Personally, I don't think there's intelligent life on other planets. Why should other planets be any different from this one?

— Bob Monkhouse

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Space and Astronomy News from Universe Today
Updated: 11 hours 53 min ago

Astronomers Used Meteorites to Create a Geological Map of the Main Asteroid Belt

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 5:19pm

More than one million asteroids larger than 1 km exist in the main asteroid belt (MAB) between Mars and Jupiter. Their roots are in a much smaller number of larger asteroids that broke apart because of collisions, and the MAB is populated with debris fields from these collisions. Researchers have created a geological map of the MAB by tracking meteorites that fell to Earth and determining which of these debris fields they originated in.

Categories: Astronomy

JWST Cycle 4 Spotlight, Part 3: Supermassive Black Holes and Cosmic Noon

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 4:12pm

Welcome back to our five-part examination of Webb's Cycle 4 General Observations program. In the first and second installments, we examined how some of Webb's 8,500 hours of prime observing time this cycle will be dedicated to exoplanet characterization and the study of galaxies that existed at "Cosmic Dawn" - ca. less than 1 billion years after the Big Bang.

Categories: Astronomy

Dust Obscures Our View of the Cosmos. Now it's Mapped Out in the Milky Way

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 2:36pm

We see the Universe through a glass darkly, or more accurately, through a dusty window. Interstellar dust is scattered throughout the Milky Way, which limits our view depending on where we look. In some directions, the effects of dust are small, but in other regions the view is so dusty it's called the Zone of Avoidance. Dust biases our view of the heavens, but fortunately a new study has created a detailed map of cosmic dust so we can better account for it.

Categories: Astronomy

We Finally Know the Mass of Brand New Neutron Stars

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 2:23pm

When massive stars explode as supernovae, they can leave behind neutron stars. Other than black holes, these are the densest objects we know of. However, their masses are difficult to determine. New research is making headway.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Think They've Found a Reliable Biosignature. But There's a Catch

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 12:27pm

The search for life has become one of the holy grails of science. With the increasing number of exoplanet discoveries, astronomers are hunting for a chemical that can only be present in the atmosphere of a planet with life! A new paper suggests that methyl halides, which contain one carbon and three hydrogen atoms, may just do the trick. Here on Earth they are produced by bacteria, algae, fungi and some plants but not by any abiotic processes (non biological.) There is a hitch, detecting these chemicals is beyond the reach of current telescopes.

Categories: Astronomy

China's Flagship Space Telescope Launches in 2027. Here's How it'll Change Cosmology

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 11:29am

The China Space Station Telescope, scheduled for a 2027 launch, will offer astronomers a fresh view on the cosmos. Though somewhat smaller than Hubble, it features a much wider field of view, giving a wide-field surveys that will map gravitational lensing, galaxy clusters, and cosmic voids. Scientists anticipate it will measure dark energy with 1% precision, differentiate between cold and dark matter models, and evaluate gravitational theories.

Categories: Astronomy

What's the Deadliest Part of a Supernova Explosion?

Mon, 03/17/2025 - 7:02pm

From far enough away, most supernovas are benign. But the thing you have to watch out for are the X-rays.

Categories: Astronomy

Microlightning Could Have Kickstarted Life on Earth

Mon, 03/17/2025 - 6:26pm

When water is sprayed or splashed, different size microdroplets develop opposite charges. This "microlightning" could've provided the energy needed to synthesize prebiotic molecules necessary for life.

Categories: Astronomy

A New Company Plans to Prospect the Moon

Mon, 03/17/2025 - 3:32pm

Helium-3 (He-3) on the Moon's surface has drawn attention for decades. In 1939, a paper first noted the presence of Helium-3 on the Moon. Still, it really came into the collective consciousness of space resource enthusiasts during the 1980s when they realized just how valuable a resource it was and how much the Moon had of it. Now, a new paper from a company called Interlune, a relatively new start-up based out of Seattle, presented a paper at the recent Lunar and Planetary Science Conference that discusses plans to try to mine some of that wealth of material economically.

Categories: Astronomy

One Instrument on the Failed Lunar Lander Did a Little Science

Mon, 03/17/2025 - 3:15pm

Even tipped over onto its side, the Odysseus Lunar Lander was able to do some science. Though a broken leg means it's doomed to spend eternity in an awkward position, its solar panels were able to gather some energy. Enough for its radiotelescope to take observations for about 80 minutes.

Categories: Astronomy

Giant Exoplanets Have Elliptical Orbits. Smaller Planets Follow Circular Orbits

Mon, 03/17/2025 - 1:30pm

We are so familiar with our solar system that we often presume it is generally how star systems are built. Four little planets close to the star, four large gas planets farther away, and all with roughly circular orbits. But as we have found ever more exoplanets, we've come to understand just how unusual the solar system is. Large planets often orbit close to their star, small planets are much more common than larger ones, and as a new study shows, orbits aren't always circular.

Categories: Astronomy

Hera Swings Past Mars, Sees Deimos From a New Angle

Mon, 03/17/2025 - 11:56am

Gravitational slingshots are now a common part of space missions where the trajectory of a spacecraft is altered using the gravity of another body. These often bring fabulous opportunities for an extra bit of bonus science such as that demonstrated by ESA’s Hera mission on its way to asteroid Dimorphos. It’s following up on the DART 2022 impact but to get there, it’s used the gravity of Mars. It came within 5,000 km of the red planet and on its way, was able to take a look at Mars’ smaller moon Deimos from its far side.

Categories: Astronomy

Exploding Stars May Have Caused Two of Earth's Mass Extinctions

Mon, 03/17/2025 - 10:47am

Supernova explosions are powerful enough to cause mass extinctions if they're close enough. But can we tie supernovae to any of Earth's five mass extinctions? New research shows supernovae could be responsible for the Late Devonian and Late Ordovician mass extinctions.

Categories: Astronomy

What Will the Betelgeuse Supernova Be Like - And Will It Hurt Us?

Sun, 03/16/2025 - 7:39pm

When Betelgeuse goes off, it's going to be the show of a lifetime. But it’s not going to hurt us.

Categories: Astronomy

Pallas Has a Very Blue Family

Sun, 03/16/2025 - 4:47pm

Despite their overall similarities, asteroids are usually pretty distinct from one another. Vesta has a very different spectroscopic profile than Psyche, for example. So it might come as no surprise that another of the main asteroids - Pallas - is in a class all its own except for the 300 or so members of its "family" with similar orbital profiles and spectroscopic lines. A new paper from researchers who were then Visiting Astronomers at NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) in Haiwi'i took a look at members of that family in the infrared for the first time and compared them to a particular Near-Earth object that might have a similar make-up.

Categories: Astronomy

JWST Cycle 4 Spotlight, Part 2: The Distant Universe

Sat, 03/15/2025 - 7:01pm

Earlier this week, the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) announced the science objectives for the fourth cycle of the James Webb Space Telescope's (JWST) General Observations program - aka. Cycle 4 GO. In keeping with Webb's major science objectives, many of these programs will focus on the study of the earliest galaxies in the Universe.

Categories: Astronomy

A Mars Chopper Mission Over Glaciers and Canyons

Sat, 03/15/2025 - 11:38am

Ingenuity proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that a helicopter can operate on another planet. Over 72 flights, the little quadcopter that could captivated the imagination of space exploration fans everywhere. But, several factors limited it, and researchers at NASA think they can do better. Two papers presented at the recent Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, held March 10-14 in The Woodlands, Texas, and led by Pascal Lee of NASA Ames and Derric Loya of the SETI Institute and Colorado Mesa University, describe a use case for that still-under-development helicopter, which they call Nighthawk.

Categories: Astronomy

New Horizons Needs a New Flyby Target. Vera Rubin Can Help.

Fri, 03/14/2025 - 4:22pm

Exploration of the outer Solar System may be getting a boost from the Vera Rubin Observatory (VRO). When this gigantic telescope opens its eye later in 2025, it begins a decade-long survey of the ever-changing sky. As part of this time-lapse vision of the cosmos, distant objects in the Kuiper Belt will be among its most challenging targets.

Categories: Astronomy

Watching the Power of Supermassive Black Holes With X-ray Interferometers

Fri, 03/14/2025 - 3:03pm

X-ray astronomy is a somewhat neglected corner of the more general field of astronomy. The biggest names in telescopes, like Hubble and James Webb, don't even touch that bandwidth. And Chandra, the most capable space-based X-ray observatory to date, is far less well-known. However, some of the most interesting phenomena in the universe can only be truly understood through X-rays, and it's a shame that the discipline doesn't garner more attention. Kimberly Weaver of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center hopes to change that perception as she works on a NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) grant to develop an in-space X-ray interferometer that could allow us to see for the first time what causes the power behind supermassive black holes.

Categories: Astronomy

This is a Lunar Eclipse, Seen from the Moon!

Fri, 03/14/2025 - 1:06pm

Thursday brought with it a total lunar eclipse for parts of the world that could see the Moon. If you missed it (like I did) then no problem since Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost mission has got your back. The lunar lander took a break from its science duties on our nearest astronomical neighbour to capture this stunning image of the eclipse. Observers on Earth saw the shadow of the Earth fall across the Moon but for Blue Ghost, it experienced a solar eclipse where the Sun hid behind the Earth!

Categories: Astronomy