Behold, directly overhead, a certain strange star was suddenly seen...
Amazed, and as if astonished and stupefied, I stood still.

— Tycho Brahe

Astronomy

Will asteroid 2024 YR4 hit the Moon?

ESO Top News - Fri, 06/27/2025 - 3:00am

Asteroid 2024 YR4 made headlines earlier this year when its probability of impacting Earth in 2032 rose as high as 3%. While an Earth impact has now been ruled out, the asteroid’s story continues.

The final glimpse of the asteroid as it faded out of view of humankind’s most powerful telescopes left it with a 4% chance of colliding with the Moon on 22 December 2032.

The likelihood of a lunar impact will now remain stable until the asteroid returns to view in mid-2028. In this FAQ, find out why we are left with this lingering uncertainty and how ESA's planned NEOMIR space telescope will help us avoid similar situations in the future.

Categories: Astronomy

A fast radio burst detected last year turned out to be from long-dead NASA satellite

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

A team of astronomers and astrophysicists affiliated with several institutions in Australia has found that a mysterious fast radio burst (FRB) detected last year originated not from a distant source, but from one circling the planet—a long-dead satellite. The team has posted a paper outlining their findings on the arXiv preprint server.

Categories: Astronomy

A Framework To Ensure Lunar Resources Are Available To All

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

Space exploration enthusiasts tend to overlook the regulatory aspects of their desired goals. They focus on technologies and the science we can do with them rather than mundane things like property rights or environmental considerations. However, in the long run, those enthusiasts will have to grapple with all aspects of exploration programs as they begin to affect more and more of the public. With such foresight, various groups have started putting forward ideas for frameworks of how to holistically think about how to utilize the Moon, as that seems the most likely first stepping stone out to the wider solar system. A new paper from Ekaterina Seltikova and her colleagues at the Space Generation Advisory Council (SGAC) and the University of Toronto puts forth one such framework, with a particular focus on how to develop a lunar economy that is open for everyone.

Categories: Astronomy

A Mission To Collect A Sample From Apophis

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

The coming of asteroid (99942) Apophis in April 2029 has sparked plenty of discussion both inside and outside the astronomical community. Despite original fears that it be pose a threat, Apophis will safely pass around 32,000 km away from Earth - though admittedly that is still closer than some geostationary communications satellites. That close approach offers a unique opportunity for those interested in asteroid science to take an up-close look at one of these relic of the early solar system, and various groups are planning to do just that. A new paper from Victor Hernandez Megia and his colleagues at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) suggests a new mission that could provide even further insight into the interior of Apophis - by returning part of it to Earth.

Categories: Astronomy

Ceramics Will Be Critical To the Lunar Economy - But We Don't Know How To Make Them There Yet

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

If there are permanent stations on the Moon, the residents will need to learn to live off the land, using local resources to manufacture building material and supplies. Ceramics work well on Earth, and they'll have a role to play on the Moon. The problem is, we don't know how to make them. In a new paper, researchers propose chemical reactions that could produce useful ceramics and even useful byproducts, like aluminum.

Categories: Astronomy

Antarctica is the Perfect Place to Study Snowball Earth

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

Hundreds of millions of years ago, temperatures cooled on Earth to the point that almost the entire planet was covered in glaciers: snowball Earth. Just how life survived has perplexed scientists for some time! A team of researchers believe they have found answers in Antarctica's tiny meltwater ponds, discovering thriving ecosystems packed with diverse microbes, algae, and microscopic animals. These ice bound oases show how ancient life could have weathered Earth's deepest freeze, and not just survived, but flourished.

Categories: Astronomy

How Solar Flares Can Change the Weather on Exoplanets

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

Astronomers know that red dwarf stars can release powerful flares on a regular basis, and these could irradiate nearby planets. But are there other effects? Researchers have simulated four scenarios of flare activity from quiescent to extreme flare activity and found that it can change temperature fluctuations at different levels in the atmosphere. The upper atmosphere actually cools while the middle and lower atmosphere warms up. Ozone can also be depleted and wind speeds dramatically affected.

Categories: Astronomy

Camera Systems as Scientific Instruments in Artemis III EVAs

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

What imaging systems can NASA’s Artemis astronauts use on the Moon to conduct groundbreaking science and efficient documentation on the lunar surface? This is what a recent study presented at the 56th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC) aspired to address as a team of researchers from the University of Texas at El Paso and Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory investigated using next-generation cameras on the Artemis III mission, which is slated to be the first lunar surface mission of the Artemis program.

Categories: Astronomy

The Milky Way is More Clumpy than Astronomers Thought

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

Astronomers have found a new way of accurately mapping the outer gas disk of the Milky Way using the positions of young stars. In the process, they've also discovered that our galaxy's structure is more complex than everyone thought, complete with tufty-looking "flocculent" gas clouds.

Categories: Astronomy

First Amazing Solar Views from NASA’s CODEX Imager Released

Universe Today - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 9:44pm

A new solar observing telescope on the exterior of the International Space Station is open for business. NASA recently released images from the newly commissioned Coronal Diagnostic Experiment (CODEX) mounted on the station.

Categories: Astronomy

Mystery fireball spotted plummeting to Earth over the US

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 6:09pm
There have been hundreds of reports of sightings of a “fireball” in the skies over the southern US – it may have been a meteor breaking up as it falls through Earth’s atmosphere
Categories: Astronomy

Mystery fireball spotted plummeting to Earth over the US

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 6:09pm
There have been hundreds of reports of sightings of a “fireball” in the skies over the southern US – it may have been a meteor breaking up as it falls through Earth’s atmosphere
Categories: Astronomy

More than 1,800 National Science Foundation workers abruptly kicked out of agency headquarters

Space.com - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 5:35pm
National Science Foundation employees were told they'll be removed from the agency's headquarters on Tuesday (June 24) with no direction yet for where to go.
Categories: Astronomy

Upcoming DC movies: Superman, Supergirl, Clayface, The Batman Part II & beyond

Space.com - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 5:00pm
Superman is spearheading DC's big reboot in the realm of movies and TV, but what's coming next? And which projects are confined to elseworlds?
Categories: Astronomy

Does Using ChatGPT Really Change Your Brain Activity?

Scientific American.com - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 4:45pm

Scientists warn against reading too much into a small experiment about ChatGPT and brain activity that is receiving a lot of buzz

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers discover baby planets taking their 1st steps in nearby stellar nursery (images)

Space.com - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 4:00pm
Astronomers have discovered the first step in planet birth, finding hitherto unseen structures in 78 planetary disks in the star-forming region of Ophiuchus.
Categories: Astronomy

Rocket Lab launches 'Get the Hawk Outta Here' mission from New Zealand (video)

Space.com - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 3:54pm
Rocket Lab launched an Electron rocket from New Zealand on June 26. The rocket carried a trio of radio frequency geolocation satellites and one experimental payload into a polar orbit.
Categories: Astronomy

Ash trees are rapidly evolving some resistance to ash dieback disease

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 3:00pm
DNA sequencing shows young trees are more likely to have gene variants that confer partial resistance to a fungus that has been wiping out ash trees across Europe
Categories: Astronomy

Ash trees are rapidly evolving some resistance to ash dieback disease

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 3:00pm
DNA sequencing shows young trees are more likely to have gene variants that confer partial resistance to a fungus that has been wiping out ash trees across Europe
Categories: Astronomy

Deep sleep seems to lead to more eureka moments

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 06/26/2025 - 3:00pm
After a nap, people who entered the second stage of sleep were more likely to spot a solution to a problem than those who slept lightly or not at all
Categories: Astronomy