For space lovers around the world, the month of June is set to be stellar: Jupiter will be clearly visible, and those wanting to catch a glimpse of its moons will only need a pair of binoculars.
"It may not be surprising that when we engage in the act of forgiveness, we can begin to turn off the stress response and the... changes that accompany it."
Take that, Tennessee. The most generous state in America is Utah, which boasts the highest percentage of volunteers in all 50 states and Washington, D.C.
The red meat or white meat debate is a draw: Eating white meat, such as poultry, has an identical effect on your cholesterol level as beef, researchers say.
To some, BTS' success is a sign that the so-called hallyu wave -- the global popularity of South Korean entertainment -- isn't just coming, it's crashing upon US shores.
Imagine this scenario: A single satellite loses power and smashes, uncontrolled, into another satellite. They explode, sending plumes of junk charging through space at 23 times the speed of sound. A piece of that debris slams into another satellite, and it sets off a chain reaction that obliterates everything orbiting in nearby altitudes. In low-Earth orbit, that could include multibillion-dollar networks like Starlink, the International Space Station, spy satellites and Earth-imaging technology. Nothing would remain except an impenetrable graveyard of rubbish that could ground rocket launches for years, maybe even centuries.
From black-stoned pyramids staggering out of the Sudanese desert to the silhouetted bare bones of England's Gothic Whitby Abbey in North Yorkshire striking abandoned sacred places can be found across the world.
The newly minted billionaire has signed the Giving Pledge, which encourages the world's richest people to dedicate a majority of their wealth to charitable causes, either during their lifetimes or in their wills.
According to the ruling by the Utah Supreme Court, Judge Michael Kwan's Facebook posts were "laden with blunt, and sometimes indelicate, criticism" of Trump.
The issue highlights the privacy concerns around home DNA technology and its use by police to solve cold cases, a field that has exploded in the last year.