The top 10 neighbors for SPACE.com span academics, government organizations, social media platforms, podcasts, TV shows, and fellow websites — with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: scores run from Dr. Michio Kaku at 0.78 down to The Expanse at 0.74 and World and Science at 0.74, a range of only four points across the full top 10. That compression means no structural anchor — the audience overlaps are distributed rather than concentrated. By subcategory, the mix is genuinely varied: Dr. Michio Kaku is an Academic; Imgur is Social Media; NASA Astronauts is a Government organization; Stephanie Miller is Podcasts and Radio; Boeing Airplanes is B2B; George Takei is an Actor; and WikiLeaks is Activism. Only one neighbor — CNN Travel at 0.73 — shares SPACE.com's own subcategory of Websites. The presence of a political podcast, an image-sharing platform, and an aerospace manufacturer alongside a physicist and a sci-fi series signals that the audience shape here is not defined by a single content category or community type.
The flat, cross-kind distribution suggests SPACE.com draws an audience whose composition is recognizable across a wide range of unrelated contexts — a generalist digital audience rather than a tightly bounded enthusiast one.