Astronomy
Webb Watches Haze Rise and Fall in Pluto's Atmosphere
When the New Horizons spacecraft swept past Pluto and Charon in 2015, it revealed two amazingly complex worlds and an active atmosphere on Pluto. Those snapshots redefined our understanding of the system. Now, new observations using the James Webb Space Telescope taken over the space of a week, show that Pluto's atmosphere is completely different from any other one in the Solar System.
What Life on Europa Needs
As the years go by, the chance of Europa hosting life seems to keep going down. But it's not out of contention yet.
Do the Clouds of Venus Really Host Life?
On the surface (you're welcome for the joke), Venus is not even close to being hospitable to life. But that's not the end of the story.
Reusable Chinese Rocket Soft-Lands in the Ocean in a New Test
Chinese rocket startup Space Epoch put on a show recently, with a demonstration test launch of their reusable Yanxinghe-1 rocket booster.
How Likely Is Life on Mars?
Mars is by far the most Earth-like planet in the solar system…but that's not saying much.
Why the Waymo Car Fires in Recent Los Angeles Protests Caused the Robotaxis to Burn So Completely
During recent protests in Los Angeles, fires triggered “thermal runaway” in several Waymo robotaxis’ lithium-ion battery packs. The phenomenon sent temperatures past 1,000 degrees Celsius, vaporized much of the cars and spewed lung-searing hydrogen fluoride
NASA raises the odds that an asteroid could hit the moon in 2032
How the Mathematics of Honesty Underlies These Auctions
Here's the surprising math at the heart of auction theory
Central Brazil Cerrado
Starlink satellites are leaking radio signals that may ruin astronomy
How to Protect Yourself from Recent Salmonella Outbreak in Recalled Eggs
To prevent Salmonella food poisoning, refrigerate your eggs, cook them well, never eat them raw and clean, clean, clean
The chilling discovery that nerve cells help cancers grow and spread
Sauropod dinosaur's last meal reveals that it didn't bother to chew
A Mysterious Kidney Disease Epidemic Is Killing Thousands of Young Men. What’s behind It?
As cases of chronic kidney disease emerge in outdoor laborers around the world, scientists are finding that repeated damage from prolonged extreme heat seems to be a leading factor to kidney failure
A Blockbuster ‘Muon Anomaly’ May Have Just Disappeared
The most anticipated particle physics result of recent years is here—but the real news came one week before: the “muon g–2 anomaly” might have never existed
Superheroes Represent Something Different to Today’s Kids
The newest generation of superheroes are complex, irreverent and exactly what our kids need
Ignis mission: Ready for Lift-Off
ESA project astronaut Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski is heading to the International Space Station on his first mission as part of Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4). He is the second ESA project astronaut from a new generation of Europeans to fly on a commercial human spaceflight mission with Axiom Space.
Sponsored by the Polish government and supported by ESA, the Polish Ministry of Economic Development and Technology (MRiT), and the Polish Space Agency (POLSA), the mission—called Ignis—features an ambitious technological and scientific programme. It includes several experiments proposed by the Polish space industry and developed in cooperation with ESA, along with additional ESA-led experiments.
Follow Sławosz's journey on the Ignis mission website and discover more about the next mission patch to be hung on the walls of the Columbus Control Centre.
Milky Way–Andromeda Collision Is in Doubt, North Atlantic Ocean Heat Surged, and Worms Build Towers
The Milky Way’s big crash with Andromeda might not be a sure thing. Plus, we discuss an overheated ocean, a giant planet circling a tiny star and worms that build living towers.