Space News & Blog Articles

Tune into the SpaceZE News Network to stay updated on industry news from around the world.

Lunchables will launch kids to space camp with limited 'Lunchabuilds' kits

A rocket-shaped stack of cheese and crackers could now launch your kid on a real-life space adventure.

Brown Dwarfs are Probably Much More Common in the Milky Way Than Previously Believed

Brown dwarfs are strange things. They are in the middle ground between planets and stars. A star is defined as an object massive enough for helium to fuse into hydrogen into its core, while a planet is too small for core fusion to occur. It seems a simple distinction until you learn about fusion. Anything with a mass below about 13 Jupiters is too small for fusion to occur, and is thus a planet. If your mass is about about 80 Jupiters, then you can fuse helium and are therefore a star. But if your mass is between 13 and 80 Jupiters, things get interesting. You can’t fuse hydrogen to shine brightly, but you can fuse lithium into other elements. This is known as lithium burning. It doesn’t provide lots of energy, but it is technically nuclear fusion.

Continue reading

A quarter of sunlike stars eat their own planets, according to new research

How rare is our solar system? In the 30 years or so since planets were first discovered orbiting stars other than our sun, we have found that planetary systems are common in the galaxy.

Inspiration4 astronauts to conduct health research on private SpaceX mission

The private astronauts of Inspiration4 will be helping to expand our understanding of how space affects the human body on their mission around Earth.

NASA's 'quiet' X-59 supersonic plane is coming together as space agency chases faster flight

NASA engineers are building a next-generation supersonic plane that will produce a barely audible thump instead of the infamous boom that can rattle furniture and break glass.

Summer Triangle Overhead

The calendar might say “September,” but now is the perfect time to explore the Summer Triangle. Find your way with this month's Sky Tour podcast.

Continue reading

China Wants to Build a Spaceship That’s Kilometers Long

It’s no secret that China has become a major contender when it comes to spaceflight. In the past twenty years, the China National Space Agency (CNSA) has accomplished some historic firsts. This includes sending astronauts to space, deploying three space stations (as part of the Tiangong program), developing heavy launch vehicles (like the Long March 5), and sending robotic explorers to the far side of the Moon and Mars.

Continue reading

3D-printed lunar floor

Image: 3D-printed lunar floor

Three galaxies are tearing each other apart in stunning new Hubble telescope image

We're getting a bird's-eye view of some of the damage Ida has wrought, thanks to before-and-after photos snapped by Maxar Technologies' WorldView-2 satellite.

Satellites track huge Tropical Storm Ida at night from space (photos)

Powerful eyes in the sky watched the menacing maelstrom Ida churn through the southern United States, even at night.

The US Space Force's secretive X-37B space plane: 10 surprising facts

Learn all about the U.S. Space Force's robotic X-37B space plane, which has flown six mystery missions to date.

The launch of NASA's new Landsat 9 satellite has been delayed by a liquid nitrogen shortage

The launch of NASA's Earth-observing Landsat 9 satellite will be delayed a week due to a shortage of liquid nitrogen.

NASA’s hopes waning for SLS test flight this year

In this July 28 photo, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson views the Space Launch System for the Artemis 1 mission inside the Vehicle Assembly Building. Credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett

The earliest NASA’s first Space Launch System moon rocket could roll out from the Vehicle Assembly Building to its seaside launch complex in Florida is in late November, officials told Spaceflight Now, leaving little time to conduct a critical fueling test, roll the rocket back into the VAB for final closeouts, then return to the pad for liftoff before the end of the year.

Continue reading

Archivist's vintage 'Images of Apollo' photo prints land on auction

By entangling the motion and quantum properties of a beryllium crystal, scientists have achieved unprecedented precision for measuring electromagnetic waves.

Webb’s Ariane 5 gains upper stage

Fans may have had limited access to U.S. Open tennis tournaments over the last year and a half, but at least they can view it from space.

China wants its new rocket for astronaut launches to be reusable

NASA is looking for student teams to enter its TechRise Student Challenge, which tasks students in grades six through 12 with designing experiments to launch on a suborbital spaceflight.

About Space.com: Who we are and how to contact us

Humanity is feeling the effects of climate change around the world, but could climate change make humans go extinct?

Pandemic-caused liquid oxygen shortage impacts launch schedules

In this file photo from 2017, several Praxair tanker trucks deliver liquid oxygen to launch pad 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett

The effects of a nationwide liquid oxygen shortage caused by the recent spike in hospitalized coronavirus patients has already delayed the launch of a Landsat imaging satellite by a week, and threatens to impact more missions from launch sites in Florida and California.

Continue reading

'Jett: The Far Shore,' a new space adventure game, is 20% off until Oct. 5

Explore a mythic ocean planet to carve out a future for a community haunted by oblivion.

Satellite tracks vicious Caldor Fire spread in California in time-lapse video

NOAA's GOES 17 satellite has captured this video of Caldor Fire as the blaze spread south of Lake Tahoe and forced the evacuation of tens of thousands of residents.

'Radio colors' from mysterious deep-space flashes reveal lone stellar corpse as source

Mysterious repeating pulses of radio waves may come from a hitherto unknown kind of extraordinarily powerful cosmic magnet, and not pairs of stars as previously suggested, a new study finds.


SpaceZE.com