All Science
- First LookGone Bennu hunting: The OSIRIS-REx launch
The goal of NASA's asteroid mission is to bring back a priceless trove of space rocks and data.
- Science NotebookNASA spacecraft on way to asteroid to bring back samples
The 4 billion-mile mission, ending in 2023, could help us learn about the origins of the solar system and protect the planet from future collisions with space rocks.
- We've been looking at giraffes all wrong for 100 years
When geneticists dug into giraffes' genomes, they found something surprising: not just one species of the long-necked animal, but four.
- Police may someday identify suspects by their hair, say scientists
Variations of the proteins found in hair may be as valid an identification method as DNA, say researchers, which could aid in analyzing crime-scene evidence.
- Will teenage tetrapods change the story of leap from sea to land?
A new technique helps scientists bring picture of earliest limbed vertebrates into focus.
- Are there aliens in our backyard? NASA astronaut weighs in.
The discovery of a planet within the habitable zone of a star just 4.22 light-years from our solar system has prompted scientists to speculate that life may exist there. But perhaps we should be looking even closer to home.
- The science behind NASA's asteroid sampling mission
NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is set to launch Thursday, and it promises to deepen our understanding of the origins of our solar system, and, perhaps, life itself.
- First Look After 2,000 years, archaeologists restore Temple Mount tile patterns
Researches say they used geometric principles and similarities found in tile design used by King Herod at other sites to reconstruct the pattern.
- Scientists will be studying NASA’s asteroid samples for decades
Like the Apollo lunar samples, rock from asteroid Bennu could initiate decades of continuous scientific research.
- First LookUS companies pledged to fight climate change, but will they really?
Some of the largest US companies, including Verizon and Google, pledged their support for President Obama's climate policies. A recent study, however, reveals that what those companies do with their political money sends the opposite message.
- NASA's asteroid sampling mission to launch Thursday
The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is set to sample material from the asteroid Bennu in 2018 and return it to Earth in 2023.
- Did a planetary smashup deliver the key ingredients for life?
A recent study suggests that carbon, a key building block of all life on Earth, could have come from a Mercury-sized protoplanet's collision with a young Earth.
- First LookEarth welcomes the return of three astronauts from the ISS
Outgoing International Space Station commander American Jeff Williams and two Russian cosmonauts will plunge back to Earth Tuesday night.
- First LookWhy climate change could be fatal for lizards
Previous studies may have underestimated the risk of climate change to lizards. A 2010 study showed that 20 percent of lizard species would likely be extinct by 2080. Now the researchers say it may be much worse.
- First LookWhat did the 'real' Loch Ness Monster look like?
Scotland's real aquatic 'monster,' an ichthyosaur fossil discovered on the Isle of Skye, has spent decades in storage, waiting for modern technology to help paleontologists understand its mysteries.
- First LookIs climate change generating stronger, more frequent typhoons?
Thanks to ocean warming, over the past 40 years tropical cyclones in East and Southeast Asia have increased – both in strength and frequency, say scientists.
- First LookLost and found: Tiny Philae space probe discovered on comet
After a two-year hunt for the missing Philae spacecraft, scientists now know exactly where the lander ended up on Comet 67P.
- SpaceX explosion: Who pays when rocket launches go awry?
Israel's Space Communication Ltd is seeking reimbursement after a Spacecom satellite was destroyed in the explosion of a SpaceX rocket on Thursday.
- ESA finds lost Philae lander just in time to crash it into a comet
The European Space Agency had begun to lose hope of pinpointing the first space probe to land on a comet.
- First LookMiss the ‘ring of fire’ eclipse? Mark your calendar for the next cosmic light show
For those who missed the September 1 event, there will be more opportunities to observe eclipses in the near future, including a September 16 lunar eclipse visible from some regions of the world.