NASA
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NASA: Water on Mars Lakes Existed Long After the Red Planet Dried Up
Scientists have long known that there was a time water existed in the lakes and streams on Mars. New data recently revealed that the timing is a bit off by roughly a billion years; some of the bodies of water in the planet were found to have formed much later than initially believed.
Latest Research Articles
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Why NASA’s Asteroid Redirect Mission is Important to Making Mars Journey a Reality
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Finding ET: NASA Discuss First Contact with Aliens in the Style of 'Star Trek'
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New Software Traces OSIRIS-REx’s Complex Route to Asteroid Bennu
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Robots of the Red Planet: Meet the Machines Behind NASA’s Mars Exploration
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Antarctica Provides ICE to Study Behavior Effects of Extreme Weather Conditions in Astronauts
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Consequences of Climate Change: Polar Bears to have Shorter Hunting, Breeding Season, NASA Says
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NASA to Conduct Health Checks on Corals of the Great Barrier Reef
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NASA’s Asteroid Mission Gets Help From Canadian Space Instrument
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ALERT: This Year's August was the Hottest One in 136 Years, According to NASA
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International Space Station Astronaut Talks Science with Napa Students
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LOOK: NASA Reveals Rare Closest Images of Jupiter
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NASA’s Asteroid Mission Could Save Earth From Potential Impact