A picture is worth a thousand words, but sometimes it’s far more valuable. The Artemis II crew took hundreds of stellar photos while slingshotting around the moon, using little more than an off-the-shelf Nikon Z9 mirrorless camera. It turns out those images are not only good enough for desktop backgrounds but also for scientific discovery. Researchers from Tokyo City University published a study in June using photographs of a total solar eclipse obtained during the Artemis II lunar flyby to investigate the properties of the F-corona — fancy science-speak for interplanetary dust particles that scatter sunlight when the moon is viewed with the…

Europe is not facing an immediate fuel supply crisis despite renewed tensions in the Middle East, but the continent remains dangerously exposed to fossil fuel supply and price shocks and must rapidly electrify its economy while resisting calls to return to Russian energy, top energy leaders told Euronews. Energy Commissioner…

The number of deaths comes as healthcare workers threaten to walk off the job over a delay in payments.Published On 9 Jul 20269 Jul 2026At least 600 people in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have died from Ebola, as the number of confirmed cases of the illness rose…

Tuesday’s round-of-16 FIFA World Cup match between Egypt and Argentina in Atlanta was perhaps both the tournament’s most controversial game and its most politically consequential.After going up 1-0 against the defending champions, Egypt had a second goal controversially disallowed and its request for video review of an Argentina goal denied.Fans…

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