Nikola Tesla said he could build, improve, and operate machines in his mind before making them real, and the surprise is what that reveals about imagination — not fantasy or escape, but a private laboratory where the future sometimes arrives first, and not always accurately 2d ago Space Daily · Space Daily Editorial Team
Japan’s H3 to returns to flight with debut launch of lightest configuration 2d ago NASA Spaceflight · William Graham
SpaceX sends 24 Starlink satellites into orbit as market awaits IPO launch (video) 2d ago Space.com · Robert Z. Pearlman Launch ServicesSatellite Communications
Urban birds in a new study let men get about a metre closer than women before flying away, and the mystery is not the distance itself but what the birds are seeing in people that people do not see in themselves 2d ago Space Daily · Space Daily Editorial Team
Did Life Start When Impacts Created Vast Hydrothermal Systems in Earth's Crust? 2d ago Universe Today · Evan Gough
James Webb Space Telescope discovers 'galaxy-killing' wind that may explain why some early galaxies lived fast and died young 2d ago Space.com · Samantha Mathewson
After nearly breaking, NASA's Deep Space Network "worked well" on Artemis II 2d ago Ars Technica Space · Stephen Clark
Most of us think of memory as a record of what actually happened to them, but an influential 2000 model proposes something stranger — that a ‘working self,’ shaped by who we are trying to be now, may quietly decide which pieces of our past we get to retrieve 2d ago Space Daily · Mal James
Don't miss this beautiful 3-planet parade after sunset tonight — it won't last long 3d ago Space.com · Jules-Pierre Malartre
Italy is now losing population so rapidly that by 2050 it is projected to have nearly 5 million fewer residents than today — with a fertility rate that has just hit 1.14 children per woman in 2025, and the lowest annual number of births since the country’s unification in 1861 — and entire villages in southern Italy have begun selling off houses for one euro to anyone willing to move in and stay 3d ago Space Daily · Space Daily Editorial Team
ESA astronaut assignment on Artemis 3 part of negotiations on revised Artemis roles 3d ago SpaceNews · Jeff Foust
Russian scientists in Siberia have brought a 24,000-year-old microscopic animal back to life — a tiny creature called a bdelloid rotifer, frozen in Arctic permafrost since the last Ice Age — and after thawing, it began moving, eating, and reproducing as if no time had passed, in research suggesting that some forms of life can survive in a kind of suspended animation for tens of thousands of years 3d ago Space Daily · Space Daily Editorial Team
SpaceX Set for IPO, Banking on Faith in Elon Musk and Massive AI Growth 3d ago Via Satellite · Rachel Jewett, Jeffrey Hill Launch ServicesSatellite Communications
Meet REMORA: The Autonomous Space Fleet Built to Tag and Track Asteroids 3d ago Universe Today · Andy Tomaswick
The Sahara Desert was a green savanna with rivers, hippos, and giraffes as recently as 6,000 years ago — and within roughly a century, the entire region collapsed into the arid desert we know today, in a climate transition so abrupt that the cave paintings made by people who lived through it survived on rock walls long after the lakes they painted had vanished 3d ago Space Daily · Space Daily Editorial Team
Canada awards $2.4 million for ground-control systems to be used by RADARSAT+ Earth observation satellites 3d ago SpaceQ · Marc Boucher
'Star City''s Agnes O'Casey and Anna Maxwell Martin spill the tea on Soviet severity, fighting for trousers, and furry hats 3d ago Space.com · Jeff Spry