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Despite being known as the Red Planet, Mars shows off its swirling yellows, oranges and browns in a new satellite photo from ...
11dOpinion
Space.com on MSNIs Mars really red? A physicist explains the planet’s reddish hue and why it looks different to some telescopesYour blood is also red because of a mixture of iron and oxygen in a molecule called hemoglobin. So in a way, the ancient ...
1d
Live Science on MSNDoes Mars have a moon?One summer night in 1877, American astronomer Asaph Hall was looking through his telescope in Washington, D.C. Mars was at ...
NASA's Curiosity rover finds strange rock formations on Mars. These look like spiderwebs. The rover spots these on Mount ...
Curiosity finds strange boxwork ridges on Mars that hint at ancient underground water. Scientists are now drilling for ...
If you looked at the churning clouds near Jupiter’s pole, they appear like ocean currents on Earth — as if you’re looking at ...
1dOpinion
Space.com on MSNEarly visions of Mars: Meet the 19th-century astronomer who used science fiction to imagine the red planetThe second half of the 19th century was a particularly interesting time to imagine Mars. This was a period during which the ...
After nearly 20 years of operations, NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) is on a roll, performing a new maneuver to ...
NASA’s Perseverance rover faced a challenging Mars rock named “Kenmore,” revealing valuable insights into Martian geology.
People from cultures across the world have been looking at Mars since ancient times. Because it appears reddish, it has often ...
Nearly a decade’s worth of data went into the first direct observation of sputtering on Mars, which researchers believe ...
Mars isn’t a bright, fire-engine red, but the iron oxide in its rocks makes it appear redder than other planets, especially from afar.
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