WARPTECHNEWS · LAB
HomeAIBusinessTechArchive
WARPTECH LAB NEWS

Warptech Lab News aggrega le notizie più rilevanti da oltre 700 fonti internazionali, con classificazione AI, TL;DR sintetici e timeline cluster su singole storie.

Navigazione

  • Home
  • Archivio
  • Editor's Brief
  • Cerca
  • Il tuo account
  • Newsletter tech/AI

Informazioni legali

  • Privacy Policy
  • Termini di servizio
  • Cookie Policy

© 2026 Sparktech S.R.L. — Tutti i diritti riservati. Sito gestito e manutenuto da Sparktech S.R.L.

Sede legale: Corso Libertà 55, 13100 Vercelli (VC), Italia · P.IVA / C.F. 02835910023 · Contatti: admin@warptechlab.com

Home
Storia in 2 fonti

A Single Asteroid Strike May Have Delivered All of Mercury's Water, Study Finds

Despite being the closest planet to the Sun, Mercury hosts water ice at its poles. Now scientists may know how it got there.

Raccontata daspace.comgizmodo.com

Confronto fonti

2 prospettive sulla stessa storia
AI · summaries
gizmodo.comStai leggendo4 g fa

A Single Asteroid Strike May Have Delivered All of Mercury's Water, Study Finds

Despite being the closest planet to the Sun, Mercury hosts water ice at its poles. Now scientists may know how it got there.

originale
space.com5 g fa

Where did Mercury get its water ice? Maybe from a slow asteroid impact in a single Mercurian day

New findings suggest Mercury's ice was deposited rapidly rather than supplied gradually over long periods of time.

Leggi questa versione → originale

Timeline cronologica

  1. giovedì 28 maggio 2026·space.com

    Where did Mercury get its water ice? Maybe from a slow asteroid impact in a single Mercurian day

    New findings suggest Mercury's ice was deposited rapidly rather than supplied gradually over long periods of time.

  2. venerdì 29 maggio 2026·gizmodo.com

    A Single Asteroid Strike May Have Delivered All of Mercury's Water, Study Finds

    Despite being the closest planet to the Sun, Mercury hosts water ice at its poles. Now scientists may know how it got there.