StringersHub on MSN45m
US: Mouse Jumps to Health in New Study, Helping Astronauts Combat Space Travel RisksA new study from Johns Hopkins University suggests that jumping exercises may help astronauts prevent cartilage damage during long space missions to the Moon and Mars, with promising results seen in ...
An aerospace engineer has invented an appliance that can whip up quiches, pizzas and more in a zero-gravity environment ...
You might think sex in space would be an out-of-this-world experience — but low-gravity intimacy may not be as much of a high as it sounds.
Previous research has shown that treadmill running may help slow cartilage breakdown in rodents. The new Johns Hopkins study ...
NASA astronauts Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore's mission at the International Space Station (ISS) has extended from eight ...
NASA's two stuck astronauts may end up back on Earth a little sooner than planned. The space agency said Tuesday that SpaceX ...
There is only one way to experience lunar gravity while still on Earth, or rather a few thousand feet above its surface: on a parabolic flight. In this exclusive mini-documentary, Space.com reporter ...
James Cook’s first voyage of exploration which saw him become the first European to lay eyes on Australia took nearly three ...
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Cornwall Live on MSNSpace tech company looking to build the world's deepest pool in CornwallAs well as looking to build the biggest 'space pool' in the world in Cornwall, Blue Abyss also wants to build a human-rated ...
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PhilStar Global on MSNPure common sense is better than automationI’ve many local examples to prove that a common-sense solution is much better than automation. One case is the Bureau of Immigration. In 2008, the bureau, in its attempt to thwart human traffickers in ...
“We [will be able to] move quickly and map out very large areas of the sky,” adds Josh Schlieder, the telescope’s wide-field ...
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