Inside new Bruno Mars album Romantic
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After five years on Mars, NASA confirmed Perseverance remains fully operational, with enough durability to support an extended science mission.
NASA’s ultimate mission to discover if life exists on Mars has been effectively cancelled. A new US spending bill released this week backs the White House’s move to end the costly programme, which has been on life support for months.
A recent photo from NASA's Curiosity rover gives an idea of what Mars would look like under skies that resemble our own on Earth. Take a look.
A Congressional bill restores funding for most NASA space science missions, but there is no money for returning samples already collected on the red planet.
As Bruno Mars releases his new single "I Just Might," some of his biggest hits, like "That's What I Like" and "Locked Out of Heaven" return to Billboard's global charts.
Mars has an active, electrically charged surface where dust storms and spinning dust devils regularly move and reshape the landscape. Mars is often portrayed as a dry, empty world, but the planet is far more active than it appears.
The 16-time Grammy winner is set to further cement his status as one of the all-time great pop stars with his long-awaited LP.
"I Just Might" introduces The Romantic, the upcoming album by Bruno Mars, and Americans quickly turned it into a top 10 bestseller on iTunes.
This composite image was weeks in the making, as Horálek’s two "crossings" happened months apart. Mars traced its path through the cluster from late April to early May 2025. Venus followed with a brief morning-twilight passage from late August to early September 2025, appearing low in early dawn light.
It’s serendipitous that Bruno Mars has returned with a new single within a fortnight of the finale of Stranger Things. The sci-fi period piece hit Netflix the summer before the release of Mars’s previous lead single as a solo artist,
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New microbes could let humans grow buildings on Mars
Turning Martian dust into shelter has long sounded like science fiction, but researchers are now treating it as an engineering problem with a biological answer. Instead of shipping steel and concrete across space,