“...all the past is but a beginning of a beginning, and that all that is and has been is but the twilight of dawn.”

— H.G. Wells
1902

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Space and Astronomy News from Universe Today
Updated: 3 hours 44 min ago

New Evidence That An Ancient Martian Ocean Covered Half The Planet

5 hours 28 min ago

Mars Was Half Covered by an Ocean susannakohler33808 Mon, 01/12/2026 - 12:00 Mars Was Half Covered by an Ocean https://mediarelations.unibe.ch/media_releases/2026/media_releases_2026/mars_was_half_covered_by_an_ocean/index_eng.html

Categories: Astronomy

Can Philanthropy Fast-Track a Flagship Telescope?

9 hours 37 min ago

New Space is a term now commonly used around the rocketry and satellite industries to indicate a new, speed focused model of development that takes its cue from the Silicon Valley mindset of “move fast and (hopefully don’t) break things.” Given that several of the founders of rocketry and satellite companies have a Silicon Valley background, that probably shouldn’t be a surprise, but the mindset has resulted in an exponential growth in the number of satellites in orbit, and also an exponential decrease in the cost of getting them to orbit. A new paper, recently published in pre-print form in arXiv from researchers at Schmidt Space and a variety of research institutes, lays out plans for the Lazuli Space Observatory, which hopes to apply that same mindset to flagship-level space observatory missions.

Categories: Astronomy

When Martian Winds Become Sandblasters

11 hours 40 min ago

Mars Express has captured stunning images of wind sculpted terrain near the planet’s equator, revealing how Martian winds act as a sandblaster across geological timescales. The spacecraft’s high resolution camera spotted amazing ridges called yardangs, features carved by sand carrying winds that extend tens of kilometres across the surface. These dramatic erosional features share the landscape with impact craters and ancient lava flows, creating a fusion of three different geological forces that together tell the story of Mars’s violent and dynamic past.

Categories: Astronomy

The Hidden Lives of the Universe’s Ultramassive Galaxies

12 hours 20 sec ago

Astronomers have revealed a surprising diversity in the evolutionary paths of the universe’s most massive galaxies. Using multi-wavelength observations combining Keck Observatory spectroscopy with far infrared and radio data, researchers found that less than two billion years after the Big Bang, some ultramassive galaxies had already shut down star formation and shed their dust, while others continued building stars behind thick dusty veils.

Categories: Astronomy

The Galaxy’s Most Common Planets Have a Strange Childhood

14 hours 34 min ago

Astronomers have discovered a crucial missing link in understanding how the Galaxy’s most common planets form. By studying four young, extraordinarily puffy planets orbiting a 20 million year old star, researchers have captured a rare snapshot of worlds actively transforming into super Earths and sub Neptunes. This discovery reveals that the universe’s most successful planets start as bloated giants before shrinking dramatically over billions of years, fundamentally changing our understanding of how planetary systems evolve.

Categories: Astronomy

Is the Universe Made of Math? Part 4: The Fire and the Filter

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 7:37pm

Like I said at the beginning, I’m not really keen on the idea of the mathematical universe. My own personal biggest objection stems from the whole point of occam’s razor: make things as simple as possible.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Discover the First Galaxy-Wide Wobbling Black Hole Jet

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 6:29pm

Astronomers using W. M. Keck Observatory on Maunakea, Hawaiʻi Island have uncovered the largest and most extended stream of super-heated gas ever observed flowing from a nearby galaxy, providing the clearest evidence yet that a supermassive black hole can dramatically reshape its host galaxy far beyond its core.

Categories: Astronomy

The Global Ocean Temperature Keeps Rising But Don't Worry It's Probably Nothing

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 4:34pm

The oceans' check engine light is on and is starting to flash violently. For the eighth year in a row, the world’s oceans absorbed a record-breaking amount of heat in 2025. That means more powerful storms for us, and changing ocean chemistry that could spell the end for some living things.

Categories: Astronomy

Stellar Evolution Depends on Where Supernovae Occur

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 3:58pm

Supernovae play a crucial role in the formation and evolution of new stars. But where they occur is nearly as important as when. A new study looks at where supernovae will occur in the Triangulum Galaxy, which will help astronomers understand the role of supernovae in more detail.

Categories: Astronomy

A Zombie Star Blows A Magnetic Wind

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 2:38pm

Gas and dust flowing from stars can, under the right conditions, clash with a star's surroundings and create a shock wave. Now, astronomers using the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (ESO's VLT) have imaged a beautiful shock wave around a dead star—a discovery that has left them puzzled. According to all known mechanisms, the small, dead star RXJ0528+2838 should not have such a structure around it. This discovery, as enigmatic as it's stunning, challenges our understanding of how dead stars interact with their surroundings.

Categories: Astronomy

Few Cosmic Events Can Rival The Brightness Of This Black Hole Shredding A Star Apart

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 11:51am

A distant black hole shredded a companion star that got too close. The star was torn to pieces and the explosion was an extremely powerful event, more energetic than a supernova. At its peak, the energy released was 400 billion times brighter than the Sun.

Categories: Astronomy

Rubin Observatory Spots Fastest Spinning Asteroid Ever

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 9:30am

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory has discovered the fastest-spinning asteroid ever over 500 meters in size.

Categories: Astronomy

Unveiling the Turbulent 'Teenage Years' of the Universe

Mon, 01/12/2026 - 7:35am

Combining data from different telescopes is one of the best ways to get a fuller picture of far-off objects. Because telescopes such as Hubble (visible light), the James Webb Space Telescope (infrared), and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (radio) each collect data in different wavelengths, they are able to capture distinct features of objects like galaxies that other telescopes cannot observe. A new paper by a large group of authors, headed by Andreas Faisst of Caltech, presented at the American Astronomical Society Meeting last week and published in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement tracks eighteen early galaxies in as broad of a spectrum as those instruments can collect, and most significantly found that they seem to “grow up” faster than expected.

Categories: Astronomy

Is the Universe Made of Math? Part 3: The Frog and the Bird

Sun, 01/11/2026 - 7:36pm

Beginning in the 1980’s, another physicist, Roger Penrose, came up with what he called the Triangle of Reality, which sounds like the nerdiest cult in history (and when later I get to talk about the Pythagoreans you’ll see that I’m right).

Categories: Astronomy

NASA to Return SpaceX Crew Ahead of Schedule

Sun, 01/11/2026 - 6:23pm

NASA has announced that it and SpaceX will return the Crew-11 mission team to Earth from the ISS (due to medical concerns with a crew member) no earlier than 5 p.m. EST (2 p.m. PST) on Wednesday, Jan. 14th.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Spot a Barred Spiral Galaxy That Existed Just 2 Billion Years After the Big Bang

Sun, 01/11/2026 - 4:16pm

Astronomers have uncovered a barred spiral galaxy that existed over 2 billion years after the Big Bang, potentially making it the earliest barred spiral galaxy ever observed.

Categories: Astronomy

Is the Universe Made of Math? Part 2: The Minimalist Universe

Sat, 01/10/2026 - 7:24pm

Like, it shouldn’t be this easy. Yeah I know physics is kind of hard, and it has taken us centuries to reach our present level of knowledge, and we know we’re still a long way from complete knowledge of time and space.

Categories: Astronomy

A New Study Finds a Subtle Dance Between Dark Matter and Neutrinos

Sat, 01/10/2026 - 11:51am

Scientists are a step closer to solving one of the universe's biggest mysteries as new research finds evidence that dark matter and neutrinos may be interacting, offering a rare window into the darkest recesses of the cosmos.

Categories: Astronomy

This System Reveals How Super-Earths Are Born

Sat, 01/10/2026 - 7:30am

One of the best things about being able to see thousands of exoplanetary systems is that we’re able to track them in different stages of development. Scientists still have so many questions about how planets form, and comparing notes between systems of different ages is one way to answer them. A new paper recently published in Nature by John Livingston of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan and his co-authors details one particularly interesting system, known as V1298, which is only around 30 million years old, and hosts an array of four “cotton candy” planets, which represent some of the earliest stages of planet formation yet seen.

Categories: Astronomy

Is the Universe Made of Math? Part 1: The Unreasonable Tool

Fri, 01/09/2026 - 7:22pm

Imagine you walk into a parking lot full of cars. You have in your pocket one single key. It’s the key to your car. The same key you’ve always used, the same key you’ve always trusted, the same key that you always manage to realize that you’ve lost right when you’re rushing out the door.

Categories: Astronomy