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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Common-Sense Measures Could Curb Heat-Related Deaths

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Extreme heat is becoming more prevalent. We need to protect people who work and play outside

Categories: Astronomy

Exercise Boosts Your Gut Microbiome, Which Helps Your Metabolism, Immune System, and More

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

A workout boosts the fitness of your gut microbiome. This creates molecules that aids your immune system, metabolism, and more

Categories: Astronomy

Can We Refreeze the Arctic’s Ice? Scientists Test New Geoengineering Solutions

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Researchers are trying to rebuild sea ice above the Arctic Circle so it can reflect the sun’s warming rays, slowing climate change

Categories: Astronomy

Readers Respond to the February 2025 Issue

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Letters to the editors for the February 2025 issue of Scientific American

Categories: Astronomy

Surprising Genetic Evidence Shows Human Evolution in Recent Millennia

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Mounting evidence from genome studies indicates that, contrary to received wisdom, our species has undergone profound biological adaptation in its recent evolutionary past

Categories: Astronomy

Science Crossword: Light Touch

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Play this crossword inspired by the June 2025 issue of Scientific American

Categories: Astronomy

Poem: ‘An Electrolysis of Brine’

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Science in meter and verse

Categories: Astronomy

Why Mitochondria Are More like a Motherboard Than the Powerhouse of the Cell

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

When these energy-giving organelles thrive, so do we

Categories: Astronomy

Why a Hurricane’s Storm Surge Can Be So Dangerous

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

How hurricanes push water onto shore in deadly storm surges, and why storm surges are getting worse

Categories: Astronomy

Surprising Ways That Sunlight Might Heal Autoimmune Diseases

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Sunshine may hold healing rays for a variety of autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis. Scientists are turning this surprising discovery into treatments

Categories: Astronomy

The Universe’s First Light Could Reveal Secrets of the Cosmic Dawn

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

A new generation of telescopes could peer back to the earliest epochs of the universe

Categories: Astronomy

The End of the Universe Could Begin with a Quantum Bubble

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

A freak particle physics process could wipe out all galaxies and life—but it’s wildly unlikely

Categories: Astronomy

Math Puzzle: Measure the Star

Scientific American.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am

Build a special set of dice in this math puzzle

Categories: Astronomy

'We don't know how bad it could get': Are we ready for the worst space weather?

Space.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 9:00am
Space weather forecasting doesn't yet command the same resources as Earth weather forecasting, even though the stakes are growing.
Categories: Astronomy

Ancient Maltese temples may have been schools for celestial navigation

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 8:00am
The alignment of some megalithic temples in Malta suggests they may have been used to teach sailors how to navigate by the stars
Categories: Astronomy

Ancient Maltese temples may have been schools for celestial navigation

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 8:00am
The alignment of some megalithic temples in Malta suggests they may have been used to teach sailors how to navigate by the stars
Categories: Astronomy

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APOD - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 8:00am


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

Did Predator just harpoon a plane out of the sky? Oh, count us in for 'Predator: Killer of Killers' after this latest trailer (video)

Space.com - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 8:00am
The first of 2025's two Predator movies is an animated anthology which is looking even bloodier and more action-packed in its second trailer.
Categories: Astronomy

Hubble Images Galaxies Near and Far

NASA - Breaking News - Tue, 05/20/2025 - 7:30am
Explore Hubble

2 min read

Hubble Images Galaxies Near and Far This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features the remote galaxy HerS 020941.1+001557, which appears as a red arc that partially encircles a foreground elliptical galaxy. ESA/Hubble & NASA, H. Nayyeri, L. Marchetti, J. Lowenthal

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image offers us the chance to see a distant galaxy now some 19.5 billion light-years from Earth (but appearing as it did around 11 billion years ago, when the galaxy was 5.5 billion light-years away and began its trek to us through expanding space). Known as HerS 020941.1+001557, this remote galaxy appears as a red arc partially encircling a foreground elliptical galaxy located some 2.7 billion light-years away. Called SDSS J020941.27+001558.4, the elliptical galaxy appears as a bright dot at the center of the image with a broad haze of stars outward from its core. A third galaxy, called SDSS J020941.23+001600.7, seems to be intersecting part of the curving, red crescent of light created by the distant galaxy.

The alignment of this trio of galaxies creates a type of gravitational lens called an Einstein ring. Gravitational lenses occur when light from a very distant object bends (or is ‘lensed’) around a massive (or ‘lensing’) object located between us and the distant lensed galaxy. When the lensed object and the lensing object align, they create an Einstein ring. Einstein rings can appear as a full or partial circle of light around the foreground lensing object, depending on how precise the alignment is. The effects of this phenomenon are much too subtle to see on a local level but can become clearly observable when dealing with curvatures of light on enormous, astronomical scales.

Gravitational lenses not only bend and distort light from distant objects but magnify it as well. Here we see light from a distant galaxy following the curve of spacetime created by the elliptical galaxy’s mass. As the distant galaxy’s light passes through the gravitational lens, it is magnified and bent into a partial ring around the foreground galaxy, creating a distinctive Einstein ring shape.

The partial Einstein ring in this image is not only beautiful, but noteworthy. A citizen scientist identified this Einstein ring as part of the SPACE WARPS project that asked citizen scientists to search for gravitational lenses in images.

Text Credit: ESA/Hubble

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Media Contact:

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

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Last Updated

May 20, 2025

Editor Andrea Gianopoulos Location NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

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