The last time a person visited the moon was in December 1972, during NASA's Apollo 17 mission. Astronauts say the reasons are ...
The icy shell of Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, may possibly contain a six-mile-thick layer of methane ice beneath its surface ...
The strange, sideways-rotating planet – the third largest in our solar system – has always been something of a mystery to ...
It was collected from the largest, deepest and oldest impact crater on the far side of the moon, where the lunar crust is at its thinnest. Visitors to the event will be able to view the samples up ...
If this is really an impact structure, it would be Venus' oldest and largest, giving us a rare glimpse into Venus' past and ...
Scientists believe Saturn's largest moon, Titan, could be one of humanity's best bets to find some form of extraterrestrial ...
This realization led the scientists to rethink the famous moon’s internal structure. “This was very surprising because, based ...
A six-mile-thick crust of methane trapped in water ice could explain many of the saturnian moon's weird properties ...
“If life exists in Titan’s ocean under the thick ice shell, any sign of life, biomarkers, would need to be up Titan’s ice ...
A recent study conducted by planetary scientists at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa suggests that life could potentially ...
But there's something really weird about Venus. Though the hellish world has beautifully preserved impact craters on its ...
New research suggests Saturn’s moon Titan may possess a crust of methane ice that warms its interior, promoting the ...