"Man will never reach the moon regardless of all future scientific advances."

— Dr. Lee De Forest

Astronomy

Watch a Möbius strip robot move and climb when hit by light

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 8:00am
When light strikes a soft robot made from a twisted strip of hydrogel sheets, it moves in a predictable way and can climb a vertical rod or haul up a load
Categories: Astronomy

Watch a Möbius strip robot move and climb when hit by light

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 8:00am
When light strikes a soft robot made from a twisted strip of hydrogel sheets, it moves in a predictable way and can climb a vertical rod or haul up a load
Categories: Astronomy

Stunning image shows atoms transforming into quantum waves — just as Schrödinger predicted

Space.com - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 8:00am
A new imaging technique, which captured frozen lithium atoms transforming into quantum waves, could be used to probe some of the most poorly understood aspects of the quantum world.
Categories: Astronomy

The surface of this volcanic exoplanet is hotter than some stars

Space.com - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 8:00am
Described as being like "Io on steroids," a newly discovered exoplanet is the victim of a tug of war between its neighboring planets and its star.
Categories: Astronomy

Meeting Developmental Milestones Early Doesn’t Always Predict Success

Scientific American.com - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 8:00am

Developmental milestones help us understand when a child needs help, but meeting them early doesn’t necessarily predict long term success

Categories: Astronomy

Nuclear Weapons at Any Price? Congress Should Say No

Scientific American.com - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 7:30am

Costs are skyrocketing to modernize the U.S. nuclear arsenal. Instead of turning a blind eye, Congress should demand fiscal oversight and make hard decisions balancing costs with deterrence

Categories: Astronomy

Pigs seem less stressed if their barn is scented with lavender

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 6:00am
If a lavender scent is sprayed into pig pens three times a day, the animals show less aggressive behaviour and appear more relaxed
Categories: Astronomy

Pigs seem less stressed if their barn is scented with lavender

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 6:00am
If a lavender scent is sprayed into pig pens three times a day, the animals show less aggressive behaviour and appear more relaxed
Categories: Astronomy

How a giant sunspot unleashed solar storms that spawned global auroras that just dazzled us all

Space.com - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 6:00am
Intense solar activity generated the most extreme geomagnetic storm since 2003 on Friday (May 10), and the action could continue into this week. Here's how it happened.
Categories: Astronomy

The Internet Is Full of Deepfakes, and the Sky Is Full of Trash

Scientific American.com - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 6:00am

Deepfake images, a delayed spaceflight, the troubles with space junk and a blast from our past for your Monday review of science news.

Categories: Astronomy

Does using the internet make us happier or sadder?

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 8:01pm
A study of more than 2 million people in 168 countries suggests that having access to the internet is linked to higher life satisfaction, but many questions remain unanswered
Categories: Astronomy

Does using the internet make us happier or sadder?

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 8:01pm
A study of more than 2 million people in 168 countries suggests that having access to the internet is linked to higher life satisfaction, but many questions remain unanswered
Categories: Astronomy

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APOD - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 4:00pm

This is how the Sun disappeared from the daytime sky last month.


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

SpaceX Shows Off Its New Extravehicular Activity Suit

Universe Today - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 3:54pm

In February 2022, SpaceX and entrepreneur/philanthropist Jared Isaacman (commander of the Inspiration4 mission) announced they were launching a new program to “rapidly advance human spaceflight capabilities” while supporting important charitable and humanitarian causes here on Earth. It’s called the Polaris Program. In a recent press release, SpaceX revealed the spacesuits its Polaris astronauts will be wearing (up top) and described the research crews will conduct during the program’s three human spaceflight missions – the first of which is scheduled to launch this summer!

These missions will build on the company’s experience with NASA’s Commercial Crew Delivery (CCD) program, where NASA certified SpaceX’s Crew Dragon vehicle to transport crews to the International Space Station (ISS). According to the company’s press statement, the new suits are an evolution of the Intravehicular Activity (IVA) suit currently used by Dragon crews. This included the crew of the Demo-2 mission, which validated the flight system and was the first crewed mission to take off from U.S. soil since the retirement of the Space Shuttle in 2011.

It was also the suit worn by the Inspiration4 crew as they became the first flight to be crewed entirely by private citizens. These latest are known as the Extravehicular Activity Space Suit, which has several new features. Per the company’s press statement, “Developed with mobility in mind, SpaceX teams incorporated new materials, fabrication processes, and novel joint designs to provide greater flexibility to astronauts in pressurized scenarios while retaining comfort for unpressurized scenarios.”

The suit also has redundancy features, such as additional seals and pressure valves to help ensure the suit remains pressurized during EVAs. The new 3D-printed helmet incorporates a new visor that reduces glare and features a camera and a new Heads-Up Display (HUD) that monitors conditions inside the suit. These suits will make their debut during the first of three Polaris missions – Polaris Dawn – scheduled to take place this summer (at the earliest). This mission will be commanded by Isaacman and will see a Crew Dragon launched from Launch Complex 39A atop a Falcon 9 rocket. The crew will spend five days in orbit and attempt to reach the highest Earth orbit ever flown.

During their time in space, the Polaris Dawn crew will conduct the first commercial spacewalk (and the first EVA where four astronauts were in space simultaneously) and be the first to test the Starlink laser-based communication system in space. The crew will also conduct scientific research in collaboration with the Translational Research Institute for Space Health (TRISH), BioServe Space Technologies, Space Technologies Lab, Weill Cornell Medicine, the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHUAPL), the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and the U.S. Air Force Academy.

These efforts are designed to advance our understanding of human health during long-duration spaceflights, with applications for health here on Earth. According to the company website, these research activities will include:

  • Using ultrasound to monitor, detect, and quantify venous gas emboli (VGE), contributing to studies on human prevalence to decompression sickness;
  • Gathering data on the radiation environment to better understand how space radiation affects human biological systems;
  • Providing biological samples towards multi-omics analyses for a long-term Biobank; and
  • Research related to Spaceflight Associated Neuro-Ocular Syndrome (SANS), which is a key risk to human health in long-duration spaceflight.

Polaris Dawn will be followed up by a second mission (Polaris II, the date of which is TBD) that will attempt to build upon these objectives. The third mission (Polaris III) will be the first human spaceflight involving the Starship and Super Heavy launch vehicle. But as is made clear in the company’s statement, the suits are intended to fulfill SpaceX’s long-term goals:

“While Polaris Dawn will be the first time the SpaceX EVA suit is used in low-Earth orbit, the suit’s ultimate destiny lies much farther from our home planet. Building a base on the Moon and a city on Mars will require the development of a scalable design for the millions of spacesuits required to help make life multiplanetary.”

Further Reading: SpaceX, Polaris Program

The post SpaceX Shows Off Its New Extravehicular Activity Suit appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Astronomy

Do Clashing Galaxies Create Odd Radio Circles?

Universe Today - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 2:30pm

Within the last five years, astronomers have discovered a new type of astronomical phenomenon that exists on vast scales – larger than whole galaxies. They’re called ORCs (odd radio circles), and they look like giant rings of radio waves expanding outwards like a shockwave. Until now, ORCs had never been observed in any wavelength other than radio, but according to a new paper released on April 30 2024, astronomers have captured X-rays associated with an ORC for the first time.

The discovery offers some new clues as to what might be behind the creation of an ORC.

While many astronomical events, like supernova explosions, can leave behind circular remnants, ORCs seem to require a different explanation.

“The power needed to produce such an expansive radio emission is very strong,” said Esra Bulbul, lead author of the new paper. “Some simulations can reproduce their shapes but not their intensity. No simulations explain how to create ORCs.”

ORCs can be a challenge to study, in part because they are usually only visible in radio wavelengths. They haven’t previously been associated with X-ray or infrared emissions, nor has there been any sign of them in optical wavelengths. Sometimes, ORCs surround a visible galaxy, but not always (eight have been discovered to date around known elliptical galaxies).

Using ESA’s XMM-Newton telescope, Bulbul and her team observed one of the nearest known ORCs, an object called the Cloverleaf, and found a striking X-ray component to the object.

“This is the first time anyone has seen X-ray emission associated with an ORC,” said Bulbul. “It was the missing key to unlock the secret of the Cloverleaf’s formation.”

This image of the first ORC (odd radio circle) ever discovered, aptly dubbed ORC-1, overlays radio observations from South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope in green atop an optical and infrared map from the international DES (Dark Energy Survey) project. J. English (U. Manitoba)/EMU/MeerKAT/DES (CTIO)

X-rays of the Cloverleaf show gas that has been heated and excited by some process. In this case, the X-ray emissions reveal two groups of galaxies (totaling about a dozen galaxies altogether) that have begun to merge inside the Cloverleaf, heating the gas to 15 million degrees Fahrenheit.

The chaotic galaxy mergers are interesting, but they can’t explain the Cloverleaf by themselves. Galaxies mergers happen all over the universe, while ORCs are a rare phenomenon. There’s something unique going on to create something like the Cloverleaf.

“Mergers make up the backbone of structure formation, but there’s something special in this system that rockets the radio emission,” Bulbul said. “We can’t tell right now what it is, so we need more and deeper data from both radio and X-ray telescopes.”

That doesn’t mean astronomers don’t have any guesses.

“One fascinating idea for the powerful radio signal is that the resident supermassive black holes went through episodes of extreme activity in the past, and relic electrons from that ancient activity were reaccelerated by this merging event,” said Kim Weaver, NASA project scientist for XMM-Newton.

In other words, ORCs like the Cloverleaf might require a two-part origin story – powerful emissions from active supermassive black holes, followed by galaxy merger shockwaves that give those emissions a second kick.

Learn More:

E. Bulbul et. al. “The galaxy group merger origin of the Cloverleaf odd radio circle system.” Astronomy and Astrophysics.

X-ray Satellite XMM-Newton Sees ‘Space Clover’ in a New Light.” NASA.

The post Do Clashing Galaxies Create Odd Radio Circles? appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Astronomy

SpaceX launches 23 Starlink satellites from Florida (video)

Space.com - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 2:00pm
SpaceX launched 23 of its Starlink satellites from Florida on Sunday (May 12), adding to its huge and ever-growing broadband megaconstellation.
Categories: Astronomy

Scientists could make blazing-fast 6G using curving light rays

Space.com - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 10:00am
Researchers have discovered a way to curve data-carrying terahertz signals around obstacles, paving the way for ultrafast 6G.
Categories: Astronomy

Doctors Must Help Patients Avoid Deadly Heat Fueled by Climate Change, CDC Urges

Scientific American.com - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 7:00am

New CDC guidance encourages clinicians to start conversations with patients about dangerous heat

Categories: Astronomy

'Extreme' solar storms cook up sweet Mother's Day auroras for Moms everywhere

Space.com - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 6:00am
Want to save all the calories from Mother's Day brunch? You can still "sweeten" her holiday with an opportunity to see the northern lights again tonight!
Categories: Astronomy

The stormy sun erupts with its biggest solar flare yet from a massive sunspot — and it's still crackling (video)

Space.com - Sat, 05/11/2024 - 3:11pm
Just when we think we’ve seen the most powerful of flares from a colossal sunspot, the sun unleashed kicked off the strongest eruption of the weekend yet and is still crackling with solar storms.
Categories: Astronomy