Latest NASA News | Page 5

Is Mars really red? A physicist explains the planet’s reddish hue and why it looks different to some telescopes
A 3-tonne, $1.5 billion satellite to watch Earth’s every move is set to launch this week
Magnetic Field Of Sun In State Of Turmoil
Creative Dialogues Port Kembla offers room to grow – Wollongong
Space scholarships for seven university students
Uncertainty at NASA − Trump withdraws his nominee for administrator while the agency faces a steep proposed budget cut
Astronomers gain unprecedented insight into the formation of a planet 850 lightyears away
New model helps to figure out which distant planets may host life
Study Finds Coastal Flooding More Frequent Than Previously Thought
Webb Reveals Origin Of Ultra-hot Exoplanet WASP-121b
Swinburnes Space Stars On Show At Parliament House
X-rays have revealed a mysterious cosmic object never before seen in our galaxy
Cosmic mystery deepens as astronomers find object flashing in both radio waves and X-rays
Innovation Made By Max Planck
A decade after the release of ‘The Martian’ and a decade out from the world it envisions, a planetary scientist checks in…
Ready for space travel? GENESTAR can track how space affects your health
Do photons wear out? An astrophysicist explains light’s ability to travel vast cosmic distances without losing energy
Space tourism’s growth blurs the line between scientific and symbolic achievement – a tourism scholar explains how
In what order did the planets in our solar system form?
Landing on the Moon is an incredibly difficult feat − 2025 has brought successes and shortfalls for companies and space agencies
Taking Close Look At Asteroid
QUT robotics education pioneer honoured with global award
Energy-Efficient Harvesting of Brassica rapa for Phytonutrients and Biomass
Why collect asteroid samples? 4 essential reads on what these tiny bits of space rock can tell scientists
Right now, space law doesn’t protect historical sites, mining operations and bases on the Moon – a space lawyer describes a framework that could
As Donald Trump Cuts Funding To Antarctica, Will US Be Forced Off Icy Continent?
Meteorites and marsquakes hint at an underground ocean of liquid water on the Red Planet
FAO Wins Prize For Geospatial Project In Zimbabwe
Spacecraft can ‘brake’ in space using drag − advancing craft agility, space safety and planetary missions
Ancient Mars may have had a carbon cycle − a new study suggests the red planet may have once been warmer, wetter…
‘Let us know you’re safe’ – Police concerned for missing man
Billion-year-old impact in Scotland sparks questions about life on land
‘Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence’ − an astronomer explains how much evidence scientists need to claim discoveries like extraterrestrial life
Scientists claim to have found evidence of alien life. But ‘biosignatures’ might hide more than they reveal
Fossil fuel companies ‘poisoned the well’ of public debate with climate disinformation. Here’s how Australia can break free
Scientists found a potential sign of life on a distant planet – an astronomer explains why many are still skeptical
Dark energy may have once been ‘springier’ than it is today − DESI cosmologists explain what their collaboration’s new measurement says about…
Why the meteorites that hit Earth have less water than the asteroid bits brought back by space probes – a planetary scientist…
Trump’s nomination for NASA leader boasts business and commercial spaceflight experience during a period of uncertainty for the agency
TRISH seeks brain pressure measurement proposals for space
Stars Align For International Rover Challenge Winners
West Lafayette, IN: Plant growth and development respond to all wavelengths of the broad-band solar
Advanced materials research in microgravity earns NASA recognition
Swinburnes Spotlight on STEM: A Night of Space Innovation with Shelli Brunswick
Clearest images yet of 380,000-year-old baby universe released
First comprehensive data release of Euclid space telescope 
Doctor Is In Ice House
As the rescued astronauts return, space law is still in orbit over who’s responsible when missions go wrong