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Space Facts

1,083 facts in Space. Click any fact to see its full page.

All 11,441 🫀 Human Body 1,734 🐾 Animals 1,691 📜 History 1,197 🚀 Space 1,083 🔬 Science 1,061 ✨ General 895 🌍 Geography 640 🎭 Culture 608 🌊 Ocean 570 💻 Technology 521 🍕 Food 508 🧠 Psychology 352 💬 Language 291 🌿 Nature 289 ✨ Tester 1
The Juno spacecraft reached speeds of over 165,000 miles per hour as it approached Jupiter.
🚀 Space Fact #11347
The TRAPPIST-1 system contains seven Earth-sized planets, three of which are in the habitable zone.
🚀 Space Fact #11346
The Curiosity rover plays Happy Birthday to itself every year on the anniversary of its Mars landing using its soil sampling mechanism.
🚀 Space Fact #11345
The first American space station, Skylab, fell back to Earth in 1979 and pieces landed in Western Australia.
🚀 Space Fact #11344
The Cassini-Huygens mission traveled 2.2 billion miles to reach Saturn and spent 13 years studying the planet and its moons.
🚀 Space Fact #11343
Alan Shepard hit a golf ball on the Moon during the Apollo 14 mission in 1971.
🚀 Space Fact #11342
The International Space Station has been continuously occupied since November 2, 2000.
🚀 Space Fact #11341
The Kepler Space Telescope discovered over 2,600 exoplanets during its nine-year mission.
🚀 Space Fact #11340
The first selfie in space was taken by Buzz Aldrin during the Gemini 12 mission in 1966.
🚀 Space Fact #11339
The Opportunity rover on Mars was designed for a 90-day mission but operated for over 14 years.
🚀 Space Fact #11338
The Soviet space station Mir was continuously occupied for nearly 10 years, from 1989 to 1999.
🚀 Space Fact #11337
SpaceX's Falcon 9 was the first orbital-class rocket to successfully land vertically after launch.
🚀 Space Fact #11336
The New Horizons probe, which flew past Pluto in 2015, carries a small amount of Clyde Tombaugh's ashes — the astronomer who discovered Pluto.
🚀 Space Fact #11335
The Hubble Space Telescope orbits Earth at about 340 miles above the surface and completes one orbit every 95 minutes.
🚀 Space Fact #11334
Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space in 1963, orbiting Earth 48 times over nearly three days.
🚀 Space Fact #11333
The Soviet Union's Venera 7 was the first spacecraft to successfully land on another planet and transmit data back to Earth in 1970.
🚀 Space Fact #11332
NASA's Voyager probes are powered by plutonium-238 batteries that will continue operating until around 2025.
🚀 Space Fact #11331
The Apollo 11 command module computer had less processing power than a modern USB-C charger.
🚀 Space Fact #11330
Buzz Aldrin's mother's maiden name was Moon, making him arguably destined to walk on it.
🚀 Space Fact #11329
The first living creatures to orbit the Moon and return safely were two Russian tortoises aboard Zond 5 in 1968.
🚀 Space Fact #11328
The lightest known exoplanet, PSR B1257+12 A, has a mass only twice that of the Moon.
🚀 Space Fact #10755
Titan is the only moon in the solar system with a dense atmosphere, which is mostly nitrogen like Earth's.
🚀 Space Fact #10754
The total number of stars visible to the naked eye from Earth is only about 9,000, split between the two hemispheres.
🚀 Space Fact #10753
Rogue black holes wander through galaxies at millions of miles per hour after being ejected from their original positions.
🚀 Space Fact #10752
The Perseverance rover on Mars carries a small helicopter called Ingenuity, which made the first powered flight on another planet.
🚀 Space Fact #10751
Gravitational lensing allows astronomers to see galaxies behind other galaxies by bending light around massive objects.
🚀 Space Fact #10750
The fastest spinning pulsar ever discovered rotates 716 times per second.
🚀 Space Fact #10749
Dark energy makes up about 68% of the universe and is responsible for the accelerating expansion of space.
🚀 Space Fact #10748
The temperature difference between the sunny and shady sides of the Moon can exceed 500 degrees Fahrenheit.
🚀 Space Fact #10747
A solar sail spacecraft uses radiation pressure from sunlight to propel itself without any fuel.
🚀 Space Fact #10746
Ceres, the largest object in the asteroid belt, contains about one-third of the belt's total mass.
🚀 Space Fact #10745
The diameter of the observable universe is about 93 billion light-years, even though it is only 13.8 billion years old.
🚀 Space Fact #10744
The cosmic microwave background radiation has a temperature of about 2.7 Kelvin, or minus 454.8 degrees Fahrenheit.
🚀 Space Fact #10743
Hypervelocity stars are traveling so fast through space that they will eventually escape the gravitational pull of the Milky Way entirely.
🚀 Space Fact #10742
The event horizon of a black hole is the boundary beyond which nothing, not even light, can escape.
🚀 Space Fact #10741
Binary star systems, where two stars orbit each other, are more common in the universe than single stars like our Sun.
🚀 Space Fact #10740
Olympus Mons on Mars is not only the tallest volcano in the solar system but also has a base the size of Arizona.
🚀 Space Fact #10739
The Hubble Space Telescope has made over 1.5 million observations since its launch in 1990.
🚀 Space Fact #10738
Venus has over 1,600 major volcanoes, more than any other planet in the solar system.
🚀 Space Fact #10737
The tallest cliff in the solar system is Verona Rupes on Uranus's moon Miranda, standing about 12 miles high.
🚀 Space Fact #10736
A quasar can emit more energy than an entire galaxy containing billions of stars.
🚀 Space Fact #10735
Mercury has ice at its poles despite surface temperatures reaching 800 degrees Fahrenheit, because deep craters never see sunlight.
🚀 Space Fact #10734
The James Webb Space Telescope can detect the heat signature of a bumblebee on the Moon.
🚀 Space Fact #10733
Some black holes spin at nearly the speed of light, warping space-time around them.
🚀 Space Fact #10732
The farthest human-made object from Earth, Voyager 1, carries a gold-plated copper disk with greetings in 55 languages.
🚀 Space Fact #10731
Pluto has a heart-shaped nitrogen ice glacier on its surface called Tombaugh Regio.
🚀 Space Fact #10730
The Karman line, at 62 miles above sea level, is the internationally recognized boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space.
🚀 Space Fact #10729
There is a supermassive black hole at the center of nearly every large galaxy, including the Milky Way.
🚀 Space Fact #10728
The Sun makes up about 99.86% of the total mass of the entire solar system.
🚀 Space Fact #10727
The average density of Saturn is less than that of water — about 0.69 grams per cubic centimeter.
🚀 Space Fact #10726