
Satellite Images May Help Predict Underwater Eruptions
Anew study has suggested using satellite images of sea discoloration as a new predictor of an impending underwater volcanic eruption.

Tidal Forces Cause Icequakes on Enceladus
New research has examined just how the tidal forces affect the surface ice of Enceladus, cracking it and even causing geysers of water.

High Amounts of Methane Found at Enceladus
Researchers used mathematical models to try to understand the reason for the large amount of methane found in the plumes of Enceladus by the Cassini spacecraft.

New Research May Bring the Universe Into Cohesion
A new review paper by renowned physicist Wendy Freedman reveals that the gap in the measurements used in the Standard Model is closing as measurements improve.

Galaxies Travel on Mass Threads
Observations describe an active galaxy that has two large jets streaming out of its central supermassive black hole and getting bent to stream behind the galaxy.

Cloud of Gas Found Lurking in Galaxy Cluster
Recent observations of the Leo Cluster (Abel 1367) to reveal faint structures of the system found a small, warm gas cloud as well.

Methane on Mars Collects at Night
Mars Curiosity detected methane while orbiting satellites did not, and new research proclaims both results are correct due to differences between night and day.

This Week in Rocket History: STS-71
This week in rocket history we look back at the STS-71 mission, the first time a spacecraft docked at another nation’s space station.

Asteroid Day: Robotic Missions Abound!
Our coverage of Asteroid Day 2021 continues with a look at the Hayabusa2 and OSIRIS-REx sample return missions as well as the upcoming DART mission.

Routine ISS Resupply Launch Brings Food, Experiments
On June 29 at 23:27 UTC, a Russian Soyuz 2.1a launched the Progress MS-17 cargo resupply to the ISS, carrying food, tools, experiments and propellant.