Space isn't remote at all. It's only an hour's drive away if your car could go upwards.

— Fred Hoyle

Astronomy

Why you should join a watch party for the first Vera C. Rubin images

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 06/18/2025 - 2:00am
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory is releasing its first images on 23 June, showing us galaxies as we’ve never seen them before. Here’s how you can join a party to see those shots in full definition
Categories: Astronomy

Why you should join a watch party for the first Vera C. Rubin images

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 06/18/2025 - 2:00am
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory is releasing its first images on 23 June, showing us galaxies as we’ve never seen them before. Here’s how you can join a party to see those shots in full definition
Categories: Astronomy

UK should expect summers above 40°C in next decade, warns Met Office

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 8:01pm
Meteorologists say that in the next decade, summer daytime temperatures above 28°C could persist for more than a month, with spikes as high as 46.6°C possible under today’s climate conditions
Categories: Astronomy

UK should expect summers above 40°C in next decade, warns Met Office

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 8:01pm
Meteorologists say that in the next decade, summer daytime temperatures above 28°C could persist for more than a month, with spikes as high as 46.6°C possible under today’s climate conditions
Categories: Astronomy

Ancient monstersaur had 'goblin-like' teeth and sheddable tail

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 8:01pm
The discovery of a prehistoric tail-shedding reptile reveals more about large lizard life and lineage during the Late Cretaceous Epoch
Categories: Astronomy

Ancient monstersaur had 'goblin-like' teeth and sheddable tail

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 8:01pm
The discovery of a prehistoric tail-shedding reptile reveals more about large lizard life and lineage during the Late Cretaceous Epoch
Categories: Astronomy

The Universe is Filled With Natural Telescope Lenses. Roman Will Use Them to Study Dark Matter

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

We don't know what dark matter is, but that doesn't stop astronomers from using it to their advantage. Dark matter is part of what makes gravitational lensing so effective. Astronomers expect the Roman Space Telescope to find 160,000 gravitational lenses, and dark matter makes a crucial contribution to these lenses.

Categories: Astronomy

How Bubble Muscles Could Help Astronauts Get Their Space Legs

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

When astronauts finally reach Mars, they'll face a unique challenge: walking and working in gravity that's only 37% as strong as Earth's. After spending months in the weightlessness of space, their weakened muscles and bones will struggle to cope with even this reduced gravity. Now, researchers at the University of Bristol have developed a promising solution; a soft, wearable exosuit powered by inflatable "bubble muscles."

Categories: Astronomy

The Moon is Covered in Tiny Orange Glass Beads. Now We Know Why.

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

When the Apollo astronauts landed on the Moon, they discovered drifts of tiny brilliant orange glass beads glittering across the surface. Each one less than 1 mm across and formed about 3.6 billion years ago. These microscopic treasures, each smaller than a pinhead, had been hiding their secrets for billions of years. Now, cutting edge technology has finally cracked the mystery: they're perfect time capsules from the Moon's explosive volcanic past, frozen droplets of ancient lava that solidified instantly in the airless void recording the history of the Moon.

Categories: Astronomy

1000 Hours with the Square Kilometre Array is Our Best Hope to Finally See Cosmic Dawn.

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

The Hubble Deep Field revolutionised astronomy by staring at a seemingly empty patch of sky for thousands of hours, unveiling a cosmos teeming with distant galaxies. But even Hubble can't peer back far enough to witness the universe's first moment of illumination; the Cosmic Dawn, when primordial darkness gave way to starlight. Now, the Square Kilometre Array promises to shatter that barrier. In a groundbreaking simulation, researchers have modelled 1000 hours of SKA observations, creating astronomy's next great deep field, one designed to capture the universe's very first sunrise.

Categories: Astronomy

The Solar Orbiter is Giving Us an Unprecedented Look at the Sun's Poles

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

The ecliptic is the apparent path that the Sun follows during a year. It's an imaginary line that the planets follow, with some small deviations, around the Sun. Spacecraft find it easier to follow the ecliptic because it's generally more energy efficient. However, the Solar Orbiter isn't on the ecliptic and it's giving us our first up-close looks at the Sun's poles.

Categories: Astronomy

Distant Galaxy Has Similar Icy Dust to the Milky Way. So, Similar Planets?

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

For most of us, dust is just something we have to clean up. For astronomers, interstellar dust is a hindrance when they want to study distant objects. However, recent James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observations of a distant galaxy are changing that. This infrared-sensitive observatory is letting them find a way to use dust to understand the evolution of early galaxies. In addition, it uncovered a special property of that galaxy's ice-covered dust, indicating it could be similar to the materials that formed our Solar System.

Categories: Astronomy

Supernova Explosions Changed Earth's Climate and Shaped Humanity's History

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

Most scientists agree that supernova explosions have affected Earth's climate, though the details are not all clear. They likely cooled the climate several times in the last several thousand years, just as humanity was becoming established around the world. The evidence is in telescopes and tree rings.

Categories: Astronomy

Webb Shows Another Jupiter Forming in Real Time

Universe Today - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 6:07pm

Astronomers have used JWST to study a fascinating planetary system that's only 16.7 million years old, with two bizarre giant exoplanets. Designated YSES-1, its closer planet, YSES-1b seems to be surrounded by a disk of material that could be the birthplace of moons, similar to what might have happened at Jupiter billions of years ago. The other, YSES-1c, has a layer of silicate particles in its upper atmosphere—clouds of sand.

Categories: Astronomy

Tiny ‘primordial’ black holes created in the Big Bang may have rapidly grown to supermassive sizes

Space.com - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 5:00pm
Supermassive black holes that seem too large to exist in the early universe may have grown from primordial black holes formed in the first second after the Big Bang.
Categories: Astronomy

Could reusable rockets make solar geoengineering less risky?

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 4:30pm
Injecting aerosols into the atmosphere – but at higher altitudes than planes can reach – could cool the climate while avoiding some of the downsides of lower-altitude solar geoengineering
Categories: Astronomy

Could reusable rockets make solar geoengineering less risky?

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 4:30pm
Injecting aerosols into the atmosphere – but at higher altitudes than planes can reach – could cool the climate while avoiding some of the downsides of lower-altitude solar geoengineering
Categories: Astronomy

Biotech firm aims to create ‘ChatGPT of biology’ – will it work?

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 4:13pm
A UK biotech firm spent years gathering genetic data that has uncovered 1 million previously unknown microbial species and billions of newly identified genes – but even this trove of data may not be enough to train an AI biologist
Categories: Astronomy

Biotech firm aims to create ‘ChatGPT of biology’ – will it work?

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 4:13pm
A UK biotech firm spent years gathering genetic data that has uncovered 1 million previously unknown microbial species and billions of newly identified genes – but even this trove of data may not be enough to train an AI biologist
Categories: Astronomy

Cryopreserved sea star larvae could enable vital species to recover

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 06/17/2025 - 4:00pm
Sea star larvae have been stored at -200°C and thawed for the first time, a step towards restoring populations that have been ravaged by disease
Categories: Astronomy