There are many worlds and many systems of Universes existing all at the same time, all of them perishable.

— Anaximander 546 BC

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Property and sovereignty in space: Countries and companies face potential clashes as they take to the stars

Space.com - Sun, 03/09/2025 - 10:00am
Is there enough legal framework to avoid arguments between nations as space exploration and commercial activity rapidly increase?
Categories: Astronomy

Is there life out there? The existence of other technological species is highly likely

Space.com - Sun, 03/09/2025 - 9:00am
Is there life out there? The existence of other technological species is highly likely
Categories: Astronomy

Rocket Lab unveils plan to land Neutron rockets at sea, 1st launch in 2025

Space.com - Sun, 03/09/2025 - 8:00am
The new Neutron rocket includes a "hippo" mouth fairing that deploys upper stages by spitting them out from inside.
Categories: Astronomy

What will happen during the total lunar eclipse of March 2025?

Space.com - Sun, 03/09/2025 - 6:00am
Observers across most of the United States will have front-row seats to the spectacular total lunar eclipse overnight on March 13-14. Here's what to expect.
Categories: Astronomy

How Humans Can Reinvent Themselves to Live on Other Worlds

Universe Today - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 2:39pm

Let’s face it: Space is a hostile environment for humans. Even on Mars, settlers might have a hard time coping with potentially lethal levels of radiation, scarce resources and reduced gravity. In “Mickey 17” — a new sci-fi movie from Bong Joon Ho, the South Korean filmmaker who made his mark with “Parasite” — an expendable space traveler named Mickey (Robert Pattinson) is exposed over and over again to deadly risks. And every time he’s killed, the lab’s 3D printer just churns out another copy of Mickey.

Categories: Astronomy

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APOD - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 1:00pm

Have you heard about the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field?


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

Here's the launch plan for NASA's SPHEREx and PUNCH missions: 'Liftoff is just the beginning'

Space.com - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 12:32pm
After more than a week of delays, two new NASA missions have gotten the greenlight to head to space tonight (March 8).
Categories: Astronomy

Hubble Unveils a Glittering View of Sh2-284

NASA - Breaking News - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 12:01pm
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2 min read

Hubble Unveils a Glittering View of Sh2-284 Hubble’s infrared view of emission nebula Sh2-284 provides a glimpse of the brilliant young stars hidden within clouds of gas and dust. Credit: NASA, ESA, and M. Andersen (European Southern Observatory – Germany); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)
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A tiny fraction of the stellar nursery known as Sh2-284 is visible in this glittering, star-filled NASA Hubble Space Telescope image. This immense region of gas and dust is the birthing place of stars, which shine among the clouds. Bright clusters of newborn stars glow pink in infrared light, and clouds of gas and dust, resembling puffy cumulus clouds, are dotted with dark knots of denser dust.

This image shows an infrared view from Hubble, giving an excellent view of the stars that might otherwise be obscured by Sh2-284’s clouds. Unlike visible light, infrared wavelengths can travel through clouds of gas and dust, providing a glimpse of the stars forming within the obscuring clouds.

The nebula is shaped by a young central star cluster, Dolidze 25 (not visible in the Hubble image), whose stars range from 1.5 to 13 million years old (our Sun, in contrast, is 4.6 billion years old). The cluster blasts out ionizing winds and radiation, pushing at the gas and dust of the nebula and carving out intricate shapes and pillars, as seen in detail here. This ionizing radiation gives Sh2-284 its classification as an HII region, an emission nebula consisting primarily of ionized hydrogen. An emission nebula like Sh2-284 glows with its own light as stars within or nearby energize its gas with a flood of intense ultraviolet radiation.

The ground-based image (top) of M24 shows the location of the Hubble view (bottom). The European Southern Observatory’s visible-light image shows prominent clouds of gas and dust, while the Hubble image’s infrared vision highlights the stars within and behind the clouds. Ground-based image: ESO/VPHAS+ Team; Hubble image: NASA, ESA, and M. Andersen (European Southern Observatory – Germany); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)

Sh2-284 is also a low-metallicity region, which means it is poor in elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. These conditions mimic the early universe, when matter was mostly helium and hydrogen and heavier elements were just beginning to form via nuclear fusion within massive stars. Hubble took these images as part of an effort to examine how low metallicity influences stellar formation and how this would apply to the early universe.

Sh2-284 resides 15,000 light-years away at the end of an outer spiral arm of our Milky Way galaxy, in the constellation Monoceros.

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Hubble’s Nebulae


Exploring the Birth of Stars

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Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterGreenbelt, MD
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Last Updated

Mar 08, 2025

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Since its 1990 launch, the Hubble Space Telescope has changed our fundamental understanding of the universe.


Hubble’s Cosmic Adventure


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Hubble’s 35th Anniversary

Categories: NASA

Hubble Jams With A Cosmic Guitar

NASA - Breaking News - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 12:01pm
Explore Hubble

3 min read

Hubble Jams With A Cosmic Guitar Elliptical galaxy NGC 3561B (upper left) and spiral galaxy NGC 3561A (lower right) form a shimmering guitar shape in the ongoing merger known collectively as Arp 105. NASA, ESA and M. West (Lowell Observatory); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)

Arp 105 is a dazzling ongoing merger between an elliptical galaxy and a spiral galaxy drawn together by gravity, characterized by a long, drawn out tidal tail of stars and gas more than 362,000 light-years long. The immense tail, which extends beyond this image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, was pulled from the two galaxies by their gravitational interactions and is embedded with star clusters and dwarf galaxies. The distinctively shaped arrangement of galaxies and tail gives the grouping its nickname: The Guitar.

The gravitational dance between elliptical galaxy NGC 3561B and spiral galaxy NGC 3561A creates a wealth of fascinating colliding galaxy features. A long lane of dark dust emerging from the elliptical galaxy ends in, and may be feeding, a bright blue area of star formation on the base of the guitar known as Ambartsumian’s Knot. Ambartsumian’s Knot is a tidal dwarf galaxy, a type of star-forming system that develops from the debris in tidal arms of interacting galaxies.

Two more bright blue areas of star formation are obvious in the Hubble image at the edges of the distorted spiral galaxy. The region to the left in the spiral galaxy is likely very similar to Ambartsumian’s Knot, a knot of intense star formation triggered by the merger. The region to the right is still under investigation ― it could be part of the collision, but its velocity and spectral data (indicating distance) are different from the rest of the system, so it may be a foreground galaxy.

Thin, faint tendrils of gas and dust are just barely visible stretching between and connecting the two galaxies. These tendrils are particularly interesting to astronomers since they may help define the timescale of the evolution of this collision.

A multitude of more-distant background galaxies are visible around and even through this merging duo. The bright blue blob of stars to the left of Ambartsumian’s Knot may be a particularly bright background galaxy.

Arp 105 is one of the brightest objects in the crowded galaxy cluster Abell 1185 in the constellation Ursa Major. Abell 1185, located around 400 million light-years away, is a chaotic cluster of at least 82 galaxies, many of which are interacting, as well as a number of wandering globular clusters that are not gravitationally attached to any particular galaxy. This Hubble image was taken as part of a study of the ongoing creation of galactic and intergalactic stellar populations in Abell 1185.

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Hubble’s Galaxies


Galaxy Details and Mergers


Hubble Focus E-Book: Galaxies through Space and Time

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NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterGreenbelt, MD

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Since its 1990 launch, the Hubble Space Telescope has changed our fundamental understanding of the universe.


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Categories: NASA

Hubble Spies a Spectacular Starburst Galaxy

NASA - Breaking News - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 12:00pm
Explore Hubble

2 min read

Hubble Spies a Spectacular Starburst Galaxy Starburst spiral NGC 4536 is bright with blue clusters of star formation and pink clumps of ionized hydrogen. NASA, ESA, and J. Lee (Space Telescope Science Institute); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America) 

Sweeping spiral arms extend from NGC 4536, littered with bright blue clusters of star formation and red clumps of hydrogen gas shining among dark lanes of dust. The galaxy’s shape may seem a little unusual, and that’s because it’s what’s known as an “intermediate galaxy”: not quite a barred spiral, but not exactly an unbarred spiral, either ― a hybrid of the two.

NGC 4536 is also a starburst galaxy, in which star formation is happening at a tremendous rate that uses up the gas in the galaxy relatively quickly, by galactic standards. Starburst galaxies can happen due to gravitational interactions with other galaxies or ― as seems to be the case for NGC 4536 ― when gas is packed into a small region. The bar-like structure of NGC 4536 may be driving gas inwards toward the nucleus, giving rise to a crescendo of star formation in a ring around the nucleus. Starburst galaxies birth lots of hot blue stars that burn fast and die quickly in explosions that unleash intense ultraviolet light (visible in blue), turning their surroundings into glowing clouds of ionized hydrogen, called HII regions (visible in red).

NGC 4536 is approximately 50 million light-years away in the constellation Virgo. It was discovered in 1784 by astronomer William Herschel. Hubble took this image of NGC 4536 as part of a project to study galactic environments to understand connections between young stars and cold gas, particularly star clusters and molecular clouds, throughout the local universe.


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Hubble’s Galaxies


Galaxy Details and Mergers


Hubble Focus E-Book: Galaxies through Space and Time

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Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterGreenbelt, MD
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov

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Last Updated

Mar 08, 2025

Location NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Related Terms Keep Exploring Discover More Topics From Hubble

Hubble Space Telescope

Since its 1990 launch, the Hubble Space Telescope has changed our fundamental understanding of the universe.


Hubble’s Cosmic Adventure


Hubble’s Night Sky Challenge


Hubble’s 35th Anniversary

Categories: NASA

Hubble Examines Stars Ensconced in a Cocoon of Gas

NASA - Breaking News - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 12:00pm
Explore Hubble

2 min read

Hubble Examines Stars Ensconced in a Cocoon of Gas NGC 460 is an open cluster of stars within a greater collection of nebulae and star clusters known as the N83-84-85 complex. NASA, ESA, and C. Lindberg (The Johns Hopkins University); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)
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An open cluster of stars shines through misty, cocoon-like gas clouds in this Hubble Space Telescope image of NGC 460.

NGC 460 is located in a region of the Small Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy that orbits the Milky Way. This particular region contains a number of young star clusters and nebulae of different sizes ― all likely related to each other. The clouds of gas and dust can give rise to stars as portions of them collapse, and radiation and stellar winds from those hot, young bright stars in turn shape and compress the clouds, triggering new waves of star formation. The hydrogen clouds are ionized by the radiation of nearby stars, causing them to glow.

The NGC 460 star cluster resides in one of the youngest parts of this interconnected complex of stellar clusters and nebulae, which is also home to a number of O-type stars: the brightest, hottest and most massive of the normal, hydrogen-burning stars (called main-sequence stars) like our Sun. O-type stars are rare ― out of more than 4 billion stars in the Milky Way, only about 20,000 are estimated to be O-type stars. The area that holds NGC 460, known as N83, may have been created when two hydrogen clouds in the region collided with one another, creating several O-type stars and nebulae.

Open clusters like NGC 460 are made of anywhere from a few dozen to a few thousand stars loosely knitted together by gravity. Open clusters generally contain young stars, which may migrate outward into their galaxies as time progresses. NGC 460’s stars may someday disperse into the Small Magellanic Cloud, one of the Milky Way’s closest galactic neighbors at about 200,000 light-years away. Because it is both close and bright, it offers an opportunity to study phenomena that are difficult to examine in more distant galaxies.

Six overlapping observations from a study of the gas and dust between stars, called the interstellar medium, were combined to create this Hubble image. The study aims to understand how gravitational forces between interacting galaxies can foster bursts of star formation. This highly detailed 65 megapixel mosaic includes both visible and infrared wavelengths. Download the 400 MB file and zoom in to see some of the intricacies captured by Hubble.

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Hubble’s Star Clusters

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Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight CenterGreenbelt, MD
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov

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Last Updated

Mar 08, 2025

Location NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Related Terms Keep Exploring Discover More Topics From Hubble

Hubble Space Telescope

Since its 1990 launch, the Hubble Space Telescope has changed our fundamental understanding of the universe.


Hubble’s Cosmic Adventure


Hubble’s Night Sky Challenge


Hubble’s 35th Anniversary

Categories: NASA

This Week In Space podcast: Episode 151 — In Search of Alien Megastructures

Space.com - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 11:17am
On Episode 151 of This Week In Space, Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik talk with former NASA Chief Scientist Jim Green about how we can search for technosignatures that might indicate advanced civilizations.
Categories: Astronomy

Earth’s Oldest Impact Crater Discovered in Australia

Scientific American.com - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 9:00am

Scientists with a new theory about how Earth’s early continents formed predicted where a superold impact crater should be—then found it

Categories: Astronomy

New 'Starman' documentary shines light on NASA JPL legend Gentry Lee

Space.com - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 9:00am
This illuminating film debuts this weekend at the SXSW 2025.
Categories: Astronomy

NASA's Artemis 2 crew wants your help designing the plush toy that will fly with them around the moon.

Space.com - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 7:00am
The first astronauts preparing to fly to the moon in more than 50 years want your help identifying their "moon mascot." NASA's Artemis II crew is seeking an original idea for their zero-g indicator.
Categories: Astronomy

For NASA astronauts on a 10-day space mission that lasted 9 months, a landing date at last

Space.com - Sat, 03/08/2025 - 12:23am
Crew members launching on SpaceX's next mission to the International Space Station are ready to take the reins of the orbital lab so NASA's Starliner astronauts can finally return to Earth.
Categories: Astronomy

FAA investigating SpaceX Starship Flight 8 explosion that disrupted commercial flights

Space.com - Fri, 03/07/2025 - 8:57pm
Nine minutes after its launch, SpaceX's latest Starship to attempt to reach space exploded, leaving a trail of debris in its wake. Airports in Florida were forced to halt flights.
Categories: Astronomy

Stand Up for Science Rallies Draw Crowds Protesting Trump Cuts

Scientific American.com - Fri, 03/07/2025 - 6:45pm

Scientists and supporters rallied in cities across the U.S. and Europe to protest dramatic funding cuts and other attacks from the Trump administration

Categories: Astronomy

The Athena Lunar Lander Also Fell Over on its Side

Universe Today - Fri, 03/07/2025 - 6:41pm

The Athena Lunar Lander Also Fell Over on its Side

Categories: Astronomy