Spacecraft with Antimatter propulsion could reach Earth’s twin in 84 years
The fastest today’s spacecraft would take 74,420 years to reach another solar system, but with antimatter propulsion could reach it in just 84 years.
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The fastest today’s spacecraft would take 74,420 years to reach another solar system, but with antimatter propulsion could reach it in just 84 years.
NASA’s Dawn mission reveals that dwarf planet Ceres hosts an unexpectedly young cryovolcano that formed with the past billion years.
Astronomers observed a cosmic weather event that has never been seen before, on a supermassive black hole.
NASA’s MMS captures Earth’s magnetic reconnection in action. This short video outlines the MMS mission and its first results…
A prototype 13-kilowatt Hall thruster, demonstrated the technology development of high-power solar electric propulsion into a flight-qualified system.
This incredible NASA’s footage from the astronauts on ISS, brings ultra-high definition video to a new level…
A revolutionary concept E-Sail propulsion system that could send spacecraft to the heliopause, the edge of our solar system, faster than ever before, start tests at NASA’s Marshall
Researchers coated a solar cell with a very thin film of graphene, to also produce power by rain.
‘Power paper’ made from organic materials, stores electricity by conducting ions and electrons.
China is planning to build the world largest Particle Collider in 2020, twice the size of CERN’s Large Hadron Collider.