SCIENCE

Top scientist admits space telescope image was actually a slice of chorizo

Top scientist admits space telescope image was actually a slice of chorizo

A French scientist has apologized after tweeting a photo of a slice of chorizo, claiming it was an image of a distant star taken by the James… Read more

Drought sluggish Mississippi River make small dead zone

Drought sluggish Mississippi River make small dead zone

 Drought made the Mississippi River sluggish and led to a smaller than average dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico — an area where… Read more

New device will investigate Milky Ways origins

New device will investigate Milky Ways origins

Scientists have supercharged one of Earth's most powerful telescopes with new technology that will reveal how our galaxy formed in unprecedented… Read more

Uncontrolled return to Earth raises concern

Uncontrolled return to Earth raises concern

Debris from a Chinese rocket is expected to crash to Earth in an uncontrolled re-entry this weekend.

The probability of it landing in any populated… Read more

Chinese astronauts successfully enter lab module

Chinese astronauts successfully enter lab module

Three Chinese astronauts aboard the country’s space station, currently under construction, have successfully entered the lab module on Monday,… Read more

Eerie glow in sky confuses Australian town and outs cannabis farm

Eerie glow in sky confuses Australian town and outs cannabis farm

When a pink glow lit up the evening sky above an Australian town on Wednesday, local woman Tammy Szumowski wondered if the apocalypse had arrived.

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Scientists develop microrobots that surround a cancer cell and kill it

Scientists develop microrobots that surround a cancer cell and kill it

Researchers at the Physical Intelligence Department of Max Planck Institute in Germany have made a breakthrough that can help fight cancer. Reportedly,… Read more

High-flying experiment: Do stem cells grow better in space

High-flying experiment: Do stem cells grow better in space

Researcher Dhruv Sareen’s own stem cells are now orbiting the Earth. The mission. To test whether they’ll grow better in zero gravity.

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