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Artemis Delayed; Peregrine Leakes And A Brown Dwarf With Aurora…
It’s Wednesday the 10th of January 2024, these are the science and space headlines you need to know now… The first Commercial Lunar Payload is doomed to fail, following a
It’s Wednesday the 10th of January 2024, these are the science and space headlines you need to know now… The first Commercial Lunar Payload is doomed to fail, following a
The Axanar story deepens, Potemkin’s no fundraising call sparks fake outrage and Discovery season five gets episode titles on this edition of The Trekzone Breakdown — welcome to 2024!
Our rebroadcast of the Robservations podcast with Paul Jenkins discussing the Axanar financials that he and others (including Trekzone) have acquired with the help of our sources.
It’s been a year. Our twentieth. Now, as it draws to a close – lets look back at what we reckon are the best of the year… All this, as
It’s Friday, December 22 2023, these are the science and space headlines you need to know now. Equatorial Launch Australia unveil a new launch pad design. Celebrating twenty five years
Today – three months on from the complete disproving of Alec’s version of events during the Altercation in Atlanta … Dean Newbury is back to break down the latest ramblings
00:00 – Opener00:06 – Unfinished Business from @MrBnetV00:23 – Can’t Stop from @FSFilmCZ00:44 – O Tenenbaum from @Potemkin171100:53 – 13 Days to Go01:02 – #StopToxicFandom01:54 – Prime Directive Cracks 10k02:21
The most anticipated fan film of the year is the one marching to their own beat… the one daring to take a chance on something well outside their comfort zone
Spirit Launches, a multi-national cooperation gets underway in polar orbit. Meet Roo-ver – Australia’s first lunar rover, set to be launched by NASA for Artemis. And Blue Origin’s fifteen month
Headlines this week: The Best of 2023 Without Needing A SandboxChris Lea’s TeasersPotemkin Pictures’ Latest RatingsAll Singing, All Dancing from FSFilmSupanova’s Counting Down To #100Once Again, For The Cheap Seats
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
Researchers from the Curtin node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research say they have made a record-breaking astrophysical discovery while simultaneously uncovering a possible explanation for the rare and extreme event known as long-period radio transients.
The Voyager 2 flyby of Uranus in 1986 may have occurred during a rare intense wind event, according to international researchers who say this means our scientific understanding of the planet may be flawed.
Astronauts perform tasks slower in space, but a new study involving 25 professional astronauts has found no evidence of brain damage once they returned to Earth.
Overseas researchers report new evidence suggesting the Moon is older than we previously thought thanks to a ‘remelting’ of the Moon’s surface around 4.35 billion years ago that may have masked a far older history.
New Curtin University-led research has uncovered what may be the oldest direct evidence of ancient hot water activity on Mars, revealing the planet may have been habitable at some point in its past.
Two new stars have been found dancing near the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole, according to international researchers, who say the binary star system was predicted to be there but has escaped detection until now.
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It’s the end of the third week in February twenty twenty five. Here’s the science and space headlines we followed…
Researchers from the Curtin node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research say they have made a record-breaking astrophysical discovery while simultaneously uncovering a possible explanation for the rare and extreme event known as long-period radio transients.
The Voyager 2 flyby of Uranus in 1986 may have occurred during a rare intense wind event, according to international researchers who say this means our scientific understanding of the planet may be flawed.
Astronauts perform tasks slower in space, but a new study involving 25 professional astronauts has found no evidence of brain damage once they returned to Earth.
Overseas researchers report new evidence suggesting the Moon is older than we previously thought thanks to a ‘remelting’ of the Moon’s surface around 4.35 billion years ago that may have masked a far older history.
New Curtin University-led research has uncovered what may be the oldest direct evidence of ancient hot water activity on Mars, revealing the planet may have been habitable at some point in its past.
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