Visitor From Another Solar System
The first asteroid from another solar system was seen flying near Earth.
2.92K
views
Evidence Of A Planet Forming
NASA's Spitzer telescope spots a planet forming near a star in Taurus.
4.27K
views
Mars Dust Storms
Storms on Mars cause problems for the Mars Exploration Rover robotic space mission.
1.53K
views
Fly Through Galaxies
This flythrough uses real images of galaxy clusters from the NASA Hubble Space Telescope.
5.32K
views
Alien Fountains
NASA's Hubble space telescope records fountains on Jupiter's moon Europa
3.29K
views
A Star's Echo
NASA Hubble Telescope records aftermath of a star explosion in the Milky Way.
2.85K
views
Desert Dust From Space
NASA satellite scan reveals giant desert dust clouds across the Earth.
1.41K
views
Climate Change Time Lapse
NASA time lapse video depicting effects of climate change on Arctic ice
12K
views
Cassini's Voyage
NASA video showing the Cassini spacecraft's mission of exploring Saturnian system since 2004
195
views
Greenland's Invisible Grand Canyon
NASA Goddard Space Center depiction of a massive canyon beneath Greenland's ice sheet
4.32K
views
What To Expect Upon Super Blue Blood Moon's Arrival
Nature can be quite the treat. The wonderful blue skies and the almighty sun just breaking through the atmosphere is a godly divine. The skies have always been a mystery to us, although we put lots of effort, time and money towards finding out what lives in the great unknown. We believe that no matter how much time we spend searching through space, that we will always have more to find out and discover.
January sky watchers are in for a rare treat: a Blue Moon, a total lunar eclipse and a "<a href="https://rumble.com/v4aznt-what-is-a-super-blue-moon-eclipse.html" target="_blank">supermoon</a>" all in the same month.
A Blue Moon is when two full moons happen in the same calendar month; lunar eclipses occur when the moon passes into Earth's shadow; and "supermoons" happen when the moon's perigee — its closest approach to Earth in a single orbit — coincides with a full moon. In this case, the "supermoon" also happens to be the day of the lunar eclipse.
The first full moon of January occurred on the night of Jan. 1 or the morning of Jan. 2, depending on your location. The second full moon and the lunar eclipse will occur on the night of Jan. 31 or the morning of Feb. 1. And the "supermoon" will take place on the night of Jan. 30, which is technically one day before the moon reaches peak fullness, but even NASA is willing to call the event a "supermoon" nonetheless.
2.34K
views
NASA Goes Out On A Hunt Mission For Aliens
Footage of NASA's TESS - Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite is on its two year mission. A <a href="https://rumble.com/v4ceor-nasa-space-telescope-spitzer-beyond.html" target="_blank">NASA</a> mission, set to launch by June will continue to try to answer the question “Are we alone?”. TESS short for Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite is designed to look for planets beyond our solar system. Over two years, it will scan the entire sky using four cameras created by MIT and monitor 200,000 + stars for dips in brightness, which would indicate a planet passing in front of the star.TESS is expected to identify over 2,000 exoplanets hundreds of which could be Earth-sized. The data will then allow other missions to further explore which planets could support life.
The principal goal of the TESS mission is to detect small planets with bright host stars in the solar neighborhood, so that detailed characterizations of the planets and their atmospheres can be performed. ESS will monitor the brightness of more than 200,000 <a href="https://rumble.com/v4d1ip-bright-star-trails-across-the-night-sky.html" target="_blank">stars</a> during a two year mission, searching for temporary drops in brightness caused by planetary transits. Transits occur when a planet's orbit carries it directly in front of its parent star as viewed from Earth. TESS is expected to catalog more than 1,500 transiting exoplanet candidates, including a sample of ∼500 Earth-sized and ‘Super Earth’ planets, with radii less than twice that of the Earth. TESS will detect small rock-and-ice planets orbiting a diverse range of stellar types and covering a wide span of orbital periods, including rocky worlds in the habitable zones of their host stars.
81.7K
views
1
comment
Longest Underwater Cave Discovered In Mexico
Humans have gone above and beyond out of there way find out very interesting facts and places on our Earth. We Have flown great heights and dived deep waters and yet still seem to find more and more about our precious Earth.
Man has gone great lengths into the Earths crust to figure what we stand on and how it has effect on us on our daily lives. Although there will always be more to discover and more to see as we have yet to uncover all the secrets this world has to offer.
In this video we have a couple of brave divers that have gone diving in <a href="https://rumble.com/v34cox-bulldogs-parade-through-mexico-city-in-hopes-of-world-record.html" target="_blank">Mexico</a> just to discover the worlds largest underwater cave as we know so far. There is lots of detail in the video where you can learn more about this miraculous discovery.
There will always be brave people such as these divers that will go out of there way to find out about all this <a href="https://rumble.com/v3yjgt-fireball-spotted-falling-to-earth-in-space-station-timelapse.html" target="_blank">Earth</a> has to offer. We like to think of them as heroes as they do risk their lives in order to go beyond what any man has gone to discover yet unknown locations.
Divers in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula say they have discovered the world’s largest underwater cave. This video is quite interesting, it is definitely worth giving it a watch!
3.47K
views
1
comment