Morning Overview on MSN
Why anyone who lands on Mars may never return to Earth
Anyone who steps onto Mars will be crossing a one-way threshold in more ways than one. The physics of getting there and back, ...
Live Science on MSN
Einstein was right: Time ticks faster on Mars, posing new challenges for future missions
Clocks on Mars tick faster by about 477 microseconds each Earth day, a new study suggests. This difference is significantly more than that for our moon, posing potential challenges for future crewed ...
Scientists have found that time passes slightly faster on Mars than on Earth, a difference caused by gravity and orbital motion that could affect future human missions, space navigation systems and ...
The Earth's climate has been changing for millions of years under the influence of the gravity of neighboring planets. A new study has shown that even the small planet Mars has a significant impact on ...
Regtechtimes on MSN
Study explains how Mars’ gravity subtly influences Earth’s long-term climate cycles through orbital changes
The idea that Mars could affect Earth’s climate sounds dramatic, since climate change is usually linked to cars, factories, ...
Mars clocks tick 477 microseconds faster per Earth day, complicating future missions and interplanetary timekeeping.
While Mars doesn't directly control Earth's climate, its gravity subtly influences our planet's orbit and tilt over vast ...
ESA images show a large meteoroid strike on Apollinaris Mons, leaving more than 100 mysterious moving dust marks on Mars.
ISS microgravity experiments reveal how particles cluster, helping science on Earth and future space missions.
Engineers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison uncovered a critical flaw in how lunar and Martian rovers are tested on Earth. Simulations revealed that test results have been misleading for decades ...
Built to last, NASA’s Perseverance rover continues its long journey across Mars, collecting samples and revealing the ...
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