What Time Is It on the Moon?
Satellite navigation systems for lunar settlements will require local atomic clocks. Scientists are working out what time they will keep
Elizabeth Gibney is a senior physics reporter for Nature magazine.
Satellite navigation systems for lunar settlements will require local atomic clocks. Scientists are working out what time they will keep
Fusion researchers at the U.S. National Ignition Facility created a reaction that made more energy than they put in
Prolific generation of data drove the need for prefixes that denote 1027 and 1030
How, and whether, to keep atomic time in sync with Earth’s rotation is still up for debate
Middle Eastern governments are ramping up their green ambitions ahead of the COP27 climate summit but show few signs of reining in fossil-fuel exports
When Russia invaded Ukraine, many analysts expected an unprecedented level of cyberattacks—which so far haven’t materialized
In the next five years, the nation hopes to launch a robotic craft to an asteroid, two lunar missions and an orbital observatory
Detective work reconstructs the final movements of the European Space Agency’s Philae probe
Researchers have spent decades searching for the elusive particles. A final generation of detectors should leave them no place to hide
Celebration is tinged with relief as $200-million orbiter embarks on 7-month odyssey to the Red Planet
Close-up reveals a surface dancing with ‘campfires’
The United Arab Emirates’ Hope orbiter is the Arab world’s first interplanetary spacecraft — and has jump-started science in the country. Will the momentum last?
European particle-physics lab will pursue a 100-kilometer machine to uncover the Higgs boson’s secrets — but it doesn’t yet have the funds
Physicists have made a Bose–Einstein condensate on the International Space Station—allowing them to probe the mysteries of quantum physics in detail
A reduction in seismic noise because of changes in human activity is a boon for geoscientists
A planetary alignment provides a window to visit Uranus and Neptune—but time is tight
Europe’s space agency is set to receive 45% more money than in the previous three-year budget
The science is immature, and a multipurpose quantum computer doesn’t yet exist. But that isn’t stopping investors from pouring cash into quantum start-ups
The company says that its quantum computer is the first to perform a calculation that would be practically impossible for a classical machine
Canadian telescope finds eight more repeating blasts—energetic events from deep in the cosmos
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