Space.com on MSN
This giant metal dome will hide a truly colossal telescope mirror | Space photo of the day for Feb. 16, 2026
Straight to the dome.
A fungus aboard the ISS extracted palladium from meteorite rock, hinting at future space mining powered by living microbes.
The album will contain songs by metal bands like Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden and Judas Priest. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Finding resources far from Earth is a well-known spaceflight limitation, but metal-harvesting microbes provide a way to tap ...
The recent study focuses on the amount of lithium left behind from a single rocket reentry. Previous studies have already ...
10don MSN
Space mining without heavy machines? Microbes harvest metals from meteorites aboard space station
If humankind is to explore deep space, one small passenger should not be left behind: microbes. In fact, it would be ...
Can we use fungus to mine precious metals from asteroids?
If the classic video game franchise "Metal Gear" had a love child with 1987's " Predator ," it would look suspiciously like ...
New Scientist on MSN
Atmospheric pollution caused by space junk could be a huge problem
After a Falcon 9 rocket stage burned up in the atmosphere, vaporised lithium and other metals drifted over Europe. This ...
spot on news US on MSN
William Shatner plans heavy metal album
At 94 years old, William Shatner is taking the hardest step of his music career: The "Star Trek" star is working on a heavy ...
Star Trek” legend William Shatner is boldly going where few 94-year-olds have gone before, as the Canadian actor announced plans to release a heavy metal album.
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