Astronomy
Is Mars Storing its Water Underground?
Mars' oceans, lakes, and rivers are long gone. They've left behind evidence of their time here in river channels, deltas, paleolakes, and other features. The water's existence isn't a mystery, but its whereabouts is. Did it disappear into space, or did it retreat into underground aquifers?
Single-Atom Quantum Computer Achieves Breakthrough Molecular Simulations
A quantum computer has used a single atom to model the complex dynamics of organic molecules interacting with light
Lunar Landing Pads Will Need to be Tough
As humanity heads back to the Moon, a silent danger lurks: exhaust plumes from multiple spacecraft will blast lunar dust into orbit, creating a potentially deadly obstacle course for future missions. The solution will be to build landing pads on the lunar surface out of the lunar regolith. Researchers simulated landing pads just like these and their tests showed they could handle the heat and force of the propellant exhaust from a landing spacecraft. The techniques they found will minimise erosion over multiple landings.
Getting Enough Sleep Is Critical for Weight Loss and Maintenance
A sleep medicine specialist explains how restless nights lead to consuming more calories and how you can use sleep as a tool for weight loss
Sleep Aids Can Be Uneven and Expensive, Leaving Anxious Patients Lacking
When insomnia took hold of this journalist, she relied on her science reporting to find a medication that (mostly) worked
New Class of Drugs Blocks Wakefulness Chemical and Offers Relief from Insomnia
Drugs that target wakefulness, molecules in cannabis and wearable devices that modulate brain activity could help people with insomnia
Status Report: Gravitational Waves
Astronomers at the International Astronomical Union report that we have now detected more than 200 gravitational-wave events, most the merger of two black holes.
The post Status Report: Gravitational Waves appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Tonight's Perseid Meteor Shower May Be Dipped in Aurora Sauce
The Perseids peak on Sunday night, August 11-12 and just might be joined by a colorful display of northern lights.
The post Tonight's Perseid Meteor Shower May Be Dipped in Aurora Sauce appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Woo-hoo — The Perseid Meteor Shower Is Coming!
It's time again for the annual August meteor-shower fest, the Perseids. This year's display should be a beauty with only minor moonlight and a special surprise at dawn.
The post Woo-hoo — The Perseid Meteor Shower Is Coming! appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
This Week's Sky at a Glance, August 9 – 18
The Perseid meteor shower peaks late Sunday night August 11th and maybe Monday night too. Jupiter and Mars have a close conjunction on the morning of the 14th, looking radically different in the same telescopic view.
The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, August 9 – 18 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Prepare for the Perseids and a Pretty Planetary Pairing
The year’s long-awaited Perseid meteor shower will be accompanied by a graceful planetary conjunction. It’s well worth staying up all night to watch.
The post Prepare for the Perseids and a Pretty Planetary Pairing appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
The Hubble Ultra-Deep Field, 15 Years Later
Fifteen years ago, the Hubble Space Telescope gazed intently at the infrared glow of galaxies in a tiny fraction of the sky. New research shows how this patch of space has changed since then.
The post The Hubble Ultra-Deep Field, 15 Years Later appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Neutron Stars Might Be Squishy Inside
New data on the brightest pulsar observed with a telescope on the International Space Station suggests neutron star interiors are "squishy."
The post Neutron Stars Might Be Squishy Inside appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Enroll in the School of Stars
Amateur astronomers are all life-long learners — and this "back to school" time of year provides just the right motivation.
The post Enroll in the School of Stars appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
This Week's Sky at a Glance, August 2 – 11
The Perseid meteors ramp up this week to their peak. Saturn is nicely up in the east by late evening. Jupiter and Mars near their conjunction in the morning sky. And there's a story behind Poniatowski's Bull.
The post This Week's Sky at a Glance, August 2 – 11 appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Does This Mars Rock Show a "Potential Biosignature"? Or Just "Wet Chemistry"?
"Leopard spots" on a Mars rock could come from life — or they could simply be a sign of a type of chemical reaction that requires water.
The post Does This Mars Rock Show a "Potential Biosignature"? Or Just "Wet Chemistry"? appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
August Podcast: Nova Watch in the Northern Crown
Let’s go on a night-sky tour of the stars and planets that you’ll see overhead during August. Find a good seat for some great “shooting stars,” watch Saturn climb in the eastern sky in early evening, check out the summer's brightest stars, and start looking for a once-in-your-lifetime star blast.
The post August Podcast: Nova Watch in the Northern Crown appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Reading the Tea Leaves: The Future of the Hubble and Chandra Space Telescopes
Future funding for NASA's remaining Great Observatories — Chandra X-ray Observatory and Hubble Space Telescope — is still up in the air.
The post Reading the Tea Leaves: The Future of the Hubble and Chandra Space Telescopes appeared first on Sky & Telescope.