Why NASA’s Artemis II astronauts are carrying the names of 5.6 million people to the Moon |

When NASA launches Artemis II, the spacecraft will carry far more than a crew of four astronauts. Alongside critical systems and experiments, it will also transport a digital archive containing the names of over 5.6 million people from around the world. Collected through NASA’s “Send Your Name to the Moon” campaign, these names represent a…

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Nasa Artemis II Rocket Launch: How to watch Artemis II launch live on April 1: Full timing, streaming details, and crew information |

NASA’s Artemis II mission will allow humanity to return to the lunar frontier as we near the end of decades-long silence (since the Apollo era). Launching from Kennedy Space Centre on April 1, 2026, this historic mission will be the first crewed Luna flight in more than 50 years; it will be a long-duration (10-day)…

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Electricity from sweat: Scientists develop sweat sensors and their future in personal health monitoring looks bright |

Imagine a world where your fitness tracker or smart watch never needs to be recharged, not because it has a battery that never dies, but simply because your body provides the power it needs to function. In a breakthrough scientific achievement, a group of Japanese scientists have created a wearable device that uses the electricity…

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SWOT satellite captures hidden early tsunami signals from the 2025 Kamchatka earthquake |

A recent study linked to a powerful earthquake near Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula has offered a closer look at how tsunamis begin beneath the ocean surface. Using data from the SWOT (satellite) mission, researchers were able to detect subtle wave patterns forming close to the earthquake source. These signals carry clues about how the seafloor shifted…

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Scientists discover a hidden ocean 700 kilometres beneath Earth that may be bigger than all oceans |

Earth’s internal structure continues to reveal details that reshape established scientific explanations about the planet’s formation. One such development concerns the origin and distribution of water. For decades, the dominant explanation suggested that water was delivered to Earth by icy comets during its early history. Geological and seismic research, however, presents a more intricate picture….

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