Kendall Myers is a Senior Author with Collider. As part of the TV and Movies Features team, she writes about some of the most popular releases before, during, and after they premiere. In three years, ...
In 2014, development began on Lost in Space, a modern reboot of an iconic television science fiction series from the 1960s. Rather than a broadcast or cable network, Netflix won the rights for it just ...
For 24 hours a day, seven days a week since November 2000, NASA and its international partners have sustained a continuous human presence in low-Earth orbit, including at least one American – a streak ...
John M. Horack receives extramural research funding from NASA, Voyager Technologies, and other spaceflight-related sources, as part of his work as a Professor at The Ohio State University. For 24 ...
The International Space Station (ISS) may never again be visited by a space plane. NASA's space shuttle orbiters were instrumental in building the ISS, and in keeping it operational for its first ...
China remains America’s top threat in space and is catching up to the U.S. military’s space capabilities at an “incredible pace,” a top Space Force general said. Here, a visitor takes photos of ...
On Episode 178 of This Week In Space, Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik are joined by Terry Virts, a former shuttle and ISS astronaut. There's a very elite club in astronaut circles, one in which former ...
There are stories that are told with every generation, there will always be a Bond, a Robin Hood, and a Spider-Man, but for some reason, Hollywood keeps trying with Lost in Space, the sci-fi take off ...
The curious minds at ColdFusion investigate the mysterious death of the first human in space. FDA expands warning of radioactive shrimp as two more brands recalled Trump Considers Declaring National ...
From the moment we could look up to the skies, humanity has dreamt of what’s up there. And once we got there, how could we master it? And now that we’re there all the time, how can we use it? In 2025, ...
Cosmic dust—the tiny particles that help form stars, planets and the chemical building blocks of life—might be much spongier and fluffier than long assumed, according to an international group of ...