Articles for category: Space

blue and red galaxy illustration

Alien Life: What the Search for Extraterrestrials Teaches Us About Earth

Maria Faith Saligumba

The quest to find life beyond our planet has become one of humanity’s most captivating scientific endeavors. Every radio telescope scanning the cosmos, every Mars rover collecting soil samples, and every exoplanet discovery brings us closer to answering the ultimate question: are we alone? But here’s the twist—while we’re busy looking up at the stars, ...

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope Finds Dead Stars 'Polluted with Planet Debris.

The Silent Planets: Why So Many Worlds Are Dead—and Why That Matters

Trizzy Orozco

When you look up at the night sky, you’re staring at a cosmic graveyard. Those twinkling stars illuminate billions of worlds, but the vast majority of them are silent, barren, and utterly lifeless. From the scorching surface of Venus to the frozen wastelands of Mars, our own solar system tells a story of planetary death ...

Neptune’s Supersonic Winds and Frozen Blue Mysteries

Annette Uy

Picture this: a world where winds scream across the surface at speeds that would make a jet fighter look like it’s standing still, where temperatures plummet to depths that would freeze the very air we breathe, and where the entire planet glows with an ethereal blue light that seems almost otherworldly. Welcome to Neptune, the ...

Io: The Moon With 400 Volcanoes and a Molten Heart

Io: The Moon With 400 Volcanoes and a Molten Heart

Trizzy Orozco

Imagine a world where the ground beneath your feet is constantly reshaping itself, where sulfur fountains shoot 300 miles into space, and where the landscape changes faster than any planet in our solar system. This isn’t science fiction—it’s Io, Jupiter’s innermost moon and perhaps the most geologically active body we’ve ever discovered. While Earth’s Mount ...

The Power of Citizen Science

5 Times Citizen Scientists Made Major Contributions to Science

Trizzy Orozco

Picture this: you’re sitting in your backyard, casually observing birds, when suddenly you notice something unusual. Maybe it’s a migration pattern that doesn’t quite match what you’ve read about, or perhaps a species showing up where it shouldn’t be. What if I told you that observation could lead to a groundbreaking scientific discovery? This isn’t ...

The Fermi Paradox Explained – Why Haven’t We Found Aliens Yet?

Annette Uy

Picture this: you’re standing outside on a clear night, looking up at thousands of twinkling stars. Each one of those dots represents a massive sun, potentially hosting planets that could harbor life. With billions of stars in our galaxy alone, and billions of galaxies in the observable universe, the numbers become mind-boggling. Yet despite all ...

Voices from the Field: Rangers, Scientists, and Locals

Breaking the Lab Ceiling: How Women of Color Are Transforming Science

Trizzy Orozco

In laboratories across the globe, a quiet revolution is reshaping the future of scientific discovery. While news headlines often focus on breakthrough technologies and Nobel Prize winners, a more profound transformation is happening beneath the surface. Women of color are breaking through centuries-old barriers, bringing fresh perspectives to research that’s solving humanity’s greatest challenges. From ...