Nothing is the bridge between the future and the further future. Nothing is certainty. Nothing is any definition of anything.

— Peter Hammill

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Tidal Forces and Orbital Evolution of Habitable Zone Planets

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

How do tidal forces determine a planet’s orbital evolution, specifically planets in the habitable zone? This is what a recently submitted study hopes to address as an international team of researchers investigated how tidal forces far more powerful than experienced on Earth could influence orbital evolution of habitable zone planets with highly eccentric orbits around low-mass stars. This study has the potential to help researchers better understand the formation and evolution of exoplanets, specifically regarding where we could find life beyond Earth.

Categories: Astronomy

It's Official: Asteroids Ryugu and Bennu Are Siblings

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

Some scientists thought that the asteroids Ryugu and Bennu were from the same family. Now that they have samples and JWST spectra from both, the verdict is in: They're both from the Polana collisional family, a diverse and widespread family of asteroids.

Categories: Astronomy

A Distant Star Explodes While Swallowing Its Black Hole Companion

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

Astronomers have discovered what may be a massive star exploding while trying to swallow a black hole companion, offering an explanation for one of the strangest stellar explosions ever seen.

Categories: Astronomy

Moon Flybys Could Save Fuel On Interplanetary Missions

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

The Three Body Problem isn’t just the name of a viral Netflix series or a Hugo Award winning sci-fi book. It also represents a really problem in astrodynamics - and one that can cause headaches to mission planners in terms of its complexity, but also one that offers the promise of an easier way to enter stable orbits that might otherwise be possible. A new paper from researchers at the Beijing Institute of Technology shows one way those orbital maneuvers might be enhanced while exploring planetary systems - by using a gravity assist from its moons.

Categories: Astronomy

A 3D Printed Alumnium Mirror Could Enable Enhance CubeSat Observations

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

Compact, reflective, easy to manufacture mirrors are a critical component for advancing astronomical technology in space. Mirrors are a key component in most telescopes, though they are notoriously hard to manufacture with the necessary precision, especially at large scales. A new paper from researchers in the UK uses additive manufacturing to make a thin, flexible, and lightweight mirror out of aluminum and analyzes its properties to see if it will be useful in applications such as CubeSats.

Categories: Astronomy

Tracking the Interstellar Objects 1I/'Oumuamua, 2I/Borisov, and 3I/Atlas to their Source

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

In a recent paper, researchers followed the trajectories of 1I/`Oumuamua, 2I/Borisov, and 3I/ATLAS - three installer objects that have entered the Solar System in the past decade - to constrain their possible origin. Through a series of Monte Carlo simulations, they came up with predictions of where they came from and how old they are.

Categories: Astronomy

Detecting Exoplanet Magnetic Fields From The Moon

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

Exoplanets with and without a magnetic field are predicted to form, behave, and evolve very differently. In order to understand the exoplanet population, and to make progress understanding habitability, astronomers need to understand and constrain exoplanets' magnetic fields. Detecting them may best be done from the Moon.

Categories: Astronomy

Astronomers Search for Dark Matter Using Far Away Galaxies

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

Physicists from the University of Copenhagen have begun using the gigantic magnetic fields of galaxy clusters to observe distant black holes in their search for an elusive particle that has stumped scientists for decades.

Categories: Astronomy

How Did Jupiter's Galilean Moons Form?

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

We already know a decent amount about how planets form, but moon formation is another process entirely, and one we’re not as familiar with. Scientists think they understand how the most important Moon in our solar system (our own) formed, but its violent birth is not the norm, and can’t explain larger moon systems like the Galilean moons around Jupiter. A new book chapter (which was also released as a pre-print paper) from Yuhito Shibaike and Yann Alibert from the University of Bern discusses the differing ideas surrounding the formation of large moon systems, especially the Galileans, and how we might someday be able to differentiate them.

Categories: Astronomy

A Cosmic Noon Puzzle: Why Did Cosmic Noon Galaxies Emit So Many Cosmic Rays?

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

The Universe's early galaxies were engulfed in halos of high-energy cosmic rays. It's likely because they had tangled and turbulent magnetic fields. These fields accelerate cosmic rays to higher energies.

Categories: Astronomy

China’s Crewed Lunar Lander Passes Key Test Milestone

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

China took a step closer to the Moon, with the first short test for their crewed lunar lander. The test was completed on Wednesday, August 6th at a facility in China’s northern Hebei Province, and lasted just under 30 seconds. The tethered test successfully demonstrated the integration and performance of key systems, simulating descent, guidance, control and engine shutdown. This marks the first test for a China’s Manned (crewed) Space Agency (CMSA’s) human-rated lander.

Categories: Astronomy

JPL Is Ready To Test Mars Samples - If They're Ever Returned

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

Taking a walk is great for inspiration. There have been numerous studies about how people think more clearly on walks, and how new ideas come to them more frequently while doing so. That’s part of the reason some of the most famous minds in history included a daily walk in their schedule. Just such an inspiration must have happened recently to Nicholas Heinz, a scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California. On a hike in Arizona he found a rock that could be used as an analog of a unique one found by the Perseverance rover on Mars - and decided to take it back to his lab to study it.x

Categories: Astronomy

How Climate Change Will Reshape Space Weather's Impact on Satellites

Universe Today - 11 hours 49 min ago

Climate change isn't just transforming weather on Earth's surface, it’s also fundamentally altering how space weather affects the thousands of satellites orbiting our planet. New research reveals that rising carbon dioxide levels will dramatically change how geomagnetic storms impact the upper atmosphere, creating both opportunities and challenges for the satellite industry in the decades ahead.

Categories: Astronomy

What to Know about Measles as the Outbreak in Texas Ends and the School Year Begins

Scientific American.com - 12 hours 16 min ago

Texas may have declared its measles outbreak over, but rising cases elsewhere and the return to school mean it could easily resurge

Categories: Astronomy

Lunar Strike is a hard sci-fi adventure game about preserving humanity's legacy on the moon (exclusive)

Space.com - 12 hours 16 min ago
Save the world and our lunar history in Lunar Strike, the 2026 sci-fi narrative adventure game that was just announced at the Future Games Show.
Categories: Astronomy

Our brain doesn't actually reorganise itself after an amputation

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - 13 hours 15 min ago
Previous research in macaques suggests that part of the brain reorganises itself when a limb is removed, but now a study in people has turned that idea on its head
Categories: Astronomy

Our brain doesn't actually reorganise itself after an amputation

Previous research in macaques suggests that part of the brain reorganises itself when a limb is removed, but now a study in people has turned that idea on its head
Categories: Astronomy

Could lacing food with fat-trapping microbeads help us lose weight?

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - 13 hours 15 min ago
Edible microbeads made of vitamin E and seaweed helped rats lose weight by absorbing excess fat in their guts
Categories: Astronomy

Could lacing food with fat-trapping microbeads help us lose weight?

Edible microbeads made of vitamin E and seaweed helped rats lose weight by absorbing excess fat in their guts
Categories: Astronomy

A partial solar eclipse is coming: 1 month until the moon takes a 'bite' out of the sun

Space.com - 13 hours 16 min ago
A deep partial solar eclipse will grace the Southern Hemisphere on Sept. 21, 2025, with the best views from remote seas and New Zealand's dawn skies.
Categories: Astronomy