One year on this giant, blistering hot planet is just 16 hours long
A newly discovered “ultrahot Jupiter” has the shortest orbit of any known gas giant.
A newly discovered “ultrahot Jupiter” has the shortest orbit of any known gas giant.
Co-Investigator Scientist Professor Richard Binzel discusses NASA’s latest interplanetary mission, which is co-led by Cathy Olkin ’88, PhD ’96.
Not just an exoplanet-finder anymore, TESS yields diverse astrophysics results at second science conference.
Lincoln Laboratory’s TROPICS satellites will help scientists study extreme tropical weather once all six are launched next year.
MIT researchers are co-leading the design of a global Space Sustainability Rating system that will soon be operational.
With thousands of satellites, each network could beam down tens of terabits per second, filling gaps left by land-based services.
Planetary physicist and former director of the MIT Center for Space Research and the Arecibo Observatory helped repurpose military radar technology for science and space exploration.
Student-led efforts preserve iconic campus landmark for future generations of education and research.
Skylo, co-founded by an MIT alumnus, is transforming fishing, farming, and shipping with an inexpensive network for transmitting data through satellites.
Study is first demonstration of a fully 3D-printed thruster using pure ion emission for propulsion.
The US will provide sensors to be hosted on board regional navigation satellites that Japan is developing.
With her students, aerospace engineer Kerri Cahoy is developing small, affordable “CubeSats” to monitor weather and search for exoplanets.
Several of the winning innovations apply artificial intelligence to solutions for challenges to national security.
A colliding star may have triggered the drastic transformation.
Neptune-sized planet may be remnant core of a much larger planet.