Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

— Arthur C. Clarke's Third Law

Astronomy

Private Ax-4 astronauts aboard ISS are filling their time with science, views of Earth and pierogis (video)

Space.com - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 6:00pm
As the Axiom-4 mission approaches its two-week mark before returning to Earth, the private space mission crew discusses science and pierogis.
Categories: Astronomy

‘Science Fair’ of Lost Research Protests Trump Cuts

Scientific American.com - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 5:00pm

A protest at a congressional office building highlighted future research findings that vast cuts to science will erase

Categories: Astronomy

Scientists discover ice in space isn't like water on Earth after all

Space.com - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 5:00pm
Scientists had assumed that the ice in space was purely amorphous, but new experiments show it can have a partly crystalline structure similar to ice on Earth.
Categories: Astronomy

NASA's asteroid-crash Earth defense tactic has a complication — DART ejected large boulders into space

Space.com - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 4:10pm
"You can think of it as a cosmic pool game. We might miss the pocket if we don't consider all the variables."
Categories: Astronomy

Smart telescope, smarter deal — save $600 off the Unistellar eQuinox 2

Space.com - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 4:00pm
Grab the Unistellar eQuinox 2 (the best smart telescope) for $2199 in this anti-Prime Day deal from BH Photo and Video
Categories: Astronomy

Surgical robots take step towards fully autonomous operations

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 3:00pm
An AI system trained on videos of operations successfully guided a robot to carry out gall bladder surgery on a dead pig, with minimal human assistance
Categories: Astronomy

Surgical robots take step towards fully autonomous operations

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 3:00pm
An AI system trained on videos of operations successfully guided a robot to carry out gall bladder surgery on a dead pig, with minimal human assistance
Categories: Astronomy

The JWST Shows Us How Galaxies Evolve

Universe Today - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:44pm

The Milky Way and other similar galaxies have two distinct disk sections. One is the thin disk section, and it contains mostly younger stars with higher metallicity. The second is the thick disk, and it contains older stars with lower metallicity. The effort to study these disks in more galaxies and in greater detail has been stymied. But now we have the JWST, and researchers used it to examine more than 100 distant, edge-on galaxies.

Categories: Astronomy

When Theia Struck Earth, it Helped Set the Stage for Life to Appear

Universe Today - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:44pm

Earth life is carbon-based, and without carbon, there would be no life. New research shows how Earth got its carbon from impactors, including a boost from Theia, the impactor that created the Moon. Jupiter also pitched in to help.

Categories: Astronomy

Primordial Black Holes Could Have Accelerated Early Star Formation

Universe Today - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:44pm

The search for dark matter requires all of the best models, theories, and ideas we can throw at it. A new paper from Julia Monika Koulen, Stefano Profumo, and Nolan Smyth from the University of California at Santa Cruz (UCSC) tackles the implications of the sizes and abundance of one of the more interesting dark matter candidates - primordial black holes (PBHs).

Categories: Astronomy

How To Use Fusion To Get To Proxima Centauri's Potentially Habitable Exoplanet

Universe Today - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:44pm

Proxima Centauri b is the closest known exoplanet that could be in the habitable zone of its star. Therefore, it has garnered a lot of attention, including several missions designed to visit it and send back information. Unfortunately, due to technological constraints and the gigantic distances involved, most of those missions only weigh a few grams and require massive solar scales or pushing lasers to get anywhere near their target. But why let modern technological levels limit your imagination when there are so many other options, if still theoretical, options to send a larger mission to our nearest potentially habitable neighbor? That was the thought behind the Master’s Thesis of Amelie Lutz at Virginia Tech - she looked at the possibility of using fusion propulsion systems to send a few hundred kilogram probe to the system, and potentially even orbit it.

Categories: Astronomy

Reviving SETI with High-Energy Astronomy

Universe Today - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:44pm

What new methods can be developed in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI)? This is what a recent white paper submitted to the 2025 NASA Decadal Astrobiology Research and Exploration Strategy (DARES) Request for Information (RFI) hopes to address as a pair of researchers from the Breakthrough Listen project and Michigan State University discussed how high-energy astronomy could be used for identifying radio signals from an extraterrestrial technological civilization, also called technosignatures. This study has the potential to help SETI and other organizations develop novel techniques for finding intelligent life beyond Earth.

Categories: Astronomy

Webb Refines the Bullet Cluster's Mass

Universe Today - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:44pm

One of the most iconic cosmic scenes in the Universe lies nearly 3.8 billion light-years away from us in the direction of the constellation Carina. This is where two massive clusters of galaxies have collided. The resulting combined galaxies and other material is now called the Bullet Cluster, after one of the two members that interacted over several billion years. It's one of the hottest-known galaxy clusters, thanks to clouds of gas that were heated by shockwaves during the event. Astronomers have observed this scene with several different telescopes in multiple wavelengths of light, including X-ray and infrared. Those observations and others show that the dark matter makes up the majority of the cluster's mass. Its gravitational effect distorts light from more distant objects and makes it an ideal gravitational lens.

Categories: Astronomy

Will YR4 Hit the Moon? We Won't Know Until 2028

Universe Today - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:44pm

Earlier this year, asteroid 2024 YR4 was discovered and found to have a trajectory through the Earth/Moon system in 2032. The world's telescopes focused on the potential threat and downgraded the chance to negligible for the Earth...but it still has a non-zero chance of hitting the Moon. As the asteroid became too dim to continue observing, its Moon impact chance stood at 4%. When will we update this number? Not until it does another close flyby in 2028.

Categories: Astronomy

Anatomy of a Space Shuttle

NASA Image of the Day - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:43pm
This illustration shows the parts of a space shuttle orbiter. About the same size and weight as a DC-9 aircraft, the orbiter contains the pressurized crew compartment (which can normally carry up to seven crew members), the cargo bay, and the three main engines mounted on its aft end.
Categories: Astronomy, NASA

The cosmos is vast, so how do we measure it?

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:00pm
The awe-inspiring distances of the cosmos are hard to visualise, so how can we be certain we are measuring them correctly? Chanda Prescod-Weinstein explains
Categories: Astronomy

Is this the raciest conference invite ever?

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:00pm
Feedback has been invited to an event next year in Shaoxing, China. It's an academic conference promising "revolutionary thinkers who are redefining human intimacy through cutting-edge robotics and AI"
Categories: Astronomy

Plans to genetically screen newborns for rare diseases are problematic

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 07/09/2025 - 2:00pm
The UK's health secretary has announced a 10-year plan to check newborns for a huge range of rare conditions. There are major medical and ethical issues with this, argues neurologist Suzanne O'Sullivan
Categories: Astronomy