https://twitter.com/nasaspaceflight/status/2060164928472854821 #reusablerocket #BlueOrigin #gravitywins #spacehumor #aerospaceengineering #HackerNews #ngated
Mr. Moon pretending to be beautiful while casually ruining this Eta Aquarids meteor shower like a cosmic attention seeker.
#MeteorShower #Moon #Astronomy #NightSky #spacehumor
Read our Article on meteor shower : https://formulon.blog/2025/11/20/the-great-meteor-shower-experience/
Illustration credits : @athikan_s_u
Gleich geht es los! Wir sind mege aufgeregt und haben schon ein bisschen Bammel vor dem Start! 😱Aber Artemis 2 ist ein gutes Baby, die wird uns safe zum Mond bringen! Leute, wir haben ein Date mit dem Mann im Mond!
#Artemis2 #NASA #MissionMoon #ZumMond #MoonMission #Mondflug #SpaceMission #Raumfahrt #NextStopMoon #BackToTheMoon #AstronautLife #Weltraum #MoonVibes #CountdownZumStart #LaLeLu #DerMannImMond #SpaceHumor #WirHebenAb #ToTheMoon #TeamMond #WAL
(Foto mit KI erstellt)
I’m fairly certain this violates federal law (51 U.S.C. § 50911) regarding obtrusive space advertising.
To whoever is responsible: I'm grateful for a promo, but please take this down. The stars aren't a billboard.
(Photo credit: JWST, NASA, ESA)

Le vice-president américain JD Vance a été franc sur les OVNIs et les extraterrestres. Dans une interview avec le podcaster conservateur Benny Johnson, Vance a été franc sur le fait qu’il n’est pas certain que les événements OVNIs soient relís à des extraterrestres. Selon Vance, la réponse est plus proche d’une question spirituelle.
Did you hear about the restaurant on the moon? Great food, no atmosphere. 🌕
Did you hear about the restaurant on the moon? Great food, no atmosphere. 🚀🌕
The number of objects in orbit is rapidly increasing, primarily driven by the launch of megaconstellations, an approach to satellite constellation design that involves large numbers of satellites paired with their rapid launch and disposal. While satellites provide many benefits to society, their use comes with challenges, including the growth of space debris, collisions, ground casualty risks, optical and radio-spectrum pollution, and the alteration of Earth's upper atmosphere through rocket emissions and reentry ablation. There is potential for current or planned actions in orbit to cause serious degradation of the orbital environment or lead to catastrophic outcomes, highlighting the urgent need to find better ways to quantify stress on the orbital environment. Here we propose a new metric, the CRASH Clock, that measures such stress in terms of the timescale for a possible catastrophic collision to occur if there are no satellite manoeuvres or there is a severe loss in situational awareness. Our calculations show the CRASH Clock is currently 5.5 days, which suggests there is limited time to recover from a wide-spread disruptive event, such as a solar storm. This is in stark contrast to the pre-megaconstellation era: in 2018, the CRASH Clock was 164 days.