Watch the stars and from them learn. To the Master's honor all must turn, Each in its track, without a sound, Forever tracing Newton's ground

— Albert Einstein

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Arctic permafrost is now a net source of major greenhouse gases

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 10:52am
An Arctic-wide survey has found that the permafrost region is emitting more carbon into the atmosphere than it absorbs, causing the planet to heat even further
Categories: Astronomy

No, you didn't see a solar flare during the total eclipse — but you may have seen something just as special

Space.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 10:02am
Several media outlets have incorrectly claimed that explosive solar flares were spotted during the April 8 total solar eclipse. But there were no flares during totality, so what did people see?
Categories: Astronomy

Does Dark Energy Change over Time?

Scientific American.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 10:00am

In just one year of observations, a program that is creating the largest 3D map of the universe to date has sniffed out hints that dark energy may be stranger than scientists supposed

Categories: Astronomy

Tech Today: Folding NASA Experience into an Origami Toolkit 

NASA - Breaking News - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 9:42am

3 min read

Preparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater) Though the art of origami is centuries old, until the late 20th century it was considered virtually impossible to make insects or other figures with many long, complex protrusions. That changed with the introduction of math-based origami design, which Lang helped pioneer. Today, he’s still drawn to the challenges presented by insects and other arthropods, and they are well-represented in the menagerie of his origami gallery.

After uncovering the mathematical underpinnings of origami, Robert Lang left a 20-year engineering career, including over four years at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, to pursue his lifelong passion. However, while he was working at JPL, Lang picked up an important key to computational design, allowing him to turn paper into impossibly intricate 3D forms.

In the center’s Micro Devices Laboratory in the late 1980s and early ’90s, Lang worked on building an optical computer that uses light rather than electricity to carry out calculations. This work introduced him to the concept of nonlinear constrained optimization.

Lang explained that a simple nonlinear constrained optimization problem is like packing different-sized balls into a box. The constraint is that the balls can’t overlap, and the solutions are nonlinear because the balls can be any direction or distance from each other. The optimization is making the box as small as possible.

System design optimization for lasers and other components requires minimizing energy consumption, semiconductor materials, and other costs. In origami, optimization means creating the most extensive form possible using a single sheet of paper.

In the mid-1990s, he took his expertise gain at JPL and created an open-source software called TreeMaker, the first program available to design complex origami figures. Lang’s design software uses an equation to map the points that will become features like a head and limbs. It helps decide exactly how far apart any two points have to be, depending on their location in the final shape.

In 2001, he left his last engineering job to become a full-time origamist, and he remains one of the world’s leading figures at the intersection of math and paper folding. Lang’s work ranges from small paper sculptures to huge public art made from metal and other materials, which he co-creates with other artists.

Since Lang left NASA, the agency has called him back in to consult on a few projects that capitalized on his dual background in engineering and origami. One of those was the Starshade concept, a design for a baseball diamond-sized disk that would fold up tightly to fit in a rocket fairing and then unfurl in space. There, it would block the light from a given star so a space telescope could photograph its planets. Credit: NASA

The art of folding has even crept into space technology in recent years. Commercial companies now seek out Lang for his origami and engineering backgrounds to consult on folding hardware, including a collapsible radio antenna and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s Eyeglass space telescope. He’s also returned to NASA to help figure out how to fold large objects for launch inside rocket fairings.

“The irony is that, when I was employed full-time at NASA, I was not working on origami, but after I left, I’ve been invited back a couple of times to work on origami-related projects,” he said.

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EarthCARE mission card for portal

ESO Top News - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 9:10am

EarthCARE - ESA's cloud and aerosol mission

Categories: Astronomy

ESA astronaut graduation: launching into the future

ESO Top News - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 9:08am

One year of basic training will soon bear fruit for ESA’s astronaut candidates Sophie Adenot, Pablo Álvarez Fernández, Rosemary Coogan, Raphaël Liégeois, Marco Sieber and Australian Space Agency astronaut candidate Katherine Bennell-Pegg.

On 22 April 2024, these astronaut candidates will receive their certification at ESA's European Astronaut Centre in Cologne, Germany, officially becoming fully fledged astronauts eligible for spaceflight.

Categories: Astronomy

Week in images: 08-12 April 2024

ESO Top News - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 9:06am

Week in images: 08-12 April 2024

Discover our week through the lens

Categories: Astronomy

Fallout and the Space Age: The franchise's connections and nods to the final frontier

Space.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 9:00am
The Fallout video game franchise (now also a streaming series) is known for its unique take on the post-apocalypse, but it's also quite interested in outer space.
Categories: Astronomy

ESA astronaut class of 2022 graduation ceremony

ESO Top News - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 9:00am
Video: 00:01:00

As they reach the end of one year of rigorous basic astronaut training, ESA astronaut candidates Sophie Adenot, Rosemary Coogan, Pablo Álvarez Fernández, Raphaël Liégeois, Marco Sieber and Australian Space Agency astronaut candidate Katherine Bennell-Pegg will receive astronaut certification at ESA’s European Astronaut Centre on 22 April 2024.

The group was selected in November 2022 and began their training in April 2023.

Basic astronaut training provides the candidates with an overall familiarisation and training in various areas, such as spacecraft systems, spacewalking, flight engineering, robotics and life support systems, as well as survival and medical training.

Following certification, the new astronauts will move on to the next phases of pre-assignment and mission-specific training, paving the way for future missions to the International Space Station and beyond.

Join us for the graduation ceremony live on ESA Web TV on Monday 22 April from 10:00 – 11:30 CEST.

Categories: Astronomy

What Is Pollution Doing to Our Brains? 'Exposomics' Reveals Links to Many Diseases

Scientific American.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 9:00am

The new science of "exposomics" shows how air pollution contributes to Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, bipolar disorder and other brain diseases

Categories: Astronomy

Sierra Space wants to drop cargo from orbit to anywhere on Earth in 90 minutes

Space.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 8:00am
Sierra Space has unveiled a new "global payload delivery" system known as Ghost that is designed to drop vital payloads from orbit to anywhere on Earth's surface within 90 minutes.
Categories: Astronomy

Juice’s first year in space: “it’s real now”

ESO Top News - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 8:00am

One year since the launch of ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (Juice), we catch up with core team members Claire Vallat, Giuseppe Sarri, Olivier Witasse and Ignacio Tanco.

From memories of launch day to hopes for the future, they talk honestly about the ups and downs of flying a space mission, and reveal how they’re ensuring that Juice will be a huge success.

Categories: Astronomy

Space Junk from the International Space Station May Have Struck a Home in Florida

Scientific American.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 8:00am

Three years ago astronauts threw out the largest piece of trash ever tossed from the International Space Station. Now some of it seems to have punched a hole through a house in Naples, Fla.

Categories: Astronomy

A Random Influx of DNA from a Virus Helped Vertebrates Become So Stunningly Successful

Scientific American.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 7:30am

Insertion of genetic material from a virus into the genome of a vertebrate ancestor enabled the lightning-quick electrical impulses that give animals with backbones their smarts

Categories: Astronomy

Hubble Spots a Galaxy Hidden in a Dark Cloud

NASA - Breaking News - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 7:01am

2 min read

Hubble Spots a Galaxy Hidden in a Dark Cloud This Hubble image features the spiral galaxy IC 4633. ESA/Hubble & NASA, J. Dalcanton, Dark Energy Survey/DOE/FNAL/DECam/CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA; Acknowledgement: L. Shatz

The subject of this image taken with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope is the spiral galaxy IC 4633, located 100 million light-years away from us in the constellation Apus. IC 4633 is a galaxy rich in star-forming activity and also hosts an active galactic nucleus at its core. From our point of view, the galaxy is tilted mostly towards us, giving astronomers a fairly good view of its billions of stars.

However, we can’t fully appreciate the features of this galaxy — at least in visible light — because it’s partially concealed by a stretch of dark dust (lower-right third of the image). This dark nebula is part of the Chamaeleon star-forming region, itself located only around 500 light-years from us, in a nearby part of our Milky Way galaxy. The dark clouds in the Chamaeleon region occupy a large area of the southern sky, covering their namesake constellation but also encroaching on nearby constellations, like Apus. The cloud is well-studied for its treasury of young stars, particularly the cloud Cha I, which both Hubble and the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope have imaged.

The cloud overlapping IC 4633 lies east of the well-known Cha I, II, and III, and is also known as MW9 and the South Celestial Serpent. Classified as an integrated flux nebula (IFN) — a cloud of gas and dust in the Milky Way galaxy that’s not near to any single star and is only faintly lit by the total light of all the galaxy’s stars — this vast, narrow trail of faint gas that snakes over the southern celestial pole is much more subdued looking than its neighbors. Hubble has no problem making out the South Celestial Serpent, though this image captures only a tiny part of it.

Text credit: European Space Agency (ESA)


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Media Contact:

Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterGreenbelt, MD
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov

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Last Updated

Apr 12, 2024

Editor Andrea Gianopoulos

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Chatbots can persuade conspiracy theorists their view might be wrong

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 7:00am
After a short conversation with an artificial intelligence, people’s belief in a conspiracy theory dropped by about 20 per cent
Categories: Astronomy

Chatbots can persuade conspiracy theorists their view might be wrong

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 7:00am
After a short conversation with an artificial intelligence, people’s belief in a conspiracy theory dropped by about 20 per cent
Categories: Astronomy

Untangling the enigmatic origins of the human family’s newest species

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 7:00am
Five years ago, a fossil found in the Philippines was determined to be from a new species of hominin called Homo luzonensis. Since then, we’ve learned a bit more about the newest member of the human family
Categories: Astronomy

Untangling the enigmatic origins of the human family’s newest species

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 7:00am
Five years ago, a fossil found in the Philippines was determined to be from a new species of hominin called Homo luzonensis. Since then, we’ve learned a bit more about the newest member of the human family
Categories: Astronomy

Black Scientists Are Building Their Own Vital Communities

Scientific American.com - Fri, 04/12/2024 - 7:00am

A person-centric scientific conference demonstrates that gathering can counter the isolation of underrepresentation

Categories: Astronomy