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Today β€” 1 June 2024Main stream

β€˜Once in a lifetime’: UK and European space scientists urged to join Nasa mission to Uranus

1 June 2024 at 12:44

Astrophysicists call for international cooperation on ambitious probe, amid growing interest in the mysterious planet

European space scientists have been urged to join forces with Nasa to ensure the success of one of the most ambitious space missions planned for launch this century.

Joining a robot spaceflight to the mysterious planet Uranus would offer β€œthe opportunity to participate in a groundbreaking, flagship-class mission”, astrophysicists have said.

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Β© Photograph: Heritage Images/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Heritage Images/Getty Images

Meet Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore, the NASA Astronauts Riding on Boeing’s Starliner

1 June 2024 at 11:48
After a May 6 liftoff was scrubbed, the astronauts returned to their home base in Houston and continued their preparations for Saturday’s flight.

Β© Cristobal Herrera-Ulashkevich/EPA, via Shutterstock

The astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams on their way to the Starliner spacecraft on May 6, before the launch was called off.
Yesterday β€” 31 May 2024Main stream

Six planets to appear in alignment next week in rare celestial parade

Mercury, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus will be visible but viewers may need some equipment to see them clearly

Stargazers are in with a chance of a celestial treat on Monday with six planets appearing in alignment.

Mercury, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus will take part in the parade – which occurs when planets gather on the same side of the sun.

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Β© Photograph: Steve Allen Photography/Getty Images

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Β© Photograph: Steve Allen Photography/Getty Images

Before yesterdayMain stream

The Unistellar Odyssey smart telescope made me question what stargazing means

29 May 2024 at 07:00
Two telescopes on a forest path

Enlarge / The Sky-Watcher HEQ5 Pro and the Unistellar Odyssey Pro. (credit: Tim Stevens)

It's been 300 years since Galileo and Isaac Newton started fiddling around with lenses and parabolic mirrors to get a better look at the heavens. But if you look at many of the best amateur telescopes today, you'd be forgiven for thinking they haven't progressed much since.

Though components have certainly improved, the basic combination of mirrors and lenses is more or less the same. Even the most advanced "smart" mounts that hold them rely on technology that hasn't progressed in 30 years.

Compared to the radical reinvention that even the humble telephone has received, it's sad that telescope tech has largely been left behind. But that is finally changing. Companies like Unistellar and Vaonis are pioneering a new generation of scopes that throw classic astronomy norms and concepts out the window in favor of a seamless setup and remarkable image quality.

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NASA Astronauts to Wait Another Week for Boeing Starliner Launch

24 May 2024 at 14:56
Officials from NASA and Boeing say they have worked out a solution to a helium leak that has kept the Starliner astronaut capsule grounded.

Β© Joe Raedle/Getty Images

The astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams on their way to the Starliner spacecraft on May 6, before the launch was called off.

Euclid telescope spies rogue planets floating free in Milky Way

23 May 2024 at 06:00

Wandering worlds are seen deep inside Orion nebula, a giant cloud of dust and gas 1,500 light years away

Astronomers have spotted dozens of rogue planets floating free from their stars after turning the Euclid space telescope to look at a distant region of the Milky Way.

The wandering worlds were seen deep inside the Orion nebula, a giant cloud of dust and gas 1,500 light years away, and described in the first scientific results announced by Euclid mission researchers.

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Β© Photograph: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA

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Β© Photograph: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA

Nova explosion visible to the naked eye expected any day now

21 May 2024 at 10:13
Image of a blue sphere, surrounded by blue filaments, and enclosed in a partial sphere of pink specks.s

Enlarge / Aftermath of a nova at the star GK Persei. (credit: NASA/CXC/RIKEN/STScI/NRAO/VLA)

When you look at the northern sky, you can follow the arm of the Big Dipper as it arcs around toward the bright star called Arcturus. Roughly in the middle of that arc, you'll find the Northern Crown constellation, which looks a bit like a smiley face. Sometime between now and September, if you look to the left-hand side of the Northern Crown, what will look like a new star will shine for five days or so.

This star system is called T. Coronae Borealis, also known as the Blaze Star, and most of the time, it is way too dim to be visible to the naked eye. But once roughly every 80 years, a violent thermonuclear explosion makes it over 10,000 times brighter. The last time it happened was in 1946, so now it’s our turn to see it.

Neighborhood litterbug

β€œThe T. Coronae Borealis is a binary system. It is actually two stars,” said Gerard Van Belle, the director of science at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. One of these stars is a white dwarf, an old star that has already been through its fusion-powered lifecycle. β€œIt’s gone from being a main sequence star to being a giant star. And in the case of giant stars, what happens is their outer parts eventually get kind of pushed into outer space. What’s left behind is a leftover core of the starβ€”that’s called a white dwarf,” Van Belle explained.

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Milky Way photographer of the year 2024 – in pictures

21 May 2024 at 01:00

The travel photography site Capture the Atlas has published the seventh edition of its Milky Way photographer of the year collection. The Milky Way season ranges from February to October in the northern hemisphere and from January to November in the southern hemisphere. The best time to see and photograph the Milky Way is usually between May and June, when hours of visibility are at their maximum on both hemispheres – away from light-polluted areas such as cities, and preferably at higher elevation

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Β© Photograph: Julien Looten/2024 MILKY WAY PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR

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Β© Photograph: Julien Looten/2024 MILKY WAY PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR

Ed Dwight Goes to Space 63 Years After Training as 1st Black Astronaut

19 May 2024 at 18:34
Edward Dwight was among the first pilots that the United States was training to send to space in 1961, but he was passed over. On Sunday, he finally made it on a Blue Origin flight.

Β© Blue Origin, via Agence France-Presse β€” Getty Images

Edward Dwight was one of six people who went to space aboard the Mission NS-25 crew capsule from Blue Origin on Sunday. Upon exiting, he raised his arm and said, β€œLong time coming.”

How the perils of space have affected asteroid Ryugu

19 May 2024 at 07:55
Grey image of a complicated surface composed of many small rocks bound together by dust.

Enlarge / The surface of Ryugu. Image credit: JAXA, University of Tokyo, Kochi University, Rikkyo University, Nagoya University, Chiba Institute of Technology, Meiji University, Aizu University, AIST (credit: JAXA)

An asteroid that has been wandering through space for billions of years is going to have been bombarded by everything from rocks to radiation. Billions of years of traveling through interplanetary space increases the odds of colliding with something in the vast emptiness, and at least one of those impacts had enough force to leave the asteroid Ryugu forever changed.

When the Japanese Space Agency’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft touched down on Ryugu, it collected samples from the surface that revealed that particles of magnetite (which is usually magnetic) in the asteroid’s regolith are devoid of magnetism. A team of researchers from Hokkaido University and several other institutions in Japan are now offering an explanation for how this material lost most of its magnetic properties. Their analysis showed that it was caused by at least one high-velocity micrometeoroid collision that broke the magnetite’s chemical structure down so that it was no longer magnetic.

β€œWe surmised that pseudo-magnetite was created [as] the result of space weathering by micrometeoroid impact,” the researchers, led by Hokkaido University professor Yuki Kimura, said in a study recently published in Nature Communications.

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New Star Wars Plan: Pentagon Rushes to Counter Threats in Orbit

17 May 2024 at 18:31
Citing rapid advances by China and Russia, the United States is building an extensive capacity to fight battles in space.

Β© Craig Bailey/Florida Today, via Associated Press

A rocket carrying the Pentagon’s secretive X-37B crewless space plane launching last year from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Alarmed by Climate Change, Astronomers Train Their Sights on Earth

A growing number of researchers in the field are using their expertise to fight the climate crisis.

Β© David Maurice Smith for The New York Times

Penny Sackett, former director of the Australian National University’s Mount Stromlo Observatory, just outside Canberra, in the remains of the observatory, which was destroyed in a 2003 wildfire.

Monster galactic outflow powered by exploding stars

12 May 2024 at 06:00
Image of a galaxy showing lots of complicated filaments of gas.

Enlarge / All galaxies have large amounts of gas that influence their star-formation rates. (credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, and J. Lee (NOIRLab))

Galaxies pass gasβ€”in the case of galaxy NGC 4383, so much so that its gas outflow is 20,000 light-years across and more massive than 50 million Suns.

Yet even an outflow of this immensity was difficult to detect until now. Observing what these outflows are made of and how they are structured demands high-resolution instruments that can only see gas from galaxies that are relatively close, so information on them has been limited. Which is unfortunate, since gaseous outflows ejected from galaxies can tell us more about their star formation cycles.

The MAUVE (MUSE and ALMA Unveiling the Virgo Environment) program is now changing things. MAUVE’s mission is to understand how the outflows of galaxies in the Virgo cluster affect star formation. NGC 4383 stood out to astronomer Adam Watts, of the University of Australia and the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), and his team because its outflow is so enormous.

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Northern Lights Set to Return Tonight as Extreme Solar Storm Continues

Electrical utilities said they weathered earlier conditions as persistent geomagnetic storms were expected to cause another light show in evening skies.

Β© NASA/Solar Dynamics Observatory

A NASA satellite recorded the sun releasing a powerful solar flare on Friday night. Elevated solar activity this week has contributed to powerful geomagnetic storms in Earth’s atmosphere.

Northern Lights Forecast: How to See the Aurora Borealis This Weekend

11 May 2024 at 14:13
The Space Weather Prediction Center said solar activity would be high again on Saturday.

Β© Olivier Morin/Agence France-Presse β€” Getty Images

Northern lights hung over the Lofoten Islands in Norway in March.

Northern Lights Are Visible as Solar Storm Intensifies: What to Know

Officials warned of potential blackouts or interference with navigation and communication systems this weekend, as well as auroras as far south as Southern California or Texas.

Β© NASA/SDO

Some NASA Satellites Will Soon Stop Sending Data Back to Earth

3 May 2024 at 16:47
Three long-running satellites will soon be switched off, forcing scientists to figure out how to adjust their views of our changing planet.

Β© NASA/GSFC/LaRC/JPL, MISR Team

Marine stratocumulus clouds over the southeastern Pacific Ocean, captured by NASA’s Terra satellite in 2002.

Eta Aquarid Meteor Shower 2024: Peak Time and How to Watch

2 May 2024 at 12:06
The event will be active when the moon is just a sliver in the sky, but it is less easy to see in the Northern Hemisphere than other meteor showers.

Β© W. Liller/NASA

Halley’s comet over Easter Island in 1986. The Eta Aquarids meteor shower is the result of debris from Halley’s tail.

Killer Asteroid Hunters Spot 27,500 Overlooked Space Rocks

30 April 2024 at 09:00
With the help of Google Cloud, scientists churned through hundreds of thousands of images of the night sky to reveal that the solar system is filled with unseen objects.

Β© B612 Asteroid Institute/University of Washington DiRAC Institute/OpenSpace Project

An algorithm and cloud computing identified overlooked space rocks. Most, in green, are in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, but other items in orange share Jupiter’s orbit, and items in light blue are closer to Earth.

Killer Asteroid Hunters Spot 27,500 Overlooked Space Rocks

30 April 2024 at 09:00
With the help of Google Cloud, scientists churned through hundreds of thousands of images of the night sky to reveal that the solar system is filled with unseen objects.

Β© B612 Asteroid Institute/University of Washington DiRAC Institute/OpenSpace Project

An algorithm and cloud computing identified overlooked space rocks. Most, in green, are in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, but other items in orange share Jupiter’s orbit, and items in light blue are closer to Earth.

Lyrid Meteor Shower 2024: Peak Time and How to Watch

19 April 2024 at 12:00
A nearly full moon could interfere with the shower during its peak. It is forecast to be active until near the end of the month.

Β© Christian Bruna/EPA, via Shutterstock

A long exposure of the night sky over Austria in April 2020 during a Lyrid meteor shower.

NASA Seeks β€˜Hail Mary’ for Mars Sample Return Mission

15 April 2024 at 20:46
The agency will seek new ideas for its Mars Sample Return program, expected to be billions of dollars over budget and years behind schedule.

Β© NASA/ESA/JPL-Caltech

An artist’s conception of multiple robotic vehicles teaming up to return samples of rocks and soil, collected from the Martian surface by NASA's Mars Perseverance rover, to earth.

James Dean, Founding Director of NASA Art Program, Dies at 92

15 April 2024 at 17:07
He arranged for artists to have access to astronauts, launchpads and more. β€œTheir imaginations enable them to venture beyond a scientific explanation,” he once said.
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