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The Effects of Outer Space on Hair Growth

Hair does not stop being hair in orbit. It still follows the same biological cycle seen on Earth, with follicles moving through growth, transition, rest, and shedding. Hair follicles are affected by metabolism, hormones, inflammation, immune activity, skin condition, light exposure, sleep timing, nutrition, and stress. Long missions in low Earth orbitdisturb each of those inputs to some degree, which is why the question is more complicated than asking whether zero gravity makes hair grow faster or slower.

Where Is the Center of the Universe?

The question feels like something a child might ask on a clear night, staring at a sky crowded with stars. Where is the middle of all of this? The answer, when it arrives, has a way of unsettling people: there isn't one. Or, more precisely, every point in the universe could legitimately claim to be the center, which turns out to mean the same thing as there being no center at all.

Top Rated Books about the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Available on Amazon

In 1960, Project Ozma pointed a radio telescope at Tau Ceti and Epsilon Eridani. The result was silence. That silence did not end the search for extraterrestrial intelligence , but it did establish one of the field’s lasting features: a scientific program can produce no detection for decades and still grow in method, scope, and seriousness.

What is Fractional Orbital Bombardment, and Why Is It Important?

On 25 August 1969, the Soviet Union placed a regiment of R-36O missiles on duty at Baikonur Cosmodrome , giving the world its only known operational fractional orbital bombardment system, usually shortened to FOBS. It was not a science-fiction device and not a paper study. It was a deployed nuclear delivery system built to send a warhead into low Earth orbit, or close enough to orbital flight for strategic purposes, and then force it back down before it completed a full circuit of the planet.

Highly Rated Books About Launch Vehicle Engineering Available on Amazon

In March 2026, Wiley lists a tenth edition of Rocket Propulsion Elements . That single detail says a great deal about launch vehicle engineering as a field. Rockets have changed, launch cadence has changed, private capital has changed, reusability has moved from experiment to routine in part of the market, and new heavy-lift vehicles have entered service. Yet the underlying engineering problems have not been swept away. Propellant choice, chamber pressure, nozzle expansion, structural mass fraction, staging logic, guidance margins, thermal loads, manufacturing limits, and test discipline still decide whether a launcher works, how much payload it can carry, and whether it can do the job more than once.

China’s Space Program Past, Present, and Future

In June 2024, Chang’e-6 returned the first samples ever collected from the far side of the Moon. By March 2026, Tiangong was in regular operation, Tianwen-2 was already on its way after launching in May 2025, and China’s crewed lunar hardware had moved from broad concept art into named vehicles, completed system tests, and expanding ground infrastructure at Wenchang Space Launch Site .

What Specifications Does a Space Telescope Need to See the Earliest Light in the...

The universe began roughly 13.8 billion years ago in an event known as the Big Bang. For the first 380,000 years after that moment, the cosmos was a dense, searing plasma in which photons couldn't travel more than a short distance before colliding with free electrons and scattering away. There was light everywhere, but it was imprisoned.

The World’s Operational ICBMs: A 2026 Assessment

A single intercontinental ballistic missile launched from an underground silo in the American plains can strike Moscow in roughly 30 minutes. That arithmetic has defined every major power's foreign policy since the 1960s, and as of March 2026, the arithmetic has not changed. What has changed is the roster of nations holding this capability, the specific hardware each deploys, and the degree to which decades-old arms control frameworks still constrain those arsenals.

Ursa Major Company Profile

Ursa Major is no longer best understood as a startup trying to sell engines into a crowded launch market. That description fit the company a few years ago, when its public story leaned heavily on outsourced propulsion for small and medium launch vehicles. By March 2026, the evidence points somewhere else. Ursa has become a propulsion company with real flight heritage in hypersonics, a growing role in tactical and defense propulsion, a widening solid rocket motor business, and a smaller but still relevant launch-engine portfolio that now sits beside in-space mobility and space-based defensework.

The Highest-Rated Books on Cosmology Available on Amazon

Cosmology is the branch of physics concerned with the origin, structure, evolution, and eventual fate of the universe taken as a whole. Its subject matter ranges from the first fractions of a second after the Big Bang, when the universe was a seething plasma smaller than an atomic nucleus, to the trillion-year timescales over which matter will eventually dissipate into cold dark silence. Between those extremes lie some of the most counterintuitive ideas in all of science: spacetime that curves around mass, an expansion driven by an energy no one has directly measured, and quantum fluctuations so small they can barely be imagined yet so consequential they seeded every galaxy that exists today.

Emerging Markets Defining the Future of the Space Industry 2026

The commercial space industry is not one market. It never was. What's happening right now is the fragmentation of a sector that spent sixty years as a government monopoly into dozens of distinct, occasionally overlapping, and sometimes competing sub-markets. Some of these markets are already generating billions in annual revenue. Others are compelling on paper but haven't turned a profit anywhere. And a handful are so speculative that the companies pursuing them might be operating in 2050 or might not exist by 2030.

Why Scientists Still Cannot Agree on How Fast the Universe Is Expanding

The argument is about the Hubble constant , usually written as H0. It expresses the present-day expansion rate of the universe in kilometers per second for every megaparsec of distance. In plain terms, it asks how much faster a faraway galaxy appears to recede when it is another 3.26 million light-years farther away.

Feature Specification for “OVERWATCH”: A Service for Emerging Economies Defense, Security, and Intelligence Organizations

The specification that follows describes OVERWATCH as a specific, named service targeting a specific set of customers: defense ministries, border security agencies, maritime security organizations, national intelligence services, and commercial intelligence firms operating in emerging economies. That framing is deliberate and commercially useful, but it risks obscuring something architecturally significant. OVERWATCH isn't a purpose-built tool for defense intelligence. It's a vertical application sitting on top of a horizontal capability platform, and that platform, temporal change detection and automated reporting over satellite imagery, is one of the more broadly applicable analytical infrastructures that the current commercial space industry has made economically viable.

Liquid Propulsion Rocket Engines Market Analysis 2026

A rocket engine's job is both simple and unforgiving. Liquid propellants react, combust, and expand through a nozzle at temperatures and pressures that would destroy almost any other machine, and what emerges from that nozzle is thrust. That's the physics. The global market built around that physics has gotten considerably more interesting over the last decade, shifting in ways that make 2026 look genuinely distinct from any prior period in rocket engine history.

Commercial LEO Destinations Market Analysis 2026

The International Space Station has been continuously crewed since November 2, 2000. It won't last indefinitely. NASA has formally set 2030 as the decommission target, and planning documents submitted to Congress over the past several years lay out a transition strategy that depends on commercial operators being ready to take over low Earth orbit functions before that deadline arrives. In June 2024, the agency awarded SpaceX a contract worth up to $843 million to develop the U.S. Deorbit Vehicle, a heavily modified Dragon-based spacecraft that will dock to the ISS and provide the final propulsive push to send the station toward a targeted ocean re-entry.

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