for this Aussie company.
It’s Tuesday September 29 2020. This is Talkin’ Science. Detailed images emerge of M-87’s heart, a supermassive black hole, Artemis is on track for a return to the moon according to NASA and analysing archive data pays off for researchers… finding three salt water lakes on Mars.
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.
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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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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