Space isn't remote at all. It's only an hour's drive away if your car could go upwards.

— Fred Hoyle

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Space and Astronomy News from Universe Today
Updated: 13 hours 59 min ago

Bridging the Gap Between the Cosmic Microwave Background and the First Galaxies

Thu, 03/20/2025 - 2:18pm

One of the Holy Grails in cosmology is a look back at the earliest epochs of cosmic history. Unfortunately, the Universe's first few hundred thousand years are shrouded in an impenetrable fog. So far, nobody's been able to see past it to the Big Bang. As it turns out, astronomers are chipping away at that cosmic fog by using data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) in Chile.

Categories: Astronomy

A Dyson Swarm Made of Solar Panels Would Make Earth Uninhabitable

Thu, 03/20/2025 - 1:30am

As civilisations become more and more advanced, their power needs also increase. It’s likely that an advanced civilisation might need so much power that they enclose their host star in solar energy collecting satellites. These Dyson Swarms will trap heat so any planets within the sphere are likely to experience a temperature increase. A new paper explores this and concludes that a complete Dyson swarm outside the orbit of the Earth would raise our temperature by 140 K!

Categories: Astronomy

Would We Know if a Supernova Was About to Hit the Earth?

Wed, 03/19/2025 - 7:12pm

We know that regular supernovae pose no existential threat to life on Earth in the near-term. But there are other varieties of supernova that are a little bit harder to predict, and little bit harder to spot.

Categories: Astronomy

A Simulated Universe Works Better When Dark Energy Changes Over Time

Wed, 03/19/2025 - 6:25pm

Dark Energy is a mystery so daunting that it stretches and strains our most robust theories. The Universe is expanding, driven by the unknown force that we've named Dark Energy. Dark Energy is also accelerating the rate of expansion. If scientists could figure out why, it would open up a whole new avenue of understanding.

Categories: Astronomy

The ESA's Euclid Space Telescope Gives Glimpses of its Deep Field

Wed, 03/19/2025 - 2:40pm

The ESA's Euclid Space Telescope has already wowed us with some fantastic images. After launching in July 2023, the telescope delivered some stunning first images of the Perseus Cluster, the Horsehead Nebula, and other astronomical objects. Now, the telescope has released its first images of its three Deep Fields.

Categories: Astronomy

Webb Directly Observers Giant Planets, Sensing Carbon Dioxide in their Atmospheres

Wed, 03/19/2025 - 1:16pm

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has achieved groundbreaking discoveries in the field of exoplanet studies. In particular, it has made strides in the analysis of their atmospheres by studying light from the parent star as it travels through the gas surrounding the planets. JWST has recently bucked the trend and observed a some gas giant planets in the system HR 8799 and detected the presence of carbon dioxide in their atmospheres, suggesting there are similarities between the formation of this system and our own.

Categories: Astronomy

Astro-Challenge: Following Venus From Dusk Til Dawn

Wed, 03/19/2025 - 12:41pm

With luck and clear skies, you can spot Venus crossing between the Earth and the Sun this weekend. Up for a challenge? If skies are clear, you may be able to complete a rare feat of visual athletics this coming weekend, and follow Venus on its trek from the evening and into the morning sky.

Categories: Astronomy

Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore Finally Get to Come Home to Earth

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 7:34pm

After an unexpectedly long mission in orbit, astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore finally arrived home. Their SpaceX Dragon capsule detached from the International Space Station early Tuesday morning, beginning the de-orbiting process. Nick Hague and Aleksandr Gorbunov are also on board and, following a nail biting descent, finally at 7.58pm EDT today.

Categories: Astronomy

Can Any Nearby Supernova Cause a Mass Extinction?

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 7:08pm

The most dangerous parts of a supernova explosion are the outputs like X-rays and gamma rays. Even though they only share a small fraction of a supernova’s power, they are extremely dangerous.

Categories: Astronomy

The Square Kilometre Array Releases its First Test Image

Tue, 03/18/2025 - 5:27pm

The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) remains under construction with completion still a few years away. However, engineers recently provided an exciting preview having installed 1,024 of the planned 131,072 antennas and capturing a test image of the sky. The image covers about 25 square degrees and reveals 85 of the brightest known galaxies in the region. Once fully operational, the complete array is expected to detect more than 600,000 galaxies within this same area!

Categories: Astronomy

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