We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.

— Oscar Wilde

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NASA Implementation of Executive Order 14303

NASA News - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 10:29am
Download NASA Implementation of Executive Order 14303, Restoring Gold Standard Science

Aug 22, 2025

PDF (277.15 KB)

Categories: NASA

NASA Implementation of Executive Order 14303

NASA - Breaking News - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 10:29am
Download NASA Implementation of Executive Order 14303, Restoring Gold Standard Science

Aug 22, 2025

PDF (277.15 KB)

Categories: NASA

An incredible Denisovan skull is upending the story of human evolution

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 10:00am
An ancient skull has finally shown us what the Denisovans looked like. Now it turns out they, not Neanderthals, might be our closest relatives, redrawing our family tree and transforming the hunt for Ancestor X
Categories: Astronomy

An incredible Denisovan skull is upending the story of human evolution

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 10:00am
An ancient skull has finally shown us what the Denisovans looked like. Now it turns out they, not Neanderthals, might be our closest relatives, redrawing our family tree and transforming the hunt for Ancestor X
Categories: Astronomy

Dark matter could create black holes that devour exoplanets from within

Space.com - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 10:00am
Dark matter could gather at the heart of Jupiter-sized worlds, eventually creating a black hole that eats its way out of its exoplanet host.
Categories: Astronomy

Don't miss Mars close to the slender crescent moon at sunset tonight

Space.com - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 9:00am
The crescent moon will be positioned close to Mars soon after sunset on Aug. 26
Categories: Astronomy

Radio dish on the move | Space photo of the day for Aug. 25, 2025

Space.com - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 8:00am
It makes it easier to drive an extremely heavy radio dish when you can do it remotely.
Categories: Astronomy

ESA data records help underpin climate change report

ESO Top News - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 7:49am

According to the newly released 35th State of the Climate report, 2024 saw record highs in greenhouse gas concentrations, global land and ocean temperatures, sea levels, and ocean heat content. Glaciers also suffered their largest annual ice loss on record. Data records from ESA’s Climate Change Initiative helped underpin these findings.

Categories: Astronomy

A New Model for Early Black Hole Formation Could Revolutionize Cosmologicy

Universe Today - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 7:25am

A new theoretical study by University of Virginia astrophysicist Jonathan Tan, a research professor with the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences’ Department of Astronomy, proposes a comprehensive framework for the birth of supermassive black holes.

Categories: Astronomy

NASA Commanded Psyche To Turn Around And Capture Images Of Earth And The Moon

Universe Today - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 7:25am

New images from NASA's Psyche spacecraft show that its cameras are working just fine. By pointing them at Earth and the Moon, NASA was able to test the spacecraft's cameras and science instruments. Since both bodies reflect light like Psyche, and since their spectra are familiar, it's a valuable opportunity to test and calibrate the instruments.

Categories: Astronomy

Roman's High-Latitude Time-Domain Survey Will Find Tens of Thousands of Supernovae

Universe Today - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 7:25am

For thousands of years, humanity viewed the skies as unchanging, except for a few “wandering stars” (that we now know are planets). As we improved our ability to perceive the cosmos with light-gathering telescopes and electronic detectors, we realized that the universe is full of things that change in brightness, whether it be an exploding star or a matter-gulping black hole. NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is poised to deliver an avalanche of such transients, including thousands of “standard candle” supernovae that allow us to measure the expansion history of the universe.

Categories: Astronomy

These Rare Star Systems Are A New Tool To Understand Brown Dwarfs

Universe Today - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 7:25am

The discovery of an extremely rare quadruple star system could significantly advance our understanding of brown dwarfs, astronomers say. Brown dwarfs in wide binary orbits offer a chance to determine their properties more clearly.

Categories: Astronomy

SpaceX to Launch Secret X-37B Space Plane Thursday

Universe Today - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 7:25am

The hunt will be on shortly, to once again recover a clandestine mission in low Earth orbit. SpaceX is set to launch a Falcon-9 rocket from launch pad LC-39A at the Kennedy Space Center Thursday night August 21st, with the classified USSF-36 mission. The U.S. Space Force has announced that this is the eighth mission for its fleet of two Orbital Test Vehicles (OTV-8). This is the automated ‘mini-space shuttle’ about the size of a large SUV that launches like a rocket, and lands like a plane.

Categories: Astronomy

Using Video Game Techniques To Optimize Solar Sails

Universe Today - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 7:25am

Sometimes inspiration can strike from the most unexpected places. It can result in a cross-pollination between ideas commonly used in one field but applied to a completely different one. That might have been the case with a recent paper on lightsail design from researchers at the University of Nottingham that used techniques typically used in video games to develop a new and improved structure of a lightsail.

Categories: Astronomy

60-Second Astro News: Light Pollution, Birds, and Zambuto Mirrors

Sky & Telescope Magazine - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 6:50am

In this roundup of recent news, birds react to light pollution and a respected mirror maker calls it a day.

The post 60-Second Astro News: Light Pollution, Birds, and Zambuto Mirrors appeared first on Sky & Telescope.

Categories: Astronomy

The Way People Search the Internet Can Fuel Echo Chambers

Scientific American.com - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 6:45am

Users’ Internet search questions can strengthen echo chambers, even on factual topics, but there are simple ways to lessen the effect

Categories: Astronomy

180 Years of Scientific American Means 180-Degree Turns in Science—Here Are Some of the Wildest Ones

Scientific American.com - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 6:00am

In honor of SciAm’s 180th birthday, we’re spotlighting the biggest “wait, what?” moments in science history.

Categories: Astronomy

Juice team resolves anomaly on approach to Venus

ESO Top News - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 6:00am

The European Space Agency’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (Juice) is on track for its gravity-assist flyby at Venus on 31 August, following the successful resolution of a spacecraft communication anomaly that temporarily severed contact with Earth.

The issue, which emerged during a routine ground station pass on 16 July, temporarily disrupted Juice’s ability to transmit information about its health and status (telemetry).

Thanks to swift and coordinated action by the teams at ESA’s European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany, and Juice’s manufacturer, Airbus, communication was restored in time to prepare for the upcoming planetary encounter.

Categories: Astronomy

NASA's Psyche asteroid probe beams home haunting view of distant Earth (photo)

Space.com - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 6:00am
NASA's Psyche spacecraft, which is headed toward a big and bizarre metal asteroid, has delivered a stunning perspective of our home planet from deep space.
Categories: Astronomy

Lindy Garay: Supporting Space Station Safety and Success

NASA - Breaking News - Mon, 08/25/2025 - 6:00am

Lindy Garay always knew she wanted to develop software. She did not anticipate that her work would contribute to human spaceflight.

The electrical and software engineering degree Garay earned from the University of Texas at Austin paved the way for a 25-year career with NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. Her first job out of college was developing software for the International Space Station Program’s original space station training facility simulator. “I had not always been interested in working in the space program, but I became enamored with being able to contribute to such an important mission,” she said.

Official portrait of Lindy Garay.NASA

Today, Garay serves as a training systems software architect and is the technical lead for training system external interfaces. That means she leads the team that helps connect training simulations from NASA’s external partners with simulations run by Johnson’s Mission Training Center (MTC) to support crew and flight controller training. The MTC currently provides training capabilities for the International Space Station Program, the Commercial Crew Program, and Artemis campaign components such as the Orion Program and the human landing system.

Garay said that not having an aerospace background was challenging at the beginning of her career, but she overcame that by leaning on teammates who had knowledge and experience in the field. “Every successful endeavor depends on having a solid team of dedicated people working toward one goal,” she said. “Success also depends on good communication, flexibility, and being willing to listen to different opinions,” she added.

Garay was recently named as a 2025 NASA Space Flight Awareness Program Honoree – one of the highest recognitions presented to the agency’s workforce. Recipients must have significantly contributed to the human spaceflight program to ensure flight safety and mission success. Garay’s commendation acknowledged her “sustained superior performance, dedication, and commitment to the Flight Operations Directorate’s goals” and her instrumental role in the success of several major training systems projects. In particular, she was recognized for contributions to the High-Level Architecture simulation framework, which is used to create realistic simulations of visiting vehicles’ arrival, docking, and departure from the space station.

From left to right, Johnson Space Flight Awareness (SFA) Lead Jessica Cordero, SFA Coordinator Michelle Minor, Johnson Space Center Acting Director Stephen Koerner, Drew Faulkner, Adam Korona, Teresa Sindelar, Lindy Garay, Lindsay Kirk, Keith Barr, Ephram Rubin, and NASA astronaut Randy Bresnik. NASA/Kim Shiflett

Garay and 36 other agency honorees were celebrated during a special ceremony in Cocoa Beach, Florida, and had the opportunity to attend the launch of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 mission at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. “That was quite an honor,” she said.

Outside of work, Garay may be found cheering on Houston’s sports teams. She enjoys traveling to watch the Texans and the Astros play.

Garay is also rooting for the Artemis Generation as NASA prepares to return to the Moon and journey on to Mars. She offered this advice: “Always remember the importance and the magnitude of the whole mission.”

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Categories: NASA