"For the sage, time is only of significance in that within it the steps of becoming can unfold in clearest sequence."

— I Ching

Astronomy

Asteroid exploded 'similar to a bomb' over France in a rare event

An asteroid called 2023 CX1 underwent a single explosion, hinting that it had an unusual structure that might be more damaging on the ground
Categories: Astronomy

Climate Change Fuels Record Summer Heat, Killing Thousands

Scientific American.com - 9 hours 19 min ago

Climate-fueled heat has caused thousands of excess deaths over the past three summers, which were the three hottest on record

Categories: Astronomy

Earth Has Another Quasi-Satellite: The Asteroid Arjuna 2025 PN7

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

Earth has a new co-moving neighbour. It's a new member of the group of asteroids that follow Earth-like orbits and are called quasi-satellites. Together, they constitute an asteroid belt.

Categories: Astronomy

Make Like A Spacecraft And Fly Through Gaia’s 3D Map Of Stellar Nurseries

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

Here we fly through Gaia’s new 3D map of stellar nurseries. This new map includes 3D-views of the Gum Nebula, the North American Nebula, the California Nebula, and the Orion-Eridanus superbubble. It allows us to fly around, through, and above these areas containing stellar nurseries. At the end of the animation, we arrive at our Sun.

Categories: Astronomy

Blue Alchemist Is One Step Closer to Creating Sustainable Infrastructure on the Moon

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

Blue Origin's breakthrough in-space resource utilization system aims to turn lunar regolith into solar arrays, metals, and breathable and propellant-grade oxygen, enabling sustainable robotic and human Moon missions and future Mars exploration.

Categories: Astronomy

New Evidence Says An Exploding Comet Wiped Out The Clovis Culture And Triggered The Younger Dryas

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

A swarm of fragments from an air burst comet could've triggered the Younger Dryas cooling period. A wave of megafauna extinctions followed, as did the disappearance of the Clovis culture.

Categories: Astronomy

Does the Multiverse Explain the Nature of the Universe?

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

One possibility to explain the constants of nature is that there’s more than one universe.

Categories: Astronomy

Rare Triple Conjunction Smiles at Dawn on September 19th

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

Sometimes, it seems as if the Universe is literally smiling down upon us. If skies are clear this coming Friday September 19th, be sure to wake up early to catch a bizarre celestial scene as Venus, Regulus and the slim crescent Moon huddle together in the eastern dawn. This triple play is a complicated one, evolving one of the best conjunctions for 2025.

Categories: Astronomy

Clusters and Chains of Stars Reveal a Dynamic Milky Way

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

Gaia Proves Our Skies Are Filled with Chains of Starry Gatherings Gaia Proves Our Skies Are Filled with Chains of Starry Gatherings https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Gaia/Gaia_proves_our_skies_are_filled_with_chains_of_starry_gatherings

Categories: Astronomy

First Dark Matter Sub-Halo Found In The Milky Way

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

There are plenty of theories about what dark matter is and how it might be gravitationally affecting the universe. However, proving those theories out is hard since it hardly ever interacts with anything, especially on “small” scales like galaxies. So when a research team claims to have found evidence for dark matter in our own galaxy, it's worth taking a look at how. A new paper from Dr. Surkanya Chakrabati and her lab at the University of Alabama at Huntsville (UAH) does just that. They found evidence for a dark matter “sub-halo” in the galactic neighborhood, by looking at signals from binary pulsars.

Categories: Astronomy

New Bright Comet SWAN Could Perform a Surprise October Show

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

A new comet approaching from sunward could make a fine dusk appearance in October. There was chatter on the boards this past Friday September 12th, about a comet seen in the Solar Wind Anisotropies (SWAN) images near the Sun. Tentatively named SWAN25B and now formally designated as C/2025 R2 SWAN, this comet could put on a brief show in late September into October if it holds up.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Catch a Planet in the Act of Being Born

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

It’s rather strange to think about catching a planet in the act of being born given that the process takes millions of years but for the first time, astronomers have done just that! The evidence reveals a planet actively forming and feeding from its surrounding disk of gas and dust. The discovery of hydrogen emission from the protoplanet offers a new glimpse into the violent stages of planetary formation, revealing processes that shaped our own Solar System billions of years ago.

Categories: Astronomy

Interstellar Objects Like Comet 3I/ATLAS Could Act As Planetary Seeds

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

ISOs like Comet 3I/ATLAS are fascinating yet fleeting visitors from distant solar systems. New research suggests that when captured by a young solar system that's still forming planets, these objects could act as planetary seeds for the formation of planets.

Categories: Astronomy

Civilization Can't Arise Without Plate Tectonics And Carbon Dioxide

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

Can a planet that lacks plate tectonics and has very little carbon dioxide support life? Maybe. Can it support life long enough for a technological civilization to arise? New research says no.

Categories: Astronomy

The Anthropic Argument: Nature Is the Way It Is Because We Exist

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

According to every experiment, the constants of nature appear to be constant.

Categories: Astronomy

“Black Hole Stars" Could Solve the Mystery of Little Red Dots

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

A bizarre new type of object could solve one of astronomy's most puzzling mysteries. The James Webb Space Telescope spotted some “little red dots” and until now, it’s been thought they were galaxies. Now, a team of astronomers have come up with an alternative theory, supermassive black holes wrapped up in a thick envelope of gas and they are calling them ‘black hole stars!’

Categories: Astronomy

A Rover To Mine Martian Volcanoes

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

Different parts of Mars have different advantages and disadvantages when it comes to their available resources, just like Earth. The polar caps are likely the most valuable in terms of their water content, which will be critical to any early stage crewed mission to the Red Planet. But to really unlock the fully potential of Mars, geologists think we’ll need to look to the volcanoes, where there is likely to be easily accessible valuable materials like nickel, titanium, and chromium, that were placed there when the volcanoes were active. Reaching those deposits on the side of some of the largest mountains in the solar system safely is a challenge, and one that is tackled in a new paper by Divij Gupta and Arkajit Aich, where they look at the necessary requirements to set up an effective mining operation on the slopes of Olympus and Elysium Mons.

Categories: Astronomy

Ancient Floods and Rolling Rocks Boosts the Hunt for Life on Mars

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

David Bowie once sung ‘Is there life on Mars?’ and along with being a question in a hit song, its also a question that has driven decades of missions to the red planet. From early orbital surveys to rovers hunting for evidence that life once existed beyond Earth the search has become more and more sophisticated. Europe's upcoming Mars rover mission is one such mission and it has received an unexpected boost in its search for signs of ancient life, as two new studies reveal that natural Martian processes could deliver rich organic materials directly to the rover, eliminating the need for long distance travel to find the building blocks of life.

Categories: Astronomy

A Spacecraft Could Explore 3I/ATLAS to Learn More About "Cosmic Noon"

Universe Today - Tue, 09/16/2025 - 6:02pm

An examination of the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS shows that it is likely to be a remnant of the Galaxy's “Cosmic Noon” period, ca. 9 to 13 billion years ago. An examination of the object by an active mission could provide clues about stellar and planetary formation, and maybe the emergence of life, during this early period of galactic history.

Categories: Astronomy