Astronomy
NASA Astronaut Frank Rubio in Space Station Cupola
Exoplanet 40 light years from Earth may have right conditions for life
Exoplanet 40 light years from Earth may have right conditions for life
US Congress is holding a UFO hearing tomorrow about 'restoring public trust.' Here's how to watch live
Does this sculpted head show an ancient hunter-gatherer's hairstyle?
Does this sculpted head show an ancient hunter-gatherer's hairstyle?
Sculpted head hints at hair fashion for ancient hunter-gatherers
Sculpted head hints at hair fashion for ancient hunter-gatherers
We’ve glimpsed the secret quantum landscape inside all matter
We’ve glimpsed the secret quantum landscape inside all matter
Scientists Release the Latest Gravitational-wave Detections
The number of gravitational-wave signals has just doubled with the release of the newest catalog of events.
The post Scientists Release the Latest Gravitational-wave Detections appeared first on Sky & Telescope.
Photochemistry and Climate Modeling of Earth-like Exoplanets
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.
Scientists Solve the Mystery of Why Similar Asteroids Look Different Colours
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.
What Technosignatures Would Interstellar Objects Have?
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.
Viruses in the Gut Protect Us and Change with Age and Diet
A new review study examines the “gut virome”: the microbiome’s mysterious viral population
NASA’s InSight Lander Reveals Mars’s Lumpy Mantle in New Seismic Study
A common nasal spray shows promise in reducing COVID risk, but vaccine access remains tangled in policy in the U.S.
Quantum router could speed up quantum computers
Quantum router could speed up quantum computers
3I/ATLAS's Coma Is Largely Carbon Dioxide
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.