Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

— Arthur C. Clarke's Third Law

Astronomy

Juno Detects Callisto's "Footprints" in Jupiter's Aurorae

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Jupiter hosts the brightest and most spectacular auroras in the Solar System, and its largest moons (the Galileans) create their own auroral signatures known as “satellite footprints” in the planet’s atmosphere. Until now, astronomers had detected the auroral signatures of three Galileans (Io, Europa, and Ganymede), but not Callisto. Thanks to an international team, close-up images of Callisto's footprints have been seen at last.

Categories: Astronomy

The JWST's New Contribution To Understanding The Cosmic Dawn: MINERVA

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

The JWST is performing a new multi-wavelength survey called MINERVA (Medium-band Imaging with NIRCam to Explore ReVolutionary Astrophysics). It'll study four extragalactic fields in greater detail and depth, and will help us understand the Cosmic Dawn.

Categories: Astronomy

Clues In A Dusty Disk Point The Way To A Potential Exoplanet

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Astronomers struggle to detect small exoplanets directly. One tool they use is to search for the effects these planets have on debris disks around stars. Clues in these disks tell astronomers where they can find sub-Jupiter mass exoplanets.

Categories: Astronomy

Catch the Final Total Lunar Eclipse of 2025 Sunday Night

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Live in the eastern hemisphere? If skies are clear, you have a chance to see a remarkable sight this Sunday night into Monday morning: the ‘Blood Moon’ of a total lunar eclipse. The eclipse favors the Indian Ocean region in its entirety. Europe sees the eclipse already underway at Moonrise, while Australia catches it in progress at Moonset. Only the Americas sit this one out in person... though you can still catch it live online.

Categories: Astronomy

BlueDOGs Might Evolve From Little Red Dots

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

One of the most difficult parts of astronomy is understanding how time affects it. The farther away you look in the universe, the farther back you look in time. One way this complicates things is how objects might change over time. For example, a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy in the early universe might appear one way to our modern telescopes, but the same supermassive black hole might appear completely differently a few billion years later. Understanding the connection between the two objects would be difficult to say the least, but a new paper from researchers at the University of Science and Technology in South Korea describes one potential parallel, between the recently discovered “Little Red Dots” of the early universe and “BlueDOGs” of the slightly later universe.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Use a Double-Lensing Technique to Study a Supermassive Black Hole

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

An international team of astronomers led by Matus Rybak (Leiden University, Netherlands) has proven, thanks to accidental double zoom, that millimetre radiation is generated close to the core of a supermassive black hole. Their findings have been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

Categories: Astronomy

The Butterfly Star And Its Planet-Forming Disk

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

The so-called Butterfly star gets its name from its edge-on appearance. The star's protoplanetary disk blocks out starlight revealing a nebula, or butterfly wing, on each side. Deeper JWST observations show the disk is tilted and asymmetrical, which affects how planets form.

Categories: Astronomy

Ionic Liquids Could Form Naturally And Replace Water As A Biological Solvent

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Water is key to life as we know it. But that doesn’t mean its key to life everywhere. Despite the fact that the ability to house liquid water is one of the key characteristics we look for in potentially habitable exoplanets, there is nothing written in stone about the fact that life has to use water as a solvent as opposed to other liquid options. A new paper from researchers at MIT, including those who are developing missions to look for life on Venus, shows there might be an alternative - ionic liquids that can form and stay stable in really harsh conditions.

Categories: Astronomy

Webb's Images of Early Galaxies are Providing Fresh Insights into the Early Universe

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Images taken with the MIRI infrared camera on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have made it possible to observe the first galaxies in long-wavelength infrared light for the first time. Alongside a recent study published in Astronomy and Astrophysics, these images provide new insights into how the first galaxies formed over 13 billion years ago.

Categories: Astronomy

Chandra Peers Into A Supernova's Troubled Heart

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

NASA's Chandra Reveals Star's Inner Conflict Before Explosion - https://chandra.si.edu/press/25_releases/press_082825.html

Categories: Astronomy

Metals Are Critical To Life - We Should Screen Exoplanets For Them

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Life is complicated, and not just in a philosophical sense. But one simple thing we know about life is that it requires energy, and to get that energy it needs certain fundamental elements. A new paper in preprint on arXiv from Giovanni Covone and Donato Giovannelli from the University of Naples discusses how we might use that constraint to narrow our search for stars and planets that could potentially harbor life. To put it simply, if it doesn’t have many of the constituent parts of the “building blocks” of life, then life probably doesn't exist there.

Categories: Astronomy

Cosmic Butterfly Unlocks Secrets of How Rocky Planets Form

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Deep in the constellation Scorpius, about 3,400 light years from Earth, a spectacular cosmic butterfly is revealing fundamental secrets about how worlds like our own came to exist. Using the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have peered into the heart of the Butterfly Nebula and discovered clues that could transform our understanding of rocky planet formation.

Categories: Astronomy

Photochemistry and Climate Modeling of Earth-like Exoplanets

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

What role can the relationship between oxygen (O2) and ozone (O3) in exoplanet atmospheres have on detecting biosignatures? This is what a recent study submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics hopes to address as an international team of researchers investigated novel methods for identifying and analyzing Earth-like atmospheres. This study has the potential to help scientists develop new methods for identifying exoplanet biosignatures, and potentially life as we know it.

Categories: Astronomy

Scientists Solve the Mystery of Why Similar Asteroids Look Different Colours

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

When NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft returned from its mission to asteroid Bennu in 2023, it brought back more than just ancient space rocks, it delivered answers to puzzles that have baffled astronomers for years. Among the most intriguing questions was why asteroids that should look identical through telescopes appear strikingly different colours from Earth.

Categories: Astronomy

What Technosignatures Would Interstellar Objects Have?

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

The recent discovery of the third known interstellar object (ISO), 3I/ATLAS, has brought about another round of debate on whether these objects could potentially be technological in origin. Everything from random YouTube channels to tenured Harvard professors have thoughts about whether ISOs might actually be spaceships, but the general consensus of the scientific community is that they aren’t. Overturning that consensus would require a lot of “extraordinary evidence”, and a new paper led by James Davenport at the DiRAC Institute at the University of Washington lays out some of the ways that astronomers could collect that evidence for either the current ISO or any new ones we might find.

Categories: Astronomy

3I/ATLAS's Coma Is Largely Carbon Dioxide

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

All (or at least most) astronomical eyes are on 3I/ATLAS, our most recent interstellar visitor that was discovered in early July. Given its relatively short observational window in our solar system, and especially its impending perihelion in October, a lot of observational power has been directed towards it. That includes the most powerful space telescope of them all - and a recent paper pre-printed on arXiv describes what the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) discovered in the comet’s coma. It wasn’t like any other it had seen before.

Categories: Astronomy

Scientists Crack the Code of the Galaxy's Most Mysterious Steam Worlds

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

Imagine worlds where water exists in forms so exotic that they defy our everyday understanding of matter, where the familiar liquid we drink every day transforms into something that behaves like neither gas nor liquid. These aren't science fiction fantasies, but real planets that represent some of the most common worlds in our Galaxy, and scientists at UC Santa Cruz have just developed new models to understand them.

Categories: Astronomy

New Insights into Coronal Heating and Solar Wind Acceleration

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

What processes are responsible for our Sun’s solar wind, heat, and energy? This is what a recent study published in Physical Review X hopes to address as a team of researchers presented evidence for a newly discovered type of barrier that the Sun exhibits that could help explain the transfer of energy to heat within the Sun’s outer atmosphere. This study has the potential to help scientists better understand the underlying mechanisms for what drives our Sun and what this could mean for learning about other suns throughout the cosmos.

Categories: Astronomy

Scientists Discover Unusual Plasma Waves in Jupiter's Aurora

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

In the cold darkness above Jupiter's poles, where temperatures plummet to hundreds of degrees below zero, something remarkable is happening that challenges our understanding of planetary science. Using data from NASA's Juno spacecraft, researchers have uncovered a completely new type of plasma phenomenon that creates auroras that can only be seen with specialised instruments, revealing that our Solar System's largest planet operates by rules we never knew existed.

Categories: Astronomy

Binary Star Evolution as a Driver of Planet Formation

Universe Today - Thu, 09/04/2025 - 9:04pm

What can binary star systems teach astronomers about the formation and evolution of planets orbiting them? This is what a recent study published in Nature hopes to address as a team of scientists investigated past studies that claimed a specific binary star system could host a planet demonstrating a retrograde orbit, meaning it orbits in the opposite direction of the star’s rotation. This study has the potential to help scientists better understand binary and multiple star systems, specifically the formation and evolution of their planets and what this could mean for finding life beyond Earth.

Categories: Astronomy