On average, Martian time ticks roughly 477 millionths of a second faster than terrestrial clocks per Earth day. But the Red ...
Airlines rarely announce how much water they carry; excess potable water adds weight, but little water is no good either.
The Asian Development Bank and World Bank study finds that since the 2008 global financial crisis, Asian economies have ...
The idea that Mars could affect Earth’s climate sounds dramatic, since climate change is usually linked to cars, factories, ...
Even worse, the orbit of Mars is elliptical (think of a slight oval rather than a perfect circle), which means that sometimes ...
Clocks on Mars tick faster by about 477 microseconds each Earth day, a new study suggests. This difference is significantly ...
These three forces—intelligence, elasticity, and connection—are converging into a new operating model for marketing. AI is ...
With new technologies comes new discoveries. Or so Spider Man's Uncle Ben might have said if he was an astronomer. Or a ...
Reactors designed to produce energy from the fusion of atoms could have an unexpected scientific side benefit.
New measurements using gravitational lensing suggest the universe’s current expansion rate does not agree with signals from ...
Time moves differently on Mars. NIST physicts recently calculated exactly how fast each second passes on Mars. And if humans want to explore the solar system, every microsecond counts.
According to a NASA study, Saturn's moon Titan may be the most fantastically large slushie of all time. Based on a reexamination of data from the Cassini probe collected in 2012, the moon's ...