MalevusMalevus
  • HISTORY
  • SCIENCE
  • BIOGRAPHY
  • NEWS
MalevusMalevus
Search

Trending →

Hard-to-Believe Facts About Blood

By Alby Butler
December 23, 2025

Facts About Roman Emperors – Both Funny and Terrifying

By Hrothsige Frithowulf
December 23, 2025

Facts About Jack the Ripper

By Hrothsige Frithowulf
December 23, 2025

What to Do If You Encounter a Bear

By Alby Butler
December 23, 2025

What Will Happen to Our Planet If Antarctica Melts

By Jim Collins
December 20, 2025
© Malevus. All Rights Reserved.
Malevus > Cosmos > Nearby Exoplanet Smells Like Rotten Eggs
Cosmos

Nearby Exoplanet Smells Like Rotten Eggs

Astronomers detect hydrogen sulphide on an extrasolar planet for the first time.

By Bertie Atkinson
Published: July 10, 2024
HD 189733b contains hydrogen sulfide.
This nearby exoplanet could stink of rotten eggs, because the hot gas envelope of HD 189733b contains hydrogen sulfide. Roberto Molar Candanosa/ Johns Hopkins University
SOURCES:Nature
Previous Article supergranules sun Mystery of the Sun’s “Super Grains”
Next Article Avian Influenza for Mammals How Infectious is Avian Influenza for Mammals?

You Might Also Like

Space exploration History of our conquest of space

Space exploration: History of our conquest of space

Ophiuchusurania-Ophiuchus as depicted in Urania’s Mirror, a constellation card published in London c. 1825. A

Constellations: Universal time and direction indicators

Images from the "Hubble" space telescope: View of the globular star cluster Omega Centauri

Med-Sized Black Hole Discovered

Colonization of the Moon

Colonization of the Moon: How are we going achieve it?

nasa

NASA: Origin, missions and history of the US space agency

Apollo 8

Apollo 8: The first flight to the Moon

DART crashing a satellite into an asteroid for planet defense

DART: crashing a satellite into an asteroid for planet defense

Sound In Space

Is There Really No Sound In Space?

exoplanet HIP-65426b james webb

Webb Telescope Pictured The First Exoplanet: HIP 65426 b

An explanation for Saturn's rings: A lost moon, Chrysalis

An explanation for Saturn’s rings: a lost moon, Chrysalis

spacecraft travel

How Do Spacecraft Travel in Space?

The giant "scar," known as Aganippe Foss

Striking Image of an Incredible Scar on the Surface of Mars!

MalevusMalevus
Follow US
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • About us
  • Editorial Standards