"I never think about the future. It comes soon enough."

— Albert Einstein

Astronomy

New Scientist recommends Never Let Me Go

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
The books, TV, games and more that New Scientist staff have enjoyed this week
Categories: Astronomy

Owning our own data is the only way to stop enshittifcation

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
The internet is not what it once was, with so many apps and websites mere shadows of themselves. Thankfully, the inventor of the web Tim Berners-Lee, has a fix that we should adopt
Categories: Astronomy

Has life today been enshittified? Cory Doctorow's new book explores

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
Enshittification is a term coined by Cory Doctorow in 2022. In his new book, Doctorow lays out how tech companies have made our lives progressively worse, finds Matthew Sparkes
Categories: Astronomy

The end of US support for the CMB-S4 telescope is devastating

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
The US government's decision to stop supporting a telescope facility that would have given us unprecedented insight into the early universe is calamitous, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
Categories: Astronomy

Spider Web Patterns May Help Arachnids Sense Vibrations from Prey

Scientific American.com - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm

Researchers simulated the effects that different web decorations had on vibrations, adding fresh insight to a decades-old debate about the function of these structures

Categories: Astronomy

The end of US support for the CMB-S4 telescope is devastating

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
The US government's decision to stop supporting a telescope facility that would have given us unprecedented insight into the early universe is calamitous, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
Categories: Astronomy

Minecraft fan may be most committed hobbyist out there

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
Feedback comes across a YouTuber's efforts to build a large language model in Minecraft and is impressed at the scale of it – even if it doesn't quite live up to its promise to blow your mind "in spectacular fashion"
Categories: Astronomy

Tough choices lie ahead when it comes to climate change adaptation

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
COP's negotiations this month will focus on money for climate change adaptation. While more money is essential, even a big increase won't be enough on its own and we need to face up to this, warns Susannah Fisher
Categories: Astronomy

Provocative book sets out to solve the hard problem of consciousness

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
Can sea slugs form abstract thoughts? Do we dare to see any "purpose" in evolution? Is the subjective just a complicated form of the objective? Nikolay Kukushkin's One Hand Clapping is a bold voyage around the mysteries of the human mind, finds Thomas Lewton
Categories: Astronomy

Minecraft fan may be most committed hobbyist out there

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
Feedback comes across a YouTuber's efforts to build a large language model in Minecraft and is impressed at the scale of it – even if it doesn't quite live up to its promise to blow your mind "in spectacular fashion"
Categories: Astronomy

Tough choices lie ahead when it comes to climate change adaptation

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
COP's negotiations this month will focus on money for climate change adaptation. While more money is essential, even a big increase won't be enough on its own and we need to face up to this, warns Susannah Fisher
Categories: Astronomy

Provocative book sets out to solve the hard problem of consciousness

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 1:00pm
Can sea slugs form abstract thoughts? Do we dare to see any "purpose" in evolution? Is the subjective just a complicated form of the objective? Nikolay Kukushkin's One Hand Clapping is a bold voyage around the mysteries of the human mind, finds Thomas Lewton
Categories: Astronomy

Russia’s Burevestnik Nuclear-Powered Missile Is a Very Bad Idea

Scientific American.com - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 12:45pm

Russian leader Vladimir Putin claimed his nation conducted a successful flight of a nuclear-powered cruise missile. Here’s how that missile might work

Categories: Astronomy

To Expand Gravitational Wave Astronomy, Astronomers Look to a Band That's Mid

Universe Today - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 12:07pm

Current gravitational wave observatories can't see a range of frequencies known as mid-band. That could change with a new detector that uses a trick from atomic clocks.

Categories: Astronomy

Why the WIMPs Became the Toughest Particle in Physics

Universe Today - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 12:02pm

As a kid you ever play that game Guess Who? If you haven’t, it’s actually kinda fun.

Categories: Astronomy

All Eyes on Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS

Sky & Telescope Magazine - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 11:04am

An alien comet will soon depart from the Sun's glare and enter the morning sky. It may be even brighter than expected, so get ready for the observing opportunity of a lifetime.

The post All Eyes on Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS appeared first on Sky & Telescope.

Categories: Astronomy

'Most of it is good': Tim Berners-Lee on the state of the web now

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 11:00am
The man who invented the web is aware of the many issues it faces, from problematic social media use to the rise of unfettered AI. He also has a plan to remedy the situation
Categories: Astronomy

'Most of it is good': Tim Berners-Lee on the state of the web now

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 11:00am
The man who invented the web is aware of the many issues it faces, from problematic social media use to the rise of unfettered AI. He also has a plan to remedy the situation
Categories: Astronomy

X-59 Super-Quiet Supersonic Aircraft Makes Its First Test Flight

Universe Today - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 10:35am

Lockheed Martin Skunk Works has executed the first test flight of the X-59 quiet supersonic aircraft in partnership with NASA. The first flight was subsonic, but eventually the plane will demonstrate technologies aimed at reducing sonic booms to gentle thumps.

Categories: Astronomy

AI challenge advances satellite-based disaster mapping

ESO Top News - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 10:04am

Four teams from different countries have been recognised for their breakthrough work in using artificial intelligence to detect earthquake damage from space, marking the conclusion of a global competition organised by the European Space Agency in collaboration with the International Charter ‘Space and Major Disasters’ – commonly referred to as ‘the Charter’.

Categories: Astronomy