Daily Snapshot

Science headlines for Monday, March 9, 2026

Science coverage on 2026-03-09 was led by: Meteorite Crashes Through Roof in Germany After Fiery Light Show; NASA’s Van Allen Probe A to Re-Enter Atmosphere; About Subsonic Flight Demonstrator (SFD) Project.

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Key Points

3 highlights
  1. Meteorite Crashes Through Roof in Germany After Fiery Light Show

    Sources: #1 NYT Science
  2. NASA’s Van Allen Probe A to Re-Enter Atmosphere

    Sources: #2 NASA Breaking News
  3. About Subsonic Flight Demonstrator (SFD) Project

    Sources: #3 NASA Breaking News

Top 10 Stories

Ranked by daily score
  1. #1 Score 75
    Meteorite Crashes Through Roof in Germany After Fiery Light Show

    The fireball from space was spotted by a network of sky-watching cameras in Belgium, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Germany.

    NYT Science 4 days ago
  2. NASA’s Van Allen Probe A to Re-Enter Atmosphere
    #2 Score 68
    NASA’s Van Allen Probe A to Re-Enter Atmosphere

    NASA’s Van Allen Probe A is expected to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere almost 14 years after launch. From 2012 to 2019, the spacecraft and its twin, Van Allen Probe B, flew through the Van Allen belts, rings of charged particles trapped by Earth’s magnetic field, to understand how particles were gained and lost. The belts shield Earth from cosmic radiation, solar storms, and the constantly streaming […]

    NASA Breaking News 4 days ago
  3. About Subsonic Flight Demonstrator (SFD) Project
    #3 Score 59
    About Subsonic Flight Demonstrator (SFD) Project

    The purpose of the Subsonic Flight Demonstrator (SFD) project is to engage with industry and other government organizations to identify, select, and mature key airframe technologies, such as new wing designs, that have a high probability of transition to the next generation single-aisle seat class airliner. Moving technologies from a research environment to a production environment […]

    NASA Breaking News 4 days ago
  4. Superfood Fuels Mating Frenzy for Critically Endangered Kakapo
    #4 Score 56
    Superfood Fuels Mating Frenzy for Critically Endangered Kakapo

    Kakapos, which are reclusive and flightless and can live as long as humans, are found only in New Zealand. They feed on the fruit of the rimu tree.

    NYT Science 4 days ago
  5. About Flight Demonstrations and Capabilities (FDC) Project
    #5 Score 50
    About Flight Demonstrations and Capabilities (FDC) Project

    The FDC project conducts complex integrated small-scale flight research to validate the benefits of new technologies. By modifying aircraft from FDC’s support fleet, the project enables aggressive, success-oriented flight campaign schedules. While many technologies are at mid-levels of technology readiness, the FDC project supports all phases of technology maturation. FDC’s support aircraft fleet enables safety chase and in-flight experimental measurements for a variety of […]

    NASA Breaking News 4 days ago
  6. What Is Pi? (Grades 5-8)
    #6 Score 47
    What Is Pi? (Grades 5-8)

    This article is for students grades 5-8. What is Pi? Pi is a number. You might know it as 3.14 or the symbol π. But it’s way more than that! What Makes Pi Special? Pi is an irrational number. That means it goes on forever and it never repeats its sequence of numbers. Pi has […]

    NASA Breaking News 4 days ago
  7. NASA Armstrong Director Brad Flick to Retire After 40 Years of Service
    #7 Score 45
    NASA Armstrong Director Brad Flick to Retire After 40 Years of Service

    On Monday, NASA announced Bradley Flick, director of NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, will retire Thursday, March 19, after a nearly 40-year career advancing aeronautics and flight research. Flick began his NASA journey in 1986 as a flight systems engineer and rose through the ranks to lead the center. His career spanned […]

    NASA Breaking News 4 days ago
  8. A Night Light in the Sky? Reflect Orbital Wants to Launch a Big Space Mirror.
    #8 Score 44
    A Night Light in the Sky? Reflect Orbital Wants to Launch a Big Space Mirror.

    The company is seeking F.C.C. approval to test an idea to reflect sunlight to Earth at night, possibly powering solar panels. Critics say it could be bad for people and wildlife.

    NYT Science 4 days ago
  9. From 1968: Lise Meitner, Physicist, Is Dead at 89; Paved Way for Splitting of Atom
    #9 Score 40
    From 1968: Lise Meitner, Physicist, Is Dead at 89; Paved Way for Splitting of Atom

    She laid much of the theoretical groundwork for the atomic bomb, although she did not participate directly in its production.

    NYT Science 4 days ago
  10. Particles may not follow Einstein’s paths after all
    #10 Score 23
    Particles may not follow Einstein’s paths after all

    Physicists have long struggled to unite quantum mechanics—the theory governing tiny particles—with Einstein’s theory of gravity, which explains the behavior of stars, planets, and the structure of the universe. Researchers at TU Wien have now taken a new step toward that goal by rethinking one of relativity’s core ideas: the paths particles follow through curved spacetime, known as geodesics. By creating a quantum version of these paths—called the q-desic equation—the team showed that particles moving through a “quantum” spacetime may deviate slightly from the paths predicted by classical relativity.

    ScienceDaily 4 days ago