News

A new study predicts Earth will lose its oxygen in a billion years. Toho University researchers used NASA models for this finding. The sun's aging will cause water evaporation and temperature rise.
Many of us have experienced the small frustrations of Zoom meetings — searching for the unmute button when called upon, dealing with poor video quality, or struggling to share the right document ...
In collaboration with researchers from Toho University in Japan, NASA researchers have used supercomputers to model and determine how long life will remain possible on Earth. The calculated end ...
A Soviet-era spacecraft plunged to Earth on Saturday, more than a half-century after its failed launch to Venus. The European Union Space Surveillance and Tracking confirmed its uncontrolled ...
Our motion tracker has been pointed at Alien: Earth, the Alien franchise's first-ever TV show, for months now. We can confirm that we've detected movement, and, man, this is a big signal!
Just weeks ago, scientists warned that a "city killer" asteroid had a small chance of hitting Earth. While that prediction was thankfully revised, the planet may have to worry about another object ...
NASA scientists, in collaboration with Toho University, predict Earth's habitability will end around the year 1,000,002,021. The Sun's increasing output will make the planet too hot for life.
Helldivers 2 might be getting another update next week to coincide with the battle for Super Earth Third Person Shooter Helldivers 2 is finally adding a sword, and while I'm not soiling my ...
Alien: Earth will bring us a rare sight from the Weyland-Yutani saga. No, I’m not talking about Timothy Olyphant as a non-lawman character, although that fits the bill, too. Instead, this show ...
As the sun ages, rising temperatures will disrupt Earth's climate and ecosystem. Oxygen production will cease as water evaporates and the carbon cycle weakens. A supercomputer simulation by ...
Click play, go full-screen, lean back and enjoy. That's how easy it is now to get lost in the absolutely stunning scape that is our planet Earth from space as it streams live before your eyes.
Scientists have studied Earth's eventual demise for years. Research published in Nature Geoscience by Kazumi Ozaki and Christopher T. Reinhard in 2021 explained Earth eventually won't have enough ...