A series of videos to uncover the natural forces & innovations impacting our lives, our planet and our universe.
There are plenty of reasons why Venus gets called Earth’s evil twin.
The planet’s got scorching temperatures, a poisonous atmosphere, and crushing pressures, but it also may have been habitable at one time.
In Part 1 of this series about Venus, our host Julian Huguet explores how the planet next door turned into a hellscape.
Venus is hell today, and we’ve got hard evidence to back up that idea.
However, thanks to sci-fi, for a long time, people actually thought Venus might be a paradise under its thick clouds.
In this episode, we examine how our thoughts of the planet evolved over time.
Why does it feel like Venus is suddenly everywhere in the news?
Maybe it’s because of a controversial study suggesting life could exist in the clouds or because the planet offers a glimpse at what happens when the climate gets out of control.
Perhaps it’s actually something else.
In the third and final episode about Venus, host Julian Huguet explains why the planet is back in the spotlight again.
NASA recently announced it will decommission the ISS by 2030.
But what's the plan for getting the football-field-sized station back to Earth?
Many of the U.S.'s most iconic rocket launches have taken place in a region on Florida's coast.
But what makes this area such a great place for lift off?
Now What?!
For the first time ever, scientists at CERN have spotted a bizarre “X" particle in a recreation of the primordial soup that existed just moments after the Big Bang, using the LHC.
Did water crash into Earth from space by way of a massive comet, or was it around long before our planet's formation?
Here’s How
The Parker Solar Probe just made a historic flyby of the Sun.
For the first time, the satellite passed through the Alfvén Critical Surface, which is where the Sun's atmosphere ends.