"I never think about the future. It comes soon enough."

— Albert Einstein

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Can't focus after a bad night's sleep? Your dirty brain is to blame

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 5:15am
During sleep, your brain cleans itself by flushing through cerebrospinal fluid to prevent damage to brain cells. If you're lacking in sleep, this happens when you are awake – and seems to cause momentary lapses in attention
Categories: Astronomy

Can't focus after a bad night's sleep? Your dirty brain is to blame

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 5:15am
During sleep, your brain cleans itself by flushing through cerebrospinal fluid to prevent damage to brain cells. If you're lacking in sleep, this happens when you are awake – and seems to cause momentary lapses in attention
Categories: Astronomy

Can't focus after a bad's night sleep? Your dirty brain is to blame

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 5:15am
During sleep, your brain cleans itself by flushing through cerebrospinal fluid to prevent damage to brain cells. If you're lacking in sleep, this happens when you are awake – and seems to cause momentary lapses in attention
Categories: Astronomy

Can't focus after a bad's night sleep? Your dirty brain is to blame

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 5:15am
During sleep, your brain cleans itself by flushing through cerebrospinal fluid to prevent damage to brain cells. If you're lacking in sleep, this happens when you are awake – and seems to cause momentary lapses in attention
Categories: Astronomy

What TikTok’s U.S. Spin-off Means for Its Algorithm and Content Moderation

Scientific American.com - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 5:00am

TikTok’s U.S. spin-off could reshape its algorithm and the way culture is curated online.

Categories: Astronomy

ESA’s first stand-alone deep-space CubeSat Henon takes shape

ESO Top News - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 5:00am

The European Space Agency’s upcoming Henon mission will be the first ever CubeSat to independently venture into deep space, communicate with Earth and manoeuvre to its final destination without relying on a bigger spacecraft. Once in its orbit around the Sun, the carry-on luggage-sized CubeSat will observe the Sun’s emissions to demonstrate technologies capable of providing advanced warnings of solar storms hours before they reach Earth.

Categories: Astronomy

A Second Instrument On HWO Could Track Down Nearby Earth-Size Planets

Universe Today - Wed, 10/29/2025 - 4:58am

The Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) is slated to be the next Great Observatory for the world. Its main focus has been searching for biosignatures in the atmospheres of at least 25 Earth-like exoplanets. However, to do that, it will require a significant amount of effort with only a coronagraph, the currently planned primary instrument, no matter how powerful that coronagraph is. As new paper from Fabien Malbet of the University of Grenoble Alpes and his co-authors suggest an improvement - add a second instrument to HWO’s payload that will be able to astrometrically track planets down to a precision of .5 micro-arcseconds (µas). That would allow HWO to detect Earth-size planets around hundreds of nearby stars - dramatically increasing the number of potential candidates for atmospheric analysis.

Categories: Astronomy

Fate of Water-Rich Planets Around White Dwarfs

Universe Today - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 9:40pm

Can water-rich exoplanets survive orbiting white dwarf stars, the latter of which are remnants of Sun-like stars? This is what a recent study accepted to The Astrophysical Journal hopes to address as a team of researchers investigated the likelihood of small, rocky worlds with close orbits to white dwarfs could harbor life. This study has the potential to help scientists better understand the conditions for finding life as we know it, or don’t know it, and where to find it.

Categories: Astronomy

Quantum-inspired algorithm could help reveal hidden cosmic objects

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 3:46pm
Combining a quantum-inspired algorithm and quantum information processing technologies could enable researchers to measure masses of cosmic objects that bend light almost imperceptibly
Categories: Astronomy

Quantum-inspired algorithm could help reveal hidden cosmic objects

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 3:46pm
Combining a quantum-inspired algorithm and quantum information processing technologies could enable researchers to measure masses of cosmic objects that bend light almost imperceptibly
Categories: Astronomy

Gravitational Wave Detectors Spot Merging Black Holes That Have Merged Before

Sky & Telescope Magazine - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 3:04pm

Two recent discoveries of black hole mergers add to the evidence that such mergers happen over and over again.

The post Gravitational Wave Detectors Spot Merging Black Holes That Have Merged Before appeared first on Sky & Telescope.

Categories: Astronomy

US public health system is flying blind after major cuts

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 2:12pm
The Trump administration has laid off government workers integral to major public health surveys, meaning the country will lack crucial information on births, deaths and illnesses nationwide
Categories: Astronomy

US public health system is flying blind after major cuts

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 2:12pm
The Trump administration has laid off government workers integral to major public health surveys, meaning the country will lack crucial information on births, deaths and illnesses nationwide
Categories: Astronomy

Hurricane Melissa Images and Videos Show the Horrifying Power of Third Strongest Atlantic Storm Ever

Scientific American.com - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 1:45pm

These images of Hurricane Melissa show the Category 5 storm in all its power

Categories: Astronomy

Mapping the Universe's Largest Objects

Universe Today - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 1:26pm

A team of scientists has released a new survey mapping massive galaxy clusters, some of the largest structures in the universe, to test whether our fundamental understanding of the laws of the universe need revision. The analysis, using six years of Dark Energy Survey data, addresses an ongoing debate about whether the universe has more structure than our best models predict, ultimately reinforcing that our current rules remain accurate while demonstrating that galaxy clusters provide a powerful independent method for probing the universe's deepest mysteries.

Categories: Astronomy

The Hidden Gas That Builds Stars

Universe Today - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 1:15pm

Astronomers have created the first large scale map of dark molecular gas in the Milky Way, revealing vast networks of invisible star forming material that have so far have remained undetected. Using the Green Bank Radio Telescope to observe faint signals from carbon, the research team has finally started to uncover one of astronomy's biggest mysteries. Their discovery uncovers turbulent flows of gas moving faster than expected and show how raw galactic matter transforms into the molecular clouds where stars are born.

Categories: Astronomy

Building Homes Beyond Earth

Universe Today - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 1:06pm

A new study has reviewed how space habitat designs have evolved from inflatable bubbles to 3D-printed structures built from Martian dust. The research traces how engineers have wrestled with extreme temperatures, the bombardment of radiation, and the challenge of building on worlds without breathable air, transforming each obstacle into solved problems with innovative ideas and designs that could soon house the first permanent residents of the Moon and Mars.

Categories: Astronomy

Al Nagler (1935–2025)

Sky & Telescope Magazine - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 1:01pm

Albert H. Nagler, a pioneer of telescope optics, passed away at the office of his company Tele Vue Optics on Monday, October 27th. He was 90 years old.

The post Al Nagler (1935–2025) appeared first on Sky & Telescope.

Categories: Astronomy

Spying Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Near Perihelion

Universe Today - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 12:30pm

Everyone’s favorite interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS isn’t really hiding near perihelion this week, as amateur astronomers reveal. Don’t believe the breathless ballyhoo that you’re currently reading around the web about interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS. In a clockwork Universe, comets are the big wildcard, and interstellar comets doubly so. This particular comet is scientifically interesting enough in its own right, no alien interlopers needed.

Categories: Astronomy

The Science of How Hurricane Melissa Became So Extreme

Scientific American.com - Tue, 10/28/2025 - 12:19pm

A nearly perfect alignment of factors has enabled Hurricane Melissa to become one of the most intense Atlantic storms ever recorded

Categories: Astronomy