These Ultra Close-Up Images of Saturn's Rings Are Mind-Blowing
These are some of the closest ever images of Saturn's rings.
While the bread and butter of Gizmodo UK is in the bits and bytes of technology, we have a lot of fun in the off-topic areas, with many of the stories being filed in the WTF category. Bookmark this page for the sillier stories, from ridiculous examples of body-art, to... sausages made of skittles?
These are some of the closest ever images of Saturn's rings.
Deep down, we’re all the same. A long time ago, we were all just bumless bagbabies.
The man in the Moon knows a lot more about us than we think. For instance, it’s keeping tabs on the air we breath by collecting samples of it.
What is it that makes a more immersive experience more horrifying? And crucially, should we tread carefully when studies suggest a virtual world can feel just as real as the physical one?
There's no tomato in it, yet there's still that hint of tomatoey goodness. What's the deal there?
Pterosaurs, Hatzeogopteryxes and Azhdarchidae. It's a dinosaur spelling bee!
The exhibition is open to the public at the Kennedy Space Center in Titusville, Florida.
Don't we all?
Let's take a moment to think about the sad death of the Philae lander. RIP, tiny robot.
Everything is terrible and awful, and it's only been one week.
Taking direct images of exoplanets, and turning them into videos so we can watch their orbits, makes these faraway worlds a little more real.
Apparently a feat that scientists have been working on for 80 years.
After nearly 30 years of research, scientists have finally mapped the physical structure of this fascinating molecule, revealing why it tends to linger in the brain.
An ancient insect so strange—and so god awfully ugly—its discoverers had to create an entirely new scientific classification to catalogue it.
a “Arab Courier Attacked by Lions” has stood in Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Museum of Natural History for more than a century, and it's been discovered that it has a disturbing secret.
We pay our rightful respects to the brave stray cat who reached heights most of us never will.