Europa-clipper-desktop-english Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 8, 2025 CategoriesEvolutionPhysical Sciences Tagged , asteroid belt, Carl Zimmer, cosmos, DOGE, Enceladus, Europa, Europa Clipper, evolution, Ganymede, habitability, intelligent design, Jupiter, Madagascar, NASA, New York Times, Saturn, The Privileged Planet, Titan Hey DOGE, Take a Look at NASA David Klinghoffer February 8, 2025 Evolution, Physical Sciences 5 For the materialist, atheist evolutionary viewpoint to be valid, life must be easy to evolve, so aliens MUST be out there somewhere. Read More ›
Titan_globe Type post Author David Coppedge Date July 29, 2024 CategoriesIntelligent DesignPhysical Sciences Tagged , atmosphere, benzene, biosphere, California, carbon, Cassini mission, continents, Europa, European Space Agency, Ganymede, habitability, Huygens probe, hydrocarbons, hydrogen, lakes, magnetic field, methane, Michael Denton, NASA, nitrogen, organic molecules, sand dunes, Saturn, temperature, The Privileged Planet, Titan, water, weather Saturn’s Moon Titan as a Habitability Test David Coppedge July 29, 2024 Intelligent Design, Physical Sciences 10 It’s called one of the most earthlike environments in the solar system with an atmosphere and organic molecules. How does it measure up compared to Earth? Read More ›
Europa Type post Date June 1, 2022 CategoriesEvolutionPhysical SciencesPlanetology Tagged , carbon, David Coppedge, Europa, Europa Clipper, Ganymede, geophysics, Greenland, hydrogen, Jupiter, moons, NASA, nitrogen, ocean, oxygen, phosphorus, photosynthesis, seafloor, Stanford University, sulfur, water Why Scientists Think There Could Be Life on Europa Science and Culture June 1, 2022 Evolution, Physical Sciences, Planetology 4 Jupiter’s moon Europa, somewhat smaller than Earth’s moon, may have surface water and organic chemicals, researchers say. Read More ›