I can calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people

— Sir Isaac Newton

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Weekend workouts can be as valuable as exercising throughout the week

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 6:00am
Squeezing exercise into one or two days a week seems to have similar health benefits as doing the same amount of physical activity spread out throughout the week
Categories: Astronomy

What Is ‘Squirting’? The Science behind the Controversial Phenomenon Explained

Scientific American.com - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 6:00am

A mysterious and often debated aspect of human sexuality colloquially known as “squirting” sparks controversy. This episode explores what research reveals.

Categories: Astronomy

Plush polar bear with penguin art floats as Fram2 zero-g indicator in polar orbit

Space.com - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 6:00am
The first astronauts to enter a polar orbit chose the obvious animal to serve as their zero-g indicator: a plush polar bear. The doll also has an emperor penguin embroidered on its chest.
Categories: Astronomy

Citizen Scientists Use NASA Open Science Data to Research Life in Space

NASA - Breaking News - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 5:30am

2 min read

Citizen Scientists Use NASA Open Science Data to Research Life in Space 2023 Workshop of Analysis Working Group members, Washington, D.C., November 14, 2023. Now, you are invited to join their quest to understand how life can thrive in deep space! Want to learn more first? Join our live virtual event April 17 at 3pm Eastern Time to hear an overview of the OSDR AWG’s operations. Photo: NASA OSDR Team

How can life thrive in deep space? The Open Science Data Repository Analysis Working Groups invite volunteers from all backgrounds to help answer this question. Request to join these citizen science groups to help investigate how life adapts to space environments, exploring topics like radiation effects, microgravity’s impact on human and plant health, and how microbes change in orbit.

Currently, nine Analysis Working Groups (AWGs) hold monthly meetings to advance their specific focus areas. Participants collaborate using an online platform, the AWG “Forum-Space”, where they connect with peers and experts, join discussions, and contribute to over 20 active projects

The AWGs work with data primarily from the NASA Open Science Data Repository (OSDR), a treasure trove of spaceflight data on physiology, molecular biology, bioimaging, and much more. For newcomers, there are tutorials and a comprehensive paper covering all aspects of the repository and the AWG community. You can explore 500+ studies, an omics multi-study visualization portal, the environmental data app, and RadLab, a portal for radiation telemetry data. (“Omics” refers to fields of biology that end in “omics,” like “genomics”.)   

Each of the nine AWGs has a Lead who organizes their group and holds monthly virtual meetings. Once you join, make sure to connect with the Lead and get on the agenda so you can introduce yourself. Learn more about the AWGs here.

Have an idea for a new project? Propose a new project and help lead it! From data analysis and visualization to shaping data standards and conducting literature meta-analyses, there’s a place for everyone to contribute. Request to join, and together, we can address a great challenge for humanity: understanding and enabling life to thrive in deep space! 

Want to learn more?

On April 17 at 3pm Eastern Time, the NASA Citizen Science Leaders Series is hosting an virtual event with Ryan Scott about these Analysis Working Groups and their work. Ryan is the Science Lead for the Ames Life Sciences Data Archive and the liaison between the Open Data Science Repository and the Analysis Working Groups. Click here to register for this event!

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Last Updated

Apr 01, 2025

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Categories: NASA

Spaceflight Weakens Our Weight-Bearing Bones the Most

Universe Today - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 5:12am

As humans continue to make tentative progress out into the cosmos, the impact of space exploration on our fragile bodies is only beginning to be understood. We know that space travel decreases muscle and bone mass but a team of researchers have discovered which bones suffer the most! Using a group of mice that became astro-rodents for 37 days, they discovered that bone degeneration effective the femur most but not the vertebrae. They concluded that it’s our weight-bearing bones that suffer the most.

Categories: Astronomy

Northern Lights in Mexico? Low-latitudes may be more vulnerable than expected to geomagnetic storms

Space.com - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 5:00am
Mother's Day 2024 heralded Mexico's most powerful geomagnetic storm in two decades. Here's why scientists say this is something to track.
Categories: Astronomy

Messier 81

APOD - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 12:00am

One of the brightest galaxies in planet Earth's sky is similar in size


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

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APOD - Wed, 04/02/2025 - 12:00am

You'd think the Pacman Nebula would be eating stars, but actually it is forming them.


Categories: Astronomy, NASA

Travellers to Mars Need to Avoid the Dust

Universe Today - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 8:11pm

Travellers to Mars Need to Avoid the Dust

Categories: Astronomy

US government fired researchers running a crucial drug use survey

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 6:15pm
A termination letter obtained by New Scientist reveals that the Trump administration has gutted the office that runs the country’s only nationwide survey on drug use and mental health
Categories: Astronomy

US government fired researchers running a crucial drug use survey

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 6:15pm
A termination letter obtained by New Scientist reveals that the Trump administration has gutted the office that runs the country’s only nationwide survey on drug use and mental health
Categories: Astronomy

NIH Director Removes Four Main Scientists amid Massive Staff Purge

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 6:15pm

The Trump Administration has fired four leaders and thousands of employees at the National Institutes of Health in "one of the darkest days"

Categories: Astronomy

NASA's new SPHEREx space telescope takes its 1st cosmic images: 'The instrument team nailed it'

Space.com - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 6:06pm
NASA's new infrared telescope named "SPHEREx" has officially opened its eyes to the cosmos.
Categories: Astronomy

SpaceX’s Fram2 Mission Sends Four Private Astronauts into Polar Orbit

Scientific American.com - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 5:00pm

The privately funded Fram2 mission is the first ever to take astronauts into polar orbit—and the latest sign of a “new normal” for human spaceflight

Categories: Astronomy

New alien abduction film 'Watch the Skies' is giving us Swedish Spielberg vibes (video)

Space.com - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 4:00pm
Check out this peek at new alien abduction thriller "Watch the Skies" coming to theaters May 9.
Categories: Astronomy

'I’d get on in a heartbeat': Starliner astronauts would fly on Boeing spacecraft again despite malfunctions (video)

Space.com - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 3:22pm
NASA astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore both say they'd ride on Boeing's Starliner again, despite the issues the capsule had on its first crewed flight.
Categories: Astronomy

How nothing could destroy the universe

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 2:00pm
The concept of nothing once sparked a 1000-year-long war, today it might explain dark energy and nothingness even has the potential to destroy the universe, explains physicist Antonio Padilla
Categories: Astronomy

How nothing could destroy the universe

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 2:00pm
The concept of nothing once sparked a 1000-year-long war, today it might explain dark energy and nothingness even has the potential to destroy the universe, explains physicist Antonio Padilla
Categories: Astronomy

Rare 'double sunrise' captured in Canada by intrepid solar eclipse chasers (photos)

Space.com - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 2:00pm
Cloud-dodging eclipse chasers in New Brunswick and Québec, Canada, captured the solar horns, reflections and all kinds of weird views as the sun rose partially eclipsed.
Categories: Astronomy

Déjà vu: President Trump nominates Greg Autry again to be NASA's financial chief

Space.com - Tue, 04/01/2025 - 1:39pm
President Trump has nominated space policy expert Greg Autry to be NASA's chief financial officer, as he did back in 2020 to no avail.
Categories: Astronomy