Co-founder OceanGate relaunches: 1000 people on Venus by 2050
Guillermo Söhnlein, co-founder of OceanGate, overcomes the Titan tragedy that took the life of his partner and aims for a "floating" colony on Venus
Guillermo Söhnlein, co-founder of OceanGate, overcomes the Titan tragedy that took the life of his partner and aims for a "floating" colony on Venus
A tiny probe, a single instrument on board and 5 minutes: the ingredients of the ambitious attempt to find life on Venus in 2023.
NASA presents the mission that aims to reveal the secrets of Venus. DAVINCI will be a formidable flying laboratory, made to resist a descent into the underworld.
A study of the second closest planet to the sun shows that the presence of water within the mantle may be a constant there and elsewhere.
Still new clues and new analyzes reveal (this time permanently) the possibility that Venus can host life among its acid clouds.
Among the projects funded by NASA, an interesting plan to launch a swarm of space kites to explore the surface of Venus.
The signs of alien life on Venus are increasingly detailed: the presence of phosphine excludes (for now) any non-biological hypothesis
Its terrible atmosphere has always prevented direct observations, but the data collected seem to confirm the thesis: there are still active volcanoes on Venus.
A team of scientists speculate that Venus was habitable and housed life until a mysterious planetary catastrophe 700 million years ago.
India's Aditya-L1 mission enters solar orbit, marking an unprecedented space milestone for the nation
Jellyfish, anemones and plants demonstrate that learning is not just a prerogative of the brain. How “thinking” nature works.
A solar system with never-before-seen features offers new insights to astronomers.
A team of researchers works on the creation of an artificial neuron, able to connect to our biological system.
There is a new project proposal to send a solar sail probe to reach and study the Oumuamua space object.
Plants activate short memory mechanisms despite having no brain. Remembering the days of drought they take countermeasures to save water.
The University of Singapore develops an electrode capable of receiving and sending signals to plants: the developments are innumerable.
Never like this year have we searched for aliens and extraterrestrial life. Here's what we learned, what we acquired, what we lost.
There is no shortage of existential threats to life on Earth. How could a modern Noah's Ark be to save our species?
How many Earth-like planets are in our galaxy? The search for celestial bodies in the "habitable" area becomes more precise: shocking numbers.
The largest study of the composition of exoplanets reveals a surprising reality: water on other planets is practically everywhere. Cambridge revolutionizes the search for extraterrestrial life
The world awaits new landings on the moon and then on Mars, but I say: remember the asteroids, here are at least 4 good reasons to do it.