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Before yesterdayAstronomy Magazine
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  • Dark energy sheds light on life in the cosmosMark Zastrow
    In the 1960s, celebrated radio astronomer Frank Drake proposed his eponymous equation, which attempted to wrangle with the probability of finding extraterrestrial life — at least, the kind that we could identify through radio broadcasts — somewhere out there in the universe. One of the key parameters of that formulation is the rate of starContinue reading "Dark energy sheds light on life in the cosmos" The post Dark energy sheds light on life in the cosmos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Dark energy sheds light on life in the cosmos

November 23rd 2024 at 2:30 pm

In the 1960s, celebrated radio astronomer Frank Drake proposed his eponymous equation, which attempted to wrangle with the probability of finding extraterrestrial life — at least, the kind that we could identify through radio broadcasts — somewhere out there in the universe. One of the key parameters of that formulation is the rate of starContinue reading "Dark energy sheds light on life in the cosmos"

The post Dark energy sheds light on life in the cosmos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Lion’s markingsMark Zastrow
    David Gluchowski, taken from Brooklyn, New York The Lion Nebula (Sharpless 2–132) is a faint emission nebula lit by young hot stars; their winds and radiation are expanding outward, forming shock waves that comprise many of the lion’s features. This shot also accentuates the play of light and shadow around the lion’s “head”. The imagerContinue reading "The Lion’s markings" The post The Lion’s markings appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Lion’s markings

November 22nd 2024 at 10:23 pm

David Gluchowski, taken from Brooklyn, New York The Lion Nebula (Sharpless 2–132) is a faint emission nebula lit by young hot stars; their winds and radiation are expanding outward, forming shock waves that comprise many of the lion’s features. This shot also accentuates the play of light and shadow around the lion’s “head”. The imagerContinue reading "The Lion’s markings"

The post The Lion’s markings appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • String theory is not dead yetTom Siegfried
    Scientists seeking the secrets of the universe would like to make a model that shows how all of nature’s forces and particles fit together. It would be nice to do it with Legos. But perhaps a better bet would be connecting everything with strings. Not literal strings, of course — but tiny loops or snippetsContinue reading "String theory is not dead yet" The post String theory is not dead yet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

String theory is not dead yet

November 22nd 2024 at 7:54 pm

Scientists seeking the secrets of the universe would like to make a model that shows how all of nature’s forces and particles fit together. It would be nice to do it with Legos. But perhaps a better bet would be connecting everything with strings. Not literal strings, of course — but tiny loops or snippetsContinue reading "String theory is not dead yet"

The post String theory is not dead yet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • JWST spots more light than expected in the early universeTheo Nicitopoulos
    The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is well-known for discovering young, bright galaxies in the very early universe. How such regions, bursting with stars, formed so quickly and survived is enticing researchers to rethink cosmic evolution.    A recent study published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters uses JWST data to probeContinue reading "JWST spots more light than expected in the early universe" The post JWST spots more light than expected in the early universe a
     

JWST spots more light than expected in the early universe

November 22nd 2024 at 5:30 pm

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is well-known for discovering young, bright galaxies in the very early universe. How such regions, bursting with stars, formed so quickly and survived is enticing researchers to rethink cosmic evolution.    A recent study published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters uses JWST data to probeContinue reading "JWST spots more light than expected in the early universe"

The post JWST spots more light than expected in the early universe appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from November 22 to 29: Venus lingers long after sunsetAlison Klesman
    Friday, November 22Last Quarter Moon occurs at 8:28 P.M. EST, leaving most of the evening dark for deep-sky observing.  About two hours after sunset, you’ll find the Great Square of Pegasus high in the southeastern sky. The Winged Horse is home to a fabulous globular cluster, M15, which just barely hits naked-eye magnitude at 6.2.Continue reading "The Sky This Week from November 22 to 29: Venus lingers long after sunset" The post The Sky This Week from November 22 to 29: Venus lingers long after
     

The Sky This Week from November 22 to 29: Venus lingers long after sunset

November 22nd 2024 at 9:30 am

Friday, November 22Last Quarter Moon occurs at 8:28 P.M. EST, leaving most of the evening dark for deep-sky observing.  About two hours after sunset, you’ll find the Great Square of Pegasus high in the southeastern sky. The Winged Horse is home to a fabulous globular cluster, M15, which just barely hits naked-eye magnitude at 6.2.Continue reading "The Sky This Week from November 22 to 29: Venus lingers long after sunset"

The post The Sky This Week from November 22 to 29: Venus lingers long after sunset appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Uranus may not have a weird magnetic field after allKorey Haynes
    In 1986, Voyager 2 flew by the ice giant Uranus. It was humanity’s first close-up view of the outer planet, and it remains the closest any spacecraft has ever come. On this trip, the spacecraft found 10 previously undiscovered moons, two rings, and a truly bizarre magnetic field that has baffled scientists ever since. MostContinue reading "Uranus may not have a weird magnetic field after all" The post Uranus may not have a weird magnetic field after all appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Uranus may not have a weird magnetic field after all

November 22nd 2024 at 2:13 am

In 1986, Voyager 2 flew by the ice giant Uranus. It was humanity’s first close-up view of the outer planet, and it remains the closest any spacecraft has ever come. On this trip, the spacecraft found 10 previously undiscovered moons, two rings, and a truly bizarre magnetic field that has baffled scientists ever since. MostContinue reading "Uranus may not have a weird magnetic field after all"

The post Uranus may not have a weird magnetic field after all appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How Comet ATLAS fizzled outDavid L. Chandler
    When comet C/2024 S1 (ATLAS) was first discovered in late September, it was almost immediately identified as a member of the Kreutz family of Sun-grazing comets. But it was highly unusual for a Kreutz comet — virtually all of these are only discovered in their last hours or days of existence, as they plunge towardContinue reading "How Comet ATLAS fizzled out" The post How Comet ATLAS fizzled out appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How Comet ATLAS fizzled out

November 21st 2024 at 5:30 pm

When comet C/2024 S1 (ATLAS) was first discovered in late September, it was almost immediately identified as a member of the Kreutz family of Sun-grazing comets. But it was highly unusual for a Kreutz comet — virtually all of these are only discovered in their last hours or days of existence, as they plunge towardContinue reading "How Comet ATLAS fizzled out"

The post How Comet ATLAS fizzled out appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX Starship Flight 6: No booster catch, but still pushing the envelopeAlison Klesman
    While it did not recreate the historic Super Heavy booster catch it pulled off last time, SpaceX continued to push the envelope during the sixth test flight of its Starship spacecraft. The largest and most powerful rocket ever built lifted off from SpaceX’s Starbase launchpad in Texas on Tuesday evening, Super Heavy’s 33 Raptor engines creating aContinue reading "SpaceX Starship Flight 6: No booster catch, but still pushing the envelope" The post SpaceX Starship Flight 6: No booster catch, but s
     

SpaceX Starship Flight 6: No booster catch, but still pushing the envelope

November 20th 2024 at 11:43 pm

While it did not recreate the historic Super Heavy booster catch it pulled off last time, SpaceX continued to push the envelope during the sixth test flight of its Starship spacecraft. The largest and most powerful rocket ever built lifted off from SpaceX’s Starbase launchpad in Texas on Tuesday evening, Super Heavy’s 33 Raptor engines creating aContinue reading "SpaceX Starship Flight 6: No booster catch, but still pushing the envelope"

The post SpaceX Starship Flight 6: No booster catch, but still pushing the envelope appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This young, shrouded super-Neptune could help teach us how such planets formAlison Klesman
    Not so far from Earth, an infant planet is just getting its start at life. And by peeking beneath the thick cocoon of material surrounding it, astronomers could be getting a rare chance to watch a world for which our solar system has no equivalent settle into its early life. The planet closely orbits theContinue reading "This young, shrouded super-Neptune could help teach us how such planets form" The post This young, shrouded super-Neptune could help teach us how such planets form appeared firs
     

This young, shrouded super-Neptune could help teach us how such planets form

November 20th 2024 at 7:42 pm

Not so far from Earth, an infant planet is just getting its start at life. And by peeking beneath the thick cocoon of material surrounding it, astronomers could be getting a rare chance to watch a world for which our solar system has no equivalent settle into its early life. The planet closely orbits theContinue reading "This young, shrouded super-Neptune could help teach us how such planets form"

The post This young, shrouded super-Neptune could help teach us how such planets form appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The past, present, and future of Boeing in spaceBen Evans
    In October, The Wall Street Journal reported that Boeing may shed its space business to focus on commercial aircraft and defense systems. This could be due in part to this summer’s test flight of its Starliner crew transport to the International Space Station (ISS), which adversely reshaped public opinion of the beleaguered aerospace titan. ButContinue reading "The past, present, and future of Boeing in space" The post The past, present, and future of Boeing in space appeared first on Astronomy
     

The past, present, and future of Boeing in space

By: Ben Evans
November 20th 2024 at 5:30 pm

In October, The Wall Street Journal reported that Boeing may shed its space business to focus on commercial aircraft and defense systems. This could be due in part to this summer’s test flight of its Starliner crew transport to the International Space Station (ISS), which adversely reshaped public opinion of the beleaguered aerospace titan. ButContinue reading "The past, present, and future of Boeing in space"

The post The past, present, and future of Boeing in space appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The billowing cosmosMark Zastrow
    Jeff Schilling from Houston, Texas The dark nebulae LDN 935/6 contrast with billowing clouds of bright emission from the North America Nebula (NGC 7000). For this close-up study of light and dark in motion, the imager took 13¼ hours of exposure in Hubble-palette filters. The post The billowing cosmos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • Scientists discover significant ‘missing matter’ in the gas between galaxy clustersAlison Klesman
    The game is afoot! Astronomers may have found some of the universe’s missing matter, thanks to one team’s cosmic detective work. The case has been open for more than 20 years. In the 1990s and early 2000s, scientists sleuthed out the universe’s contents using observations from the cosmic microwave background radiation and Big Bang models.Continue reading "Scientists discover significant ‘missing matter’ in the gas between galaxy clusters" The post Scientists discover significant ‘missing matter’
     

Scientists discover significant ‘missing matter’ in the gas between galaxy clusters

November 19th 2024 at 8:05 pm

The game is afoot! Astronomers may have found some of the universe’s missing matter, thanks to one team’s cosmic detective work. The case has been open for more than 20 years. In the 1990s and early 2000s, scientists sleuthed out the universe’s contents using observations from the cosmic microwave background radiation and Big Bang models.Continue reading "Scientists discover significant ‘missing matter’ in the gas between galaxy clusters"

The post Scientists discover significant ‘missing matter’ in the gas between galaxy clusters appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Lowell Observatory celebrates a monumental renewalDavid J. Eicher
    On Saturday, Nov. 16, in Flagstaff, Arizona, the astronomy world changed a bit.  Lowell Observatory has long been a beacon of history in the cosmic universe. Here, Boston Brahmin Percival Lowell founded an institution to study the heavens from the far west in 1894. Here he famously studied Mars, an early obsession, believing it toContinue reading "Lowell Observatory celebrates a monumental renewal" The post Lowell Observatory celebrates a monumental renewal appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Lowell Observatory celebrates a monumental renewal

November 19th 2024 at 7:20 pm

On Saturday, Nov. 16, in Flagstaff, Arizona, the astronomy world changed a bit.  Lowell Observatory has long been a beacon of history in the cosmic universe. Here, Boston Brahmin Percival Lowell founded an institution to study the heavens from the far west in 1894. Here he famously studied Mars, an early obsession, believing it toContinue reading "Lowell Observatory celebrates a monumental renewal"

The post Lowell Observatory celebrates a monumental renewal appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How big is Earth’s orbit around the Sun?Astronomy Staff
    How big is the ellipse that our planet travels in a year around the Sun? J.J. MüdespacherMexico City, Mexico Earth’s orbit around the Sun is not circular, but an ellipse that is slightly elongated with an eccentricity of 0.017. (An eccentricity of 0 is a circle, while the dwarf planet Pluto has a relatively highContinue reading "How big is Earth’s orbit around the Sun?" The post How big is Earth’s orbit around the Sun? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How big is Earth’s orbit around the Sun?

November 18th 2024 at 7:30 pm

How big is the ellipse that our planet travels in a year around the Sun? J.J. MüdespacherMexico City, Mexico Earth’s orbit around the Sun is not circular, but an ellipse that is slightly elongated with an eccentricity of 0.017. (An eccentricity of 0 is a circle, while the dwarf planet Pluto has a relatively highContinue reading "How big is Earth’s orbit around the Sun?"

The post How big is Earth’s orbit around the Sun? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX Starship Flight 6: What to watch forMark Zastrow
    SpaceX is targeting the sixth test flight of its Starship spacecraft and Super Heavy booster — which comprise the largest and most powerful rocket system ever built — as early as Monday. Both the rocket and booster were moved to the launch mount this week for stacking. The mission, which like previous Starship flights willContinue reading "SpaceX Starship Flight 6: What to watch for" The post SpaceX Starship Flight 6: What to watch for appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

SpaceX Starship Flight 6: What to watch for

November 16th 2024 at 5:41 am

SpaceX is targeting the sixth test flight of its Starship spacecraft and Super Heavy booster — which comprise the largest and most powerful rocket system ever built — as early as Monday. Both the rocket and booster were moved to the launch mount this week for stacking. The mission, which like previous Starship flights willContinue reading "SpaceX Starship Flight 6: What to watch for"

The post SpaceX Starship Flight 6: What to watch for appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • JWST just found a black hole starving its host galaxy to deathAlison Klesman
    Astronomer Francesco D’Eugenio wasn’t looking for a murdered galaxy.  His team set out to measure the motions of stars in a distant galaxy and to understand why they appeared so old. Similar massive galaxies in the early universe were typically bustling with new star formation, and D’Eugenio, a scientist at the Kavli Institute for CosmologyContinue reading "JWST just found a black hole starving its host galaxy to death" The post JWST just found a black hole starving its host galaxy to death appe
     

JWST just found a black hole starving its host galaxy to death

November 15th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Astronomer Francesco D’Eugenio wasn’t looking for a murdered galaxy.  His team set out to measure the motions of stars in a distant galaxy and to understand why they appeared so old. Similar massive galaxies in the early universe were typically bustling with new star formation, and D’Eugenio, a scientist at the Kavli Institute for CosmologyContinue reading "JWST just found a black hole starving its host galaxy to death"

The post JWST just found a black hole starving its host galaxy to death appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Draconic fratricideMark Zastrow
    Kfir Simon, taken from Tivoli Farm, Namibia At a distance of 3,900 light-years in Norma the Square lies NGC 6164/5, also known as the Dragon’s Egg. Astronomers think the binary star at its center, HD 148937, was originally a triple system. The billowing outer shell was caused by stellar winds early in the system’s life;Continue reading "Draconic fratricide" The post Draconic fratricide appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Draconic fratricide

November 15th 2024 at 2:30 pm

Kfir Simon, taken from Tivoli Farm, Namibia At a distance of 3,900 light-years in Norma the Square lies NGC 6164/5, also known as the Dragon’s Egg. Astronomers think the binary star at its center, HD 148937, was originally a triple system. The billowing outer shell was caused by stellar winds early in the system’s life;Continue reading "Draconic fratricide"

The post Draconic fratricide appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from November 15 to 22: 2024’s last Super Moon occults the PleiadesAlison Klesman
    Friday, November 15We’re starting out the week strong with the Moon on center stage. November’s Full Moon, also called the Beaver Moon, occurs at 4:29 P.M. EST. But there’s more to this Full Moon — it’s a Super Moon, which occurs when the Moon reaches Full near its closest point to Earth, called perigee. ItContinue reading "The Sky This Week from November 15 to 22: 2024’s last Super Moon occults the Pleiades" The post The Sky This Week from November 15 to 22: 2024’s last Super Moon occults the P
     

The Sky This Week from November 15 to 22: 2024’s last Super Moon occults the Pleiades

November 15th 2024 at 9:30 am

Friday, November 15We’re starting out the week strong with the Moon on center stage. November’s Full Moon, also called the Beaver Moon, occurs at 4:29 P.M. EST. But there’s more to this Full Moon — it’s a Super Moon, which occurs when the Moon reaches Full near its closest point to Earth, called perigee. ItContinue reading "The Sky This Week from November 15 to 22: 2024’s last Super Moon occults the Pleiades"

The post The Sky This Week from November 15 to 22: 2024’s last Super Moon occults the Pleiades appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How some black holes maintain long-distance relationshipsMark Zastrow
    The European Space Agency’s Gaia emission has revealed two unexpected black holes orbiting stars like our own Sun. One minor problem: we’re not exactly sure how black holes like this should form. But a team of researchers might have an answer.  Astronomers can’t directly observe black holes. That’s because by definition they do not emitContinue reading "How some black holes maintain long-distance relationships" The post How some black holes maintain long-distance relationships appeared first on
     

How some black holes maintain long-distance relationships

November 15th 2024 at 12:47 am

The European Space Agency’s Gaia emission has revealed two unexpected black holes orbiting stars like our own Sun. One minor problem: we’re not exactly sure how black holes like this should form. But a team of researchers might have an answer.  Astronomers can’t directly observe black holes. That’s because by definition they do not emitContinue reading "How some black holes maintain long-distance relationships"

The post How some black holes maintain long-distance relationships appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • New Starlink satellites could be 32 times brighter in radio waves than beforeSamantha Hill
    Researchers using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope in Europe have discovered the second generation of Starlink satellites emit higher levels of radio waves that could pose a serious risk to radio astronomy. This issue of radio-wave emission is in addition to the sunlight that Starlink and other satellites reflect, which can be visibleContinue reading "New Starlink satellites could be 32 times brighter in radio waves than before" The post New Starlink satellites could be 32 times b
     

New Starlink satellites could be 32 times brighter in radio waves than before

November 13th 2024 at 7:29 pm

Researchers using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope in Europe have discovered the second generation of Starlink satellites emit higher levels of radio waves that could pose a serious risk to radio astronomy. This issue of radio-wave emission is in addition to the sunlight that Starlink and other satellites reflect, which can be visibleContinue reading "New Starlink satellites could be 32 times brighter in radio waves than before"

The post New Starlink satellites could be 32 times brighter in radio waves than before appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Could black holes create dark energy? Alison Klesman
    Black holes are the universe’s shadowy figures, with many millions of them roaming unseen in our galaxy alone. These cosmic heavyweights famously destroy anything that wanders too close, tearing stars and other objects to shreds with their immense gravitational pull.  But that may not be the end of the story for those doomed objects. AContinue reading "Could black holes create dark energy? " The post Could black holes create dark energy?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Could black holes create dark energy? 

November 13th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Black holes are the universe’s shadowy figures, with many millions of them roaming unseen in our galaxy alone. These cosmic heavyweights famously destroy anything that wanders too close, tearing stars and other objects to shreds with their immense gravitational pull.  But that may not be the end of the story for those doomed objects. AContinue reading "Could black holes create dark energy? "

The post Could black holes create dark energy?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Under the Tuscan sunsMark Zastrow
    Marco Meniero taken from Poggio Pinzuti, Italy The stars pirouette around Polaris above the hills of Tuscany near Pisa in this two-panel panorama taken with a Nikon Z9 mirrorless camera and a 70mm zoom lens. The imager captured 170 exposures of 15 seconds at f/4.5 and ISO 250. The post Under the Tuscan suns appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • What is dark energy?David J. Eicher
    In a 1998 research breakthrough, Saul Perlmutter of the University of California, Berkeley, and his colleagues in the Supernova Cosmology Project found the expansion rate of the universe is accelerating. Perlmutter and his team made the discovery by observing distant type Ia supernovae, whose brightnesses are well known, at different distances. His team made observationsContinue reading "What is dark energy?" The post What is dark energy? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

What is dark energy?

November 12th 2024 at 8:07 pm

In a 1998 research breakthrough, Saul Perlmutter of the University of California, Berkeley, and his colleagues in the Supernova Cosmology Project found the expansion rate of the universe is accelerating. Perlmutter and his team made the discovery by observing distant type Ia supernovae, whose brightnesses are well known, at different distances. His team made observationsContinue reading "What is dark energy?"

The post What is dark energy? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • ESO captures Dark Wolf Nebula stalking across the Milky Way Korey Haynes
    Inside the bright but unassumingly named nebula Gum 55 lies a dark nebula — a rift of dust grains that absorb visible light — creating a swatch of darkness against the glow of bright gas. Fittingly named for its shape, the Dark Wolf Nebula is no mere puppy — it spans an area some fourContinue reading "ESO captures Dark Wolf Nebula stalking across the Milky Way " The post ESO captures Dark Wolf Nebula stalking across the Milky Way  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

ESO captures Dark Wolf Nebula stalking across the Milky Way 

November 12th 2024 at 7:45 pm

Inside the bright but unassumingly named nebula Gum 55 lies a dark nebula — a rift of dust grains that absorb visible light — creating a swatch of darkness against the glow of bright gas. Fittingly named for its shape, the Dark Wolf Nebula is no mere puppy — it spans an area some fourContinue reading "ESO captures Dark Wolf Nebula stalking across the Milky Way "

The post ESO captures Dark Wolf Nebula stalking across the Milky Way  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • New astronomy products to be thankful forAstronomy Staff
    Star struck Wisconsin Historical Society PressMadison, WI In Chasing the Stars, authors Kelly Tyrell and James Lattis discuss the astronomical achievements of Washburn Observatory at the University of Wisconsin. The book’s 256 pages feature many images and details the early days of stargazing in the region, as well as Washburn’s many modern discoveries in theContinue reading "New astronomy products to be thankful for" The post New astronomy products to be thankful for appeared first on Astronomy
     

New astronomy products to be thankful for

November 12th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Star struck Wisconsin Historical Society PressMadison, WI In Chasing the Stars, authors Kelly Tyrell and James Lattis discuss the astronomical achievements of Washburn Observatory at the University of Wisconsin. The book’s 256 pages feature many images and details the early days of stargazing in the region, as well as Washburn’s many modern discoveries in theContinue reading "New astronomy products to be thankful for"

The post New astronomy products to be thankful for appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Dust on dustMark Zastrow
    Lynn Hilborn from Grafton, Ontario The origin of the reflection nebula van den Bergh 9 in Cassiopeia is the Cepheid variable star SU Cas; its blue light is reflected by surrounding dust, which are themselves partially shrouded by thicker dust clouds. This image represents 5 hours of exposure on an 8-inch scope in RGB filters. The post Dust on dust appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Dust on dust

November 11th 2024 at 11:40 pm

Lynn Hilborn from Grafton, Ontario The origin of the reflection nebula van den Bergh 9 in Cassiopeia is the Cepheid variable star SU Cas; its blue light is reflected by surrounding dust, which are themselves partially shrouded by thicker dust clouds. This image represents 5 hours of exposure on an 8-inch scope in RGB filters.

The post Dust on dust appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Leonid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the what happens when our planet, during its journey around the Sun, runs into a stream of particles in its orbit. Such an event is called a meteor shower, and because the streaks of light from these meteors seem to all come from a point in theContinue reading "The Leonid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Leonid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Leonid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

November 11th 2024 at 7:52 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the what happens when our planet, during its journey around the Sun, runs into a stream of particles in its orbit. Such an event is called a meteor shower, and because the streaks of light from these meteors seem to all come from a point in theContinue reading "The Leonid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Leonid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What is the universe expanding into?Astronomy Staff
    What is the universe expanding into? Euan TobinEdinburgh, Scotland This excellent question forces us to confront a region beyond the bounds of our intuition, so please bear with me. When you inflate a balloon, the balloon’s membrane moves outward, closer to the boundaries of whatever room encloses it. You can easily visualize this expansion becauseContinue reading "What is the universe expanding into?" The post What is the universe expanding into? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

What is the universe expanding into?

November 11th 2024 at 7:30 pm

What is the universe expanding into? Euan TobinEdinburgh, Scotland This excellent question forces us to confront a region beyond the bounds of our intuition, so please bear with me. When you inflate a balloon, the balloon’s membrane moves outward, closer to the boundaries of whatever room encloses it. You can easily visualize this expansion becauseContinue reading "What is the universe expanding into?"

The post What is the universe expanding into? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How carbon dioxide glaciers gave Mars liquid waterKorey Haynes
    Mars is tantalizingly similar to Earth in many ways, but especially in its surface features, which often resemble Earth deserts to an eerie degree. Both Earth and Mars share features such as valleys; canyons; fanlike washes of sand and rock; and long, winding gravel ridges called eskers. All are formed by flowing water, marking theContinue reading "How carbon dioxide glaciers gave Mars liquid water" The post How carbon dioxide glaciers gave Mars liquid water appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How carbon dioxide glaciers gave Mars liquid water

November 8th 2024 at 9:38 pm

Mars is tantalizingly similar to Earth in many ways, but especially in its surface features, which often resemble Earth deserts to an eerie degree. Both Earth and Mars share features such as valleys; canyons; fanlike washes of sand and rock; and long, winding gravel ridges called eskers. All are formed by flowing water, marking theContinue reading "How carbon dioxide glaciers gave Mars liquid water"

The post How carbon dioxide glaciers gave Mars liquid water appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to see a Saturn ring mirageStephen James O'Meara
    Roughly every 15 years, Earth passes through the plane of Saturn’s rings, causing them to nearly disappear from view — not to mention generating a variety of other interesting phenomena. The next such edge-on appearance will be in March 2025, though Saturn will unfortunately be too close to the Sun (only 9.5° away) for usContinue reading "How to see a Saturn ring mirage" The post How to see a Saturn ring mirage appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to see a Saturn ring mirage

November 8th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Roughly every 15 years, Earth passes through the plane of Saturn’s rings, causing them to nearly disappear from view — not to mention generating a variety of other interesting phenomena. The next such edge-on appearance will be in March 2025, though Saturn will unfortunately be too close to the Sun (only 9.5° away) for usContinue reading "How to see a Saturn ring mirage"

The post How to see a Saturn ring mirage appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX: Starship Flight 6 coming later this monthMark Zastrow
    The sixth test flight of Starship — the largest and most powerful rocket to ever fly — will launch no earlier than 5 p.m. EST on Monday, November 18, SpaceX said Wednesday. The previous test flight of Starship, which SpaceX also refers to simply as “Ship,” and the Super Heavy booster resulted in the unprecedented catchContinue reading "SpaceX: Starship Flight 6 coming later this month" The post SpaceX: Starship Flight 6 coming later this month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

SpaceX: Starship Flight 6 coming later this month

November 8th 2024 at 2:30 pm

The sixth test flight of Starship — the largest and most powerful rocket to ever fly — will launch no earlier than 5 p.m. EST on Monday, November 18, SpaceX said Wednesday. The previous test flight of Starship, which SpaceX also refers to simply as “Ship,” and the Super Heavy booster resulted in the unprecedented catchContinue reading "SpaceX: Starship Flight 6 coming later this month"

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  • The Sky This Week from November 8 to 15: Catch the Leonids earlyAlison Klesman
    Friday, November 8Although the constellation Perseus is perhaps best known for housing the famous Double Cluster, it’s also home to another open star cluster: M34, one of the Hero’s two Messier objects.  M34 is some 180 million years old and sits 1,400 light-years from Earth. The cluster contains about 100 stars and takes up roughlyContinue reading "The Sky This Week from November 8 to 15: Catch the Leonids early" The post The Sky This Week from November 8 to 15: Catch the Leonids early appeared
     

The Sky This Week from November 8 to 15: Catch the Leonids early

November 8th 2024 at 9:30 am

Friday, November 8Although the constellation Perseus is perhaps best known for housing the famous Double Cluster, it’s also home to another open star cluster: M34, one of the Hero’s two Messier objects.  M34 is some 180 million years old and sits 1,400 light-years from Earth. The cluster contains about 100 stars and takes up roughlyContinue reading "The Sky This Week from November 8 to 15: Catch the Leonids early"

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  • Five ‘shy,’ lesser-known deep-sky gems to observeStuart Atkinson
    Many constellations are well-known for having one very special deep-sky object within their borders, something so famous that when you read or hear that constellation’s name, you instantly think of it, like an astronomical word association game. Orion? The Orion Nebula! Andromeda? The Andromeda Galaxy, of course! Lyra? Easy — the Ring Nebula. And Perseus?Continue reading "Five ‘shy,’ lesser-known deep-sky gems to observe" The post Five ‘shy,’ lesser-known deep-sky gems to observe appeared first
     

Five ‘shy,’ lesser-known deep-sky gems to observe

November 7th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Many constellations are well-known for having one very special deep-sky object within their borders, something so famous that when you read or hear that constellation’s name, you instantly think of it, like an astronomical word association game. Orion? The Orion Nebula! Andromeda? The Andromeda Galaxy, of course! Lyra? Easy — the Ring Nebula. And Perseus?Continue reading "Five ‘shy,’ lesser-known deep-sky gems to observe"

The post Five ‘shy,’ lesser-known deep-sky gems to observe appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Learn the difference between common astronomical termsStuart Atkinson
    Astronomy is a science and a hobby that loves long words, acronyms, and abbreviations. At times, listening to someone talking about an event happening in the sky or an object faraway in space can feel like watching one of those episodes of Star Trek where the characters spend 10 minutes just speaking in “technobabble,” soContinue reading "Learn the difference between common astronomical terms" The post Learn the difference between common astronomical terms appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Learn the difference between common astronomical terms

November 6th 2024 at 9:30 pm

Astronomy is a science and a hobby that loves long words, acronyms, and abbreviations. At times, listening to someone talking about an event happening in the sky or an object faraway in space can feel like watching one of those episodes of Star Trek where the characters spend 10 minutes just speaking in “technobabble,” soContinue reading "Learn the difference between common astronomical terms"

The post Learn the difference between common astronomical terms appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A meteoric volleyMark Zastrow
    Xiaofeng Qu, taken at Xiaochaidan Lake, Qinghai Province, China The Perseid meteors streak across the sky from its radiant in the constellation Perseus appearing in this perspective to be lobbed across the sky. This panorama of 17 stitched 60-second frames was taken with a Nikon DSLR at 14mm lens at f/1.8. Sky frames were capturedContinue reading "A meteoric volley" The post A meteoric volley appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A meteoric volley

November 6th 2024 at 8:37 pm

Xiaofeng Qu, taken at Xiaochaidan Lake, Qinghai Province, China The Perseid meteors streak across the sky from its radiant in the constellation Perseus appearing in this perspective to be lobbed across the sky. This panorama of 17 stitched 60-second frames was taken with a Nikon DSLR at 14mm lens at f/1.8. Sky frames were capturedContinue reading "A meteoric volley"

The post A meteoric volley appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • We’re entering the era of private space stationsDoug Adler
    The era of the International Space Station (ISS) is coming to a close. In the near future, NASA plans to bring down the station in a controlled deorbit. The end of the ISS will leave a large gap in human spaceflight, although the Chinese Tiangong space station is currently active. Still, to make a spaceContinue reading "We’re entering the era of private space stations" The post We’re entering the era of private space stations appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

We’re entering the era of private space stations

November 6th 2024 at 6:30 pm

The era of the International Space Station (ISS) is coming to a close. In the near future, NASA plans to bring down the station in a controlled deorbit. The end of the ISS will leave a large gap in human spaceflight, although the Chinese Tiangong space station is currently active. Still, to make a spaceContinue reading "We’re entering the era of private space stations"

The post We’re entering the era of private space stations appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Starmus La Palma: The Island of Stars lineup revealed Alison Klesman
    Today, at the World Travel Market in London, STARMUS and The Canary Islands proudly unveiled the line-up for the highly anticipated STARMUS La Palma festival. The announcement was made during a special presentation led by STARMUS co-founder and Director, Prof. Garik Israelian, featuring the President of the Cabildo de La Palma, Sergio Rodríguez. Under theContinue reading "Starmus La Palma: The Island of Stars lineup revealed " The post Starmus La Palma: The Island of Stars lineup revealed  appea
     

Starmus La Palma: The Island of Stars lineup revealed 

November 6th 2024 at 12:42 am

Today, at the World Travel Market in London, STARMUS and The Canary Islands proudly unveiled the line-up for the highly anticipated STARMUS La Palma festival. The announcement was made during a special presentation led by STARMUS co-founder and Director, Prof. Garik Israelian, featuring the President of the Cabildo de La Palma, Sergio Rodríguez. Under theContinue reading "Starmus La Palma: The Island of Stars lineup revealed "

The post Starmus La Palma: The Island of Stars lineup revealed  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Could a methane crust be keeping Titan warm?Alison Klesman
    The second-largest moon in our solar system may have a secret ingredient that explains many of its mysteries — and maybe ups the chances for life there. In research published Sept. 30 in The Planetary Science Journal, a University of Hawaii-led team modeled the potential for methane clathrate (a kind of methane-infused water ice) inContinue reading "Could a methane crust be keeping Titan warm?" The post Could a methane crust be keeping Titan warm? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Could a methane crust be keeping Titan warm?

November 5th 2024 at 10:30 pm

The second-largest moon in our solar system may have a secret ingredient that explains many of its mysteries — and maybe ups the chances for life there. In research published Sept. 30 in The Planetary Science Journal, a University of Hawaii-led team modeled the potential for methane clathrate (a kind of methane-infused water ice) inContinue reading "Could a methane crust be keeping Titan warm?"

The post Could a methane crust be keeping Titan warm? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • This famous black hole system is actually a tripleDaniela Mata
    Despite their destructive forces, black holes are often seen in with a companion, such as a star, neutron star, white dwarf, or even another black hole. However, a study published Oct. 23 in Nature has found that the black hole binary system V404 Cygni, which contains a black hole and a small star, has anContinue reading "This famous black hole system is actually a triple" The post This famous black hole system is actually a triple appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

This famous black hole system is actually a triple

November 5th 2024 at 7:30 pm

Despite their destructive forces, black holes are often seen in with a companion, such as a star, neutron star, white dwarf, or even another black hole. However, a study published Oct. 23 in Nature has found that the black hole binary system V404 Cygni, which contains a black hole and a small star, has anContinue reading "This famous black hole system is actually a triple"

The post This famous black hole system is actually a triple appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Explore the science of rainbowsRaymond Shubinski
    Rainbows don’t actually exist. You can’t find the end of a rainbow (or its attendant pot of gold). It’s not possible to walk across a rainbow as the Norse gods did on the Bifrost, the bridge for fallen warriors to reach Valhalla, or to travel over one like Dorothy to Oz. Rather, rainbows and otherContinue reading "Explore the science of rainbows" The post Explore the science of rainbows appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Explore the science of rainbows

November 5th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Rainbows don’t actually exist. You can’t find the end of a rainbow (or its attendant pot of gold). It’s not possible to walk across a rainbow as the Norse gods did on the Bifrost, the bridge for fallen warriors to reach Valhalla, or to travel over one like Dorothy to Oz. Rather, rainbows and otherContinue reading "Explore the science of rainbows"

The post Explore the science of rainbows appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Universe, Discovered: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS still a naked eye object — barelyDavid J. Eicher
    Stellar Stories Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS now a faint naked-eye object Moving across the constellation Ophiuchus in the evening sky, Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS continues to fade as it moves farther away from Earth and the Sun. The comet now glows at 6th magnitude, keeping it as a faint naked-eye object under a very dark sky. ButContinue reading "Universe, Discovered: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS still a naked eye object — barely" The post Universe, Discovered: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS still a nak
     

Universe, Discovered: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS still a naked eye object — barely

November 5th 2024 at 2:30 pm

Stellar Stories Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS now a faint naked-eye object Moving across the constellation Ophiuchus in the evening sky, Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS continues to fade as it moves farther away from Earth and the Sun. The comet now glows at 6th magnitude, keeping it as a faint naked-eye object under a very dark sky. ButContinue reading "Universe, Discovered: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS still a naked eye object — barely"

The post Universe, Discovered: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS still a naked eye object — barely appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Universe, Discovered: Hera launches to asteroid crash sceneDavid J. Eicher
    Stellar Stories Hera spacecraft launched The European Space Agency’s Hxera spacecraft launched on October 7, initiating an exciting exploration of an unusual asteroid. The solar system contains many thousands of small asteroid bodies, but the target here — 65803 Didymos, is a binary object spanning some 850 meters (about half a mile). The accompanying imageContinue reading "Universe, Discovered: Hera launches to asteroid crash scene" The post Universe, Discovered: Hera launches to asteroid crash
     

Universe, Discovered: Hera launches to asteroid crash scene

November 5th 2024 at 11:46 am

Stellar Stories Hera spacecraft launched The European Space Agency’s Hxera spacecraft launched on October 7, initiating an exciting exploration of an unusual asteroid. The solar system contains many thousands of small asteroid bodies, but the target here — 65803 Didymos, is a binary object spanning some 850 meters (about half a mile). The accompanying imageContinue reading "Universe, Discovered: Hera launches to asteroid crash scene"

The post Universe, Discovered: Hera launches to asteroid crash scene appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the Moon as it closely passes the Ringed Planet on the evening of November 10. Our natural satellite will be just past its First Quarter phase, while Saturn will glow nicely at magnitude 0.8. If you have a telescope and point it at Saturn, you’ll seeContinue reading "The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

November 5th 2024 at 2:42 am

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the Moon as it closely passes the Ringed Planet on the evening of November 10. Our natural satellite will be just past its First Quarter phase, while Saturn will glow nicely at magnitude 0.8. If you have a telescope and point it at Saturn, you’ll seeContinue reading "The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Here are the nine sites where Artemis 3 might land on the MoonRobert Reeves
    It has been 52 years since Apollo 17 lifted off from the Taurus-Littrow Valley on the Moon.  All the Apollo landing sites, starting with Tranquility Base on the Moon’s Sea of Tranquility, have been immortalized in print and film and are well known to space aficionados worldwide. But soon, another name will join the exclusiveContinue reading "Here are the nine sites where Artemis 3 might land on the Moon" The post Here are the nine sites where Artemis 3 might land on the Moon appeared first on As
     

Here are the nine sites where Artemis 3 might land on the Moon

November 4th 2024 at 8:56 pm

It has been 52 years since Apollo 17 lifted off from the Taurus-Littrow Valley on the Moon.  All the Apollo landing sites, starting with Tranquility Base on the Moon’s Sea of Tranquility, have been immortalized in print and film and are well known to space aficionados worldwide. But soon, another name will join the exclusiveContinue reading "Here are the nine sites where Artemis 3 might land on the Moon"

The post Here are the nine sites where Artemis 3 might land on the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How are long-exposure astrophotos made? Astronomy Staff
    Many astrophotos feature exposures of 12 hours or more. Since nighttime darkness is only about this long, this implies multiple exposures on different nights. How does one set things up to get the exact same location, and avoid parallax error due to Earth’s rotation and orbit? Jose G. RieraSt. Augustine, Florida You are correct, manyContinue reading "How are long-exposure astrophotos made? " The post How are long-exposure astrophotos made?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How are long-exposure astrophotos made? 

November 4th 2024 at 7:30 pm

Many astrophotos feature exposures of 12 hours or more. Since nighttime darkness is only about this long, this implies multiple exposures on different nights. How does one set things up to get the exact same location, and avoid parallax error due to Earth’s rotation and orbit? Jose G. RieraSt. Augustine, Florida You are correct, manyContinue reading "How are long-exposure astrophotos made? "

The post How are long-exposure astrophotos made?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Eye of the universeMark Zastrow
    Overall Photons: Andrea Iorio, Elisa Cuccu, Fernando Linsalata, Javier Caldera, Paul Montague, Carlos Uriarte Castillo, Darius Kopriva, Drew Evans, Bruno Rota Sargi, Blake Behrends, Manuel Alejandro Chavarría Silva, Phillip Hoppes, Jan Beranek, Roberto Volpini, Pier Mattia Basciano, Marco Finatti, Jeff Ratino, Vakhtang Khutsishvili, and Patrice Soom NGC 7293 — better known as the Helix NebulaContinue reading "Eye of the universe" The post Eye of the universe appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Eye of the universe

November 4th 2024 at 2:30 pm

Overall Photons: Andrea Iorio, Elisa Cuccu, Fernando Linsalata, Javier Caldera, Paul Montague, Carlos Uriarte Castillo, Darius Kopriva, Drew Evans, Bruno Rota Sargi, Blake Behrends, Manuel Alejandro Chavarría Silva, Phillip Hoppes, Jan Beranek, Roberto Volpini, Pier Mattia Basciano, Marco Finatti, Jeff Ratino, Vakhtang Khutsishvili, and Patrice Soom NGC 7293 — better known as the Helix NebulaContinue reading "Eye of the universe"

The post Eye of the universe appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How Edwin Hubble won the Great DebateAlison Klesman
    By the dawn of the 20th century, not much had changed in the 400 years since Galileo’s discovery of the four jovian moons and his confirmation of Copernicus’ Sun-centered solar system.  Through the early 1900s, astronomers disagreed on whether the universe was home to a multitude of galaxies, so-called “island universes,” or contained entirely withinContinue reading "How Edwin Hubble won the Great Debate" The post How Edwin Hubble won the Great Debate appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How Edwin Hubble won the Great Debate

November 2nd 2024 at 8:30 pm

By the dawn of the 20th century, not much had changed in the 400 years since Galileo’s discovery of the four jovian moons and his confirmation of Copernicus’ Sun-centered solar system.  Through the early 1900s, astronomers disagreed on whether the universe was home to a multitude of galaxies, so-called “island universes,” or contained entirely withinContinue reading "How Edwin Hubble won the Great Debate"

The post How Edwin Hubble won the Great Debate appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Chandra X-ray telescope, facing chopping block, gets reprieve from NASARandall Hyman
    Scientists breathed a collective sigh of relief last week when NASA announced that the Chandra X-ray Observatory had been spared the chopping block — at least for another year. It was an abrupt about-face from plans announced in March to decommission the space-based telescope by this December.  Much of the credit for the 11th-hour stayContinue reading "Chandra X-ray telescope, facing chopping block, gets reprieve from NASA" The post Chandra X-ray telescope, facing chopping block, gets reprieve f
     

Chandra X-ray telescope, facing chopping block, gets reprieve from NASA

November 2nd 2024 at 1:00 am

Scientists breathed a collective sigh of relief last week when NASA announced that the Chandra X-ray Observatory had been spared the chopping block — at least for another year. It was an abrupt about-face from plans announced in March to decommission the space-based telescope by this December.  Much of the credit for the 11th-hour stayContinue reading "Chandra X-ray telescope, facing chopping block, gets reprieve from NASA"

The post Chandra X-ray telescope, facing chopping block, gets reprieve from NASA appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Opinion: An international affairs expert breaks down Harris and Trump’s records on space policyAlison Klesman
    The next president of the United States could be the first in that office to accept a phone call from the Moon and hear a woman’s voice on the line. To do so, they’ll first need to make a series of strategic space policy decisions. They’ll also need a little luck. Enormous government investment supports outerContinue reading "Opinion: An international affairs expert breaks down Harris and Trump’s records on space policy" The post Opinion: An international affairs expert breaks down Harris and Tr
     

Opinion: An international affairs expert breaks down Harris and Trump’s records on space policy

November 1st 2024 at 11:15 pm

The next president of the United States could be the first in that office to accept a phone call from the Moon and hear a woman’s voice on the line. To do so, they’ll first need to make a series of strategic space policy decisions. They’ll also need a little luck. Enormous government investment supports outerContinue reading "Opinion: An international affairs expert breaks down Harris and Trump’s records on space policy"

The post Opinion: An international affairs expert breaks down Harris and Trump’s records on space policy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Gales of NovemberMark Zastrow
    Bob Fera/Steve Mandel, taken from Sierra Remote Observatories, California The Sailboat Cluster (NGC 225) is an open star cluster in Cassiopeia; its common name was given to it by Astronomy contributor Rodney Pommier for the visual pattern of its stars. (If you can’t see the sailboat, try tilting your head slightly to the right.) TheContinue reading "Gales of November" The post Gales of November appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Gales of November

November 1st 2024 at 7:17 pm

Bob Fera/Steve Mandel, taken from Sierra Remote Observatories, California The Sailboat Cluster (NGC 225) is an open star cluster in Cassiopeia; its common name was given to it by Astronomy contributor Rodney Pommier for the visual pattern of its stars. (If you can’t see the sailboat, try tilting your head slightly to the right.) TheContinue reading "Gales of November"

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  • Here’s how ISS astronauts will vote in the 2024 electionAlison Klesman
    Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) orbit the Earth hundreds of miles above American soil. But that doesn’t mean they can’t vote while they float. Indeed, Boeing Starliner astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams—who have been in the orbital laboratory since June after their test mission was extended due to safety concerns—said they intend to cast their ballots in theContinue reading "Here’s how ISS astronauts will vote in the 2024 election" The post Here’s how ISS astronau
     

Here’s how ISS astronauts will vote in the 2024 election

November 1st 2024 at 6:35 pm

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) orbit the Earth hundreds of miles above American soil. But that doesn’t mean they can’t vote while they float. Indeed, Boeing Starliner astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams—who have been in the orbital laboratory since June after their test mission was extended due to safety concerns—said they intend to cast their ballots in theContinue reading "Here’s how ISS astronauts will vote in the 2024 election"

The post Here’s how ISS astronauts will vote in the 2024 election appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Bringing the Sun to lightSten Odenwald
    For thousands of years, humans have worshipped the Sun. Our ancestors built monuments and temples to it, and used it to mark the annual cycle of seasons. For ancient Egyptians, their most important god, Re, was the personification of the Sun itself. Today, we are no less in thrall to the wonders and mysteries ofContinue reading "Bringing the Sun to light" The post Bringing the Sun to light appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Bringing the Sun to light

November 1st 2024 at 4:30 pm

For thousands of years, humans have worshipped the Sun. Our ancestors built monuments and temples to it, and used it to mark the annual cycle of seasons. For ancient Egyptians, their most important god, Re, was the personification of the Sun itself. Today, we are no less in thrall to the wonders and mysteries ofContinue reading "Bringing the Sun to light"

The post Bringing the Sun to light appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

November 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Mars and Jupiter are improving, while Uranus reaches opposition

November 1st 2024 at 8:30 am

November brings many sights to explore, including Mercury in the early evening, Mars brightening, and the giant planets Jupiter and Saturn adding to the spectacle. Jupiter in particular is reaching its best apparition in a decade for Northern Hemisphere observers. Let’s start soon after sunset. Mercury hugs the southwest horizon and remains easily visible throughoutContinue reading "November 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Mars and Jupiter are improving, while Uranus reaches opposition"

The post November 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Mars and Jupiter are improving, while Uranus reaches opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from November 1 to 8: Valles Marineris comes into viewAlison Klesman
    Friday, November 1New Moon occurs this morning at 8:47 A.M. EDT.  The planet Mercury is now becoming visible, low in the evening sky. If you have a clear view southwest, you may catch the planet some 30 minutes after sunset, hanging just 2° above the horizon. Although bright at magnitude –0.3, it may be difficultContinue reading "The Sky This Week from November 1 to 8: Valles Marineris comes into view" The post The Sky This Week from November 1 to 8: Valles Marineris comes into view appeared fir
     

The Sky This Week from November 1 to 8: Valles Marineris comes into view

November 1st 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, November 1New Moon occurs this morning at 8:47 A.M. EDT.  The planet Mercury is now becoming visible, low in the evening sky. If you have a clear view southwest, you may catch the planet some 30 minutes after sunset, hanging just 2° above the horizon. Although bright at magnitude –0.3, it may be difficultContinue reading "The Sky This Week from November 1 to 8: Valles Marineris comes into view"

The post The Sky This Week from November 1 to 8: Valles Marineris comes into view appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Arecibo telescope was doomed by hurricane damage and human failures, says reportMark Zastrow
    Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observatory was felled by the combination of a hurricane, an equipment failure never before seen in the annals of engineering, and an “alarming” lack of concern from engineers and inspectors when crucial support cables were seen slipping out of their sockets years before the main platform of the famed radio telescope cameContinue reading "Arecibo telescope was doomed by hurricane damage and human failures, says report" The post Arecibo telescope was doomed by hurricane dama
     

Arecibo telescope was doomed by hurricane damage and human failures, says report

October 31st 2024 at 11:43 pm

Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observatory was felled by the combination of a hurricane, an equipment failure never before seen in the annals of engineering, and an “alarming” lack of concern from engineers and inspectors when crucial support cables were seen slipping out of their sockets years before the main platform of the famed radio telescope cameContinue reading "Arecibo telescope was doomed by hurricane damage and human failures, says report"

The post Arecibo telescope was doomed by hurricane damage and human failures, says report appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Boo!Mark Zastrow
    Jeff Schilling from Houston, Texas The star Gamma (γ) Cassiopeia sets aglow the interstellar clouds of IC 63 and IC 59, which appear like a ghost and its tail, respectively. This imager used a 5-inch refractor to take exposures in HαRGB filters of 5.4, 2, 2, and 2 hours, respectively. The post Boo! appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Boo!

October 31st 2024 at 1:23 am

Jeff Schilling from Houston, Texas The star Gamma (γ) Cassiopeia sets aglow the interstellar clouds of IC 63 and IC 59, which appear like a ghost and its tail, respectively. This imager used a 5-inch refractor to take exposures in HαRGB filters of 5.4, 2, 2, and 2 hours, respectively.

The post Boo! appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Tales of the Sun: From myth to modern scienceAlison Klesman
    For all of human history, the Sun has served as a great constant in daily life. As this brilliant orb blazes across the sky, it sustaind life, provides harmonious rhythms to our world, and marks the continuous passage of time. It is no wonder that curious minds have always sought to explain both the Sun’sContinue reading "Tales of the Sun: From myth to modern science" The post Tales of the Sun: From myth to modern science appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Tales of the Sun: From myth to modern science

October 30th 2024 at 9:40 pm

For all of human history, the Sun has served as a great constant in daily life. As this brilliant orb blazes across the sky, it sustaind life, provides harmonious rhythms to our world, and marks the continuous passage of time. It is no wonder that curious minds have always sought to explain both the Sun’sContinue reading "Tales of the Sun: From myth to modern science"

The post Tales of the Sun: From myth to modern science appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Watch a zombie star feed on its companionDaniela Mata
    “Watch out for rambunctious stars. They are trouble,” says Astronomy Editor David Eicher. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) just published a new photograph showing the stunning masterpiece that is R Aquarii, lying about 700 light-years away in the constellation Aquarius the Water-bearer. It is an uncommon type of binary star system displaying chaotic behavior andContinue reading "Watch a zombie star feed on its companion" The post Watch a zombie star feed on its companion appeared first on Astron
     

Watch a zombie star feed on its companion

October 30th 2024 at 4:30 pm

“Watch out for rambunctious stars. They are trouble,” says Astronomy Editor David Eicher. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) just published a new photograph showing the stunning masterpiece that is R Aquarii, lying about 700 light-years away in the constellation Aquarius the Water-bearer. It is an uncommon type of binary star system displaying chaotic behavior andContinue reading "Watch a zombie star feed on its companion"

The post Watch a zombie star feed on its companion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How Yerkes Observatory started overSamantha Hill
    The town of Williams Bay, Wisconsin is much like any other small city on a lake, with an offering of tourist shops and an active beach. But just a short drive past the activity brings you to Yerkes Observatory. Behind an opening of trees stands a sprawling, grand estate with a well-manicured lawn and aContinue reading "How Yerkes Observatory started over" The post How Yerkes Observatory started over appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How Yerkes Observatory started over

October 29th 2024 at 6:37 pm

The town of Williams Bay, Wisconsin is much like any other small city on a lake, with an offering of tourist shops and an active beach. But just a short drive past the activity brings you to Yerkes Observatory. Behind an opening of trees stands a sprawling, grand estate with a well-manicured lawn and aContinue reading "How Yerkes Observatory started over"

The post How Yerkes Observatory started over appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomers find a mini black holeAlison Klesman
    Astronomers have discovered a lightweight black hole that’s a bit of a cosmic conundrum. Hypothetically, black hole masses can range all the way from far less than a paperclip to at least tens of billions of times more than the Sun. But observations have revealed a strange scarcity of black holes between about two andContinue reading "Astronomers find a mini black hole" The post Astronomers find a mini black hole appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Astronomers find a mini black hole

October 29th 2024 at 3:30 pm

Astronomers have discovered a lightweight black hole that’s a bit of a cosmic conundrum. Hypothetically, black hole masses can range all the way from far less than a paperclip to at least tens of billions of times more than the Sun. But observations have revealed a strange scarcity of black holes between about two andContinue reading "Astronomers find a mini black hole"

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  • Ring of fireMark Zastrow
    Vikas Chander, taken from Observatorio El Sauce, Chile NGC 1291 (also cataloged as NGC 1269) lies 33 million light-years away in Eridanus. At 12 billion years old, the galaxy has lost most of its spiral structure and matured into a transitional state — yet it has an outer ring that still forming stars, appearing blue inContinue reading "Ring of fire" The post Ring of fire appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Ring of fire

October 28th 2024 at 11:47 pm

Vikas Chander, taken from Observatorio El Sauce, Chile NGC 1291 (also cataloged as NGC 1269) lies 33 million light-years away in Eridanus. At 12 billion years old, the galaxy has lost most of its spiral structure and matured into a transitional state — yet it has an outer ring that still forming stars, appearing blue inContinue reading "Ring of fire"

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  • For sale: One Boeing space program, says reportKorey Haynes
    The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that Boeing is getting out of the space business — or trying to. Part of a wider move to trim and improve business holdings and operations, the company is looking to offload its space program, assuming it can find a suitable buyer. Boeing has been one of NASA’sContinue reading "For sale: One Boeing space program, says report" The post For sale: One Boeing space program, says report appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

For sale: One Boeing space program, says report

October 28th 2024 at 10:18 pm

The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that Boeing is getting out of the space business — or trying to. Part of a wider move to trim and improve business holdings and operations, the company is looking to offload its space program, assuming it can find a suitable buyer. Boeing has been one of NASA’sContinue reading "For sale: One Boeing space program, says report"

The post For sale: One Boeing space program, says report appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Observe the Andromeda Galaxy: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe one of the most famous deep-sky objects, the Andromeda Galaxy, also known as Messier 31 (M31). Named for its location in the constellation Andromeda the Princess, M31 lies some 2.5 million light-years from Earth. While sharp-eyed observers can see it without optical aid, binoculars and telescopes giveContinue reading "Observe the Andromeda Galaxy: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Observe the Andromeda Galaxy: This Week in Astro
     

Observe the Andromeda Galaxy: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

October 28th 2024 at 7:34 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe one of the most famous deep-sky objects, the Andromeda Galaxy, also known as Messier 31 (M31). Named for its location in the constellation Andromeda the Princess, M31 lies some 2.5 million light-years from Earth. While sharp-eyed observers can see it without optical aid, binoculars and telescopes giveContinue reading "Observe the Andromeda Galaxy: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Observe the Andromeda Galaxy: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomers find out the first known brown dwarf is actually twinsAlison Klesman
    In 1995, a parallel race was on in astronomy — one to find the first planet beyond our own solar system, and the other to find the first brown dwarf, a class of object too heavy to be a planet, but below the mass of a star.  Astronomers ended up publishing the discovery of theContinue reading "Astronomers find out the first known brown dwarf is actually twins" The post Astronomers find out the first known brown dwarf is actually twins appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Astronomers find out the first known brown dwarf is actually twins

October 28th 2024 at 6:30 pm

In 1995, a parallel race was on in astronomy — one to find the first planet beyond our own solar system, and the other to find the first brown dwarf, a class of object too heavy to be a planet, but below the mass of a star.  Astronomers ended up publishing the discovery of theContinue reading "Astronomers find out the first known brown dwarf is actually twins"

The post Astronomers find out the first known brown dwarf is actually twins appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How the Cluster II mission studied the Sun’s effects on EarthSten Odenwald
    On July 26, 2000, the European Space Agency (ESA) launched the Salsa satellite, which joined its three companion satellites — Samba, Rumba, and Tango — on the Cluster II mission, scheduled to last two years. On Sep. 8, after more than 24 years of service, Salsa re-entered Earth’s atmosphere in a controlled de-orbit, where itContinue reading "How the Cluster II mission studied the Sun’s effects on Earth" The post How the Cluster II mission studied the Sun’s effects on Earth appeared first on Astr
     

How the Cluster II mission studied the Sun’s effects on Earth

October 28th 2024 at 4:30 pm

On July 26, 2000, the European Space Agency (ESA) launched the Salsa satellite, which joined its three companion satellites — Samba, Rumba, and Tango — on the Cluster II mission, scheduled to last two years. On Sep. 8, after more than 24 years of service, Salsa re-entered Earth’s atmosphere in a controlled de-orbit, where itContinue reading "How the Cluster II mission studied the Sun’s effects on Earth"

The post How the Cluster II mission studied the Sun’s effects on Earth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Is this black hole jet making stars explode?Daniela Mata
    Supernovae, the violent explosions that occur when stars die, normally happen sporadically within galaxies. However, by shifting the angle of the Hubble Space Telescope’s line of sight toward M87, astronomers recently spotted double the expected amount of supernovae along a massive 3,000-light-year-long jet blasting out of the supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s center. ResearchersContinue reading "Is this black hole jet making stars explode?" The post Is this black hole jet making stars exp
     

Is this black hole jet making stars explode?

October 25th 2024 at 11:03 pm

Supernovae, the violent explosions that occur when stars die, normally happen sporadically within galaxies. However, by shifting the angle of the Hubble Space Telescope’s line of sight toward M87, astronomers recently spotted double the expected amount of supernovae along a massive 3,000-light-year-long jet blasting out of the supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s center. ResearchersContinue reading "Is this black hole jet making stars explode?"

The post Is this black hole jet making stars explode? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Lighting the wayMark Zastrow
    Moshen Chan from San Francisco, California The tail of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) fans out over the Pacific Ocean and the Point Reyes Lighthouse in California. The photographer used a Sony mirrorless camera and 20mm f/1.8 lens to take sixteen 10-second subframes. The post Lighting the way appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Lighting the way

October 25th 2024 at 9:47 pm

Moshen Chan from San Francisco, California The tail of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) fans out over the Pacific Ocean and the Point Reyes Lighthouse in California. The photographer used a Sony mirrorless camera and 20mm f/1.8 lens to take sixteen 10-second subframes.

The post Lighting the way appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Betelgeuse may have a BetelbuddyKorey Haynes
    The bright red supergiant star Betelgeuse has long been a familiar sight for star watchers, winking with a ruddy glow from the shoulder of Orion the Hunter. But it’s also an increasingly popular target for professional astronomers thanks to its scientific peculiarities, ranging from pulsations to mysterious dimming events. Now, astronomers think they may haveContinue reading "Betelgeuse may have a Betelbuddy" The post Betelgeuse may have a Betelbuddy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Betelgeuse may have a Betelbuddy

October 25th 2024 at 7:56 pm

The bright red supergiant star Betelgeuse has long been a familiar sight for star watchers, winking with a ruddy glow from the shoulder of Orion the Hunter. But it’s also an increasingly popular target for professional astronomers thanks to its scientific peculiarities, ranging from pulsations to mysterious dimming events. Now, astronomers think they may haveContinue reading "Betelgeuse may have a Betelbuddy"

The post Betelgeuse may have a Betelbuddy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from October 25 to November 1: Callisto slips south of JupiterAlison Klesman
    Friday, October 25Venus passes 3° north of Antares at 3 P.M. EDT. The pair is very low in the southwest, but if you’ve got a clear horizon, both should be visible some 40 minutes after sunset. Venus stands out first, glowing a brilliant magnitude –4. Compare its light to dimmer, magnitude 1.1 Antares, to theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 25 to November 1: Callisto slips south of Jupiter" The post The Sky This Week from October 25 to November 1: Callisto slips south of Jupiter a
     

The Sky This Week from October 25 to November 1: Callisto slips south of Jupiter

October 25th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, October 25Venus passes 3° north of Antares at 3 P.M. EDT. The pair is very low in the southwest, but if you’ve got a clear horizon, both should be visible some 40 minutes after sunset. Venus stands out first, glowing a brilliant magnitude –4. Compare its light to dimmer, magnitude 1.1 Antares, to theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 25 to November 1: Callisto slips south of Jupiter"

The post The Sky This Week from October 25 to November 1: Callisto slips south of Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What to watch: NASA Crew-8 astronauts set for early Friday splashdownMark Zastrow
    Four NASA astronauts are set to splash down Friday morning after spending more than 200 days aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The four-person crew of NASA’s Crew-8 mission — comprising NASA astronauts Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, and Jeanette Epps, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin — will return to Earth around dawn on Friday, splashing downContinue reading "What to watch: NASA Crew-8 astronauts set for early Friday splashdown" The post What to watch: NASA Crew-8 ast
     

What to watch: NASA Crew-8 astronauts set for early Friday splashdown

October 25th 2024 at 1:05 am

Four NASA astronauts are set to splash down Friday morning after spending more than 200 days aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The four-person crew of NASA’s Crew-8 mission — comprising NASA astronauts Matthew Dominick, Michael Barratt, and Jeanette Epps, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Alexander Grebenkin — will return to Earth around dawn on Friday, splashing downContinue reading "What to watch: NASA Crew-8 astronauts set for early Friday splashdown"

The post What to watch: NASA Crew-8 astronauts set for early Friday splashdown appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • XRISM’s data debut proves its extraordinary capabilitiesDaniela Mata
    The X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission (XRISM) isn’t the first of its kind, but the state-of-the-art spectroscopic instruments onboard have opened new doors for high-energy astrophysics.  Active galactic nuclei (AGN) —  supermassive black holes that actively gobble material and shine brightly in the resulting chaos — have always held mysteries for astrophysicists. Now, a yearContinue reading "XRISM’s data debut proves its extraordinary capabilities" The post XRISM’s data debut proves its ext
     

XRISM’s data debut proves its extraordinary capabilities

October 23rd 2024 at 11:10 pm

The X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission (XRISM) isn’t the first of its kind, but the state-of-the-art spectroscopic instruments onboard have opened new doors for high-energy astrophysics.  Active galactic nuclei (AGN) —  supermassive black holes that actively gobble material and shine brightly in the resulting chaos — have always held mysteries for astrophysicists. Now, a yearContinue reading "XRISM’s data debut proves its extraordinary capabilities"

The post XRISM’s data debut proves its extraordinary capabilities appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Center stageMark Zastrow
    Lucas Thibaud, taken near Cerro Pachon in Chile The Milky Way serves as a proscenium arch for the zodiacal light and Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) in this panorama taken Oct. 19 from the Chilean Andes. The photographer used a Canon 6Da DSLR and a 20mm f/1.4 lens to take twelve 8-second frames at ISO 1600. The post Center stage appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Center stage

October 23rd 2024 at 8:54 pm

Lucas Thibaud, taken near Cerro Pachon in Chile The Milky Way serves as a proscenium arch for the zodiacal light and Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) in this panorama taken Oct. 19 from the Chilean Andes. The photographer used a Canon 6Da DSLR and a 20mm f/1.4 lens to take twelve 8-second frames at ISO 1600.

The post Center stage appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Crew-8 has returned from space on record-breaking SpaceX capsuleBen Evans
    When SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule Endeavour returns to Earth this week, she will set a clutch of records for the most time spent in space by a crewed spacecraft. Launched for her fifth mission in March, Endeavour has notched 23 cumulative months in orbit, circled Earth 11,000 times and traveled 292 million miles (470 millionContinue reading "Crew-8 has returned from space on record-breaking SpaceX capsule" The post Crew-8 has returned from space on record-breaking SpaceX capsule appeared first o
     

Crew-8 has returned from space on record-breaking SpaceX capsule

By: Ben Evans
October 22nd 2024 at 10:44 pm

When SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule Endeavour returns to Earth this week, she will set a clutch of records for the most time spent in space by a crewed spacecraft. Launched for her fifth mission in March, Endeavour has notched 23 cumulative months in orbit, circled Earth 11,000 times and traveled 292 million miles (470 millionContinue reading "Crew-8 has returned from space on record-breaking SpaceX capsule"

The post Crew-8 has returned from space on record-breaking SpaceX capsule appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Can you still see Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS?Michael E. Bakich
    Comet C/2023 A3  — better known as Tsuchinshan-ATLAS — is fading in brightness as it speeds away from the Sun and Earth in the evening sky. It’s still visible to the naked eye in a dark sky, and it’s certainly an easy target for binoculars. But now’s your last chance to see it — soContinue reading "Can you still see Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS?" The post Can you still see Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Can you still see Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS?

October 22nd 2024 at 1:47 am

Comet C/2023 A3  — better known as Tsuchinshan-ATLAS — is fading in brightness as it speeds away from the Sun and Earth in the evening sky. It’s still visible to the naked eye in a dark sky, and it’s certainly an easy target for binoculars. But now’s your last chance to see it — soContinue reading "Can you still see Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS?"

The post Can you still see Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Orionid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe one of the major meteor showers of the year. It’s called the Orionids because all the meteors seem to come from a spot in the constellation Orion the Hunter. The meteor activity will peak in the early morning hours of October 21. If you can’t getContinue reading "The Orionid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Orionid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Orionid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

October 22nd 2024 at 1:10 am

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe one of the major meteor showers of the year. It’s called the Orionids because all the meteors seem to come from a spot in the constellation Orion the Hunter. The meteor activity will peak in the early morning hours of October 21. If you can’t getContinue reading "The Orionid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Orionid meteor shower: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Blazing starMark Zastrow
    Aldo Rocco Vitale taken from Sicily, Italy This shot of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) was taken Oct. 14 from the southern flank of Mount Etna in Piano Vetore at an elevation of 5,700 feet (1750 m). The different hues come from the two tails — one of dust (orange-yellow in this shot) and one ofContinue reading "Blazing star" The post Blazing star appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Blazing star

October 21st 2024 at 7:11 pm

Aldo Rocco Vitale taken from Sicily, Italy This shot of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) was taken Oct. 14 from the southern flank of Mount Etna in Piano Vetore at an elevation of 5,700 feet (1750 m). The different hues come from the two tails — one of dust (orange-yellow in this shot) and one ofContinue reading "Blazing star"

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  • Comet and cactusMark Zastrow
    John Vermette, taken from Saguaro National Park near Tucson, Arizona Comet C/2023 A3 is pictured here Oct. 15. The image is a stack of twenty-six 3-second shots with a 50mm f/1.4 lens at ISO 3200. The post Comet and cactus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • Finding your first astroimaging rigshill
    Getting started in astrophotography can be daunting. With so many different telescopes, cameras, and mounts and all their variations, where do you start? The first piece of equipment you should choose is a mount, the mechanical base that the telescope attaches to. For astrophotography, the mount must be motorized, and ideally computer-controllable. This might soundContinue reading "Finding your first astroimaging rig" The post Finding your first astroimaging rig appeared first on Astronomy Magaz
     

Finding your first astroimaging rig

By: shill
October 18th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Getting started in astrophotography can be daunting. With so many different telescopes, cameras, and mounts and all their variations, where do you start? The first piece of equipment you should choose is a mount, the mechanical base that the telescope attaches to. For astrophotography, the mount must be motorized, and ideally computer-controllable. This might soundContinue reading "Finding your first astroimaging rig"

The post Finding your first astroimaging rig appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from October 18 to 25: The Orionid meteors peakAlison Klesman
    Friday, October 18There’s still time to catch Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) in the west after sunset, even as it pulls away from the Sun and Earth on its way back toward the outer reaches of the solar system. Currently hovering between 1st and 2nd magnitude, the comet can be spotted with naked eyes from aContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 18 to 25: The Orionid meteors peak" The post The Sky This Week from October 18 to 25: The Orionid meteors peak appeared first on Astronomy
     

The Sky This Week from October 18 to 25: The Orionid meteors peak

October 18th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, October 18There’s still time to catch Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) in the west after sunset, even as it pulls away from the Sun and Earth on its way back toward the outer reaches of the solar system. Currently hovering between 1st and 2nd magnitude, the comet can be spotted with naked eyes from aContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 18 to 25: The Orionid meteors peak"

The post The Sky This Week from October 18 to 25: The Orionid meteors peak appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • See Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS while you still canMichael E. Bakich
    Comet C/2023 A3, also known as Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, has been in the evening sky for a week now. If you haven’t seen it, that’s understandable because there’s also been a bright Moon in the sky. But the Moon is Full tonight (Oct. 17) and will rise later tomorrow (Oct. 18) and each night thereafter. So, tryContinue reading "See Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS while you still can" The post See Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS while you still can appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

See Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS while you still can

October 17th 2024 at 9:59 pm

Comet C/2023 A3, also known as Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, has been in the evening sky for a week now. If you haven’t seen it, that’s understandable because there’s also been a bright Moon in the sky. But the Moon is Full tonight (Oct. 17) and will rise later tomorrow (Oct. 18) and each night thereafter. So, tryContinue reading "See Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS while you still can"

The post See Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS while you still can appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A baby Milky Way may have swallowed a dwarf galaxy named LokiMark Zastrow
    The Milky Way galaxy has had a violent history. It did not grow though simple and calm accretion, but rather through the aggressive mergers of multiple smaller galaxies. Recently, a team of astronomers found the remnants of perhaps the oldest merger, right in our stellar neighborhood. The Milky Way’s stars have a wide variety ofContinue reading "A baby Milky Way may have swallowed a dwarf galaxy named Loki" The post A baby Milky Way may have swallowed a dwarf galaxy named Loki appeared first on
     

A baby Milky Way may have swallowed a dwarf galaxy named Loki

October 17th 2024 at 9:21 pm

The Milky Way galaxy has had a violent history. It did not grow though simple and calm accretion, but rather through the aggressive mergers of multiple smaller galaxies. Recently, a team of astronomers found the remnants of perhaps the oldest merger, right in our stellar neighborhood. The Milky Way’s stars have a wide variety ofContinue reading "A baby Milky Way may have swallowed a dwarf galaxy named Loki"

The post A baby Milky Way may have swallowed a dwarf galaxy named Loki appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Most meteorites come from just three sourcesAlison Klesman
    A pair of papers published today in Nature look at the origins of many meteorites that have fallen to Earth. By examining the detailed makeup of the rocks, ascertaining the time that has passed since they broke off larger bodies, and comparing these to asteroids in space, researchers found evidence that a great majority ofContinue reading "Most meteorites come from just three sources" The post Most meteorites come from just three sources appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Most meteorites come from just three sources

October 16th 2024 at 8:34 pm

A pair of papers published today in Nature look at the origins of many meteorites that have fallen to Earth. By examining the detailed makeup of the rocks, ascertaining the time that has passed since they broke off larger bodies, and comparing these to asteroids in space, researchers found evidence that a great majority ofContinue reading "Most meteorites come from just three sources"

The post Most meteorites come from just three sources appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sun has reached solar maximum, NASA and NOAA scientists sayKorey Haynes
    In a teleconference Oct. 15, representatives from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced that the Sun has reached the peak level in its current cycle of activity, the 25th for which humans have kept detailed records. The 25th cycle has been far more active than the previous one, especially this year,Continue reading "The Sun has reached solar maximum, NASA and NOAA scientists say" The post The Sun has reached solar maximum, NASA and NOAA scientists say appe
     

The Sun has reached solar maximum, NASA and NOAA scientists say

October 16th 2024 at 6:41 pm

In a teleconference Oct. 15, representatives from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced that the Sun has reached the peak level in its current cycle of activity, the 25th for which humans have kept detailed records. The 25th cycle has been far more active than the previous one, especially this year,Continue reading "The Sun has reached solar maximum, NASA and NOAA scientists say"

The post The Sun has reached solar maximum, NASA and NOAA scientists say appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Tsuchinshan-ATLAS’ anti-tailM
    Chris Schur, taken from Payson, Arizona Bright comets like Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) — captured here with an 6-minute exposure on an 8-inch RASA — sometimes develop an anti-tail. This secondary tail appears to protrude forward from the comet’s nucleus in the opposite direction of the “normal” tail. An anti-tail is a perspective effect created whenContinue reading "Tsuchinshan-ATLAS’ anti-tail" The post Tsuchinshan-ATLAS’ anti-tail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Tsuchinshan-ATLAS’ anti-tail

By: M
October 16th 2024 at 5:50 pm

Chris Schur, taken from Payson, Arizona Bright comets like Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) — captured here with an 6-minute exposure on an 8-inch RASA — sometimes develop an anti-tail. This secondary tail appears to protrude forward from the comet’s nucleus in the opposite direction of the “normal” tail. An anti-tail is a perspective effect created whenContinue reading "Tsuchinshan-ATLAS’ anti-tail"

The post Tsuchinshan-ATLAS’ anti-tail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Polaris Dawn crew talks mission highlights, next stepsM
    BENTONVILLE, Arkansas — The first private spacewalk, an on-orbit symphonic performance, and nearly 40 scientific research experiments. Those were just a few highlights of September’s Polaris Dawn mission: a five-day, four-person orbital spaceflight purchased from SpaceX and commanded by Jared Isaacman, the billionaire CEO of Shift4 Payments. But Isaacman — now a SpaceX “frequent flier”Continue reading "Polaris Dawn crew talks mission highlights, next steps" The post Polaris Dawn crew talks missi
     

Polaris Dawn crew talks mission highlights, next steps

By: M
October 16th 2024 at 12:32 am

BENTONVILLE, Arkansas — The first private spacewalk, an on-orbit symphonic performance, and nearly 40 scientific research experiments. Those were just a few highlights of September’s Polaris Dawn mission: a five-day, four-person orbital spaceflight purchased from SpaceX and commanded by Jared Isaacman, the billionaire CEO of Shift4 Payments. But Isaacman — now a SpaceX “frequent flier”Continue reading "Polaris Dawn crew talks mission highlights, next steps"

The post Polaris Dawn crew talks mission highlights, next steps appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Euclid releases stunning first map of the deep skyKorey Haynes
    The Euclid space observatory launched in July 2023, tasked with creating a 3D map of more than a third of the sky, surveying billions of galaxies up to 10 billion light-years away. Today, scientists revealed the first page in its cosmic atlas, a mosaic comprising 208 gigapixels of data revealing billions of galaxies in awesomeContinue reading "Euclid releases stunning first map of the deep sky" The post Euclid releases stunning first map of the deep sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Euclid releases stunning first map of the deep sky

October 15th 2024 at 7:45 pm

The Euclid space observatory launched in July 2023, tasked with creating a 3D map of more than a third of the sky, surveying billions of galaxies up to 10 billion light-years away. Today, scientists revealed the first page in its cosmic atlas, a mosaic comprising 208 gigapixels of data revealing billions of galaxies in awesomeContinue reading "Euclid releases stunning first map of the deep sky"

The post Euclid releases stunning first map of the deep sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Astronomy’s 14th annual star productsPhil Harrington
    Once again, we’ve scoured the astro-marketplace to find the finest, most practical, and most innovative products for Astronomy magazine’s Star Products, 2024 edition. This collection of 35 items, in no particular order, offers a diverse selection. From tools tailored for visual observing to those crafted for astrophotography, there’s something here for everyone, whether you’re aContinue reading "Astronomy’s 14th annual star products" The post Astronomy’s 14th annual star products appeared first
     

Astronomy’s 14th annual star products

October 15th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Once again, we’ve scoured the astro-marketplace to find the finest, most practical, and most innovative products for Astronomy magazine’s Star Products, 2024 edition. This collection of 35 items, in no particular order, offers a diverse selection. From tools tailored for visual observing to those crafted for astrophotography, there’s something here for everyone, whether you’re aContinue reading "Astronomy’s 14th annual star products"

The post Astronomy’s 14th annual star products appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • SpaceX achieves historic booster catch during Starship testM
    SpaceX’s Starship program—responsible for developing the largest and most powerful rocket ever flown—continues to make history. On Sunday, Starship and the Super Heavy booster lifted off around 8:25 a.m. EST from SpaceX’s Starbase launch pad in Boca Chica, Texas, on the rocket’s fifth suborbital test flight. But rather than splash down in the Gulf ofContinue reading "SpaceX achieves historic booster catch during Starship test" The post SpaceX achieves historic booster catch during Starship test
     

SpaceX achieves historic booster catch during Starship test

By: M
October 15th 2024 at 12:27 am

SpaceX’s Starship program—responsible for developing the largest and most powerful rocket ever flown—continues to make history. On Sunday, Starship and the Super Heavy booster lifted off around 8:25 a.m. EST from SpaceX’s Starbase launch pad in Boca Chica, Texas, on the rocket’s fifth suborbital test flight. But rather than splash down in the Gulf ofContinue reading "SpaceX achieves historic booster catch during Starship test"

The post SpaceX achieves historic booster catch during Starship test appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe a close meeting of the Moon and the ringed planet, Saturn. This celestial meet-up will take place on the evening of Oct. 14. You won’t need binoculars or a telescope to view it, although binoculars may give a more pleasing view. Head out an hour afterContinue reading "The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

October 14th 2024 at 7:14 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe a close meeting of the Moon and the ringed planet, Saturn. This celestial meet-up will take place on the evening of Oct. 14. You won’t need binoculars or a telescope to view it, although binoculars may give a more pleasing view. Head out an hour afterContinue reading "The Moon meets Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

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  • An auroral capeM
    Philippe Moussette The aurora dances above the Cap-Rouge trestle bridge in Quebec City the night of Oct. 10/11. The post An auroral cape appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • Will my telescope show color when viewing deep-sky objects?Astronomy Staff
    How much color should I be able to see in sky objects through a 10-inch telescope?  Dennis HoltConcordia, Kansas Unfortunately, when you look at distant galaxies and nebulae, you won’t see much color through your telescope. That’s because you’re viewing objects that are too faint to trigger your eyes’ color receptors. This is the sameContinue reading "Will my telescope show color when viewing deep-sky objects?" The post Will my telescope show color when viewing deep-sky objects? appeared first o
     

Will my telescope show color when viewing deep-sky objects?

October 14th 2024 at 5:30 pm

How much color should I be able to see in sky objects through a 10-inch telescope?  Dennis HoltConcordia, Kansas Unfortunately, when you look at distant galaxies and nebulae, you won’t see much color through your telescope. That’s because you’re viewing objects that are too faint to trigger your eyes’ color receptors. This is the sameContinue reading "Will my telescope show color when viewing deep-sky objects?"

The post Will my telescope show color when viewing deep-sky objects? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • 30 years ago: Magellan Venus mission successfully concludedBen Evans
    The third brightest object in the sky after the Sun and Moon, Venus is known for its opalescent splendor at dawn or dusk. Humans have long been drawn to its exquisite beauty and tied it to goddesses of love — from Inanna of Mesopotamian myth to the Greek Aphrodite and Roman Venus. But Venus isContinue reading "30 years ago: Magellan Venus mission successfully concluded" The post 30 years ago: Magellan Venus mission successfully concluded appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

30 years ago: Magellan Venus mission successfully concluded

By: Ben Evans
October 12th 2024 at 4:30 pm

The third brightest object in the sky after the Sun and Moon, Venus is known for its opalescent splendor at dawn or dusk. Humans have long been drawn to its exquisite beauty and tied it to goddesses of love — from Inanna of Mesopotamian myth to the Greek Aphrodite and Roman Venus. But Venus isContinue reading "30 years ago: Magellan Venus mission successfully concluded"

The post 30 years ago: Magellan Venus mission successfully concluded appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The best images of the Oct. 10 auroral stormAstronomy Staff
    Solar cycle 25 continues to deliver, with flares and coronal mass ejections delivering repeated auroral storms visible at latitudes much lower than normal. Last night’s geomagnetic storm reached G4 levels — the strongest since the historic G5 storm of May 10/11. This collection of photos includes the best of reader submissions, social media, and our ownContinue reading "The best images of the Oct. 10 auroral storm" The post The best images of the Oct. 10 auroral storm appeared first on Astronomy
     

The best images of the Oct. 10 auroral storm

October 11th 2024 at 10:35 pm

Solar cycle 25 continues to deliver, with flares and coronal mass ejections delivering repeated auroral storms visible at latitudes much lower than normal. Last night’s geomagnetic storm reached G4 levels — the strongest since the historic G5 storm of May 10/11. This collection of photos includes the best of reader submissions, social media, and our ownContinue reading "The best images of the Oct. 10 auroral storm"

The post The best images of the Oct. 10 auroral storm appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA’s Europa Clipper sets sail for JupiterAlison Klesman
    NASA’s newest scientific flagship is on its way to the Jupiter system to explore the icy moon Europa, one of the most compelling worlds in our solar system. The mission lifted off Oct. 14 from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 12:06 p.m. EDT aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.Continue reading "NASA’s Europa Clipper sets sail for Jupiter" The post NASA’s Europa Clipper sets sail for Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

NASA’s Europa Clipper sets sail for Jupiter

October 15th 2024 at 6:13 pm

NASA’s newest scientific flagship is on its way to the Jupiter system to explore the icy moon Europa, one of the most compelling worlds in our solar system. The mission lifted off Oct. 14 from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 12:06 p.m. EDT aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.Continue reading "NASA’s Europa Clipper sets sail for Jupiter"

The post NASA’s Europa Clipper sets sail for Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How we found Morehouse’s Black Ring: A dark nebula hiding in plain sightStephen James O'Meara
    In the pioneering days of long-exposure astrophotography in the late 19th century, the use of dry plates over wet collodion plates simplified the photographic process. The increased light sensitivity of the emulsion coatings on dry plates allowed for shorter exposure times and produced sharper images of the night sky. In 1881, the French inventors brothersContinue reading "How we found Morehouse’s Black Ring: A dark nebula hiding in plain sight" The post How we found Morehouse’s Black Ring: A da
     

How we found Morehouse’s Black Ring: A dark nebula hiding in plain sight

October 11th 2024 at 4:30 pm

In the pioneering days of long-exposure astrophotography in the late 19th century, the use of dry plates over wet collodion plates simplified the photographic process. The increased light sensitivity of the emulsion coatings on dry plates allowed for shorter exposure times and produced sharper images of the night sky. In 1881, the French inventors brothersContinue reading "How we found Morehouse’s Black Ring: A dark nebula hiding in plain sight"

The post How we found Morehouse’s Black Ring: A dark nebula hiding in plain sight appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from October 11 to 18: 2024’s third Super Moon risesAlison Klesman
    Friday, October 11Jupiter, now located in Taurus the Bull, appears in telescopes wreathed by its four largest moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. At times, those moons pass in front of or behind the planet from our point of view, and tonight you can catch the latter as Europa pops into view after crossing behindContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 11 to 18: 2024’s third Super Moon rises" The post The Sky This Week from October 11 to 18: 2024’s third Super Moon rises appeared f
     

The Sky This Week from October 11 to 18: 2024’s third Super Moon rises

October 11th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, October 11Jupiter, now located in Taurus the Bull, appears in telescopes wreathed by its four largest moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. At times, those moons pass in front of or behind the planet from our point of view, and tonight you can catch the latter as Europa pops into view after crossing behindContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 11 to 18: 2024’s third Super Moon rises"

The post The Sky This Week from October 11 to 18: 2024’s third Super Moon rises appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • See a comet in the evening: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this video, Astronomy magazine editor Dave Eicher invites you to observe a comet that’s becoming visible in the evening sky. Starting around October 14, look just to the south of west between 15 and 30 minutes after sunset. The comet will be low, but with each evening that passes, it will be a littleContinue reading "See a comet in the evening: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post See a comet in the evening: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Maga
     

See a comet in the evening: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

October 11th 2024 at 1:46 am

In this video, Astronomy magazine editor Dave Eicher invites you to observe a comet that’s becoming visible in the evening sky. Starting around October 14, look just to the south of west between 15 and 30 minutes after sunset. The comet will be low, but with each evening that passes, it will be a littleContinue reading "See a comet in the evening: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post See a comet in the evening: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is rising higher in the evening sky. Here’s where to lookMichael Bakich
    After putting on a show in the predawn sky earlier this month, Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) was eventually lost in the glare of the Sun. But now that it has crossed behind the Sun from our point of view, it is emerging in the early evening sky and becoming more visible every night as itContinue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is rising higher in the evening sky. Here’s where to look" The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is rising higher in the evening sky. Here’s where to look appeared first
     

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is rising higher in the evening sky. Here’s where to look

October 10th 2024 at 2:30 pm

After putting on a show in the predawn sky earlier this month, Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) was eventually lost in the glare of the Sun. But now that it has crossed behind the Sun from our point of view, it is emerging in the early evening sky and becoming more visible every night as itContinue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is rising higher in the evening sky. Here’s where to look"

The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is rising higher in the evening sky. Here’s where to look appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Earth sees strong aurorae Oct. 10 as solar storm hits ‘severe’ G4 levelKorey Haynes
    On Oct. 8, an X-class solar flare gave rise to a coronal mass ejection (CME) that erupted from the surface of the Sun, racing toward Earth at 1.5 million mph (2.4 million km/h). It arrived at Earth at 11:15 a.m. EDT today, Oct. 10. At 12:57 p.m. EDT, the U.S. Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC)Continue reading "Earth sees strong aurorae Oct. 10 as solar storm hits ‘severe’ G4 level" The post Earth sees strong aurorae Oct. 10 as solar storm hits ‘severe’ G4 level appeared first on Astronomy Ma
     

Earth sees strong aurorae Oct. 10 as solar storm hits ‘severe’ G4 level

October 10th 2024 at 8:55 pm

On Oct. 8, an X-class solar flare gave rise to a coronal mass ejection (CME) that erupted from the surface of the Sun, racing toward Earth at 1.5 million mph (2.4 million km/h). It arrived at Earth at 11:15 a.m. EDT today, Oct. 10. At 12:57 p.m. EDT, the U.S. Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC)Continue reading "Earth sees strong aurorae Oct. 10 as solar storm hits ‘severe’ G4 level"

The post Earth sees strong aurorae Oct. 10 as solar storm hits ‘severe’ G4 level appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

NASA wants to send humans to Mars in the 2030s − a crewed mission could unlock some of the Red Planet’s geologic mysteries

By: shill
October 9th 2024 at 10:40 pm

NASA plans to send humans on a scientific round trip to Mars potentially as early as 2035. The trip will take about six to seven months each way and will cover up to 250 million miles (402 million kilometers) each way. The astronauts may spend as many as 500 days on the planet’s surface beforeContinue reading "NASA wants to send humans to Mars in the 2030s − a crewed mission could unlock some of the Red Planet’s geologic mysteries"

The post NASA wants to send humans to Mars in the 2030s − a crewed mission could unlock some of the Red Planet’s geologic mysteries appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The hero we deserveM
    Acquired by Mark McComsikey at Observatorio El Sauce, Chile; processed by Ron Brecher The Cosmic Bat Nebula is the 43rd object in Beverly Lynds’ landmark catalog of dark nebulae, which she published in 1962 — the greatest catalog of such objects since E.E. Barnard’s in 1919. Lynds died Oct. 5 at the age of 95.Continue reading "The hero we deserve" The post The hero we deserve appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The hero we deserve

By: M
October 9th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Acquired by Mark McComsikey at Observatorio El Sauce, Chile; processed by Ron Brecher The Cosmic Bat Nebula is the 43rd object in Beverly Lynds’ landmark catalog of dark nebulae, which she published in 1962 — the greatest catalog of such objects since E.E. Barnard’s in 1919. Lynds died Oct. 5 at the age of 95.Continue reading "The hero we deserve"

The post The hero we deserve appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Moon meets Antares: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe a close meeting of the Moon and the brightest star in the constellation Scorpius the Scorpion, Antares. This celestial meet-up will take place on the evening of October 7. You won’t need binoculars or a telescope to view it, although binoculars may give a more pleasingContinue reading "The Moon meets Antares: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Moon meets Antares: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astro
     

The Moon meets Antares: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

October 8th 2024 at 9:48 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe a close meeting of the Moon and the brightest star in the constellation Scorpius the Scorpion, Antares. This celestial meet-up will take place on the evening of October 7. You won’t need binoculars or a telescope to view it, although binoculars may give a more pleasingContinue reading "The Moon meets Antares: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Moon meets Antares: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • ESA’s Hera mission is headed to Dimorphos, the asteroid NASA crashed intoSamantha Hill
    Although the day started out with a few clouds and rain, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Hera mission successfully launched on Monday at 10:52 a.m. EDT from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Although advance forecasts gave only a 15 percent chance of favorable weather, fears of postponement quickly dissipated as each stage of theContinue reading "ESA’s Hera mission is headed to Dimorphos, the asteroid NASA crashed into" The post ESA’s Hera mission is headed to Dimorphos, the asteroid NAS
     

ESA’s Hera mission is headed to Dimorphos, the asteroid NASA crashed into

October 8th 2024 at 9:18 pm

Although the day started out with a few clouds and rain, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Hera mission successfully launched on Monday at 10:52 a.m. EDT from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Although advance forecasts gave only a 15 percent chance of favorable weather, fears of postponement quickly dissipated as each stage of theContinue reading "ESA’s Hera mission is headed to Dimorphos, the asteroid NASA crashed into"

The post ESA’s Hera mission is headed to Dimorphos, the asteroid NASA crashed into appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Dark Energy Explorers: How you can help unravel one of the universe’s biggest mysteriesAlison Klesman
    Many large survey experiments in astronomy are looking to understand what we still don’t know about dark energy. Yet, many are plagued with the same problem: too much data.    A tricky problem The Hobby-Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment (HETDEX) is looking to create one of the largest maps of the universe by creating aContinue reading "Dark Energy Explorers: How you can help unravel one of the universe’s biggest mysteries" The post Dark Energy Explorers: How you can help unravel one of the
     

Dark Energy Explorers: How you can help unravel one of the universe’s biggest mysteries

October 8th 2024 at 8:00 pm

Many large survey experiments in astronomy are looking to understand what we still don’t know about dark energy. Yet, many are plagued with the same problem: too much data.    A tricky problem The Hobby-Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment (HETDEX) is looking to create one of the largest maps of the universe by creating aContinue reading "Dark Energy Explorers: How you can help unravel one of the universe’s biggest mysteries"

The post Dark Energy Explorers: How you can help unravel one of the universe’s biggest mysteries appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why Starizona’s Nexus coma corrector wowsChris Schur
    Affordable fast Newtonian astrographs are game changers for astrophotographers. Most of these instruments have a focal ratio in the vicinity of f/4, allowing them to capture light from deep-sky objects more than six times faster than the f/10 Schmidt-Cassegrain telescopes that dominate the market. But with that faster speed comes a huge problem: a curvedContinue reading "Why Starizona’s Nexus coma corrector wows" The post Why Starizona’s Nexus coma corrector wows appeared first on Astronomy Maga
     

Why Starizona’s Nexus coma corrector wows

October 8th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Affordable fast Newtonian astrographs are game changers for astrophotographers. Most of these instruments have a focal ratio in the vicinity of f/4, allowing them to capture light from deep-sky objects more than six times faster than the f/10 Schmidt-Cassegrain telescopes that dominate the market. But with that faster speed comes a huge problem: a curvedContinue reading "Why Starizona’s Nexus coma corrector wows"

The post Why Starizona’s Nexus coma corrector wows appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Europa Clipper launch postponed until at least Oct. 13 due to Hurricane MiltonMark Zastrow
    UPDATE Oct. 10: The Kennedy Space Center remains closed as NASA begins “the assessment and recovery process” from Hurricane Milton, the agency said in a statement today. The statement continued: “The agency’s Europa Clipper launch team will schedule an official launch date when teams from NASA and SpaceX are able to perform their assessments, andContinue reading "Europa Clipper launch postponed until at least Oct. 13 due to Hurricane Milton" The post Europa Clipper launch postponed until at leas
     

Europa Clipper launch postponed until at least Oct. 13 due to Hurricane Milton

October 11th 2024 at 1:03 am

UPDATE Oct. 10: The Kennedy Space Center remains closed as NASA begins “the assessment and recovery process” from Hurricane Milton, the agency said in a statement today. The statement continued: “The agency’s Europa Clipper launch team will schedule an official launch date when teams from NASA and SpaceX are able to perform their assessments, andContinue reading "Europa Clipper launch postponed until at least Oct. 13 due to Hurricane Milton"

The post Europa Clipper launch postponed until at least Oct. 13 due to Hurricane Milton appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS will soon move into the evening skyMichael E. Bakich
    Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, also known by its catalog designation C/2023 A3, is now magnitude 2.2 in the morning sky. But if you’re not an early riser, you can soon rejoice — it will become visible in the evening sky starting Oct. 14.  On that date, the comet will be in the far eastern part of theContinue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS will soon move into the evening sky" The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS will soon move into the evening sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS will soon move into the evening sky

October 7th 2024 at 8:53 pm

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, also known by its catalog designation C/2023 A3, is now magnitude 2.2 in the morning sky. But if you’re not an early riser, you can soon rejoice — it will become visible in the evening sky starting Oct. 14.  On that date, the comet will be in the far eastern part of theContinue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS will soon move into the evening sky"

The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS will soon move into the evening sky appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • An autumn conjunctionM
    Behyar Bakhshandeh from Carlsbad, California The Moon and Venus met in the sky this past weekend, as captured here on Oct. 5 with a Canon DSLR and 300mm f/4 lens. The post An autumn conjunction appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • The Best Space Gifts for Astronomy Lovers and Stargazers | Holiday Gift Guide 2024Astronomy Staff
    The holiday season is the best time to deepen your love of the cosmos — or give someone you know a great space-themed gift. But finding the perfect astronomy present is hard. That’s why The Space Store, the online store of Astronomy magazine, curated this list of top-rated astronomy and space-themed gifts for the 2024 Christmas andContinue reading "The Best Space Gifts for Astronomy Lovers and Stargazers | Holiday Gift Guide 2024" The post The Best Space Gifts for Astronomy Lovers and Stargazers
     

The Best Space Gifts for Astronomy Lovers and Stargazers | Holiday Gift Guide 2024

October 7th 2024 at 8:07 pm

The holiday season is the best time to deepen your love of the cosmos — or give someone you know a great space-themed gift. But finding the perfect astronomy present is hard. That’s why The Space Store, the online store of Astronomy magazine, curated this list of top-rated astronomy and space-themed gifts for the 2024 Christmas andContinue reading "The Best Space Gifts for Astronomy Lovers and Stargazers | Holiday Gift Guide 2024"

The post The Best Space Gifts for Astronomy Lovers and Stargazers | Holiday Gift Guide 2024 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How long will Saturn’s rings last before they disappear? Astronomy Staff
    Do astronomers have any estimates of when Saturn’s rings will disappear? Doug KaupaCouncil Bluffs, Iowa All four of the solar system’s giant planets have ring systems. The rings of Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune are dark, sparse belts or ringlets. Only Saturn’s massive main rings are dense and bright, made of almost pure water-ice particles rangingContinue reading "How long will Saturn’s rings last before they disappear? " The post How long will Saturn’s rings last before they disappear?  appeared
     

How long will Saturn’s rings last before they disappear? 

October 7th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Do astronomers have any estimates of when Saturn’s rings will disappear? Doug KaupaCouncil Bluffs, Iowa All four of the solar system’s giant planets have ring systems. The rings of Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune are dark, sparse belts or ringlets. Only Saturn’s massive main rings are dense and bright, made of almost pure water-ice particles rangingContinue reading "How long will Saturn’s rings last before they disappear? "

The post How long will Saturn’s rings last before they disappear?  appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Beverly Lynds, creator of landmark catalog of dark nebulae, dies at 95Rod Pommier
    American astronomer Beverly Turner Lynds died peacefully Oct. 5, 2024 at a hospice in Portland, Oregon, after suffering a stroke in early September. She was 95 years old.  Lynds was born Aug. 19, 1929, in Shreveport, Louisiana, but moved to New Orleans at age three. She attended Centenary College in Shreveport and decided she wanted toContinue reading "Beverly Lynds, creator of landmark catalog of dark nebulae, dies at 95" The post Beverly Lynds, creator of landmark catalog of dark nebulae, dies
     

Beverly Lynds, creator of landmark catalog of dark nebulae, dies at 95

October 7th 2024 at 5:11 pm

American astronomer Beverly Turner Lynds died peacefully Oct. 5, 2024 at a hospice in Portland, Oregon, after suffering a stroke in early September. She was 95 years old.  Lynds was born Aug. 19, 1929, in Shreveport, Louisiana, but moved to New Orleans at age three. She attended Centenary College in Shreveport and decided she wanted toContinue reading "Beverly Lynds, creator of landmark catalog of dark nebulae, dies at 95"

The post Beverly Lynds, creator of landmark catalog of dark nebulae, dies at 95 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Nuclear rockets could travel to Mars in half the time − but designing the reactors that would power them isn’t easy

By: shill
October 5th 2024 at 4:30 pm

NASA plans to send crewed missions to Mars over the next decade – but the 140 million-mile (225 million-kilometer) journey to the red planet could take several months to years round trip. This relatively long transit time is a result of the use of traditional chemical rocket fuel. An alternative technology to the chemically propelledContinue reading "Nuclear rockets could travel to Mars in half the time − but designing the reactors that would power them isn’t easy"

The post Nuclear rockets could travel to Mars in half the time − but designing the reactors that would power them isn’t easy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Hera launches to survey the wreckage of NASA’s asteroid impact testSamantha Hill
    UPDATE Oct. 7: The Hera mission lifted off today, Monday, Oct. 7 at 10:52 a.m. EDT. The launch livestream can be viewed below via the European Space Agency’s YouTube stream or on X via SpaceX’s account. Here’s what to know about the Hera mission. In 2022, NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) successfully slammed intoContinue reading "Hera launches to survey the wreckage of NASA’s asteroid impact test" The post Hera launches to survey the wreckage of NASA’s asteroid impact test appeared
     

Hera launches to survey the wreckage of NASA’s asteroid impact test

October 7th 2024 at 10:25 am

UPDATE Oct. 7: The Hera mission lifted off today, Monday, Oct. 7 at 10:52 a.m. EDT. The launch livestream can be viewed below via the European Space Agency’s YouTube stream or on X via SpaceX’s account. Here’s what to know about the Hera mission. In 2022, NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) successfully slammed intoContinue reading "Hera launches to survey the wreckage of NASA’s asteroid impact test"

The post Hera launches to survey the wreckage of NASA’s asteroid impact test appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Pastoral perihelionM
    Jean Cursino, taken from Caçapava, São Paulo, Brazil The long tail of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) appears in this 30-second exposure taken at f/2.2 and ISO 250 with a Nikon DSLR and 50mm lens. The post Pastoral perihelion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • Is AI the key to predicting solar storms?Alison Klesman
    On Sept. 1, 1859, the most intense geomagnetic storm in recorded history paid Earth a visit. This colossal solar outburst, which led to telegraph systems catching fire and aurorae lighting up skies down to the tropics, became known as the Carrington Event, in honor of English amateur astronomer Richard Carrington, who determined that a majorContinue reading "Is AI the key to predicting solar storms?" The post Is AI the key to predicting solar storms? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Is AI the key to predicting solar storms?

October 4th 2024 at 7:30 pm

On Sept. 1, 1859, the most intense geomagnetic storm in recorded history paid Earth a visit. This colossal solar outburst, which led to telegraph systems catching fire and aurorae lighting up skies down to the tropics, became known as the Carrington Event, in honor of English amateur astronomer Richard Carrington, who determined that a majorContinue reading "Is AI the key to predicting solar storms?"

The post Is AI the key to predicting solar storms? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Will a new solar flare produce great northern lights?Michael E. Bakich
    Solar flares, powerful bursts of energy from our Sun, can have serious effects here on Earth. Flares and other solar eruptions can affect radio communications, disrupt electric power grids, mess up navigation signals like GPS, and pose risks to spacecraft and any astronauts in them. These effects happen because the ionosphere (Earth’s upper atmosphere, fromContinue reading "Will a new solar flare produce great northern lights?" The post Will a new solar flare produce great northern lights? appea
     

Will a new solar flare produce great northern lights?

October 4th 2024 at 5:31 pm

Solar flares, powerful bursts of energy from our Sun, can have serious effects here on Earth. Flares and other solar eruptions can affect radio communications, disrupt electric power grids, mess up navigation signals like GPS, and pose risks to spacecraft and any astronauts in them. These effects happen because the ionosphere (Earth’s upper atmosphere, fromContinue reading "Will a new solar flare produce great northern lights?"

The post Will a new solar flare produce great northern lights? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Observe the galaxies of SculptorMichael Bakich
    The constellation Sculptor is not an easy star pattern to find, but it’s worth the effort because it contains some gorgeous deep-sky objects. Its name comes from French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, who surveyed the southern sky from 1750 to 1753 at the Cape of Good Hope. He called the pattern “The Sculptor’s Workshop,”Continue reading "Observe the galaxies of Sculptor" The post Observe the galaxies of Sculptor appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Observe the galaxies of Sculptor

October 4th 2024 at 4:30 pm

The constellation Sculptor is not an easy star pattern to find, but it’s worth the effort because it contains some gorgeous deep-sky objects. Its name comes from French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, who surveyed the southern sky from 1750 to 1753 at the Cape of Good Hope. He called the pattern “The Sculptor’s Workshop,”Continue reading "Observe the galaxies of Sculptor"

The post Observe the galaxies of Sculptor appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from October 4 to 11: Enjoy a First Quarter MoonAlison Klesman
    Friday, October 4Now that autumn is officially upon the Northern Hemisphere, the familiar wintertime constellations are rising earlier each night. One of those constellations is Taurus, now some 30° above the eastern horizon by local midnight.  The brightest star in Taurus is the Bull’s red giant eye, Aldebaran. (Don’t mistake brighter Jupiter, now in easternContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 4 to 11: Enjoy a First Quarter Moon" The post The Sky This Week from October 4 to 11: Enjo
     

The Sky This Week from October 4 to 11: Enjoy a First Quarter Moon

October 4th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, October 4Now that autumn is officially upon the Northern Hemisphere, the familiar wintertime constellations are rising earlier each night. One of those constellations is Taurus, now some 30° above the eastern horizon by local midnight.  The brightest star in Taurus is the Bull’s red giant eye, Aldebaran. (Don’t mistake brighter Jupiter, now in easternContinue reading "The Sky This Week from October 4 to 11: Enjoy a First Quarter Moon"

The post The Sky This Week from October 4 to 11: Enjoy a First Quarter Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Discovery of a tiny exoplanet sheds new light on a very old starRandall Hyman
    As lone stars go, there’s nothing quite so distinctive as Barnard’s Star. After the Alpha Centauri system, it is our closest neighbor, a red dwarf one-fifth the size of the Sun and 4,500 degrees Fahrenheit (2,500 degrees Celsius) cooler. Just 6 light-years away, it outpaces all other stars by shifting across the night sky byContinue reading "Discovery of a tiny exoplanet sheds new light on a very old star" The post Discovery of a tiny exoplanet sheds new light on a very old star appeared first o
     

Discovery of a tiny exoplanet sheds new light on a very old star

October 4th 2024 at 12:11 am

As lone stars go, there’s nothing quite so distinctive as Barnard’s Star. After the Alpha Centauri system, it is our closest neighbor, a red dwarf one-fifth the size of the Sun and 4,500 degrees Fahrenheit (2,500 degrees Celsius) cooler. Just 6 light-years away, it outpaces all other stars by shifting across the night sky byContinue reading "Discovery of a tiny exoplanet sheds new light on a very old star"

The post Discovery of a tiny exoplanet sheds new light on a very old star appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Eclipse success on Easter IslandDavid J. Eicher
    Your editor is in the midst of a weeklong trip to a very remote place. A few days ago I departed Tucson and traveled to Santiago, Chile, where I met about 20 enthusiastic people who were charged up to see the annular eclipse that occurred today. We spent two days touring the marvels of Santiago,Continue reading "Eclipse success on Easter Island" The post Eclipse success on Easter Island appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Eclipse success on Easter Island

October 3rd 2024 at 6:27 am

Your editor is in the midst of a weeklong trip to a very remote place. A few days ago I departed Tucson and traveled to Santiago, Chile, where I met about 20 enthusiastic people who were charged up to see the annular eclipse that occurred today. We spent two days touring the marvels of Santiago,Continue reading "Eclipse success on Easter Island"

The post Eclipse success on Easter Island appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Three wondersM
    Wael Omar, taken from Giza, Egypt Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) and a crescent Moon rise over the three main pyramids at Giza in this composite scene. Each layer consists of twenty-five 0.8-second subframes taken with a Sony astromodified mirrorless camera at ISO 800 and an 85mm lens at f/2.8. The post Three wonders appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Three wonders

By: M
October 2nd 2024 at 8:43 pm

Wael Omar, taken from Giza, Egypt Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) and a crescent Moon rise over the three main pyramids at Giza in this composite scene. Each layer consists of twenty-five 0.8-second subframes taken with a Sony astromodified mirrorless camera at ISO 800 and an 85mm lens at f/2.8.

The post Three wonders appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Scientists recreate spiderlike formations on Mars in the labSamantha Hill
    Each spring, when the winter frost departs, the bulbous bodies and sprawling legs of “spiders” appear across Mars’ southern hemisphere. They’re known as araneiform terrain, and scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, recently recreated the formations in a vacuum on Earth to better understand how they form and what they canContinue reading "Scientists recreate spiderlike formations on Mars in the lab" The post Scientists recreate spiderlike formations on Mars
     

Scientists recreate spiderlike formations on Mars in the lab

October 1st 2024 at 9:00 pm

Each spring, when the winter frost departs, the bulbous bodies and sprawling legs of “spiders” appear across Mars’ southern hemisphere. They’re known as araneiform terrain, and scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, recently recreated the formations in a vacuum on Earth to better understand how they form and what they canContinue reading "Scientists recreate spiderlike formations on Mars in the lab"

The post Scientists recreate spiderlike formations on Mars in the lab appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Deep-sky objects to target as a novice observerDavid J. Eicher
    Do you remember the first time you truly discovered the universe? When I was a teenager, many moons ago, I bought my first telescope, a Celestron 8. I remember excitedly unboxing it the day it arrived. Fortunately, I had a clear sky that evening and stayed up all night observing. In the early morning, IContinue reading "Deep-sky objects to target as a novice observer" The post Deep-sky objects to target as a novice observer appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Deep-sky objects to target as a novice observer

October 1st 2024 at 4:30 pm

Do you remember the first time you truly discovered the universe? When I was a teenager, many moons ago, I bought my first telescope, a Celestron 8. I remember excitedly unboxing it the day it arrived. Fortunately, I had a clear sky that evening and stayed up all night observing. In the early morning, IContinue reading "Deep-sky objects to target as a novice observer"

The post Deep-sky objects to target as a novice observer appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

October 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS passes Earth, with Mars improving before dawn

October 1st 2024 at 8:30 am

October finds Mercury and Venus in the evening sky. Mercury is shy and takes some effort to see, but brilliant Venus is not hard to find. Saturn, Neptune, Uranus, and Jupiter rise in that order before midnight. Mars becomes a fine bright object in the predawn sky, standing high in the east. And C/2023 A3Continue reading "October 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS passes Earth, with Mars improving before dawn"

The post October 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS passes Earth, with Mars improving before dawn appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Purple mountain highM
    Abhijit Patil, taken from Lick Observatory, California Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS appears above the ridgeline of the Diablo Range as seen Sept. 28. The photographer captured the comet with a tracked 10-second exposure at ISO 100 with an astromodified Nikon mirrorless camera and a 200mm zoom lens at f/2.8. The foreground is a separate 25-second exposure. The post Purple mountain high appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Purple mountain high

By: M
September 30th 2024 at 11:47 pm

Abhijit Patil, taken from Lick Observatory, California Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS appears above the ridgeline of the Diablo Range as seen Sept. 28. The photographer captured the comet with a tracked 10-second exposure at ISO 100 with an astromodified Nikon mirrorless camera and a 200mm zoom lens at f/2.8. The foreground is a separate 25-second exposure.

The post Purple mountain high appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS stuns in photos at perihelionMark Zastrow
    Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS has not disappointed — and we have the pictures now to prove it. The comet, formally known as C/2023 A3, was first discovered in January 2023 by Purple Mountain Observatory in China’s Jiangsu Province. (The name Tsuchinshan comes from an older transliteration of Zijinshan, the Chinese word for Purple Mountain.) Since then, itContinue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS stuns in photos at perihelion" The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS stuns in photos at perihelion appeared firs
     

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS stuns in photos at perihelion

September 30th 2024 at 11:40 pm

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS has not disappointed — and we have the pictures now to prove it. The comet, formally known as C/2023 A3, was first discovered in January 2023 by Purple Mountain Observatory in China’s Jiangsu Province. (The name Tsuchinshan comes from an older transliteration of Zijinshan, the Chinese word for Purple Mountain.) Since then, itContinue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS stuns in photos at perihelion"

The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS stuns in photos at perihelion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A look at New Glenn: Blue Origin’s heavy-lift booster rocketDoug Adler
    In the world of private space companies, Elon Musk’s SpaceX is king. To date, SpaceX has launched close to 400 of their Falcon 9 orbital rockets as well as 10 Falcon Heavy rockets, and their Starship program is making rapid progress.  Still, SpaceX is not without competition. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ own private space company,Continue reading "A look at New Glenn: Blue Origin’s heavy-lift booster rocket" The post A look at New Glenn: Blue Origin’s heavy-lift booster rocket appeared first on As
     

A look at New Glenn: Blue Origin’s heavy-lift booster rocket

September 30th 2024 at 8:30 pm

In the world of private space companies, Elon Musk’s SpaceX is king. To date, SpaceX has launched close to 400 of their Falcon 9 orbital rockets as well as 10 Falcon Heavy rockets, and their Starship program is making rapid progress.  Still, SpaceX is not without competition. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ own private space company,Continue reading "A look at New Glenn: Blue Origin’s heavy-lift booster rocket"

The post A look at New Glenn: Blue Origin’s heavy-lift booster rocket appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • An annular solar eclipse: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the annular eclipse that will occur Oct. 2. Annular eclipses occur when the Sun, the Moon, and Earth line up, in that order. But in this case, the Moon is either too far from Earth (so it appears smaller) or Earth is too close to theContinue reading "An annular solar eclipse: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post An annular solar eclipse: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

An annular solar eclipse: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

September 30th 2024 at 8:30 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the annular eclipse that will occur Oct. 2. Annular eclipses occur when the Sun, the Moon, and Earth line up, in that order. But in this case, the Moon is either too far from Earth (so it appears smaller) or Earth is too close to theContinue reading "An annular solar eclipse: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post An annular solar eclipse: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Milky Way and Andromeda may not merge, after allDaniela Mata
    If you’ve ever attended a star party, it’s more than likely that the astronomer on site pointed out the  Andromeda Galaxy (M31) — currently around 2.5 million light-years away — and mentioned that it’s expected to collide with the Milky Way Galaxy in about 4.5 billion years. But recently, an international team of astronomers postedContinue reading "The Milky Way and Andromeda may not merge, after all" The post The Milky Way and Andromeda may not merge, after all appeared first on Astronomy Magaz
     

The Milky Way and Andromeda may not merge, after all

September 30th 2024 at 6:50 pm

If you’ve ever attended a star party, it’s more than likely that the astronomer on site pointed out the  Andromeda Galaxy (M31) — currently around 2.5 million light-years away — and mentioned that it’s expected to collide with the Milky Way Galaxy in about 4.5 billion years. But recently, an international team of astronomers postedContinue reading "The Milky Way and Andromeda may not merge, after all"

The post The Milky Way and Andromeda may not merge, after all appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • An annular eclipseDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the annular eclipse that will occur October 2. Annular eclipses occur when the Sun, the Moon, and Earth line up, in that order. But in this case, the Moon is either too far from Earth (so it appears smaller) or Earth is too close to theContinue reading "An annular eclipse" The post An annular eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

An annular eclipse

September 27th 2024 at 11:38 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher invites you to observe the annular eclipse that will occur October 2. Annular eclipses occur when the Sun, the Moon, and Earth line up, in that order. But in this case, the Moon is either too far from Earth (so it appears smaller) or Earth is too close to theContinue reading "An annular eclipse"

The post An annular eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Get set for an eclipse on Easter IslandDavid J. Eicher
    You may not know it, but we’re on the cusp of another solar eclipse. Next Wednesday, October 2, an annular eclipse will take place.  Of course, 71 percent of our planet’s surface consists of oceans, and this eclipse will be one that barely touches land. It will be visible entirely from the Pacific Ocean withContinue reading "Get set for an eclipse on Easter Island" The post Get set for an eclipse on Easter Island appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Get set for an eclipse on Easter Island

September 27th 2024 at 9:30 pm

You may not know it, but we’re on the cusp of another solar eclipse. Next Wednesday, October 2, an annular eclipse will take place.  Of course, 71 percent of our planet’s surface consists of oceans, and this eclipse will be one that barely touches land. It will be visible entirely from the Pacific Ocean withContinue reading "Get set for an eclipse on Easter Island"

The post Get set for an eclipse on Easter Island appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • CubeSats, the tiniest of satellites, are changing the way we explore the solar systemshill
    Most CubeSats weigh less than a bowling ball, and some are small enough to hold in your hand. But the impact these instruments are having on space exploration is gigantic. CubeSats – miniature, agile and cheap satellites – are revolutionizing how scientists study the cosmos. A standard-size CubeSat is tiny, about 4 pounds (roughly 2Continue reading "CubeSats, the tiniest of satellites, are changing the way we explore the solar system" The post CubeSats, the tiniest of satellites, are changing th
     

CubeSats, the tiniest of satellites, are changing the way we explore the solar system

By: shill
September 27th 2024 at 9:25 pm

Most CubeSats weigh less than a bowling ball, and some are small enough to hold in your hand. But the impact these instruments are having on space exploration is gigantic. CubeSats – miniature, agile and cheap satellites – are revolutionizing how scientists study the cosmos. A standard-size CubeSat is tiny, about 4 pounds (roughly 2Continue reading "CubeSats, the tiniest of satellites, are changing the way we explore the solar system"

The post CubeSats, the tiniest of satellites, are changing the way we explore the solar system appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Meet 2024 PT5, Earth’s temporary mini-moonKorey Haynes
    Earth is about to receive a visitor from outer space. No little green men, alas, but a tiny and temporary moon will grace our skies for two months, beginning this weekend.  Astronomers Carlos de la Fuente Marcos and Raúl de la Fuente Marcos from Ciudad Universitaria in Madrid were the ones to discover the mini-moon,Continue reading "Meet 2024 PT5, Earth’s temporary mini-moon" The post Meet 2024 PT5, Earth’s temporary mini-moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Meet 2024 PT5, Earth’s temporary mini-moon

September 27th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Earth is about to receive a visitor from outer space. No little green men, alas, but a tiny and temporary moon will grace our skies for two months, beginning this weekend.  Astronomers Carlos de la Fuente Marcos and Raúl de la Fuente Marcos from Ciudad Universitaria in Madrid were the ones to discover the mini-moon,Continue reading "Meet 2024 PT5, Earth’s temporary mini-moon"

The post Meet 2024 PT5, Earth’s temporary mini-moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Nearing perihelionM
    Gerald Rhemann, taken from Farm Tivoli, Namibia Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) reaches perihelion — its point of closest approach to the Sun — today, Sept. 27. This shot was taken Sept. 25 with a 12-inch f/3.6 scope and LRGB filters with exposure times of 145, 20, 20, and 20 seconds, respectively. The post Nearing perihelion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Nearing perihelion

By: M
September 27th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Gerald Rhemann, taken from Farm Tivoli, Namibia Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) reaches perihelion — its point of closest approach to the Sun — today, Sept. 27. This shot was taken Sept. 25 with a 12-inch f/3.6 scope and LRGB filters with exposure times of 145, 20, 20, and 20 seconds, respectively.

The post Nearing perihelion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from September 27 to October 4: South America sees an annular eclipseAlison Klesman
    Friday, September 27Are you looking for a real observing challenge? Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) is shaping up to be the best comet of the year, but it’s still low in the early-morning sky for Northern Hemisphere observers, making it tough to see despite recently hitting mid-3rd magnitude.  Today the comet reaches perihelion, the closest pointContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 27 to October 4: South America sees an annular eclipse" The post The Sky This Week from September
     

The Sky This Week from September 27 to October 4: South America sees an annular eclipse

September 27th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, September 27Are you looking for a real observing challenge? Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) is shaping up to be the best comet of the year, but it’s still low in the early-morning sky for Northern Hemisphere observers, making it tough to see despite recently hitting mid-3rd magnitude.  Today the comet reaches perihelion, the closest pointContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 27 to October 4: South America sees an annular eclipse"

The post The Sky This Week from September 27 to October 4: South America sees an annular eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Short-lived organics on Ceres hint at a past ocean — and conditions ripe for lifeAlison Klesman
    Dwarf planet Ceres is one of the most enigmatic worlds in our solar system — one whose secrets scientists have only been uncovering in the last decade. When NASA’s Dawn mission arrived in 2015, it uncovered an active, salt-rich world that might have — or once have had —  an ocean. Now, new research providesContinue reading "Short-lived organics on Ceres hint at a past ocean — and conditions ripe for life" The post Short-lived organics on Ceres hint at a past ocean — and conditions ripe for life
     

Short-lived organics on Ceres hint at a past ocean — and conditions ripe for life

September 26th 2024 at 6:39 pm

Dwarf planet Ceres is one of the most enigmatic worlds in our solar system — one whose secrets scientists have only been uncovering in the last decade. When NASA’s Dawn mission arrived in 2015, it uncovered an active, salt-rich world that might have — or once have had —  an ocean. Now, new research providesContinue reading "Short-lived organics on Ceres hint at a past ocean — and conditions ripe for life"

The post Short-lived organics on Ceres hint at a past ocean — and conditions ripe for life appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Early galaxies may be smaller than initially thoughtRichard Talcott
    The cosmos may not be broken after all. Soon after the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) started its science mission in 2022, astronomers discovered a half-dozen galaxies near the edge of the universe that appeared far more massive than anyone expected (see “Too big, too soon” in the September 2023 Astronomy). Prevailing theory held thatContinue reading "Early galaxies may be smaller than initially thought" The post Early galaxies may be smaller than initially thought appeared first on Astronomy
     

Early galaxies may be smaller than initially thought

September 26th 2024 at 1:30 pm

The cosmos may not be broken after all. Soon after the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) started its science mission in 2022, astronomers discovered a half-dozen galaxies near the edge of the universe that appeared far more massive than anyone expected (see “Too big, too soon” in the September 2023 Astronomy). Prevailing theory held thatContinue reading "Early galaxies may be smaller than initially thought"

The post Early galaxies may be smaller than initially thought appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Making an entranceM
    Gianni Tumino, taken from Ragusa, Sicily, Italy As comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-Atlas) approaches perihelion, it is starting to become visible in the Northern Hemisphere before dawn. This photographer captured it at 6:04 a.m. in Sicily with a Canon R mirrorless camera, a zoom lens at 200mm and f/5.6, and a 1.8-second exposure at ISO 1600. The post Making an entrance appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Making an entrance

By: M
September 25th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Gianni Tumino, taken from Ragusa, Sicily, Italy As comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-Atlas) approaches perihelion, it is starting to become visible in the Northern Hemisphere before dawn. This photographer captured it at 6:04 a.m. in Sicily with a Canon R mirrorless camera, a zoom lens at 200mm and f/5.6, and a 1.8-second exposure at ISO 1600.

The post Making an entrance appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year is hereMichael E. Bakich
    Comet C/2023 A3, also known as Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, may become the next brilliant comet. The brightnesses of such objects, however, are notoriously difficult to predict. But if it continues brightening the way it has during the past month, we should get a nice show. The comet’s name comes from the two observatories that discovered it:Continue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year is here" The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year is here appeared first on Astr
     

Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year is here

September 25th 2024 at 12:00 am

Comet C/2023 A3, also known as Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, may become the next brilliant comet. The brightnesses of such objects, however, are notoriously difficult to predict. But if it continues brightening the way it has during the past month, we should get a nice show. The comet’s name comes from the two observatories that discovered it:Continue reading "Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year is here"

The post Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS: The comet of the year is here appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • BlackHoleFinder invites you to discover new black holesDaniela Mata
    Are you interested in making astronomical discoveries and contributing to the search for black holes? If your answer is “Absolutely,” then BlackHoleFinder is the perfect app for you.  BlackHoleFinder, available for Android and Apple devices, was launched by the Dutch Black Hole Consortium in a bid for the public to assist astronomers in finding astronomicalContinue reading "BlackHoleFinder invites you to discover new black holes" The post BlackHoleFinder invites you to discover new black holes a
     

BlackHoleFinder invites you to discover new black holes

September 24th 2024 at 8:13 pm

Are you interested in making astronomical discoveries and contributing to the search for black holes? If your answer is “Absolutely,” then BlackHoleFinder is the perfect app for you.  BlackHoleFinder, available for Android and Apple devices, was launched by the Dutch Black Hole Consortium in a bid for the public to assist astronomers in finding astronomicalContinue reading "BlackHoleFinder invites you to discover new black holes"

The post BlackHoleFinder invites you to discover new black holes appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Reclassified informationM
    Michael P. Caligiuri from Carlsbad, California CTB 1 (Abell 85) is a faint supernova remnant in Cassiopeia roughly 9,800 light-years distant. Originally classified by George Abell as a planetary nebula, it’s over half a degree wide — larger in apparent size than a Full Moon. This Hα/OIII/RGB image was taken with a 4.2-inch refractor atContinue reading "Reclassified information" The post Reclassified information appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Reclassified information

By: M
September 24th 2024 at 5:08 pm

Michael P. Caligiuri from Carlsbad, California CTB 1 (Abell 85) is a faint supernova remnant in Cassiopeia roughly 9,800 light-years distant. Originally classified by George Abell as a planetary nebula, it’s over half a degree wide — larger in apparent size than a Full Moon. This Hα/OIII/RGB image was taken with a 4.2-inch refractor atContinue reading "Reclassified information"

The post Reclassified information appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Nuclear bombs really could deflect asteroids, lab tests suggestKorey Haynes
    Deflecting killer asteroids with nuclear weapons has long been the stuff of science fiction. But thanks to an experiment at Sandia National Laboratories, that scenario has taken a step closer to reality. Led by physicist Nathan Moore, researchers at Sandia in Albuquerque, New Mexico, used a powerful X-ray beam to blast tiny chips of quartzContinue reading "Nuclear bombs really could deflect asteroids, lab tests suggest" The post Nuclear bombs really could deflect asteroids, lab tests suggest app
     

Nuclear bombs really could deflect asteroids, lab tests suggest

September 23rd 2024 at 6:30 pm

Deflecting killer asteroids with nuclear weapons has long been the stuff of science fiction. But thanks to an experiment at Sandia National Laboratories, that scenario has taken a step closer to reality. Led by physicist Nathan Moore, researchers at Sandia in Albuquerque, New Mexico, used a powerful X-ray beam to blast tiny chips of quartzContinue reading "Nuclear bombs really could deflect asteroids, lab tests suggest"

The post Nuclear bombs really could deflect asteroids, lab tests suggest appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Moon meets Venus: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In this episode, Dave Eicher describes the upcoming conjunction of two bright objects in the evening sky. On October 5th, you’ll see a great pairing of the crescent Moon and Venus very close together in the west. Make sure to get out there right after sunset and look from a location with a clear westernContinue reading "The Moon meets Venus: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Moon meets Venus: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Moon meets Venus: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

September 23rd 2024 at 6:15 pm

In this episode, Dave Eicher describes the upcoming conjunction of two bright objects in the evening sky. On October 5th, you’ll see a great pairing of the crescent Moon and Venus very close together in the west. Make sure to get out there right after sunset and look from a location with a clear westernContinue reading "The Moon meets Venus: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Moon meets Venus: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Why weren’t astronomers sure that supermassive black holes could merge?Astronomy Staff
    “The great hum” in the October 2023 issue states that astronomers weren’t sure that supermassive black holes in binary systems could close in on each other. I would assume that objects with such massive gravity would absolutely attract each other over time and eventually merge. What am I missing? Bill ZieglerWest Chicago, Illinois All massiveContinue reading "Why weren’t astronomers sure that supermassive black holes could merge?" The post Why weren’t astronomers sure that supermassive black hol
     

Why weren’t astronomers sure that supermassive black holes could merge?

September 23rd 2024 at 4:50 pm

“The great hum” in the October 2023 issue states that astronomers weren’t sure that supermassive black holes in binary systems could close in on each other. I would assume that objects with such massive gravity would absolutely attract each other over time and eventually merge. What am I missing? Bill ZieglerWest Chicago, Illinois All massiveContinue reading "Why weren’t astronomers sure that supermassive black holes could merge?"

The post Why weren’t astronomers sure that supermassive black holes could merge? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Watch the Moon cover the Pleiades Sunday morningMartin Ratcliffe
    Because the Moon is closer to Earth than the planets and stars, it sometimes passes in front of, or occults, more distant objects from our point of view. The early morning of September 22 brings one such event: Around 5 A.M. EDT (2 A.M. PDT), you’ll find a nearly Last Quarter Moon nestled next toContinue reading "Watch the Moon cover the Pleiades Sunday morning" The post Watch the Moon cover the Pleiades Sunday morning appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Watch the Moon cover the Pleiades Sunday morning

September 20th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Because the Moon is closer to Earth than the planets and stars, it sometimes passes in front of, or occults, more distant objects from our point of view. The early morning of September 22 brings one such event: Around 5 A.M. EDT (2 A.M. PDT), you’ll find a nearly Last Quarter Moon nestled next toContinue reading "Watch the Moon cover the Pleiades Sunday morning"

The post Watch the Moon cover the Pleiades Sunday morning appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A new planetaryM
    Drew Evans, imaged from Flagstaff, Arizona; additional processing by Utkarsh Mishra Another faint OIII nebula has been discovered by amateur astronomers — this time, a likely planetary nebula, appearing here as the small red doughnut in the middle of this image. The object is designated HorFulEvReb 1 after its discoverers: Drew Evans, Jeffrey Horne, BrianContinue reading "A new planetary" The post A new planetary appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A new planetary

By: M
September 20th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Drew Evans, imaged from Flagstaff, Arizona; additional processing by Utkarsh Mishra Another faint OIII nebula has been discovered by amateur astronomers — this time, a likely planetary nebula, appearing here as the small red doughnut in the middle of this image. The object is designated HorFulEvReb 1 after its discoverers: Drew Evans, Jeffrey Horne, BrianContinue reading "A new planetary"

The post A new planetary appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from September 20 to 27: Neptune at OppositionAlison Klesman
    Friday, September 20Neptune reaches opposition today at 8 P.M. EDT in the constellation Pisces. Opposition is generally the best time to view planets, as they are highest around local midnight. At that time, Neptune stands just over 45° high in the south. (When surveying the region, make sure not to mistake brighter, magnitude 0.6 SaturnContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 20 to 27: Neptune at Opposition" The post The Sky This Week from September 20 to 27: Neptune at Opposition app
     

The Sky This Week from September 20 to 27: Neptune at Opposition

September 20th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, September 20Neptune reaches opposition today at 8 P.M. EDT in the constellation Pisces. Opposition is generally the best time to view planets, as they are highest around local midnight. At that time, Neptune stands just over 45° high in the south. (When surveying the region, make sure not to mistake brighter, magnitude 0.6 SaturnContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 20 to 27: Neptune at Opposition"

The post The Sky This Week from September 20 to 27: Neptune at Opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Traces of Earth’s earliest atmosphere could be buried on the MoonAlison Klesman
    Our Earth is about 4.5 billion years old and, through careful work, scientists have pieced together a timeline of its past. But much of its earliest history remains a mystery. Scant geological evidence remains of the first 500 million years, an elusive era when our planet was a ball of molten rock routinely bombarded withContinue reading "Traces of Earth’s earliest atmosphere could be buried on the Moon" The post Traces of Earth’s earliest atmosphere could be buried on the Moon appeared first on
     

Traces of Earth’s earliest atmosphere could be buried on the Moon

September 19th 2024 at 7:30 pm

Our Earth is about 4.5 billion years old and, through careful work, scientists have pieced together a timeline of its past. But much of its earliest history remains a mystery. Scant geological evidence remains of the first 500 million years, an elusive era when our planet was a ball of molten rock routinely bombarded withContinue reading "Traces of Earth’s earliest atmosphere could be buried on the Moon"

The post Traces of Earth’s earliest atmosphere could be buried on the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • What gives stars their colors?shill
    When we think of color in the night sky, we often think of beautiful images of galaxies and nebulae. Unfortunately, most of the time, their faint, diffuse light shows no color to our human eyes. Stars, on the other hand, have more concentrated light, and there we can see color — even with the nakedContinue reading "What gives stars their colors?" The post What gives stars their colors? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

What gives stars their colors?

By: shill
September 19th 2024 at 4:30 pm

When we think of color in the night sky, we often think of beautiful images of galaxies and nebulae. Unfortunately, most of the time, their faint, diffuse light shows no color to our human eyes. Stars, on the other hand, have more concentrated light, and there we can see color — even with the nakedContinue reading "What gives stars their colors?"

The post What gives stars their colors? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A bite out of the MoonM
    Dave Campbell from San Antonio, Texas The partial lunar eclipse of Sept. 17 (which happened to occur during a Super Moon) is captured in this image taken with an 8-inch Celestron RASA scope with a 0.7x reducer and a cooled monochrome camera. The post A bite out of the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Black hole caught blasting jets out into the cosmic voidKorey Haynes
    Like a dragon breathing gouts of fire, a black hole in the distant universe is spewing plumes of energy into the cosmos, forming jets that span 23 million light-years. That’s 140 times the width of the Milky Way, enough to influence the evolution of the universe at scales previously unheard of.  An international team ofContinue reading "Black hole caught blasting jets out into the cosmic void" The post Black hole caught blasting jets out into the cosmic void appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Black hole caught blasting jets out into the cosmic void

September 18th 2024 at 6:30 pm

Like a dragon breathing gouts of fire, a black hole in the distant universe is spewing plumes of energy into the cosmos, forming jets that span 23 million light-years. That’s 140 times the width of the Milky Way, enough to influence the evolution of the universe at scales previously unheard of.  An international team ofContinue reading "Black hole caught blasting jets out into the cosmic void"

The post Black hole caught blasting jets out into the cosmic void appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • ’Starry Night’ captures the turbulent physics of why stars twinkleRandall Hyman
    Turbulence abounds in nature, from the spinning whorls of hurricanes to the brilliant swirls of Jupiter’s immense storms. Astronomers have even observed it where stars are born in the vast maelstrom of molecular clouds. But much as scientists have tried, no single theory has ever captured the full scale and unpredictability of turbulence. Nobel laureateContinue reading "’Starry Night’ captures the turbulent physics of why stars twinkle" The post ’Starry Night’ captures the turbulent physics of w
     

’Starry Night’ captures the turbulent physics of why stars twinkle

September 17th 2024 at 10:24 pm

Turbulence abounds in nature, from the spinning whorls of hurricanes to the brilliant swirls of Jupiter’s immense storms. Astronomers have even observed it where stars are born in the vast maelstrom of molecular clouds. But much as scientists have tried, no single theory has ever captured the full scale and unpredictability of turbulence. Nobel laureateContinue reading "’Starry Night’ captures the turbulent physics of why stars twinkle"

The post ’Starry Night’ captures the turbulent physics of why stars twinkle appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The “Wow! Signal,” not surprisingly, was a dudM
    One of the most enduring mysteries in astronomy may have just been solved — and sorry folks, it’s not aliens.  In a paper posted last month to the arXiv preprint server, a team of astronomers report they may have finally found the source of the Wow! Signal. Overnight on August 15, 1977, the Big EarContinue reading "The “Wow! Signal,” not surprisingly, was a dud" The post The “Wow! Signal,” not surprisingly, was a dud appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The “Wow! Signal,” not surprisingly, was a dud

By: M
September 17th 2024 at 2:30 pm

One of the most enduring mysteries in astronomy may have just been solved — and sorry folks, it’s not aliens.  In a paper posted last month to the arXiv preprint server, a team of astronomers report they may have finally found the source of the Wow! Signal. Overnight on August 15, 1977, the Big EarContinue reading "The “Wow! Signal,” not surprisingly, was a dud"

The post The “Wow! Signal,” not surprisingly, was a dud appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Getting closer…M
    Lionel Guyonnet from Lyon, France Every 13 to 15 years, Earth passes through the plane of Saturn’s rings, causing them to nearly disappear. This sequence of images taken over the last decade shows how the tilt of Saturn’s rings to us has narrowed The next ring-plane crossing occurs in March 2025, although Saturn will beContinue reading "Getting closer…" The post Getting closer… appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Getting closer…

By: M
September 16th 2024 at 9:49 pm

Lionel Guyonnet from Lyon, France Every 13 to 15 years, Earth passes through the plane of Saturn’s rings, causing them to nearly disappear. This sequence of images taken over the last decade shows how the tilt of Saturn’s rings to us has narrowed The next ring-plane crossing occurs in March 2025, although Saturn will beContinue reading "Getting closer…"

The post Getting closer… appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How to watch a partial lunar eclipse during Tuesday’s Super MoonAlison Klesman
    This week, we’re focused on the Moon as Tuesday brings us three amazing events.  The September Full Moon occurs Tuesday evening, bringing us the year’s Harvest Moon and the second of four stunning Super Moons of 2024.  At the same time, visible across much of the world (including the entire contiguous U.S.), the Full MoonContinue reading "How to watch a partial lunar eclipse during Tuesday’s Super Moon" The post How to watch a partial lunar eclipse during Tuesday’s Super Moon appeared first on A
     

How to watch a partial lunar eclipse during Tuesday’s Super Moon

September 16th 2024 at 9:21 pm

This week, we’re focused on the Moon as Tuesday brings us three amazing events.  The September Full Moon occurs Tuesday evening, bringing us the year’s Harvest Moon and the second of four stunning Super Moons of 2024.  At the same time, visible across much of the world (including the entire contiguous U.S.), the Full MoonContinue reading "How to watch a partial lunar eclipse during Tuesday’s Super Moon"

The post How to watch a partial lunar eclipse during Tuesday’s Super Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Studying nature’s eclipse reactionsStephen James O'Meara
    Astronomers have long investigated the effects of totality on the animal kingdom. Results vary from eclipse to eclipse and location to location, leaving one to wonder just what specific aspects of the event can trigger behavioral responses. It’s part of what makes totality one of the greatest natural wonders. Before diving into the events ofContinue reading "Studying nature’s eclipse reactions" The post Studying nature’s eclipse reactions appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Studying nature’s eclipse reactions

September 16th 2024 at 7:30 pm

Astronomers have long investigated the effects of totality on the animal kingdom. Results vary from eclipse to eclipse and location to location, leaving one to wonder just what specific aspects of the event can trigger behavioral responses. It’s part of what makes totality one of the greatest natural wonders. Before diving into the events ofContinue reading "Studying nature’s eclipse reactions"

The post Studying nature’s eclipse reactions appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Why can we still see the Moon’s disk during a total lunar eclipse?Astronomy Staff
    While watching a total lunar eclipse, I can still faintly discern the Moon’s disk, even during the umbral portion. How is this possible, given that no significant source of light reflects from the Moon at that time? Justin FarrDallas, Texas The most noticeable feature of any total lunar eclipse is its color, which is dueContinue reading "Why can we still see the Moon’s disk during a total lunar eclipse?" The post Why can we still see the Moon’s disk during a total lunar eclipse? appeared first o
     

Why can we still see the Moon’s disk during a total lunar eclipse?

September 16th 2024 at 4:30 pm

While watching a total lunar eclipse, I can still faintly discern the Moon’s disk, even during the umbral portion. How is this possible, given that no significant source of light reflects from the Moon at that time? Justin FarrDallas, Texas The most noticeable feature of any total lunar eclipse is its color, which is dueContinue reading "Why can we still see the Moon’s disk during a total lunar eclipse?"

The post Why can we still see the Moon’s disk during a total lunar eclipse? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Red dragonM
    David Joyce from Lexington, Kentucky The Flying Dragon Nebula (Sharpless 2–114) in Cygnus is a faint emission nebula that glows almost entirely in Hα, with little emission in OIII or SII. This image includes 18.5 hours of Hα data with a 2.8-inch f/6 scope. The post Red dragon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Red dragon

By: M
September 13th 2024 at 9:51 pm

David Joyce from Lexington, Kentucky The Flying Dragon Nebula (Sharpless 2–114) in Cygnus is a faint emission nebula that glows almost entirely in Hα, with little emission in OIII or SII. This image includes 18.5 hours of Hα data with a 2.8-inch f/6 scope.

The post Red dragon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Could we experience the first-ever human-made meteor shower?M
    Come 2034, humans could witness the first-ever artificial meteor shower sparked by activity in space. That’s according to a new simulation led by Eloy Peña-Asensio of Italy’s Polytechnic University of Milan, who modeled the trajectories of 3 million particles of rocky debris blasted into space after NASA’s DART spacecraft intentionally slammed into the diminutive asteroidContinue reading "Could we experience the first-ever human-made meteor shower?" The post Could we experience the first-ever hu
     

Could we experience the first-ever human-made meteor shower?

By: M
September 13th 2024 at 8:31 pm

Come 2034, humans could witness the first-ever artificial meteor shower sparked by activity in space. That’s according to a new simulation led by Eloy Peña-Asensio of Italy’s Polytechnic University of Milan, who modeled the trajectories of 3 million particles of rocky debris blasted into space after NASA’s DART spacecraft intentionally slammed into the diminutive asteroidContinue reading "Could we experience the first-ever human-made meteor shower?"

The post Could we experience the first-ever human-made meteor shower? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from September 13 to 20: A partial lunar eclipse plus an occultationAlison Klesman
    Friday, September 13This Friday the 13th, let’s get ready for the upcoming spooky season by hunting a ghost — specifically, Mirach’s Ghost.  Mirach is cataloged as Beta (β) Andromedae, whose magnitude 2.1 glow matches that of the Maiden’s alpha star, Alpheratz. It is located in the southern portion of the constellation, near its border withContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 13 to 20: A partial lunar eclipse plus an occultation" The post The Sky This Week from September 13 to 20:
     

The Sky This Week from September 13 to 20: A partial lunar eclipse plus an occultation

September 13th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, September 13This Friday the 13th, let’s get ready for the upcoming spooky season by hunting a ghost — specifically, Mirach’s Ghost.  Mirach is cataloged as Beta (β) Andromedae, whose magnitude 2.1 glow matches that of the Maiden’s alpha star, Alpheratz. It is located in the southern portion of the constellation, near its border withContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 13 to 20: A partial lunar eclipse plus an occultation"

The post The Sky This Week from September 13 to 20: A partial lunar eclipse plus an occultation appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew completes historic private spacewalkM
    The four-person crew of SpaceX’s Polaris Dawn mission made history on Thursday morning by completing the first spacewalk with private astronauts. Commander Jared Isaacman, the billionaire CEO of Shift4 Payments who purchased the five-day orbital flight from SpaceX, and mission specialist Sarah Gillis, one of the crew’s two SpaceX engineers, who are the company’s first employees toContinue reading "SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew completes historic private spacewalk" The post SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew co
     

SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew completes historic private spacewalk

By: M
September 13th 2024 at 12:44 am

The four-person crew of SpaceX’s Polaris Dawn mission made history on Thursday morning by completing the first spacewalk with private astronauts. Commander Jared Isaacman, the billionaire CEO of Shift4 Payments who purchased the five-day orbital flight from SpaceX, and mission specialist Sarah Gillis, one of the crew’s two SpaceX engineers, who are the company’s first employees toContinue reading "SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew completes historic private spacewalk"

The post SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew completes historic private spacewalk appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Don Pettit, NASA’s oldest active astronaut, begins mission aboard ISSBen Evans
    When Don Pettit boarded the International Space Station (ISS) on Sept. 11, it was for him a homecoming. The 69-year-old chemical engineer already boasts a year-plus in space on three ISS missions between 2002 and 2012. But Pettit expected to have an important first port of call after he entered his Earth-circling habitat, office, andContinue reading "Don Pettit, NASA’s oldest active astronaut, begins mission aboard ISS" The post Don Pettit, NASA’s oldest active astronaut, begins mission aboard I
     

Don Pettit, NASA’s oldest active astronaut, begins mission aboard ISS

By: Ben Evans
September 13th 2024 at 12:23 am

When Don Pettit boarded the International Space Station (ISS) on Sept. 11, it was for him a homecoming. The 69-year-old chemical engineer already boasts a year-plus in space on three ISS missions between 2002 and 2012. But Pettit expected to have an important first port of call after he entered his Earth-circling habitat, office, andContinue reading "Don Pettit, NASA’s oldest active astronaut, begins mission aboard ISS"

The post Don Pettit, NASA’s oldest active astronaut, begins mission aboard ISS appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Annular eclipse shot wins astronomy image of the yearAstronomy Staff
    The overall winner of Royal Observatory Greenwich’s Astronomy Photographer of the Year 16 is Ryan Imperio for his photograph, Distorted Shadows of the Moon’s Surface Created by an Annular Eclipse, that captures the progression of Baily’s beads during the 2023 annular eclipse. The image will be on display alongside the winners of the other categoriesContinue reading "Annular eclipse shot wins astronomy image of the year" The post Annular eclipse shot wins astronomy image of the year appeared firs
     

Annular eclipse shot wins astronomy image of the year

September 12th 2024 at 10:00 pm

The overall winner of Royal Observatory Greenwich’s Astronomy Photographer of the Year 16 is Ryan Imperio for his photograph, Distorted Shadows of the Moon’s Surface Created by an Annular Eclipse, that captures the progression of Baily’s beads during the 2023 annular eclipse. The image will be on display alongside the winners of the other categoriesContinue reading "Annular eclipse shot wins astronomy image of the year"

The post Annular eclipse shot wins astronomy image of the year appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Elephant’s TrunkM
    Ron Brecher, taken from Guelph, Ontario, Canada The emission nebula IC 1396 in Monoceros features a prominent pillar of dust known as the Elephant Trunk Nebula, many light-years long. This image represents more than 32 hours of exposure with a 14-inch f/11 scope in SHO filters, plus nearly 7 hours in RGB. The narrowband dataContinue reading "The Elephant’s Trunk" The post The Elephant’s Trunk appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Elephant’s Trunk

By: M
September 12th 2024 at 8:33 pm

Ron Brecher, taken from Guelph, Ontario, Canada The emission nebula IC 1396 in Monoceros features a prominent pillar of dust known as the Elephant Trunk Nebula, many light-years long. This image represents more than 32 hours of exposure with a 14-inch f/11 scope in SHO filters, plus nearly 7 hours in RGB. The narrowband dataContinue reading "The Elephant’s Trunk"

The post The Elephant’s Trunk appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • ALMA reveals a star’s surface in unprecedented detailAlison Klesman
    The stars in the sky are so distant that they typically appear as pinpricks even to our most powerful telescopes. Aside from the Sun, only a few nearby, bloated stars appear large enough to capture any features on their surface, however crude. New images released Sept. 11, however, capture one of the most detailed imagesContinue reading "ALMA reveals a star’s surface in unprecedented detail" The post ALMA reveals a star’s surface in unprecedented detail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

ALMA reveals a star’s surface in unprecedented detail

September 12th 2024 at 8:30 pm

The stars in the sky are so distant that they typically appear as pinpricks even to our most powerful telescopes. Aside from the Sun, only a few nearby, bloated stars appear large enough to capture any features on their surface, however crude. New images released Sept. 11, however, capture one of the most detailed imagesContinue reading "ALMA reveals a star’s surface in unprecedented detail"

The post ALMA reveals a star’s surface in unprecedented detail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Opinion: A former astronaut details what Starliner’s uncrewed return means for NASA, Boeing, and the astronauts still up in space

September 12th 2024 at 7:50 pm

Boeing’s crew transport space capsule, the Starliner, returned to Earth without its two-person crew right after midnight Eastern time on Sept. 7, 2024. Its remotely piloted return marked the end of a fraught test flight to the International Space Station which left two astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita “Suni” Williams, on the station for months longer than intendedContinue reading "Opinion: A former astronaut details what Starliner’s uncrewed return means for NASA, Boeing, and the astronauts still up in space"

The post Opinion: A former astronaut details what Starliner’s uncrewed return means for NASA, Boeing, and the astronauts still up in space appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How to use an autoguider for the best astrophotosChris Schur
    We all gaze in awe at beautiful deep-sky images, marveling at how the best imagers make it look so effortless to produce perfectly framed masterpieces. Such photos always seem to have perfect, pinpoint-round stars forming the foreground for the subject: the gauzy glow of a faint nebula or galaxy. What we don’t see are theContinue reading "How to use an autoguider for the best astrophotos" The post How to use an autoguider for the best astrophotos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to use an autoguider for the best astrophotos

September 12th 2024 at 4:30 pm

We all gaze in awe at beautiful deep-sky images, marveling at how the best imagers make it look so effortless to produce perfectly framed masterpieces. Such photos always seem to have perfect, pinpoint-round stars forming the foreground for the subject: the gauzy glow of a faint nebula or galaxy. What we don’t see are theContinue reading "How to use an autoguider for the best astrophotos"

The post How to use an autoguider for the best astrophotos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • SpaceX takes aim at FAA after latest Starship launch delayAlison Klesman
    paceX this week received disappointing news from the FAA that the launch license for its fifth test flight of Starship—the largest and most powerful rocket ever built—won’t be awarded until late November. And it’s not happy. On Tuesday, as the company occasionally does when facing what it deems to be unfair treatment, SpaceX posted a lengthy update decrying theContinue reading "SpaceX takes aim at FAA after latest Starship launch delay" The post SpaceX takes aim at FAA after latest Starship laun
     

SpaceX takes aim at FAA after latest Starship launch delay

September 12th 2024 at 12:56 am

paceX this week received disappointing news from the FAA that the launch license for its fifth test flight of Starship—the largest and most powerful rocket ever built—won’t be awarded until late November. And it’s not happy. On Tuesday, as the company occasionally does when facing what it deems to be unfair treatment, SpaceX posted a lengthy update decrying theContinue reading "SpaceX takes aim at FAA after latest Starship launch delay"

The post SpaceX takes aim at FAA after latest Starship launch delay appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Small, untrackable pieces of space junk are cluttering low Earth orbitAlison Klesman
    It’s no question that we have begun polluting the space around Earth. While governments around the world have participated in cataloging and tracking the largest orbiting hazards, astronomers have recently pointed out that the greatest threat to future missions comes from the smallest bits of debris — bits that currently go untracked.  In a paperContinue reading "Small, untrackable pieces of space junk are cluttering low Earth orbit" The post Small, untrackable pieces of space junk are clutterin
     

Small, untrackable pieces of space junk are cluttering low Earth orbit

September 12th 2024 at 12:33 am

It’s no question that we have begun polluting the space around Earth. While governments around the world have participated in cataloging and tracking the largest orbiting hazards, astronomers have recently pointed out that the greatest threat to future missions comes from the smallest bits of debris — bits that currently go untracked.  In a paperContinue reading "Small, untrackable pieces of space junk are cluttering low Earth orbit"

The post Small, untrackable pieces of space junk are cluttering low Earth orbit appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Shortsighted, aging NASA faces uncertain future, says report to CongressM
    A report published Tuesday raises serious questions about NASA’s ability to effectively function as the nation’s preeminent space agency. The 218-page document, assembled by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) at the behest of Congress, warns that NASA is prioritizing short-term missions and commercial contracts over the people and technology that makeContinue reading "Shortsighted, aging NASA faces uncertain future, says report to Congress" The post Shortsighte
     

Shortsighted, aging NASA faces uncertain future, says report to Congress

By: M
September 11th 2024 at 6:54 pm

A report published Tuesday raises serious questions about NASA’s ability to effectively function as the nation’s preeminent space agency. The 218-page document, assembled by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) at the behest of Congress, warns that NASA is prioritizing short-term missions and commercial contracts over the people and technology that makeContinue reading "Shortsighted, aging NASA faces uncertain future, says report to Congress"

The post Shortsighted, aging NASA faces uncertain future, says report to Congress appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Upcoming Polaris Dawn spacewalk will push the envelopeAlison Klesman
    Space is an unnatural environment for humans. We can’t survive unprotected in a pure vacuum for more than two minutes. Getting to space involves being strapped to a barely contained chemical explosion. Since 1961, fewer than 700 people have been into space. Private space companies such as SpaceX and Blue Origin hope to boost that number to many thousands, and SpaceX is already taking bookings forContinue reading "Upcoming Polaris Dawn spacewalk will push the envelope" The post Upcoming Polaris D
     

Upcoming Polaris Dawn spacewalk will push the envelope

September 11th 2024 at 3:30 pm

Space is an unnatural environment for humans. We can’t survive unprotected in a pure vacuum for more than two minutes. Getting to space involves being strapped to a barely contained chemical explosion. Since 1961, fewer than 700 people have been into space. Private space companies such as SpaceX and Blue Origin hope to boost that number to many thousands, and SpaceX is already taking bookings forContinue reading "Upcoming Polaris Dawn spacewalk will push the envelope"

The post Upcoming Polaris Dawn spacewalk will push the envelope appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

The wonderful Owl Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

September 11th 2024 at 12:36 am

The Owl Cluster, also known as NGC 457, is an open cluster in the constellation Cassiopeia. You can’t see it without optical aid, so use binoculars or a telescope. Astrophotographers can easily capture this celestial object with short exposures.

The post The wonderful Owl Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • JWST and MeM
    Processing by Warren Keller, taken by the James Webb Space Telescope The famous Pillars of Creation in the Eagle Nebula (M16) look like ghostly wraiths in this near-infrared view taken by the James Webb Space Telescope. To make this version, Keller downloaded JWST’s raw data from its public archives and processed it on his own.Continue reading "JWST and Me" The post JWST and Me appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

JWST and Me

By: M
September 10th 2024 at 9:19 pm

Processing by Warren Keller, taken by the James Webb Space Telescope The famous Pillars of Creation in the Eagle Nebula (M16) look like ghostly wraiths in this near-infrared view taken by the James Webb Space Telescope. To make this version, Keller downloaded JWST’s raw data from its public archives and processed it on his own.Continue reading "JWST and Me"

The post JWST and Me appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Why the SpaceX Starship launch pad mattersDoug Adler
    Rockets get all the glory and all the glamour. It’s just a fact. They’re tall, gleaming objects. They lift off from Earth standing atop columns of flame and generate thundering noise while they carry people and machines to the most distant reaches of outer space. It’s no wonder we love them. Launch pads, however, areContinue reading "Why the SpaceX Starship launch pad matters" The post Why the SpaceX Starship launch pad matters appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Why the SpaceX Starship launch pad matters

September 10th 2024 at 7:38 pm

Rockets get all the glory and all the glamour. It’s just a fact. They’re tall, gleaming objects. They lift off from Earth standing atop columns of flame and generate thundering noise while they carry people and machines to the most distant reaches of outer space. It’s no wonder we love them. Launch pads, however, areContinue reading "Why the SpaceX Starship launch pad matters"

The post Why the SpaceX Starship launch pad matters appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Polaris Dawn launched Tuesday morning: How to watch the mission’s spacewalkM
    UPDATE 9/10/2024: The Polaris Dawn mission successfully launched to low-Earth orbit aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Sept. 10 at 5:23 a.m. EDT. The crew’s first opportunity for their historic spacewalk is on Thursday, Sept. 12 at 2:23 a.m. EDT. SpaceX’s livestream will begin roughly one hour before, and can be viewed at theContinue reading "Polaris Dawn launched Tuesday morning: How to watch the mission’s spacewalk" The post Polaris Dawn launched Tuesday morning: How to watch the mission’s spa
     

Polaris Dawn launched Tuesday morning: How to watch the mission’s spacewalk

By: M
September 10th 2024 at 1:38 am

UPDATE 9/10/2024: The Polaris Dawn mission successfully launched to low-Earth orbit aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Sept. 10 at 5:23 a.m. EDT. The crew’s first opportunity for their historic spacewalk is on Thursday, Sept. 12 at 2:23 a.m. EDT. SpaceX’s livestream will begin roughly one hour before, and can be viewed at theContinue reading "Polaris Dawn launched Tuesday morning: How to watch the mission’s spacewalk"

The post Polaris Dawn launched Tuesday morning: How to watch the mission’s spacewalk appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Boeing’s Starliner returns to Earth safely — without its crewM
    Boeing’s Starliner safely departed the International Space Station on the night of Friday, Sept. 6 — albeit without its crew — and made a soft landing at White Sands Space Harbor in New Mexico at 12:01 a.m. EDT the following morning. The reentry and landing concluded a test flight to the International Space Station thatContinue reading "Boeing’s Starliner returns to Earth safely — without its crew" The post Boeing’s Starliner returns to Earth safely — without its crew appeared first on Astronomy
     

Boeing’s Starliner returns to Earth safely — without its crew

By: M
September 10th 2024 at 1:18 am

Boeing’s Starliner safely departed the International Space Station on the night of Friday, Sept. 6 — albeit without its crew — and made a soft landing at White Sands Space Harbor in New Mexico at 12:01 a.m. EDT the following morning. The reentry and landing concluded a test flight to the International Space Station thatContinue reading "Boeing’s Starliner returns to Earth safely — without its crew"

The post Boeing’s Starliner returns to Earth safely — without its crew appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless?Astronomy Staff
    How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless? Dennis MurphyFort Bragg, California Photons are indeed massless, but they still travel through our universe. You can picture the fabric of the cosmos as a sort of grid — one that is four-dimensional and incorporates not only the three dimensions ofContinue reading "How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless?" The post How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless? appeared first on
     

How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless?

September 9th 2024 at 7:30 pm

How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless? Dennis MurphyFort Bragg, California Photons are indeed massless, but they still travel through our universe. You can picture the fabric of the cosmos as a sort of grid — one that is four-dimensional and incorporates not only the three dimensions ofContinue reading "How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless?"

The post How can a black hole pull light into itself if a photon is massless? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How to process JWST images like a proshill
    In this remarkable age, space is becoming ever more accessible to the general public, and citizen scientists are enriching the field of professional astronomy with their contributions. NASA’s latest flagship spaceborne observatory, the $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), is no exception: Following the tradition set by the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA releases dataContinue reading "How to process JWST images like a pro" The post How to process JWST images like a pro appeared first on A
     

How to process JWST images like a pro

By: shill
September 9th 2024 at 4:30 pm

In this remarkable age, space is becoming ever more accessible to the general public, and citizen scientists are enriching the field of professional astronomy with their contributions. NASA’s latest flagship spaceborne observatory, the $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), is no exception: Following the tradition set by the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA releases dataContinue reading "How to process JWST images like a pro"

The post How to process JWST images like a pro appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The greatest eclipse for the rest of our livesDavid J. Eicher
    I’ve been a rabid astronomy enthusiast for 48 years, and rarely have I been as juiced up for an observational event as I am for the eclipse coming in three years. On August 2, 2027, a total solar eclipse will make its mark from the eastern Atlantic Ocean across the Strait of Gibraltar, between SpainContinue reading "The greatest eclipse for the rest of our lives" The post The greatest eclipse for the rest of our lives appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The greatest eclipse for the rest of our lives

September 7th 2024 at 1:30 pm

I’ve been a rabid astronomy enthusiast for 48 years, and rarely have I been as juiced up for an observational event as I am for the eclipse coming in three years. On August 2, 2027, a total solar eclipse will make its mark from the eastern Atlantic Ocean across the Strait of Gibraltar, between SpainContinue reading "The greatest eclipse for the rest of our lives"

The post The greatest eclipse for the rest of our lives appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A different lightM
    Anthony Grillo from Belle Vernon, Pennsylvania The familiar figure of the Triangulum Galaxy (M33) looks a bit different but is still recognizable in this portrait taken entirely with an Hα filter and ten hours of exposure on a 14-inch scope. Isolating the Hα data reveals the pockets of heated hydrogen gas dotting its spiral arms,Continue reading "A different light" The post A different light appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A different light

By: M
September 6th 2024 at 7:55 pm

Anthony Grillo from Belle Vernon, Pennsylvania The familiar figure of the Triangulum Galaxy (M33) looks a bit different but is still recognizable in this portrait taken entirely with an Hα filter and ten hours of exposure on a 14-inch scope. Isolating the Hα data reveals the pockets of heated hydrogen gas dotting its spiral arms,Continue reading "A different light"

The post A different light appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

As it happened: Boeing’s Starliner touches down, capping return flight to Earth

September 7th 2024 at 7:15 am

NASA has announced its mission timeline for the uncrewed Boeing Starliner spacecraft to depart from the International Space Station and return autonomously to Earth on Friday.

The post As it happened: Boeing’s Starliner touches down, capping return flight to Earth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from September 6 to 13: Saturn at oppositionAlison Klesman
    Friday, September 6The Moon passes 0.5° north of Spica at 1 P.M. EDT, occulting (passing in front of the planet) for some observers in parts of Africa, Canada, and the U.S. To check whether you’re in the path and the timing of the event from various cities, visit the International Occultation Timing Association’s webpage. TheContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 6 to 13: Saturn at opposition" The post The Sky This Week from September 6 to 13: Saturn at opposition appeared first on A
     

The Sky This Week from September 6 to 13: Saturn at opposition

September 6th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, September 6The Moon passes 0.5° north of Spica at 1 P.M. EDT, occulting (passing in front of the planet) for some observers in parts of Africa, Canada, and the U.S. To check whether you’re in the path and the timing of the event from various cities, visit the International Occultation Timing Association’s webpage. TheContinue reading "The Sky This Week from September 6 to 13: Saturn at opposition"

The post The Sky This Week from September 6 to 13: Saturn at opposition appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Light pollution linked to higher risk of Alzheimer’s diseaseChristopher Cokinos
    Excessive artificial light at night (ALAN) doesn’t just pollute the sky. It may also pollute the brain. That’s according to a surprising new study focused on light pollution and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). According to the Alzheimer’s Association, “Alzheimer’s is the most common cause of dementia, a general term for memory loss and other cognitive abilitiesContinue reading "Light pollution linked to higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease" The post Light pollution linked to higher risk of Alzheimer’s d
     

Light pollution linked to higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease

September 6th 2024 at 7:30 am

Excessive artificial light at night (ALAN) doesn’t just pollute the sky. It may also pollute the brain. That’s according to a surprising new study focused on light pollution and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). According to the Alzheimer’s Association, “Alzheimer’s is the most common cause of dementia, a general term for memory loss and other cognitive abilitiesContinue reading "Light pollution linked to higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease"

The post Light pollution linked to higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Volcanoes were erupting on the Moon while dinosaurs roamed Earth, Chang’e 5 samples suggestRobert Reeves
    Chinese researchers have reported evidence that the Moon was volcanically active just 125 million years ago — a geologic blink of an eye — a finding that has the potential to rewrite lunar history. The results come from an analysis of lunar samples returned over three years ago by the Chang’e 5 mission, and upendContinue reading "Volcanoes were erupting on the Moon while dinosaurs roamed Earth, Chang’e 5 samples suggest" The post Volcanoes were erupting on the Moon while dinosaurs roamed Earth,
     

Volcanoes were erupting on the Moon while dinosaurs roamed Earth, Chang’e 5 samples suggest

September 5th 2024 at 9:30 pm

Chinese researchers have reported evidence that the Moon was volcanically active just 125 million years ago — a geologic blink of an eye — a finding that has the potential to rewrite lunar history. The results come from an analysis of lunar samples returned over three years ago by the Chang’e 5 mission, and upendContinue reading "Volcanoes were erupting on the Moon while dinosaurs roamed Earth, Chang’e 5 samples suggest"

The post Volcanoes were erupting on the Moon while dinosaurs roamed Earth, Chang’e 5 samples suggest appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • New Horizons measures how dark the universe can getRandall Hyman
    As black as space may seem, even the darkest corner of the universe gets light. Measuring that tiny glimmer — called the cosmic optical background (COB) — sheds light on the energy balance of the entire universe, one of cosmology’s holy grails. With recent data gathered by the New Horizons spacecraft, now 57 times fartherContinue reading "New Horizons measures how dark the universe can get" The post New Horizons measures how dark the universe can get appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

New Horizons measures how dark the universe can get

September 5th 2024 at 8:21 pm

As black as space may seem, even the darkest corner of the universe gets light. Measuring that tiny glimmer — called the cosmic optical background (COB) — sheds light on the energy balance of the entire universe, one of cosmology’s holy grails. With recent data gathered by the New Horizons spacecraft, now 57 times fartherContinue reading "New Horizons measures how dark the universe can get"

The post New Horizons measures how dark the universe can get appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Observe a great star cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    Take some time to point binoculars or a telescope at open cluster NGC 457, which lies in the constellation Cassiopeia. You’ll first notice a pair of bright stars that give this deep-sky object the appearance of a common bird. Indeed, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher christened it the Owl Cluster more than 40 years ago.Continue reading "Observe a great star cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Observe a great star cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeare
     

Observe a great star cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

September 4th 2024 at 9:09 pm

Take some time to point binoculars or a telescope at open cluster NGC 457, which lies in the constellation Cassiopeia. You’ll first notice a pair of bright stars that give this deep-sky object the appearance of a common bird. Indeed, Astronomy magazine Editor Dave Eicher christened it the Owl Cluster more than 40 years ago.Continue reading "Observe a great star cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Observe a great star cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A look back: The Great North American Eclipse deliversAstronomy Staff
    This was the big one. Nearly seven years after totality crisscrossed the U.S. in August 2017, the Moon once again slipped in front of the Sun in the skies above North America on April 8, 2024. Making landfall in Mexico, the Moon’s shadow swept across the continent, through the heart of the U.S. into NewContinue reading "A look back: The Great North American Eclipse delivers" The post A look back: The Great North American Eclipse delivers appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A look back: The Great North American Eclipse delivers

September 4th 2024 at 4:30 pm

This was the big one. Nearly seven years after totality crisscrossed the U.S. in August 2017, the Moon once again slipped in front of the Sun in the skies above North America on April 8, 2024. Making landfall in Mexico, the Moon’s shadow swept across the continent, through the heart of the U.S. into NewContinue reading "A look back: The Great North American Eclipse delivers"

The post A look back: The Great North American Eclipse delivers appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What are NGC objects, and where did this catalog come from?Astronomy Staff
    The designation M stands for Messier objects. I understand the history behind how these were identified and cataloged. But what are NGC objects? Where did NGC come from and how is it applied? Dean TreadwayJesup, Georgia Anyone who has developed an interest in stargazing has certainly heard of the Messier and NGC catalogs. These publicationsContinue reading "What are NGC objects, and where did this catalog come from?" The post What are NGC objects, and where did this catalog come from? appeared f
     

What are NGC objects, and where did this catalog come from?

September 3rd 2024 at 8:30 pm

The designation M stands for Messier objects. I understand the history behind how these were identified and cataloged. But what are NGC objects? Where did NGC come from and how is it applied? Dean TreadwayJesup, Georgia Anyone who has developed an interest in stargazing has certainly heard of the Messier and NGC catalogs. These publicationsContinue reading "What are NGC objects, and where did this catalog come from?"

The post What are NGC objects, and where did this catalog come from? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Fall into new astronomy products this monthAstronomy Staff
    To boldly go Running Press (Hachette Book Group)Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Peeing and Pooping in Space by Kiona N. Smith is not just space-themed bathroom humor, but a history of the engineering feats it took to address how astronauts go in space. This 112-page illustrated book for all ages offers insight into little-known inventions to aid explorersContinue reading "Fall into new astronomy products this month" The post Fall into new astronomy products this month appeared first on Astronomy Maga
     

Fall into new astronomy products this month

September 2nd 2024 at 4:30 pm

To boldly go Running Press (Hachette Book Group)Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Peeing and Pooping in Space by Kiona N. Smith is not just space-themed bathroom humor, but a history of the engineering feats it took to address how astronauts go in space. This 112-page illustrated book for all ages offers insight into little-known inventions to aid explorersContinue reading "Fall into new astronomy products this month"

The post Fall into new astronomy products this month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Get to know the Andromeda GalaxyKlaus R. Brasch
    The famed Andromeda Galaxy, or M31, draws attention at public star parties not only because it is the nearest major member of the Local Group to our Milky Way, but also because most people are aware that it is set to collide with our galaxy. Some people become anxiously curious about what that collision isContinue reading "Get to know the Andromeda Galaxy" The post Get to know the Andromeda Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Get to know the Andromeda Galaxy

September 1st 2024 at 4:30 pm

The famed Andromeda Galaxy, or M31, draws attention at public star parties not only because it is the nearest major member of the Local Group to our Milky Way, but also because most people are aware that it is set to collide with our galaxy. Some people become anxiously curious about what that collision isContinue reading "Get to know the Andromeda Galaxy"

The post Get to know the Andromeda Galaxy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

September 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Saturn and Neptune reach opposition, with Mercury at its best

September 1st 2024 at 8:30 am

Venus lingers after sunset. Saturn reaches opposition Sept. 8 and Neptune reaches opposition on the 20th. Jupiter dominates Taurus and Mars improves as it passes into Gemini. Mercury makes its best morning appearance in the Northern Hemisphere and the last week of September could offer a naked-eye comet. Venus is visible in the west forContinue reading "September 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Saturn and Neptune reach opposition, with Mercury at its best"

The post September 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Saturn and Neptune reach opposition, with Mercury at its best appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • An arm-twisting companionM
    Charles Pevsner, taken from Rio Hurtado, Chile Spiral galaxy NGC 1532 lies 50 million light-years away in Eridanus. Its dwarf galaxy companion NGC 1531 has bent one of its arms out of shape as it makes a close pass. This LRGB image comprises 15.5 hours of exposure with a 5-inch refractor. The post An arm-twisting companion appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • A brief history of astronauts stuck in spaceBen Evans
    When NASA announced Aug. 24 that Boeing Starliner astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Suni Williams will remain in space another six months, miss Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year holidays with their families, and land in a different spacecraft, it stirred headlines worldwide. But theirs is not the first mission to be unexpectedly lengthened or hitContinue reading "A brief history of astronauts stuck in space" The post A brief history of astronauts stuck in space appeared first on Astronomy
     

A brief history of astronauts stuck in space

By: Ben Evans
August 30th 2024 at 11:11 pm

When NASA announced Aug. 24 that Boeing Starliner astronauts Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Suni Williams will remain in space another six months, miss Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year holidays with their families, and land in a different spacecraft, it stirred headlines worldwide. But theirs is not the first mission to be unexpectedly lengthened or hitContinue reading "A brief history of astronauts stuck in space"

The post A brief history of astronauts stuck in space appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Scientists view Ganymede’s aurorae dancing during eclipseTheo Nicitopoulos
    On June 8, 2021, researchers used the Keck I telescope on the summit on Hawaii’s Mauna Kea to observe Jupiter’s moon Ganymede in the shadow of the gas giant. During the three-hour eclipse, they were able to capture images of visible aurorae in the moon’s atmosphere using five-minute exposures, showing how they move and swell.Continue reading "Scientists view Ganymede’s aurorae dancing during eclipse" The post Scientists view Ganymede’s aurorae dancing during eclipse appeared first on Astronomy M
     

Scientists view Ganymede’s aurorae dancing during eclipse

August 30th 2024 at 7:52 pm

On June 8, 2021, researchers used the Keck I telescope on the summit on Hawaii’s Mauna Kea to observe Jupiter’s moon Ganymede in the shadow of the gas giant. During the three-hour eclipse, they were able to capture images of visible aurorae in the moon’s atmosphere using five-minute exposures, showing how they move and swell.Continue reading "Scientists view Ganymede’s aurorae dancing during eclipse"

The post Scientists view Ganymede’s aurorae dancing during eclipse appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from August 30 to September 6: See Mercury at its bestAlison Klesman
    Friday, August 30The Great Square of Pegasus is rising in the east as darkness starts to fall after sunset. This large asterism is the most recognizable portion of the Winged Horse. It is bounded by four stars, yet only three of these are in the constellation Pegasus — the fourth is in neighboring Andromeda, justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 30 to September 6: See Mercury at its best" The post The Sky This Week from August 30 to September 6: See Mercury at its best appeared fir
     

The Sky This Week from August 30 to September 6: See Mercury at its best

August 30th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, August 30The Great Square of Pegasus is rising in the east as darkness starts to fall after sunset. This large asterism is the most recognizable portion of the Winged Horse. It is bounded by four stars, yet only three of these are in the constellation Pegasus — the fourth is in neighboring Andromeda, justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 30 to September 6: See Mercury at its best"

The post The Sky This Week from August 30 to September 6: See Mercury at its best appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Waves may be heating the solar wind — and two spacecraft caught them in actionSten Odenwald
    Since the 1950s, scientists have known that the Sun emits a stream of particles in a vast wind, carrying away an Earth’s worth of mass every 150 years. This wind of protons sweeps by comets and sculpts their tails into million-kilometer wind socks. Near Earth’s orbit, the solar wind fills a sugar cube’s worth of volumeContinue reading "Waves may be heating the solar wind — and two spacecraft caught them in action" The post Waves may be heating the solar wind — and two spacecraft caught them in a
     

Waves may be heating the solar wind — and two spacecraft caught them in action

August 29th 2024 at 9:30 pm

Since the 1950s, scientists have known that the Sun emits a stream of particles in a vast wind, carrying away an Earth’s worth of mass every 150 years. This wind of protons sweeps by comets and sculpts their tails into million-kilometer wind socks. Near Earth’s orbit, the solar wind fills a sugar cube’s worth of volumeContinue reading "Waves may be heating the solar wind — and two spacecraft caught them in action"

The post Waves may be heating the solar wind — and two spacecraft caught them in action appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A monster in CygnusM
    David Gluchowski from Brooklyn, New York The reflection nebula NGC 6914 in Cygnus lies within a dense field of emission and dark tendrils of dust. “To me these reflections form the eyes of what look like an eldritch monster, formed by the dark nebulae and ridge formations in the emission nebulae,” the imager writes. TheContinue reading "A monster in Cygnus" The post A monster in Cygnus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A monster in Cygnus

By: M
August 29th 2024 at 8:22 pm

David Gluchowski from Brooklyn, New York The reflection nebula NGC 6914 in Cygnus lies within a dense field of emission and dark tendrils of dust. “To me these reflections form the eyes of what look like an eldritch monster, formed by the dark nebulae and ridge formations in the emission nebulae,” the imager writes. TheContinue reading "A monster in Cygnus"

The post A monster in Cygnus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Rogue worlds may give clues as to how stars formMichael E. Bakich
    A team of researchers has used the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to discover six likely rogue planets. Such objects have masses similar to planets but do not orbit parent stars. The newfound objects, whose masses range from five to 10 times that of Jupiter, are all in NGC 1333, a reflection nebula in theContinue reading "Rogue worlds may give clues as to how stars form" The post Rogue worlds may give clues as to how stars form appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Rogue worlds may give clues as to how stars form

August 29th 2024 at 12:02 am

A team of researchers has used the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to discover six likely rogue planets. Such objects have masses similar to planets but do not orbit parent stars. The newfound objects, whose masses range from five to 10 times that of Jupiter, are all in NGC 1333, a reflection nebula in theContinue reading "Rogue worlds may give clues as to how stars form"

The post Rogue worlds may give clues as to how stars form appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The JUICE mission just pulled off an unprecedented spaceflight maneuvershill
    A European spacecraft zipped by both Earth and the Moon last week. In the early 2030s, the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) mission will be the first European probe to orbit Jupiter. But first, it had to to carry out a key maneuver to help set up its eventual encounter with the giant planet. JUICEContinue reading "The JUICE mission just pulled off an unprecedented spaceflight maneuver" The post The JUICE mission just pulled off an unprecedented spaceflight maneuver appeared first on Astronomy
     

The JUICE mission just pulled off an unprecedented spaceflight maneuver

By: shill
August 28th 2024 at 7:30 pm

A European spacecraft zipped by both Earth and the Moon last week. In the early 2030s, the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) mission will be the first European probe to orbit Jupiter. But first, it had to to carry out a key maneuver to help set up its eventual encounter with the giant planet. JUICEContinue reading "The JUICE mission just pulled off an unprecedented spaceflight maneuver"

The post The JUICE mission just pulled off an unprecedented spaceflight maneuver appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Event Horizon Telescope captures highest-resolution images ever taken from the groundM
    The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) was designed to capture images of some of the most gargantuan structures in the universe — and a new observation just pushed it to its limits. In a study published in The Astrophysical Journal, scientists working on the EHT — a consortium of 11 radio telescopes spread out across nineContinue reading "Event Horizon Telescope captures highest-resolution images ever taken from the ground" The post Event Horizon Telescope captures highest-resolution images ever take
     

Event Horizon Telescope captures highest-resolution images ever taken from the ground

By: M
August 27th 2024 at 8:59 pm

The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) was designed to capture images of some of the most gargantuan structures in the universe — and a new observation just pushed it to its limits. In a study published in The Astrophysical Journal, scientists working on the EHT — a consortium of 11 radio telescopes spread out across nineContinue reading "Event Horizon Telescope captures highest-resolution images ever taken from the ground"

The post Event Horizon Telescope captures highest-resolution images ever taken from the ground appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Which way to the Lagoon?M
    Jeff Schilling from Kingwood, Texas The Lagoon Nebula (M8) brims with glowing gas, as well as dense dark clouds called Bok globules, where material is collapsing to form stars. The largest such globule in this image seems to be a hand pointing to the Lagoon’s center. The imager took nearly 15 hours of data inContinue reading "Which way to the Lagoon?" The post Which way to the Lagoon? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Which way to the Lagoon?

By: M
August 27th 2024 at 5:45 pm

Jeff Schilling from Kingwood, Texas The Lagoon Nebula (M8) brims with glowing gas, as well as dense dark clouds called Bok globules, where material is collapsing to form stars. The largest such globule in this image seems to be a hand pointing to the Lagoon’s center. The imager took nearly 15 hours of data inContinue reading "Which way to the Lagoon?"

The post Which way to the Lagoon? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • New study suggests we could give Mars a thicker atmosphere — using dustshill
    Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just snap our fingers and make Mars habitable? Admittedly, the challenges in the way of inhabiting the Red Planet are daunting. It’s cold, dry, and airless. It is for all intents and purposes a dead world. But recently, a team of physicists has concocted a scheme that couldContinue reading "New study suggests we could give Mars a thicker atmosphere — using dust" The post New study suggests we could give Mars a thicker atmosphere — using dust appeared first on Astr
     

New study suggests we could give Mars a thicker atmosphere — using dust

By: shill
August 27th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just snap our fingers and make Mars habitable? Admittedly, the challenges in the way of inhabiting the Red Planet are daunting. It’s cold, dry, and airless. It is for all intents and purposes a dead world. But recently, a team of physicists has concocted a scheme that couldContinue reading "New study suggests we could give Mars a thicker atmosphere — using dust"

The post New study suggests we could give Mars a thicker atmosphere — using dust appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA announces Boeing Starliner will return to Earth without crewAlison Klesman
    When NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams blasted off from Earth June 5 aboard Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft on its first crewed flight test to the International Space Station (ISS), they expected to spend about a week in space. However, the two astronauts will now spend some eight months in orbit and return home onContinue reading "NASA announces Boeing Starliner will return to Earth without crew" The post NASA announces Boeing Starliner will return to Earth without crew appeared fir
     

NASA announces Boeing Starliner will return to Earth without crew

August 27th 2024 at 1:33 am

When NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams blasted off from Earth June 5 aboard Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft on its first crewed flight test to the International Space Station (ISS), they expected to spend about a week in space. However, the two astronauts will now spend some eight months in orbit and return home onContinue reading "NASA announces Boeing Starliner will return to Earth without crew"

The post NASA announces Boeing Starliner will return to Earth without crew appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Moon, Mars, and Jupiter meet up! This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    In the hours before sunrise on Tuesday, Aug. 27, you can see a nice grouping of solar system objects. First, find the roughly 40-percent-illuminated Moon. The next brightest object, to the lower right of the Moon, will be Jupiter. Then look to the lower left of Jupiter for Mars. The Red Planet, glowing at magnitudeContinue reading "The Moon, Mars, and Jupiter meet up! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Moon, Mars, and Jupiter meet up! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher ap
     

The Moon, Mars, and Jupiter meet up! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

August 26th 2024 at 9:26 pm

In the hours before sunrise on Tuesday, Aug. 27, you can see a nice grouping of solar system objects. First, find the roughly 40-percent-illuminated Moon. The next brightest object, to the lower right of the Moon, will be Jupiter. Then look to the lower left of Jupiter for Mars. The Red Planet, glowing at magnitudeContinue reading "The Moon, Mars, and Jupiter meet up! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Moon, Mars, and Jupiter meet up! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • All about the Polaris Dawn mission launching soonBen Evans
    UPDATE 8/28/24: After pushing back the initial launch from Tuesday to Wednesday this week to check a helium leak in the launch system, SpaceX once again delayed Polaris Dawn’s launch, citing poor weather forecasts off the coast of Florida on the day of the mission’s splashdown. According to a post on X, the mission team willContinue reading "All about the Polaris Dawn mission launching soon" The post All about the Polaris Dawn mission launching soon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

All about the Polaris Dawn mission launching soon

By: Ben Evans
August 28th 2024 at 4:05 pm

UPDATE 8/28/24: After pushing back the initial launch from Tuesday to Wednesday this week to check a helium leak in the launch system, SpaceX once again delayed Polaris Dawn’s launch, citing poor weather forecasts off the coast of Florida on the day of the mission’s splashdown. According to a post on X, the mission team willContinue reading "All about the Polaris Dawn mission launching soon"

The post All about the Polaris Dawn mission launching soon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why we aren’t alone in the universe — but might as well beAlison Klesman
    Are we alone in the universe? The question has tugged at humanity ever since we discovered the enormity of the cosmos. In 1950, Enrico Fermi postulated his famous paradox: If life is common enough in the universe to give rise to us, then where is everybody? Recently, a philosopher has advanced a proposal to resolveContinue reading "Why we aren’t alone in the universe — but might as well be" The post Why we aren’t alone in the universe — but might as well be appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Why we aren’t alone in the universe — but might as well be

August 26th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Are we alone in the universe? The question has tugged at humanity ever since we discovered the enormity of the cosmos. In 1950, Enrico Fermi postulated his famous paradox: If life is common enough in the universe to give rise to us, then where is everybody? Recently, a philosopher has advanced a proposal to resolveContinue reading "Why we aren’t alone in the universe — but might as well be"

The post Why we aren’t alone in the universe — but might as well be appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Chromospheric dazeM
    Rich Ruffini from Wasilla, Alaska The myriad strands of plasma in the Sun’s chromosphere pulsate with magnetic energy, creating a mesmerizing textural tapestry. This image is a stack of 300 1/200-second frames taken with a 4-inch refractor and Daystar Hα “eyepiece.” The post Chromospheric daze appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Chromospheric daze

By: M
August 24th 2024 at 2:30 pm

Rich Ruffini from Wasilla, Alaska The myriad strands of plasma in the Sun’s chromosphere pulsate with magnetic energy, creating a mesmerizing textural tapestry. This image is a stack of 300 1/200-second frames taken with a 4-inch refractor and Daystar Hα “eyepiece.”

The post Chromospheric daze appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How merging black holes could reveal the nature of dark matterAlison Klesman
    We see evidence for merging supermassive black holes everywhere we look. One problem: We’re not exactly sure how they manage to do it. Recently, a team of astronomers has proposed that a particular form of dark matter may be the key to unlocking this cosmic mystery.  Supermassive black holes are the largest black holes inContinue reading "How merging black holes could reveal the nature of dark matter" The post How merging black holes could reveal the nature of dark matter appeared first on Astro
     

How merging black holes could reveal the nature of dark matter

August 23rd 2024 at 8:30 pm

We see evidence for merging supermassive black holes everywhere we look. One problem: We’re not exactly sure how they manage to do it. Recently, a team of astronomers has proposed that a particular form of dark matter may be the key to unlocking this cosmic mystery.  Supermassive black holes are the largest black holes inContinue reading "How merging black holes could reveal the nature of dark matter"

The post How merging black holes could reveal the nature of dark matter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Five almost-famous stars worth gazing atStuart Atkinson
    There are many glittering celebrity stars in the Hollywood of the heavens, astronomical A-listers whom every skywatcher fawns over. But for every celestial Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, or Tom Cruise, there are hundreds if not thousands of other lesser-known stars. These B-list suns may not have their own fan clubs or groupies but, like all goodContinue reading "Five almost-famous stars worth gazing at" The post Five almost-famous stars worth gazing at appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Five almost-famous stars worth gazing at

August 23rd 2024 at 6:30 pm

There are many glittering celebrity stars in the Hollywood of the heavens, astronomical A-listers whom every skywatcher fawns over. But for every celestial Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, or Tom Cruise, there are hundreds if not thousands of other lesser-known stars. These B-list suns may not have their own fan clubs or groupies but, like all goodContinue reading "Five almost-famous stars worth gazing at"

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  • The Sky This Week from August 23 to 30: Comet Olbers gets a black eyeAlison Klesman
    Friday, August 23There’s a short dark window this evening to catch one of the most popular galaxies that amateur astronomers love to observe: M51, the Whirlpool Galaxy. Located in the small constellation Canes Venatici, which is slowly sinking toward the northwest horizon after dark, the Whirlpool is a gorgeous face-on spiral with a small, compactContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 23 to 30: Comet Olbers gets a black eye" The post The Sky This Week from August 23 to 30: Comet Olbers
     

The Sky This Week from August 23 to 30: Comet Olbers gets a black eye

August 23rd 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, August 23There’s a short dark window this evening to catch one of the most popular galaxies that amateur astronomers love to observe: M51, the Whirlpool Galaxy. Located in the small constellation Canes Venatici, which is slowly sinking toward the northwest horizon after dark, the Whirlpool is a gorgeous face-on spiral with a small, compactContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 23 to 30: Comet Olbers gets a black eye"

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  • Astronomers are rallying to save NASA’s Chandra X-ray ObservatoryRandall Hyman
    All space missions come to an end. Some die quietly of old age, running out of fuel or power. Some go in a blaze of glory, plunging into an atmosphere and burning up, sending back data to the last. Others self-destruct, never reaching their intended targets — blowing up on the launch pad, or ending upContinue reading "Astronomers are rallying to save NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory" The post Astronomers are rallying to save NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Astronomers are rallying to save NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory

August 22nd 2024 at 9:30 pm

All space missions come to an end. Some die quietly of old age, running out of fuel or power. Some go in a blaze of glory, plunging into an atmosphere and burning up, sending back data to the last. Others self-destruct, never reaching their intended targets — blowing up on the launch pad, or ending upContinue reading "Astronomers are rallying to save NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory"

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  • A successful courtshipM
    Haim Huli from Kibutz Ramat HaKovesh, Israel NGC 1360 — also known as the Robin’s Egg — lies in Fornax, roughly 1,400 light-years distant. Observations in 2017 showed this planetary nebula has not one but two white dwarfs at its center. Earlier in their lives, these stars shared their outer layers in a common envelope,Continue reading "A successful courtship" The post A successful courtship appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A successful courtship

By: M
August 22nd 2024 at 7:48 pm

Haim Huli from Kibutz Ramat HaKovesh, Israel NGC 1360 — also known as the Robin’s Egg — lies in Fornax, roughly 1,400 light-years distant. Observations in 2017 showed this planetary nebula has not one but two white dwarfs at its center. Earlier in their lives, these stars shared their outer layers in a common envelope,Continue reading "A successful courtship"

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  • How is TESS able to spot more planets in the sky than Kepler could?Astronomy Staff
    How is TESS able to spot more planets in the sky than Kepler could? Doug KaupaCouncil Bluffs, Iowa The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) has outpaced the now-retired Kepler mission in discovering planets and planet candidates primarily because of the former’s significantly larger survey area. It covers almost the entire sky compared to the smallContinue reading "How is TESS able to spot more planets in the sky than Kepler could?" The post How is TESS able to spot more planets in the s
     

How is TESS able to spot more planets in the sky than Kepler could?

August 22nd 2024 at 6:30 pm

How is TESS able to spot more planets in the sky than Kepler could? Doug KaupaCouncil Bluffs, Iowa The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) has outpaced the now-retired Kepler mission in discovering planets and planet candidates primarily because of the former’s significantly larger survey area. It covers almost the entire sky compared to the smallContinue reading "How is TESS able to spot more planets in the sky than Kepler could?"

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  • How to choose the right focal length for your astrophotosshill
    On the first night out with my brand-new Celestron NexStar 8SE back in July 2015, I knew little about the relative sizes of astronomical objects. I was bowled over by my first view of Saturn — an impressive sight through an 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope (SCT) — and I was eager to see more. I knewContinue reading "How to choose the right focal length for your astrophotos" The post How to choose the right focal length for your astrophotos appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to choose the right focal length for your astrophotos

By: shill
August 22nd 2024 at 4:30 pm

On the first night out with my brand-new Celestron NexStar 8SE back in July 2015, I knew little about the relative sizes of astronomical objects. I was bowled over by my first view of Saturn — an impressive sight through an 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope (SCT) — and I was eager to see more. I knewContinue reading "How to choose the right focal length for your astrophotos"

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  • India’s lunar rover found remnants of the Moon’s ancient global magma oceanRobert Reeves
    4.5 billion years ago, amid the chaos of the early solar system, the young Earth was rocked by a cataclysmic collision with another planet the size of Mars. The debris flung into space eventually formed a molten sphere of liquified rock — a world covered in a global ocean of magma that later cooled andContinue reading "India’s lunar rover found remnants of the Moon’s ancient global magma ocean" The post India’s lunar rover found remnants of the Moon’s ancient global magma ocean appeared first on
     

India’s lunar rover found remnants of the Moon’s ancient global magma ocean

August 21st 2024 at 6:30 pm

4.5 billion years ago, amid the chaos of the early solar system, the young Earth was rocked by a cataclysmic collision with another planet the size of Mars. The debris flung into space eventually formed a molten sphere of liquified rock — a world covered in a global ocean of magma that later cooled andContinue reading "India’s lunar rover found remnants of the Moon’s ancient global magma ocean"

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  • Here’s how NASA will deorbit the International Space StationDoug Adler
    Although it may seem hard to believe, the International Space Station (ISS) is nearing the end of its operational lifespan. Some readers might’ve even been born after the first section of the ISS was launched in 1998 and have never lived in a world without it soaring overhead. The ISS took years to build andContinue reading "Here’s how NASA will deorbit the International Space Station" The post Here’s how NASA will deorbit the International Space Station appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Here’s how NASA will deorbit the International Space Station

August 21st 2024 at 5:30 pm

Although it may seem hard to believe, the International Space Station (ISS) is nearing the end of its operational lifespan. Some readers might’ve even been born after the first section of the ISS was launched in 1998 and have never lived in a world without it soaring overhead. The ISS took years to build andContinue reading "Here’s how NASA will deorbit the International Space Station"

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  • Opinion: How we can explore space without repeating colonialism’s mistakesAlison Klesman
    The past decade has seen a rapid expansion of the commercial space industry. Rival nations are competing for prime military and economic positions beyond the Earth. Public and private entities are clamoring to mine the Moon, and a growing halo of space junk is polluting low Earth orbit. In a 2023 white paper, a group of concerned astronomers warned againstContinue reading "Opinion: How we can explore space without repeating colonialism’s mistakes" The post Opinion: How we can explore space witho
     

Opinion: How we can explore space without repeating colonialism’s mistakes

August 20th 2024 at 6:30 pm

The past decade has seen a rapid expansion of the commercial space industry. Rival nations are competing for prime military and economic positions beyond the Earth. Public and private entities are clamoring to mine the Moon, and a growing halo of space junk is polluting low Earth orbit. In a 2023 white paper, a group of concerned astronomers warned againstContinue reading "Opinion: How we can explore space without repeating colonialism’s mistakes"

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  • Where did the constellations come from?F. Michael Witkoski
    The term “constellation” evokes several denotations. The most familiar is “a grouping of naked-eye stars sometimes connected by imaginary lines or superimposed by illustrations to suggest images, either earthly or mythological.” Strictly speaking, however, a constellation is a distinct portion of our sky with precise borders, not simply a collection of stars near each otherContinue reading "Where did the constellations come from?" The post Where did the constellations come from? appeared first o
     

Where did the constellations come from?

August 20th 2024 at 5:30 pm

The term “constellation” evokes several denotations. The most familiar is “a grouping of naked-eye stars sometimes connected by imaginary lines or superimposed by illustrations to suggest images, either earthly or mythological.” Strictly speaking, however, a constellation is a distinct portion of our sky with precise borders, not simply a collection of stars near each otherContinue reading "Where did the constellations come from?"

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  • The Moon slides by Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    On Tuesday, August 20, you can catch a great conjunction of the Moon and Saturn. The ringed planet will be separated from a nearly Full Moon by less than half a degree. The objects will fit nicely in binoculars or a low-power telescopic field, and will also provide a great opportunity for astrophotographers. To learnContinue reading "The Moon slides by Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Moon slides by Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on As
     

The Moon slides by Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

August 20th 2024 at 12:21 am

On Tuesday, August 20, you can catch a great conjunction of the Moon and Saturn. The ringed planet will be separated from a nearly Full Moon by less than half a degree. The objects will fit nicely in binoculars or a low-power telescopic field, and will also provide a great opportunity for astrophotographers. To learnContinue reading "The Moon slides by Saturn: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

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  • NASA bids farewell to NEOWISE missionSamantha Hill
    After 10 years and nearly 27 million images, NASA said goodbye to the Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) mission last week when its transmitter was turned off. The spacecraft began life as a space telescope tasked with uncovering distant galaxies but became so much more by searching for potentially hazardous comets and asteroidsContinue reading "NASA bids farewell to NEOWISE mission" The post NASA bids farewell to NEOWISE mission appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

NASA bids farewell to NEOWISE mission

August 19th 2024 at 11:46 pm

After 10 years and nearly 27 million images, NASA said goodbye to the Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) mission last week when its transmitter was turned off. The spacecraft began life as a space telescope tasked with uncovering distant galaxies but became so much more by searching for potentially hazardous comets and asteroidsContinue reading "NASA bids farewell to NEOWISE mission"

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  • Scientists use Jupiter to search for dark matterTom Metcalfe
    Dark matter is a mysterious substance that makes up some 85 percent of the total matter in our universe. Although we cannot see it, we can see its gravitational fingerprints on the way galaxies move and the way massive objects bend light around themselves. And now, researchers may have found a way to turn giantContinue reading "Scientists use Jupiter to search for dark matter" The post Scientists use Jupiter to search for dark matter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Scientists use Jupiter to search for dark matter

August 19th 2024 at 9:00 pm

Dark matter is a mysterious substance that makes up some 85 percent of the total matter in our universe. Although we cannot see it, we can see its gravitational fingerprints on the way galaxies move and the way massive objects bend light around themselves. And now, researchers may have found a way to turn giantContinue reading "Scientists use Jupiter to search for dark matter"

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  • In living colorM
    Daniel Phillips from Oceanside, California The open cluster NGC 6823 in Vulpecular is ensconced within the emission nebula Sharpless 2–83, bursting with color in this Hubble-palette rendition. Reaching inward toward the cluster are pillarlike tendrils of star-forming cold, dense dust. The imager used an 8-inch f/4.9 scope to take 12 hours of exposure. The post In living color appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

In living color

By: M
August 19th 2024 at 7:48 pm

Daniel Phillips from Oceanside, California The open cluster NGC 6823 in Vulpecular is ensconced within the emission nebula Sharpless 2–83, bursting with color in this Hubble-palette rendition. Reaching inward toward the cluster are pillarlike tendrils of star-forming cold, dense dust. The imager used an 8-inch f/4.9 scope to take 12 hours of exposure.

The post In living color appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Looking inside the Ring NebulaStephen James O'Meara
    The Ring Nebula (M57) in Lyra is one of the most adored planetary nebulae in the night sky. Yet its bright annulus, which is most observers’ target, can steal attention away from what lies inside it. This includes its central star, which lies at the limit of vision and is a rewarding challenge to spot.Continue reading "Looking inside the Ring Nebula" The post Looking inside the Ring Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Looking inside the Ring Nebula

August 19th 2024 at 4:30 pm

The Ring Nebula (M57) in Lyra is one of the most adored planetary nebulae in the night sky. Yet its bright annulus, which is most observers’ target, can steal attention away from what lies inside it. This includes its central star, which lies at the limit of vision and is a rewarding challenge to spot.Continue reading "Looking inside the Ring Nebula"

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  • JWST sees light invisible to the eye. These scientists decide how to color itRandall Hyman
    When it comes to appearances, the universe is a tricky place. Visible light occupies merely a sliver of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum. To study the cosmos in its entirety, scientists must peer beyond visible light using specialized instruments, including radio telescopes and X-ray telescopes. And the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) senses infrared (IR) radiation,Continue reading "JWST sees light invisible to the eye. These scientists decide how to color it" The post JWST sees light invisib
     

JWST sees light invisible to the eye. These scientists decide how to color it

August 17th 2024 at 1:30 pm

When it comes to appearances, the universe is a tricky place. Visible light occupies merely a sliver of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum. To study the cosmos in its entirety, scientists must peer beyond visible light using specialized instruments, including radio telescopes and X-ray telescopes. And the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) senses infrared (IR) radiation,Continue reading "JWST sees light invisible to the eye. These scientists decide how to color it"

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  • Mars could have oceans’ worth of liquid water buried in its crustBen Evans
    Deep beneath the surface of Mars lies a large reservoir of liquid water, according to seismometer data from NASA’s retired InSight lander. The findings, published Aug. 12 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, hint at sufficient water to fill oceans and globally cover Mars to a depth of over a mile (1 toContinue reading "Mars could have oceans’ worth of liquid water buried in its crust" The post Mars could have oceans’ worth of liquid water buried in its crust appeared first on Astr
     

Mars could have oceans’ worth of liquid water buried in its crust

By: Ben Evans
August 16th 2024 at 7:17 pm

Deep beneath the surface of Mars lies a large reservoir of liquid water, according to seismometer data from NASA’s retired InSight lander. The findings, published Aug. 12 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, hint at sufficient water to fill oceans and globally cover Mars to a depth of over a mile (1 toContinue reading "Mars could have oceans’ worth of liquid water buried in its crust"

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  • Telescoping antennaeM
    Team ShaRA, taken from Rio Hurtado, Chile The Antennae Galaxies (NGC 4038/9) are one of the most famous examples of interacting galaxies. In 1972, Alar and Jüri Toomre became the first researchers to use computers to simulate galaxy interactions; their success in replicating the dramatic tidal tails of the Antennae helped convince astronomers that galaxiesContinue reading "Telescoping antennae" The post Telescoping antennae appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Telescoping antennae

By: M
August 16th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Team ShaRA, taken from Rio Hurtado, Chile The Antennae Galaxies (NGC 4038/9) are one of the most famous examples of interacting galaxies. In 1972, Alar and Jüri Toomre became the first researchers to use computers to simulate galaxy interactions; their success in replicating the dramatic tidal tails of the Antennae helped convince astronomers that galaxiesContinue reading "Telescoping antennae"

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  • The Sky This Week from August 16 to 23: It’s a Blue Sturgeon MoonAlison Klesman
    Friday, August 16Saturn is where all the action is at this evening, as the planet’s brightest moon, Titan, slips beneath Saturn’s south pole. The planet rises around 9 P.M. local daylight time and stands more than 20° high within two hours. Glowing at magnitude 0.7, the ringed planet is relatively easy to spot in Aquarius,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from August 16 to 23: It’s a Blue Sturgeon Moon" The post The Sky This Week from August 16 to 23: It’s a Blue Sturgeon Moon appeared first o
     

The Sky This Week from August 16 to 23: It’s a Blue Sturgeon Moon

August 16th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, August 16Saturn is where all the action is at this evening, as the planet’s brightest moon, Titan, slips beneath Saturn’s south pole. The planet rises around 9 P.M. local daylight time and stands more than 20° high within two hours. Glowing at magnitude 0.7, the ringed planet is relatively easy to spot in Aquarius,Continue reading "The Sky This Week from August 16 to 23: It’s a Blue Sturgeon Moon"

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  • Archaeologists conduct first ‘space excavation’ on International Space StationAlice Gorman, The Conversation
    New results from the first archaeological fieldwork conducted in space show the International Space Station is a rich cultural landscape where crew create their own “gravity” to replace Earth’s, and adapt module spaces to suit their needs. Archaeology is usually thought of as the study of the distant past, but it’s ideally suited for revealingContinue reading "Archaeologists conduct first ‘space excavation’ on International Space Station" The post Archaeologists conduct first ‘space excavation’
     

Archaeologists conduct first ‘space excavation’ on International Space Station

August 15th 2024 at 7:00 pm

New results from the first archaeological fieldwork conducted in space show the International Space Station is a rich cultural landscape where crew create their own “gravity” to replace Earth’s, and adapt module spaces to suit their needs. Archaeology is usually thought of as the study of the distant past, but it’s ideally suited for revealingContinue reading "Archaeologists conduct first ‘space excavation’ on International Space Station"

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  • DwarfLab’s new tiny smart scope packs a punchPhil Harrington
    We have smartphones, smart cars, smart appliances, and even smart lightbulbs. What about smart telescopes? You could say that smart scopes have been around since the first go-to models were introduced decades ago. But over the past few years, a new breed of even-smarter telescopes has become increasingly popular. These next-generation smarties are not forContinue reading "DwarfLab’s new tiny smart scope packs a punch" The post DwarfLab’s new tiny smart scope packs a punch appeared first on Astro
     

DwarfLab’s new tiny smart scope packs a punch

August 15th 2024 at 4:30 pm

We have smartphones, smart cars, smart appliances, and even smart lightbulbs. What about smart telescopes? You could say that smart scopes have been around since the first go-to models were introduced decades ago. But over the past few years, a new breed of even-smarter telescopes has become increasingly popular. These next-generation smarties are not forContinue reading "DwarfLab’s new tiny smart scope packs a punch"

The post DwarfLab’s new tiny smart scope packs a punch appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Half Dome aglowM
    Abhijit Patil, taken from Yosemite National Park, California The iconic Half Dome is backlit by the glow of the aurora on the horizon the night of Aug. 11/12, as Perseid meteors streak overhead. The imager used separate Nikon mirrorless and DSLR cameras, one to image the foreground and sky and another to capture the streaksContinue reading "Half Dome aglow" The post Half Dome aglow appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Half Dome aglow

By: M
August 14th 2024 at 11:28 pm

Abhijit Patil, taken from Yosemite National Park, California The iconic Half Dome is backlit by the glow of the aurora on the horizon the night of Aug. 11/12, as Perseid meteors streak overhead. The imager used separate Nikon mirrorless and DSLR cameras, one to image the foreground and sky and another to capture the streaksContinue reading "Half Dome aglow"

The post Half Dome aglow appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Opinion: SpaceX’s Elon Musk endorsed Donald Trump for president – what this could mean for U.S. space policy

August 14th 2024 at 3:15 pm

Elon Musk officially endorsed Donald Trump for president of the United States on July 13, 2024, shortly after Trump survived an assassination attempt. Musk, a billionaire technology entrepreneur, has made groundbreaking contributions in multiple industries, particularly space travel and exploration. Even before Musk’s endorsement, Trump was reportedly considering giving the billionaire an advisory role ifContinue reading "Opinion: SpaceX’s Elon Musk endorsed Donald Trump for president – what this could mean for U.S. space policy"

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  • How the MESSENGER mission transformed our understanding of MercuryBen Evans
    Just south of Mercury’s equator lies a crater honoring Czech composer Leoš Janáček. Battered and time-worn, it sits amid countless others dotting the barren, broiling terrain of the solar system’s innermost planet. Nearby is a truck-trailer-sized depression gouged by a visitor from Earth launched 20 years ago this month: NASA’s MESSENGER. Only the second spacecraftContinue reading "How the MESSENGER mission transformed our understanding of Mercury" The post How the MESSENGER mission transformed
     

How the MESSENGER mission transformed our understanding of Mercury

By: Ben Evans
August 13th 2024 at 11:00 pm

Just south of Mercury’s equator lies a crater honoring Czech composer Leoš Janáček. Battered and time-worn, it sits amid countless others dotting the barren, broiling terrain of the solar system’s innermost planet. Nearby is a truck-trailer-sized depression gouged by a visitor from Earth launched 20 years ago this month: NASA’s MESSENGER. Only the second spacecraftContinue reading "How the MESSENGER mission transformed our understanding of Mercury"

The post How the MESSENGER mission transformed our understanding of Mercury appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to see tomorrow’s conjunction of Mars and JupiterAlison Klesman
    The peak of the Perseid meteor shower has been grabbing headlines this week, but there’s another upcoming event visible tomorrow morning you won’t want to miss: the close conjunction of Mars and Jupiter. In the pre-dawn sky of August 14, the two planets will blaze brightly in the constellation Taurus and stand just 0.3° apart,Continue reading "How to see tomorrow’s conjunction of Mars and Jupiter" The post How to see tomorrow’s conjunction of Mars and Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine
     

How to see tomorrow’s conjunction of Mars and Jupiter

August 13th 2024 at 9:05 pm

The peak of the Perseid meteor shower has been grabbing headlines this week, but there’s another upcoming event visible tomorrow morning you won’t want to miss: the close conjunction of Mars and Jupiter. In the pre-dawn sky of August 14, the two planets will blaze brightly in the constellation Taurus and stand just 0.3° apart,Continue reading "How to see tomorrow’s conjunction of Mars and Jupiter"

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  • How does spectroscopy work?Astronomy Staff
    How do scientists know what spectral lines belong to which compound? Zbigniew KomalaChrzanow, Poland Each atom and molecule has its own fingerprint that, like yours, is unique. But unlike yours, this fingerprint is made of light. Elements and compounds emit identifying sets of “colors,” or wavelengths, of light. (“Colors” is in quotes here because theContinue reading "How does spectroscopy work?" The post How does spectroscopy work? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How does spectroscopy work?

August 13th 2024 at 7:30 pm

How do scientists know what spectral lines belong to which compound? Zbigniew KomalaChrzanow, Poland Each atom and molecule has its own fingerprint that, like yours, is unique. But unlike yours, this fingerprint is made of light. Elements and compounds emit identifying sets of “colors,” or wavelengths, of light. (“Colors” is in quotes here because theContinue reading "How does spectroscopy work?"

The post How does spectroscopy work? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Double featureM
    Allen Hwang from Deming, New Mexico While out looking for Perseid meteors around 12:30 a.m. the morning of Aug. 12 in New Mexico, this photographer could see “a faint pink glow … on the northern horizon” — an auroral display from G4-level geomagnetic storms that peaked this weekend. This 20-second exposure was taken with aContinue reading "Double feature" The post Double feature appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Double feature

By: M
August 13th 2024 at 1:39 am

Allen Hwang from Deming, New Mexico While out looking for Perseid meteors around 12:30 a.m. the morning of Aug. 12 in New Mexico, this photographer could see “a faint pink glow … on the northern horizon” — an auroral display from G4-level geomagnetic storms that peaked this weekend. This 20-second exposure was taken with aContinue reading "Double feature"

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  • Saturn’s moon Mimas may hide a surprisingly young oceanKnowable Magazine
    The outer solar system is awash with liquid water. A briny ocean is concealed beneath the icy crust of Jupiter’s fourth largest moon, Europa — with more water than all of Earth’s oceans combined. A subsurface sea on Saturn’s moon Enceladus spews plumes of water vapor into space. And there are tantalizing hints that oceansContinue reading "Saturn’s moon Mimas may hide a surprisingly young ocean" The post Saturn’s moon Mimas may hide a surprisingly young ocean appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Saturn’s moon Mimas may hide a surprisingly young ocean

August 12th 2024 at 9:30 pm

The outer solar system is awash with liquid water. A briny ocean is concealed beneath the icy crust of Jupiter’s fourth largest moon, Europa — with more water than all of Earth’s oceans combined. A subsurface sea on Saturn’s moon Enceladus spews plumes of water vapor into space. And there are tantalizing hints that oceansContinue reading "Saturn’s moon Mimas may hide a surprisingly young ocean"

The post Saturn’s moon Mimas may hide a surprisingly young ocean appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Catch the Perseid meteor shower! This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    The best meteor shower of the year is here — the Perseids, peaking Aug. 12 and 13. All you need to do is go out under a clear sky, get away from city lights if possible, and look straight up. This year, the Moon will set around 10 p.m. local time, darkening the skies andContinue reading "Catch the Perseid meteor shower! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Catch the Perseid meteor shower! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Catch the Perseid meteor shower! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

August 12th 2024 at 8:43 pm

The best meteor shower of the year is here — the Perseids, peaking Aug. 12 and 13. All you need to do is go out under a clear sky, get away from city lights if possible, and look straight up. This year, the Moon will set around 10 p.m. local time, darkening the skies andContinue reading "Catch the Perseid meteor shower! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Catch the Perseid meteor shower! This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why do astronomers measure stars in magnitudes?Michael E. Bakich
    If someone asks you, “How bright is that star?” and your answer is “Pretty bright,” that isn’t very useful. And, of course, it’s worthless for any type of comparative research. So for centuries, astronomers have used and refined a method of determining the brightness of stars and every other celestial object called the magnitude system.Continue reading "Why do astronomers measure stars in magnitudes?" The post Why do astronomers measure stars in magnitudes? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Why do astronomers measure stars in magnitudes?

August 12th 2024 at 4:30 pm

If someone asks you, “How bright is that star?” and your answer is “Pretty bright,” that isn’t very useful. And, of course, it’s worthless for any type of comparative research. So for centuries, astronomers have used and refined a method of determining the brightness of stars and every other celestial object called the magnitude system.Continue reading "Why do astronomers measure stars in magnitudes?"

The post Why do astronomers measure stars in magnitudes? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Legendary space artist Adolf Schaller dies at 68Alison Klesman
    One of the world’s pioneering and most talented space artists, Adolf Schaller, died in early August at age 68. He leaves a published body of work that establishes him as one of the greatest space artists. His attention to ongoing discoveries, from the solar system to distant galaxies, resulted in portrayals reflecting both what isContinue reading "Legendary space artist Adolf Schaller dies at 68" The post Legendary space artist Adolf Schaller dies at 68 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Legendary space artist Adolf Schaller dies at 68

August 9th 2024 at 6:22 pm

One of the world’s pioneering and most talented space artists, Adolf Schaller, died in early August at age 68. He leaves a published body of work that establishes him as one of the greatest space artists. His attention to ongoing discoveries, from the solar system to distant galaxies, resulted in portrayals reflecting both what isContinue reading "Legendary space artist Adolf Schaller dies at 68"

The post Legendary space artist Adolf Schaller dies at 68 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Survivors from the Milky Way’s birthRod Pommier
    Over the past eight years, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Gaia space observatory has transformed our understanding of the history of our Milky Way Galaxy. From Gaia’s perch at Earth’s L2 Lagrange point, roughly 1 million miles (1.5 million kilometers) distant, it has produced the most comprehensive three-dimensional survey of the Milky Way ever made:Continue reading "Survivors from the Milky Way’s birth" The post Survivors from the Milky Way’s birth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Survivors from the Milky Way’s birth

August 9th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Over the past eight years, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Gaia space observatory has transformed our understanding of the history of our Milky Way Galaxy. From Gaia’s perch at Earth’s L2 Lagrange point, roughly 1 million miles (1.5 million kilometers) distant, it has produced the most comprehensive three-dimensional survey of the Milky Way ever made:Continue reading "Survivors from the Milky Way’s birth"

The post Survivors from the Milky Way’s birth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from August 9 to 16: A conjunction of Mars and JupiterAlison Klesman
    Friday, August 9Still about 50° high in the west some two hours after the Sun has set, our target for tonight is NGC 5962, a so-called “flocculent” spiral in the constellation Serpens Caput. It’s located about 2.6° northwest of magnitude 3.7 Beta (β) Serpentis, one of the three stars in a triangular formation that makeContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 9 to 16: A conjunction of Mars and Jupiter" The post The Sky This Week from August 9 to 16: A conjunction of Mars and Jupiter appear
     

The Sky This Week from August 9 to 16: A conjunction of Mars and Jupiter

August 9th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, August 9Still about 50° high in the west some two hours after the Sun has set, our target for tonight is NGC 5962, a so-called “flocculent” spiral in the constellation Serpens Caput. It’s located about 2.6° northwest of magnitude 3.7 Beta (β) Serpentis, one of the three stars in a triangular formation that makeContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 9 to 16: A conjunction of Mars and Jupiter"

The post The Sky This Week from August 9 to 16: A conjunction of Mars and Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Hunter risesM
    Panagiotis Andreou Orion the Hunter rises above Aoraki, also known as Mount Cook, the highest mountain in New Zealand. The photographer used a Nikon DSLR and 40mm f/1.4 lens at ISO 1600 to take 12 minutes of sky exposures, plus one 90-second frame for the mountain. The post The Hunter rises appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Hunter rises

By: M
August 9th 2024 at 12:50 am

Panagiotis Andreou Orion the Hunter rises above Aoraki, also known as Mount Cook, the highest mountain in New Zealand. The photographer used a Nikon DSLR and 40mm f/1.4 lens at ISO 1600 to take 12 minutes of sky exposures, plus one 90-second frame for the mountain.

The post The Hunter rises appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How to watch the Perseids, 2024’s best meteor showerAlison Klesman
    With high rates of meteors and balmy summer temperatures, the Perseid meteor shower is one of the most celebrated of the year. Second in peak rate only to the December Geminids, the Perseid meteor shower this year takes center stage, thanks to the timing of the phases of the Moon. This year, the Perseid meteorContinue reading "How to watch the Perseids, 2024’s best meteor shower" The post How to watch the Perseids, 2024’s best meteor shower appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to watch the Perseids, 2024’s best meteor shower

August 8th 2024 at 6:30 pm

With high rates of meteors and balmy summer temperatures, the Perseid meteor shower is one of the most celebrated of the year. Second in peak rate only to the December Geminids, the Perseid meteor shower this year takes center stage, thanks to the timing of the phases of the Moon. This year, the Perseid meteorContinue reading "How to watch the Perseids, 2024’s best meteor shower"

The post How to watch the Perseids, 2024’s best meteor shower appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to grasp the scale of the cosmos from your backyardMichael E. Bakich
    When amateur astronomers participate in star parties for the general public, the subject of distances in space always comes up. The immensity of our universe never fails to fascinate curious minds. But when it comes to truly grasping it — let alone explaining it — words and numbers often fall short. It might be good,Continue reading "How to grasp the scale of the cosmos from your backyard" The post How to grasp the scale of the cosmos from your backyard appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to grasp the scale of the cosmos from your backyard

August 8th 2024 at 4:30 pm

When amateur astronomers participate in star parties for the general public, the subject of distances in space always comes up. The immensity of our universe never fails to fascinate curious minds. But when it comes to truly grasping it — let alone explaining it — words and numbers often fall short. It might be good,Continue reading "How to grasp the scale of the cosmos from your backyard"

The post How to grasp the scale of the cosmos from your backyard appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Do meteor showers create meteorites?Alison Klesman
    As Earth circles the Sun, our planet regularly passes through dust and debris left in our path by passing comets and asteroids. Each time this happens, Earth experiences a meteor shower that fills the sky with bright streaks of light. These “falling stars” are the result of cosmic clouds of detritus burning up in our atmosphere. ButContinue reading "Do meteor showers create meteorites?" The post Do meteor showers create meteorites? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Do meteor showers create meteorites?

August 8th 2024 at 4:30 pm

As Earth circles the Sun, our planet regularly passes through dust and debris left in our path by passing comets and asteroids. Each time this happens, Earth experiences a meteor shower that fills the sky with bright streaks of light. These “falling stars” are the result of cosmic clouds of detritus burning up in our atmosphere. ButContinue reading "Do meteor showers create meteorites?"

The post Do meteor showers create meteorites? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • No return date yet for Starliner astronauts on ISSElizabeth Gamillo
    UPDATE 8/14/24: During a media call this afternoon, NASA officials announced that as of yet there are no major updates on the timing of Wilmore and Williams’ return, or the vehicle that may bring them back to Earth. However, they confirmed that the agency’s primary concern remains the Starliner’s propulsion system — namely the craft’sContinue reading "No return date yet for Starliner astronauts on ISS" The post No return date yet for Starliner astronauts on ISS appeared first on Astronomy Magazi
     

No return date yet for Starliner astronauts on ISS

August 14th 2024 at 10:22 pm

UPDATE 8/14/24: During a media call this afternoon, NASA officials announced that as of yet there are no major updates on the timing of Wilmore and Williams’ return, or the vehicle that may bring them back to Earth. However, they confirmed that the agency’s primary concern remains the Starliner’s propulsion system — namely the craft’sContinue reading "No return date yet for Starliner astronauts on ISS"

The post No return date yet for Starliner astronauts on ISS appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Why aren’t the constellations always drawn the same way?Astronomy Staff
    When using my astronomy software or looking at various books, I notice that not everyone draws the constellations the same way. Why? John HinkampAndros Island, Bahamas Imagining familiar images in the sky has always been an easy way to track the annual progress of the stars. Around the second century C.E., the Greek astronomer ClaudiusContinue reading "Why aren’t the constellations always drawn the same way?" The post Why aren’t the constellations always drawn the same way? appeared first on Ast
     

Why aren’t the constellations always drawn the same way?

August 7th 2024 at 7:30 pm

When using my astronomy software or looking at various books, I notice that not everyone draws the constellations the same way. Why? John HinkampAndros Island, Bahamas Imagining familiar images in the sky has always been an easy way to track the annual progress of the stars. Around the second century C.E., the Greek astronomer ClaudiusContinue reading "Why aren’t the constellations always drawn the same way?"

The post Why aren’t the constellations always drawn the same way? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s secondary mirror is now in placeElizabeth Gamillo
    On July 24, 2024, a team at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile installed its 3.4-meter secondary mirror onto the Simonyi Survey Telescope. Its installment brings the facility one step closer to imaging the southern sky with the largest digital camera in the world. The secondary mirror (M2) is the first permanent piece ofContinue reading "The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s secondary mirror is now in place" The post The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s secondary mirror is now in place appeared first o
     

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s secondary mirror is now in place

August 7th 2024 at 4:50 pm

On July 24, 2024, a team at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile installed its 3.4-meter secondary mirror onto the Simonyi Survey Telescope. Its installment brings the facility one step closer to imaging the southern sky with the largest digital camera in the world. The secondary mirror (M2) is the first permanent piece ofContinue reading "The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s secondary mirror is now in place"

The post The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s secondary mirror is now in place appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • First-of-its-kind map of Io’s volcanoes hints at subsurface magma oceanTheo Nicitopoulos
    Io, one of Jupiter’s Galilean satellites, is the most volcanically active body in the solar system. Images from spacecraft have shown molten lava erupting along walls that dam giant lava lakes and towering plumes of gas and dust rising from broad calderas. Now, a team led by planetary scientist Ashley Davies at NASA’s Jet PropulsionContinue reading "First-of-its-kind map of Io’s volcanoes hints at subsurface magma ocean" The post First-of-its-kind map of Io’s volcanoes hints at subsurface magma
     

First-of-its-kind map of Io’s volcanoes hints at subsurface magma ocean

August 6th 2024 at 5:30 pm

Io, one of Jupiter’s Galilean satellites, is the most volcanically active body in the solar system. Images from spacecraft have shown molten lava erupting along walls that dam giant lava lakes and towering plumes of gas and dust rising from broad calderas. Now, a team led by planetary scientist Ashley Davies at NASA’s Jet PropulsionContinue reading "First-of-its-kind map of Io’s volcanoes hints at subsurface magma ocean"

The post First-of-its-kind map of Io’s volcanoes hints at subsurface magma ocean appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The mark of a WolfM
    Andrea Arbizzi, taken from Modena, Italy WR 134 in Cygnus is one of the first known Wolf-Rayet stars, a class of rare stars named for their discoverers, French astronomers Charles Wolf and Georges Rayet. WR stars originally stood out due to their broad emission bands. Later, researchers found they were the result of intense stellarContinue reading "The mark of a Wolf" The post The mark of a Wolf appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The mark of a Wolf

By: M
August 6th 2024 at 12:01 am

Andrea Arbizzi, taken from Modena, Italy WR 134 in Cygnus is one of the first known Wolf-Rayet stars, a class of rare stars named for their discoverers, French astronomers Charles Wolf and Georges Rayet. WR stars originally stood out due to their broad emission bands. Later, researchers found they were the result of intense stellarContinue reading "The mark of a Wolf"

The post The mark of a Wolf appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How legendary dark-sky advocate David Crawford sparked the fight against light pollutionMark Zastrow
    David L. Crawford, an astronomer and one of the pioneers of the modern dark-sky movement, died peacefully July 22 in Carlsbad, California. During a decadeslong tenure at Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO) in Tucson, Arizona, he was renowned for his work in stellar photometry and led the construction of two of the most productive 4-meterContinue reading "How legendary dark-sky advocate David Crawford sparked the fight against light pollution" The post How legendary dark-sky advocate David Craw
     

How legendary dark-sky advocate David Crawford sparked the fight against light pollution

August 5th 2024 at 8:23 pm

David L. Crawford, an astronomer and one of the pioneers of the modern dark-sky movement, died peacefully July 22 in Carlsbad, California. During a decadeslong tenure at Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO) in Tucson, Arizona, he was renowned for his work in stellar photometry and led the construction of two of the most productive 4-meterContinue reading "How legendary dark-sky advocate David Crawford sparked the fight against light pollution"

The post How legendary dark-sky advocate David Crawford sparked the fight against light pollution appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Find cool products this hot monthAstronomy Staff
    Aberration-free Vixen Co.Saitama, Japan The VSD90SS 3.5-inch f/5.5 astrograph offers fast and aberration-free imaging across the entire field of view on a full-frame or medium-format (44mm by 33mm) camera. The optical tube assembly has a focal length of 495mm and a five-element design, with two super-low dispersion lenses and one extra-low dispersion lens. $4,999.97service@explorescientific.comhttps://global.vixen.co.jp SmoothContinue reading "Find cool products this hot month" The post Find coo
     

Find cool products this hot month

August 5th 2024 at 6:30 pm

Aberration-free Vixen Co.Saitama, Japan The VSD90SS 3.5-inch f/5.5 astrograph offers fast and aberration-free imaging across the entire field of view on a full-frame or medium-format (44mm by 33mm) camera. The optical tube assembly has a focal length of 495mm and a five-element design, with two super-low dispersion lenses and one extra-low dispersion lens. $4,999.97service@explorescientific.comhttps://global.vixen.co.jp SmoothContinue reading "Find cool products this hot month"

The post Find cool products this hot month appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Emily Calandrelli: Science TV host is reaching for the starsElizabeth Gamillo
    Emily Calandrelli, an MIT engineer, science communicator, host, and Emmy-nominated TV producer, is heading to space. On July 16, Calandrelli took to social media to announce that she will be launching aboard a Blue Origin craft, a feat that will make her one of the first 100 women in space. Calandrelli’s announcement garnered lots ofContinue reading "Emily Calandrelli: Science TV host is reaching for the stars" The post Emily Calandrelli: Science TV host is reaching for the stars appeared first
     

Emily Calandrelli: Science TV host is reaching for the stars

August 5th 2024 at 6:30 pm

Emily Calandrelli, an MIT engineer, science communicator, host, and Emmy-nominated TV producer, is heading to space. On July 16, Calandrelli took to social media to announce that she will be launching aboard a Blue Origin craft, a feat that will make her one of the first 100 women in space. Calandrelli’s announcement garnered lots ofContinue reading "Emily Calandrelli: Science TV host is reaching for the stars"

The post Emily Calandrelli: Science TV host is reaching for the stars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Explore the Hercules Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    M13, better known as the Hercules Cluster, is one of the night sky’s great globular clusters. Globulars get their name for their distinct, globe-like appearance — a ball of stars that increases in density and brightness as you look closer to the core. Unlike open clusters, which are collections of stars that form from theContinue reading "Explore the Hercules Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Explore the Hercules Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared
     

Explore the Hercules Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

August 5th 2024 at 6:22 pm

M13, better known as the Hercules Cluster, is one of the night sky’s great globular clusters. Globulars get their name for their distinct, globe-like appearance — a ball of stars that increases in density and brightness as you look closer to the core. Unlike open clusters, which are collections of stars that form from theContinue reading "Explore the Hercules Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Explore the Hercules Cluster: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Meteorite strikes create the Moon’s atmosphereAlison Klesman
    Unlike Earth’s life-sustaining blanket of air, the Moon has but a thin wisp of an atmosphere. Now, a new study using samples retrieved by the Apollo missions more than 50 years ago is helping researchers gain clues into both how our satellite’s thin atmosphere formed and how it has evolved over billions of years. “TheContinue reading "Meteorite strikes create the Moon’s atmosphere" The post Meteorite strikes create the Moon’s atmosphere appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Meteorite strikes create the Moon’s atmosphere

August 2nd 2024 at 9:30 pm

Unlike Earth’s life-sustaining blanket of air, the Moon has but a thin wisp of an atmosphere. Now, a new study using samples retrieved by the Apollo missions more than 50 years ago is helping researchers gain clues into both how our satellite’s thin atmosphere formed and how it has evolved over billions of years. “TheContinue reading "Meteorite strikes create the Moon’s atmosphere"

The post Meteorite strikes create the Moon’s atmosphere appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What is a light echo?Astronomy Staff
    In Hubble pictures taken just months apart of V838 Monocerotis, the dust ring around this star grows by several light-years during that time, called a “light echo.” How can something grow by 5 light-years in five months? Ronald VanAttaAnn Arbor, Michigan Congratulations on noticing an effect called superluminal expansion, a phenomenon we see in aContinue reading "What is a light echo?" The post What is a light echo? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

What is a light echo?

August 2nd 2024 at 7:30 pm

In Hubble pictures taken just months apart of V838 Monocerotis, the dust ring around this star grows by several light-years during that time, called a “light echo.” How can something grow by 5 light-years in five months? Ronald VanAttaAnn Arbor, Michigan Congratulations on noticing an effect called superluminal expansion, a phenomenon we see in aContinue reading "What is a light echo?"

The post What is a light echo? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • In Kosovo, a new public observatory opens eyes — and heartsRobert Reeves
    On June 15, I traveled to the Balkan country of Kosovo to install a 14-inch telescope donated by Celestron to that young country’s new national observatory and planetarium. The installation of this telescope was a historic occasion, marking the completion of Kosovo’s first national observatory. The facility has enormous potential to cultivate and harness theContinue reading "In Kosovo, a new public observatory opens eyes — and hearts" The post In Kosovo, a new public observatory opens eyes — and
     

In Kosovo, a new public observatory opens eyes — and hearts

August 2nd 2024 at 2:30 pm

On June 15, I traveled to the Balkan country of Kosovo to install a 14-inch telescope donated by Celestron to that young country’s new national observatory and planetarium. The installation of this telescope was a historic occasion, marking the completion of Kosovo’s first national observatory. The facility has enormous potential to cultivate and harness theContinue reading "In Kosovo, a new public observatory opens eyes — and hearts"

The post In Kosovo, a new public observatory opens eyes — and hearts appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from August 2 to 9: The Moon meets VenusAlison Klesman
    Friday, August 2The constellation Hercules stands high in the eastern sky after dark tonight. Although it’s well known for the famous globular cluster M13, the Strongman is home to many other deep-sky treasures, including NGC 6210, the Turtle Nebula. This 9th-magnitude planetary nebula is achievable in even small scopes because it is compact and hasContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 2 to 9: The Moon meets Venus" The post The Sky This Week from August 2 to 9: The Moon meets Venus app
     

The Sky This Week from August 2 to 9: The Moon meets Venus

August 2nd 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, August 2The constellation Hercules stands high in the eastern sky after dark tonight. Although it’s well known for the famous globular cluster M13, the Strongman is home to many other deep-sky treasures, including NGC 6210, the Turtle Nebula. This 9th-magnitude planetary nebula is achievable in even small scopes because it is compact and hasContinue reading "The Sky This Week from August 2 to 9: The Moon meets Venus"

The post The Sky This Week from August 2 to 9: The Moon meets Venus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Read these two great new Moon books from Robert ReevesDavid J. Eicher
    Lightning rarely strikes twice, but in the world of lunar astronomy, that’s exactly what has just happened. I’ve had the privilege of knowing one of the most accomplished lunar observers and photographers since I was a teenager. He has frequently contributed his expertise in articles in Astronomy Magazine. I’m speaking of Robert Reeves, who asContinue reading "Read these two great new Moon books from Robert Reeves" The post Read these two great new Moon books from Robert Reeves appeared first on
     

Read these two great new Moon books from Robert Reeves

August 1st 2024 at 5:48 pm

Lightning rarely strikes twice, but in the world of lunar astronomy, that’s exactly what has just happened. I’ve had the privilege of knowing one of the most accomplished lunar observers and photographers since I was a teenager. He has frequently contributed his expertise in articles in Astronomy Magazine. I’m speaking of Robert Reeves, who asContinue reading "Read these two great new Moon books from Robert Reeves"

The post Read these two great new Moon books from Robert Reeves appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 10 modern mysteries of the universeDavid J. Eicher
    Whether you realize it or not, you’re part of a revolution. Let me explain. In the past, ideas to interpret the nature of things developed slowly. Before there was astronomy, there was astrology, attempting to divine mystic meaning from the motions of stars and planets. What became chemistry was originally alchemy, seeking to transform leadContinue reading "10 modern mysteries of the universe" The post 10 modern mysteries of the universe appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

10 modern mysteries of the universe

August 1st 2024 at 4:30 pm

Whether you realize it or not, you’re part of a revolution. Let me explain. In the past, ideas to interpret the nature of things developed slowly. Before there was astronomy, there was astrology, attempting to divine mystic meaning from the motions of stars and planets. What became chemistry was originally alchemy, seeking to transform leadContinue reading "10 modern mysteries of the universe"

The post 10 modern mysteries of the universe appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

August 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Jupiter and Mars meet in Taurus in a mid-month conjunction

August 1st 2024 at 4:30 pm

Venus is a bright evening star for a short period after sunset, beckoning skywatchers to view the oncoming string of planets. Saturn puts on a great show when it rises in the late evening. You can also grab a pair of binoculars to spy Uranus and Neptune — we provide guides below. The real spectacleContinue reading "August 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Jupiter and Mars meet in Taurus in a mid-month conjunction"

The post August 2024: What’s in the sky this month? Jupiter and Mars meet in Taurus in a mid-month conjunction appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A morning-star travelogM
    Tunç Tezel from Bursa, Turkey Venus’ morning apparition of 2023–2024 is captured in this sequence of images, taken at the same time on every clear morning from late August 2023 to early February 2024. Venus is now becoming more visible in the evening sky, having passed superior conjunction on June 4. The post A morning-star travelog appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A morning-star travelog

By: M
August 1st 2024 at 1:32 am

Tunç Tezel from Bursa, Turkey Venus’ morning apparition of 2023–2024 is captured in this sequence of images, taken at the same time on every clear morning from late August 2023 to early February 2024. Venus is now becoming more visible in the evening sky, having passed superior conjunction on June 4.

The post A morning-star travelog appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Did Perseverance find hints of ancient martian life?Michael E. Bakich
    NASA’s Perseverance rover, which has operated on Mars since February 2021, recently found a large rock containing organic compounds that may have been microscopic life in the distant past. The results are as yet uncertain, so scientists are not ready to proclaim that life once existed on the Red Planet. The discovery came when theContinue reading "Did Perseverance find hints of ancient martian life?" The post Did Perseverance find hints of ancient martian life? appeared first on Astronomy Magazi
     

Did Perseverance find hints of ancient martian life?

July 31st 2024 at 8:44 pm

NASA’s Perseverance rover, which has operated on Mars since February 2021, recently found a large rock containing organic compounds that may have been microscopic life in the distant past. The results are as yet uncertain, so scientists are not ready to proclaim that life once existed on the Red Planet. The discovery came when theContinue reading "Did Perseverance find hints of ancient martian life?"

The post Did Perseverance find hints of ancient martian life? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How do light pollution filters work?Astronomy Staff
    How do light pollution filters work? Do they actually help? Kyle NorrisPeoria, Arizona Light pollution reduction (LPR) filters work because many outdoor lighting sources do not shine evenly across the visible spectrum. Instead, they emit radiation at only a few distinct wavelengths. For instance, a high-pressure sodium streetlight radiates principally in yellow wavelengths. LPR filtersContinue reading "How do light pollution filters work?" The post How do light pollution filters work? appeared f
     

How do light pollution filters work?

July 31st 2024 at 6:15 pm

How do light pollution filters work? Do they actually help? Kyle NorrisPeoria, Arizona Light pollution reduction (LPR) filters work because many outdoor lighting sources do not shine evenly across the visible spectrum. Instead, they emit radiation at only a few distinct wavelengths. For instance, a high-pressure sodium streetlight radiates principally in yellow wavelengths. LPR filtersContinue reading "How do light pollution filters work?"

The post How do light pollution filters work? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • What we learned by crashing Lunar Prospector into the MoonBen Evans
    Early on July 31, 1999, human eyes fastened with rapt eagerness on the Moon’s south pole as a spacecraft plunged to its demise in a breathtaking bid to uncover whispers of water on a parched world. Although Lunar Prospector was quickly snuffed out in a shadowy crater, it ignited a search for the building blocksContinue reading "What we learned by crashing Lunar Prospector into the Moon" The post What we learned by crashing Lunar Prospector into the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

What we learned by crashing Lunar Prospector into the Moon

By: Ben Evans
July 31st 2024 at 4:30 pm

Early on July 31, 1999, human eyes fastened with rapt eagerness on the Moon’s south pole as a spacecraft plunged to its demise in a breathtaking bid to uncover whispers of water on a parched world. Although Lunar Prospector was quickly snuffed out in a shadowy crater, it ignited a search for the building blocksContinue reading "What we learned by crashing Lunar Prospector into the Moon"

The post What we learned by crashing Lunar Prospector into the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • NASA crew completes Mars mission on EarthSamantha Hill
    Last June, a group of four people embarked on a more-than yearlong mission to a place that looked a lot like Mars. They grew their own food, exercised, took walks on a red dusty surface, and spent time with only each other. The group was part of the Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog (CHAPEA),Continue reading "NASA crew completes Mars mission on Earth" The post NASA crew completes Mars mission on Earth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

NASA crew completes Mars mission on Earth

July 30th 2024 at 9:00 pm

Last June, a group of four people embarked on a more-than yearlong mission to a place that looked a lot like Mars. They grew their own food, exercised, took walks on a red dusty surface, and spent time with only each other. The group was part of the Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog (CHAPEA),Continue reading "NASA crew completes Mars mission on Earth"

The post NASA crew completes Mars mission on Earth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Must-see: Catch a double meteor shower tonightAlison Klesman
    The Alpha Capricornid, Southern Delta Aquariid, and Perseid meteor showers have already begun, but like all meteor showers, they’ve been ramping up slowly. Now, their peaks are right around the corner. The Alpha Capricornids and Southern Delta Aquariids will peak around the same time: July 31, while the Perseids reach their maximum in mid-August. Here’sContinue reading "Must-see: Catch a double meteor shower tonight" The post Must-see: Catch a double meteor shower tonight appeared first on Astro
     

Must-see: Catch a double meteor shower tonight

July 30th 2024 at 6:40 pm

The Alpha Capricornid, Southern Delta Aquariid, and Perseid meteor showers have already begun, but like all meteor showers, they’ve been ramping up slowly. Now, their peaks are right around the corner. The Alpha Capricornids and Southern Delta Aquariids will peak around the same time: July 31, while the Perseids reach their maximum in mid-August. Here’sContinue reading "Must-see: Catch a double meteor shower tonight"

The post Must-see: Catch a double meteor shower tonight appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Thinking small: Uncovering the secrets of micrometeoritesDavid Boehnlein
    As I look down into a Petri dish of sand through a binocular microscope, the larger grains become obelisks, with smaller ones forming avenues between them. It’s a microscopic echo of the Chicago skyline that I can see through the window when I look up. I’m at the Field Museum of Natural History, home toContinue reading "Thinking small: Uncovering the secrets of micrometeorites" The post Thinking small: Uncovering the secrets of micrometeorites appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Thinking small: Uncovering the secrets of micrometeorites

July 30th 2024 at 5:50 pm

As I look down into a Petri dish of sand through a binocular microscope, the larger grains become obelisks, with smaller ones forming avenues between them. It’s a microscopic echo of the Chicago skyline that I can see through the window when I look up. I’m at the Field Museum of Natural History, home toContinue reading "Thinking small: Uncovering the secrets of micrometeorites"

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  • What are the most beautiful images in astronomy?Astronomy Staff
    Welcome to the Astronomy.com roundtable, where our editors help explain (and sometimes debate) hot topics. This week, however, we’re asking a question that’s more a matter of opinion. Astronomy.com: Here’s a wide-open question for the group: What are your picks for the four most beautiful images in astronomy?  Michael E. Bakich, Associate Editor: My fourContinue reading "What are the most beautiful images in astronomy?" The post What are the most beautiful images in astronomy? appeared first on
     

What are the most beautiful images in astronomy?

July 29th 2024 at 10:34 pm

Welcome to the Astronomy.com roundtable, where our editors help explain (and sometimes debate) hot topics. This week, however, we’re asking a question that’s more a matter of opinion. Astronomy.com: Here’s a wide-open question for the group: What are your picks for the four most beautiful images in astronomy?  Michael E. Bakich, Associate Editor: My fourContinue reading "What are the most beautiful images in astronomy?"

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  • Gaze into the Snow Globe: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    The Snow Globe Nebula (NGC 6781) is a unique planetary nebula lying 1,500 light-years away in the constellation Aquila. The object gets its name because the interior of the ring is partially transparent, allowing points of starlight to come through, appearing like snowflakes suspended in a snow globe. In addition to being a great deep-skyContinue reading "Gaze into the Snow Globe: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Gaze into the Snow Globe: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher
     

Gaze into the Snow Globe: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

July 29th 2024 at 9:44 pm

The Snow Globe Nebula (NGC 6781) is a unique planetary nebula lying 1,500 light-years away in the constellation Aquila. The object gets its name because the interior of the ring is partially transparent, allowing points of starlight to come through, appearing like snowflakes suspended in a snow globe. In addition to being a great deep-skyContinue reading "Gaze into the Snow Globe: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

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  • Blowing bubblesM
    Steve Leonard, taken from Markham, Ontario, Canada The Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635) is an emission nebula surrounding the star SAO 20575 in Cassiopeia; the faint shell is created by its intense winds. The imager used a 4.5-inch f/5.7 refractor to take 24 hours of SHO data and 3 hours of RGB data. The final imageContinue reading "Blowing bubbles" The post Blowing bubbles appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Blowing bubbles

By: M
July 28th 2024 at 2:56 pm

Steve Leonard, taken from Markham, Ontario, Canada The Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635) is an emission nebula surrounding the star SAO 20575 in Cassiopeia; the faint shell is created by its intense winds. The imager used a 4.5-inch f/5.7 refractor to take 24 hours of SHO data and 3 hours of RGB data. The final imageContinue reading "Blowing bubbles"

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  • The Sky This Week from July 26 to August 2: Catch the Southern Delta AquariidsAlison Klesman
    Friday, July 26With a good dark window between sunset and moonrise, take a look this evening at two famous galaxies: M81 and M82, also known as Bode’s Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy, respectively. Both lie in Ursa Major, visible in the north after sunset. Tonight, the Big Dipper is standing on its bowl with theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 26 to August 2: Catch the Southern Delta Aquariids" The post The Sky This Week from July 26 to August 2: Catch the Southern Delta Aquariids appea
     

The Sky This Week from July 26 to August 2: Catch the Southern Delta Aquariids

July 26th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, July 26With a good dark window between sunset and moonrise, take a look this evening at two famous galaxies: M81 and M82, also known as Bode’s Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy, respectively. Both lie in Ursa Major, visible in the north after sunset. Tonight, the Big Dipper is standing on its bowl with theContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 26 to August 2: Catch the Southern Delta Aquariids"

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  • How China’s Chang’e 6 mission snagged the first samples of the Moon’s farsideDoug Adler
    On June 25, 2024, China’s Chang’e 6 mission came to an end when a reentry capsule touched down in the Siziwang Banner Province in Mongolia. The capsule contained truly precious cargo: just under 2 kilograms (4.4 pounds) of lunar samples from the farside of the Moon. No mission had ever retrieved material from the farsideContinue reading "How China’s Chang’e 6 mission snagged the first samples of the Moon’s farside" The post How China’s Chang’e 6 mission snagged the first samples of the Moon’s fa
     

How China’s Chang’e 6 mission snagged the first samples of the Moon’s farside

July 25th 2024 at 2:30 pm

On June 25, 2024, China’s Chang’e 6 mission came to an end when a reentry capsule touched down in the Siziwang Banner Province in Mongolia. The capsule contained truly precious cargo: just under 2 kilograms (4.4 pounds) of lunar samples from the farside of the Moon. No mission had ever retrieved material from the farsideContinue reading "How China’s Chang’e 6 mission snagged the first samples of the Moon’s farside"

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  • JWST directly images a surprise super-Jupiter planetAlison Klesman
    A case of cosmic mistaken identity led to astronomers finding a new exoplanet where an old one should have been. The world, Epsilon Indi Ab, now takes the place of a planet with the same designation that, it turns out, doesn’t exist. The bizarre case, which seems like a Law & Order plot twist, isContinue reading "JWST directly images a surprise super-Jupiter planet" The post JWST directly images a surprise super-Jupiter planet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

JWST directly images a surprise super-Jupiter planet

July 24th 2024 at 7:16 pm

A case of cosmic mistaken identity led to astronomers finding a new exoplanet where an old one should have been. The world, Epsilon Indi Ab, now takes the place of a planet with the same designation that, it turns out, doesn’t exist. The bizarre case, which seems like a Law & Order plot twist, isContinue reading "JWST directly images a surprise super-Jupiter planet"

The post JWST directly images a surprise super-Jupiter planet appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA cancels fully built Moon rover, stunning scientistsRobert Reeves
    To the shock of the lunar science community, on July 17, NASA cancelled the much-anticipated Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) mission, which was expected to prospect for water ice on the Moon — a critical resource for future explorers. VIPER was one of the highest profile missions in NASA’s ongoing Commercial Lunar Payload ServicesContinue reading "NASA cancels fully built Moon rover, stunning scientists" The post NASA cancels fully built Moon rover, stunning scientists ap
     

NASA cancels fully built Moon rover, stunning scientists

July 24th 2024 at 6:29 pm

To the shock of the lunar science community, on July 17, NASA cancelled the much-anticipated Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) mission, which was expected to prospect for water ice on the Moon — a critical resource for future explorers. VIPER was one of the highest profile missions in NASA’s ongoing Commercial Lunar Payload ServicesContinue reading "NASA cancels fully built Moon rover, stunning scientists"

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  • Tools for finding dark skiesshill
    Have you ever seen the Milky Way? Only 20 percent of people in the U.S. live in a location where they can. Away from light pollution, the wide, ghostly band almost looks like clouds, and the stars overhead look so big and real that you feel you might fall into the sky. Through the eyepieceContinue reading "Tools for finding dark skies" The post Tools for finding dark skies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Tools for finding dark skies

By: shill
July 24th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Have you ever seen the Milky Way? Only 20 percent of people in the U.S. live in a location where they can. Away from light pollution, the wide, ghostly band almost looks like clouds, and the stars overhead look so big and real that you feel you might fall into the sky. Through the eyepieceContinue reading "Tools for finding dark skies"

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  • What we do — and don’t — know about dark energyAlison Klesman
    Our universe is shrouded in mystery, with about 70 percent of it consisting of dark energy. The exact nature of dark energy remains a puzzle that, once solved, could unlock profound insights into the formation of our solar system, the evolution of the Milky Way Galaxy, the origins of life, and even the fate ofContinue reading "What we do — and don’t — know about dark energy" The post What we do — and don’t — know about dark energy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

What we do — and don’t — know about dark energy

July 23rd 2024 at 8:29 pm

Our universe is shrouded in mystery, with about 70 percent of it consisting of dark energy. The exact nature of dark energy remains a puzzle that, once solved, could unlock profound insights into the formation of our solar system, the evolution of the Milky Way Galaxy, the origins of life, and even the fate ofContinue reading "What we do — and don’t — know about dark energy"

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  • Take a summer road trip along the Milky WayStuart Atkinson
    Summer in the Northern Hemisphere is a frustrating time for many amateur astronomers. The nights never get dark enough to easily see the faint, fuzzy galaxies and nebulae they enjoy looking at through their telescopes, and there are fewer bright stars in the sky too. Occasionally a display of electric-blue noctilucent clouds will decorate theContinue reading "Take a summer road trip along the Milky Way" The post Take a summer road trip along the Milky Way appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Take a summer road trip along the Milky Way

July 23rd 2024 at 6:55 pm

Summer in the Northern Hemisphere is a frustrating time for many amateur astronomers. The nights never get dark enough to easily see the faint, fuzzy galaxies and nebulae they enjoy looking at through their telescopes, and there are fewer bright stars in the sky too. Occasionally a display of electric-blue noctilucent clouds will decorate theContinue reading "Take a summer road trip along the Milky Way"

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  • Bird of many namesM
    Katelyn Beecroft from London, Ontario, Canada M17 in Sagittarius is popularly called the Swan Nebula or the Omega Nebula, though it also goes by Checkmark Nebula and the Horseshoe Nebula. The resemblance to a swan is much stronger with visual observations, yielding an unmistakable swanlike profile. This SHORGB image was taken over 4.5 hours withContinue reading "Bird of many names" The post Bird of many names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Bird of many names

By: M
July 23rd 2024 at 1:51 am

Katelyn Beecroft from London, Ontario, Canada M17 in Sagittarius is popularly called the Swan Nebula or the Omega Nebula, though it also goes by Checkmark Nebula and the Horseshoe Nebula. The resemblance to a swan is much stronger with visual observations, yielding an unmistakable swanlike profile. This SHORGB image was taken over 4.5 hours withContinue reading "Bird of many names"

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  • The colors of Rho Ophiuchi: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    The most colorful region of the entire sky, without a doubt, is the area surrounding Rho Ophiuchi. And while you won’t be able to see these colors with the human eye — even with a telescope — photographs reveal spectacular splashes of blue, red, yellow, and orange. Some of these colors come from emission ofContinue reading "The colors of Rho Ophiuchi: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The colors of Rho Ophiuchi: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy
     

The colors of Rho Ophiuchi: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

July 23rd 2024 at 12:47 am

The most colorful region of the entire sky, without a doubt, is the area surrounding Rho Ophiuchi. And while you won’t be able to see these colors with the human eye — even with a telescope — photographs reveal spectacular splashes of blue, red, yellow, and orange. Some of these colors come from emission ofContinue reading "The colors of Rho Ophiuchi: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

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  • A lucky break revealed a surprise inside a martian rockElizabeth Gamillo
    NASA’s Curiosity Rover has made an unexpected discovery that one scientist likened to finding an “oasis in the desert.” On May 30, Curiosity traversed the Gediz Vallis channel and drove over a rock that split open to reveal pure yellow sulfur crystals. These crystals, according to a NASA press release, are a first for theContinue reading "A lucky break revealed a surprise inside a martian rock" The post A lucky break revealed a surprise inside a martian rock appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A lucky break revealed a surprise inside a martian rock

July 22nd 2024 at 10:22 pm

NASA’s Curiosity Rover has made an unexpected discovery that one scientist likened to finding an “oasis in the desert.” On May 30, Curiosity traversed the Gediz Vallis channel and drove over a rock that split open to reveal pure yellow sulfur crystals. These crystals, according to a NASA press release, are a first for theContinue reading "A lucky break revealed a surprise inside a martian rock"

The post A lucky break revealed a surprise inside a martian rock appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How Eileen Collins burst through the glass ceiling aboard the space shuttleBen Evans
    Twenty-five years ago, Eileen Collins became the first woman to command a spaceflight. A test pilot, mathematician, and trailblazer, this soft-spoken Air Force Colonel helmed space shuttle Columbia when it roared into Florida’s post-midnight darkness on July 23, 1999. Her STS-93 crew deployed NASA’s $1.5 billion Chandra X-ray Observatory — at 25 tons, it wasContinue reading "How Eileen Collins burst through the glass ceiling aboard the space shuttle" The post How Eileen Collins burst through the
     

How Eileen Collins burst through the glass ceiling aboard the space shuttle

By: Ben Evans
July 22nd 2024 at 9:23 pm

Twenty-five years ago, Eileen Collins became the first woman to command a spaceflight. A test pilot, mathematician, and trailblazer, this soft-spoken Air Force Colonel helmed space shuttle Columbia when it roared into Florida’s post-midnight darkness on July 23, 1999. Her STS-93 crew deployed NASA’s $1.5 billion Chandra X-ray Observatory — at 25 tons, it wasContinue reading "How Eileen Collins burst through the glass ceiling aboard the space shuttle"

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  • The mysteries behind the gegenscheinStephen James O'Meara
    In April 1961, Galaxy magazine contained an article entitled “The Puzzle Called Gegenschein,” by German-American science writer Willy Ley. Referring to the mystery of who was the first to identify the faint glow of the gegenschein, Ley wrote: “Historians of astronomy are in fair agreement that the first discoverer of the Gegenschein was the DanishContinue reading "The mysteries behind the gegenschein" The post The mysteries behind the gegenschein appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The mysteries behind the gegenschein

July 20th 2024 at 4:30 pm

In April 1961, Galaxy magazine contained an article entitled “The Puzzle Called Gegenschein,” by German-American science writer Willy Ley. Referring to the mystery of who was the first to identify the faint glow of the gegenschein, Ley wrote: “Historians of astronomy are in fair agreement that the first discoverer of the Gegenschein was the DanishContinue reading "The mysteries behind the gegenschein"

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  • Astronomers catch a planet changing into a hot JupiterElizabeth Gamillo
    Hot Jupiters, massive worlds that orbit close to their host star, likely weren’t always so hot. Astronomers believe that these exoplanets formed cold, in the outer regions of their star systems, and later migrated inward toward their star. Researchers have now spotted a juvenile planet in the process of doing just that, on its wayContinue reading "Astronomers catch a planet changing into a hot Jupiter" The post Astronomers catch a planet changing into a hot Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Ma
     

Astronomers catch a planet changing into a hot Jupiter

July 19th 2024 at 5:27 pm

Hot Jupiters, massive worlds that orbit close to their host star, likely weren’t always so hot. Astronomers believe that these exoplanets formed cold, in the outer regions of their star systems, and later migrated inward toward their star. Researchers have now spotted a juvenile planet in the process of doing just that, on its wayContinue reading "Astronomers catch a planet changing into a hot Jupiter"

The post Astronomers catch a planet changing into a hot Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Oceans on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, likely have tiny wavesmnewman
    An international team of planetary scientists studied archival data from the Cassini spacecraft — designed to study Saturn and its satellites — which yielded new clues to three strange oceans on the surface of the planet’s largest moon, Titan. The research, published in Nature Communications, gathered Cassini data taken through bistatic radar experiments between MarchContinue reading "Oceans on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, likely have tiny waves" The post Oceans on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon,
     

Oceans on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, likely have tiny waves

By: mnewman
July 19th 2024 at 3:43 pm

An international team of planetary scientists studied archival data from the Cassini spacecraft — designed to study Saturn and its satellites — which yielded new clues to three strange oceans on the surface of the planet’s largest moon, Titan. The research, published in Nature Communications, gathered Cassini data taken through bistatic radar experiments between MarchContinue reading "Oceans on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, likely have tiny waves"

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  • Centaurus A’s ejectionsM
    Vikas Chander, taken from Observatorio El Sauce in the Río Hurtado Valley, Chile Just 12 million light-years away, Centaurus A (NGC 5128) is the nearest active galaxy to us, with a supermassive black hole at its core spitting material back out into the intergalactic medium. Famously, these outflows can be seen in radio emission asContinue reading "Centaurus A’s ejections" The post Centaurus A’s ejections appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Centaurus A’s ejections

By: M
July 19th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Vikas Chander, taken from Observatorio El Sauce in the Río Hurtado Valley, Chile Just 12 million light-years away, Centaurus A (NGC 5128) is the nearest active galaxy to us, with a supermassive black hole at its core spitting material back out into the intergalactic medium. Famously, these outflows can be seen in radio emission asContinue reading "Centaurus A’s ejections"

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  • The Sky This Week from July 19 to 26: Stand under the Full Buck MoonAlison Klesman
    Friday, July 19Taurus the Bull may be one of the premier winter constellations, but did you know there’s also a bull in the summer nighttime sky? Known as Taurus Poniatovii or Poniatowski’s Bull, this small constellation was created by Marcin Poczobut, director of Vilnius Observatory in Lithuania, in 1777. It is one of countless constellationsContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 19 to 26: Stand under the Full Buck Moon" The post The Sky This Week from July 19 to 26: Stand under the Full
     

The Sky This Week from July 19 to 26: Stand under the Full Buck Moon

July 19th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, July 19Taurus the Bull may be one of the premier winter constellations, but did you know there’s also a bull in the summer nighttime sky? Known as Taurus Poniatovii or Poniatowski’s Bull, this small constellation was created by Marcin Poczobut, director of Vilnius Observatory in Lithuania, in 1777. It is one of countless constellationsContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 19 to 26: Stand under the Full Buck Moon"

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  • Is there a hottest temperature possible in the universe?Astronomy Staff
    We all accept that the coldest temperature any object can reach is absolute zero. Is there a theoretical maximum temperature anything can attain? Stephen KittermanThomasville, North Carolina Temperature is a measure of the average energy of a collection of particles. (This is in contrast to kinetic energy, which is a measure of the energy carriedContinue reading "Is there a hottest temperature possible in the universe?" The post Is there a hottest temperature possible in the universe? appeared f
     

Is there a hottest temperature possible in the universe?

July 18th 2024 at 10:01 pm

We all accept that the coldest temperature any object can reach is absolute zero. Is there a theoretical maximum temperature anything can attain? Stephen KittermanThomasville, North Carolina Temperature is a measure of the average energy of a collection of particles. (This is in contrast to kinetic energy, which is a measure of the energy carriedContinue reading "Is there a hottest temperature possible in the universe?"

The post Is there a hottest temperature possible in the universe? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Folklore meets science in this search for the ‘sounds’ of the northern lightsElizabeth Gamillo
    Over Mother’s Day weekend in May, skies as far south as Florida and Texas were filled with the vibrant colors of the aurora borealis. Some of the staff at Astronomy ventured out to score a rare view of the northern lights in southeastern Wisconsin. I traveled out to Wisconsin’s Kohler-Andrae State Park to experience theContinue reading "Folklore meets science in this search for the ‘sounds’ of the northern lights" The post Folklore meets science in this search for the ‘sounds’ of the northern li
     

Folklore meets science in this search for the ‘sounds’ of the northern lights

July 23rd 2024 at 4:34 pm

Over Mother’s Day weekend in May, skies as far south as Florida and Texas were filled with the vibrant colors of the aurora borealis. Some of the staff at Astronomy ventured out to score a rare view of the northern lights in southeastern Wisconsin. I traveled out to Wisconsin’s Kohler-Andrae State Park to experience theContinue reading "Folklore meets science in this search for the ‘sounds’ of the northern lights"

The post Folklore meets science in this search for the ‘sounds’ of the northern lights appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to reboot the Large Hadron Collidermnewman
    When you push “start” on your microwave or computer, the device flips right on — but major physics experiments like the Large Hadron Collider at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, known as CERN, don’t work that way. Instead, engineers and physicists need to take a few weeks every year to carefully reset the colliderContinue reading "How to reboot the Large Hadron Collider" The post How to reboot the Large Hadron Collider appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to reboot the Large Hadron Collider

By: mnewman
July 17th 2024 at 7:41 pm

When you push “start” on your microwave or computer, the device flips right on — but major physics experiments like the Large Hadron Collider at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, known as CERN, don’t work that way. Instead, engineers and physicists need to take a few weeks every year to carefully reset the colliderContinue reading "How to reboot the Large Hadron Collider"

The post How to reboot the Large Hadron Collider appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • What would happen if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth?Astronomy Staff
    What if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth?Caroline Adams Portland, Oregon Before we can know what happens when our spoonful comes to Earth, let’s think about what’s in our spoon: a superdense collection of neutrons. A neutron star is the remnant of a massive star (bigger than 10 Suns) that hasContinue reading "What would happen if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth?" The post What would happen if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth? app
     

What would happen if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth?

July 17th 2024 at 5:17 pm

What if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth?Caroline Adams Portland, Oregon Before we can know what happens when our spoonful comes to Earth, let’s think about what’s in our spoon: a superdense collection of neutrons. A neutron star is the remnant of a massive star (bigger than 10 Suns) that hasContinue reading "What would happen if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth?"

The post What would happen if a tablespoonful of a neutron star was brought to Earth? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Hubble spots likely intermediate-mass black hole in Omega CentauriAlison Klesman
    Black holes come in three weight classes: stellar-mass black, intermediate-mass black, and supermassive. While astronomers have definitively identified objects in the lightest and heaviest classes, the middleweight intermediate-mass black holes, or IMBHs, have remained elusive. But evidence is piling up, including compelling new results from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) spanning two decades, published JulyContinue reading "Hubble spots likely intermediate-mass black hole in Omega Centauri" T
     

Hubble spots likely intermediate-mass black hole in Omega Centauri

July 17th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Black holes come in three weight classes: stellar-mass black, intermediate-mass black, and supermassive. While astronomers have definitively identified objects in the lightest and heaviest classes, the middleweight intermediate-mass black holes, or IMBHs, have remained elusive. But evidence is piling up, including compelling new results from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) spanning two decades, published JulyContinue reading "Hubble spots likely intermediate-mass black hole in Omega Centauri"

The post Hubble spots likely intermediate-mass black hole in Omega Centauri appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Gathering stormsM
    Mark Johnston from Scottsdale, Arizona The fireworks of solar cycle 25 continue, as seen in this Hα shot from July 2 featuring a filament at lower left and prominences leaping off the limb of the active Sun. The shot was taken with a 6-inch refractor fitted with an energy rejection filter and a Lunt etalonContinue reading "Gathering storms" The post Gathering storms appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Gathering storms

By: M
July 17th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Mark Johnston from Scottsdale, Arizona The fireworks of solar cycle 25 continue, as seen in this Hα shot from July 2 featuring a filament at lower left and prominences leaping off the limb of the active Sun. The shot was taken with a 6-inch refractor fitted with an energy rejection filter and a Lunt etalonContinue reading "Gathering storms"

The post Gathering storms appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Is it possible to make Mars like Earth?mnewman
    Is it possible that one day we could make Mars like Earth? – Tyla, age 16, Mississippi When I was in middle school, my biology teacher showed our class the sci-fi movie “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.” The plot drew me in, with its depiction of the “Genesis Project” – a new technologyContinue reading "Is it possible to make Mars like Earth?" The post Is it possible to make Mars like Earth? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Is it possible to make Mars like Earth?

By: mnewman
July 16th 2024 at 6:22 pm

Is it possible that one day we could make Mars like Earth? – Tyla, age 16, Mississippi When I was in middle school, my biology teacher showed our class the sci-fi movie “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.” The plot drew me in, with its depiction of the “Genesis Project” – a new technologyContinue reading "Is it possible to make Mars like Earth?"

The post Is it possible to make Mars like Earth? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Lunar lava tube could shelter a future Moon baseRobert Reeves
    The Moon’s surface presents an unforgivingly harsh environment. As it lacks a magnetic field, it is exposed to levels of hazardous radiation 150 times greater than that on Earth. Without an atmosphere, it is fully vulnerable to deadly coronal mass ejections from the Sun, as well as a perpetual rain of impacting meteorites. And itsContinue reading "Lunar lava tube could shelter a future Moon base" The post Lunar lava tube could shelter a future Moon base appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Lunar lava tube could shelter a future Moon base

July 16th 2024 at 4:40 pm

The Moon’s surface presents an unforgivingly harsh environment. As it lacks a magnetic field, it is exposed to levels of hazardous radiation 150 times greater than that on Earth. Without an atmosphere, it is fully vulnerable to deadly coronal mass ejections from the Sun, as well as a perpetual rain of impacting meteorites. And itsContinue reading "Lunar lava tube could shelter a future Moon base"

The post Lunar lava tube could shelter a future Moon base appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The North America and Pelican nebulae: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    This week, Dave explores the North America Nebula (NGC 7000) and the Pelican Nebula (IC 5070). This pair of objects in Cygnus, split by a dark lane of dust, are two of the most beloved and recognizable emission nebulae in the night sky. Lying about 2,600 light-years away, they are high in the northern summertimeContinue reading "The North America and Pelican nebulae: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The North America and Pelican nebulae: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher a
     

The North America and Pelican nebulae: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

July 16th 2024 at 6:33 am

This week, Dave explores the North America Nebula (NGC 7000) and the Pelican Nebula (IC 5070). This pair of objects in Cygnus, split by a dark lane of dust, are two of the most beloved and recognizable emission nebulae in the night sky. Lying about 2,600 light-years away, they are high in the northern summertimeContinue reading "The North America and Pelican nebulae: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The North America and Pelican nebulae: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Cloak of the owlM
    Massimo Di Fusco, taken from Ferrara, Italy Surrounding the familiar visage of the Owl Nebula (M97) in Ursa Major is a much fainter, rarely seen outer shell of emission from ionized oxygen. This imager captured it with an 8-inch scope at f/4.8, taking 32 hours of data with an Hα/OIII dual-band filter, plus an additionalContinue reading "Cloak of the owl" The post Cloak of the owl appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Cloak of the owl

By: M
July 16th 2024 at 6:22 am

Massimo Di Fusco, taken from Ferrara, Italy Surrounding the familiar visage of the Owl Nebula (M97) in Ursa Major is a much fainter, rarely seen outer shell of emission from ionized oxygen. This imager captured it with an 8-inch scope at f/4.8, taking 32 hours of data with an Hα/OIII dual-band filter, plus an additionalContinue reading "Cloak of the owl"

The post Cloak of the owl appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Colorado town throws 100th birthday party for pet space rockElizabeth Gamillo
    On the afternoon of July 6, 1924, John Moore’s funeral was interrupted. A meteorite, trailing smoky plume, announced its arrival with a series of thunderous bangs. As the attendees walked over to the site of the crash, they discovered a meteorite buried four feet (1.2 meters) deep into the soil. “Being a burial, they happenedContinue reading "Colorado town throws 100th birthday party for pet space rock" The post Colorado town throws 100th birthday party for pet space rock appeared first on Astro
     

Colorado town throws 100th birthday party for pet space rock

July 15th 2024 at 11:06 pm

On the afternoon of July 6, 1924, John Moore’s funeral was interrupted. A meteorite, trailing smoky plume, announced its arrival with a series of thunderous bangs. As the attendees walked over to the site of the crash, they discovered a meteorite buried four feet (1.2 meters) deep into the soil. “Being a burial, they happenedContinue reading "Colorado town throws 100th birthday party for pet space rock"

The post Colorado town throws 100th birthday party for pet space rock appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The legacy of the Advanced Imaging ConferenceMichael E. Bakich
    Sadly, the Advanced Imaging Conference (AIC) is no more. But thanks to the generosity of its members, the organization’s legacy will carry on. I spoke to AIC President Ken Crawford about the donation. He said, “As a non-profit CA corporation, we did accumulate a tidy sum of money through the years.  We wanted to haveContinue reading "The legacy of the Advanced Imaging Conference" The post The legacy of the Advanced Imaging Conference appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The legacy of the Advanced Imaging Conference

July 15th 2024 at 9:52 pm

Sadly, the Advanced Imaging Conference (AIC) is no more. But thanks to the generosity of its members, the organization’s legacy will carry on. I spoke to AIC President Ken Crawford about the donation. He said, “As a non-profit CA corporation, we did accumulate a tidy sum of money through the years.  We wanted to haveContinue reading "The legacy of the Advanced Imaging Conference"

The post The legacy of the Advanced Imaging Conference appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: The backstory and its impactBen Evans
    Over six dramatic days in July 1994, a shimmering train of ice-encrusted particles slammed into Jupiter, the solar system’s largest and most massive planet. Like a celestial string of opalescent pearls, they impacted its swirling atmosphere with the explosive equivalence of 10 million megatons of TNT, thousands of times more energetically potent than Earth’s entireContinue reading "Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: The backstory and its impact" The post Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: The backstory and its impact
     

Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: The backstory and its impact

By: Ben Evans
July 15th 2024 at 6:31 pm

Over six dramatic days in July 1994, a shimmering train of ice-encrusted particles slammed into Jupiter, the solar system’s largest and most massive planet. Like a celestial string of opalescent pearls, they impacted its swirling atmosphere with the explosive equivalence of 10 million megatons of TNT, thousands of times more energetically potent than Earth’s entireContinue reading "Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: The backstory and its impact"

The post Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9: The backstory and its impact appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Astronomers say they’ve spotted the oldest, most distant black hole. How do they know this?Astronomy Staff
    It was recently in the news that astronomers spotted the oldest, most distant black hole since the Big Bang. How do they know it is the oldest and most distant? HeatherMazatlán, Sinaloa, Mexico A research team led by Akos Bogdan of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian discovered a supermassive black hole (SMBH)Continue reading "Astronomers say they’ve spotted the oldest, most distant black hole. How do they know this?" The post Astronomers say they’ve spotted the oldest, most
     

Astronomers say they’ve spotted the oldest, most distant black hole. How do they know this?

July 15th 2024 at 6:30 pm

It was recently in the news that astronomers spotted the oldest, most distant black hole since the Big Bang. How do they know it is the oldest and most distant? HeatherMazatlán, Sinaloa, Mexico A research team led by Akos Bogdan of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian discovered a supermassive black hole (SMBH)Continue reading "Astronomers say they’ve spotted the oldest, most distant black hole. How do they know this?"

The post Astronomers say they’ve spotted the oldest, most distant black hole. How do they know this? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Astronaut and accomplished pilot Joe Engle dies at 91Ben Evans
    Astronaut, adventurer and aviator extraordinaire Joe Henry Engle, who passed away on July 10 at 91, earned renown in his career as the first human to reach space three times. He was also the only person to manually fly a space shuttle mission through almost its entire reentry. Engle was a retired Air Force general,Continue reading "Astronaut and accomplished pilot Joe Engle dies at 91" The post Astronaut and accomplished pilot Joe Engle dies at 91 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Astronaut and accomplished pilot Joe Engle dies at 91

By: Ben Evans
July 13th 2024 at 1:24 am

Astronaut, adventurer and aviator extraordinaire Joe Henry Engle, who passed away on July 10 at 91, earned renown in his career as the first human to reach space three times. He was also the only person to manually fly a space shuttle mission through almost its entire reentry. Engle was a retired Air Force general,Continue reading "Astronaut and accomplished pilot Joe Engle dies at 91"

The post Astronaut and accomplished pilot Joe Engle dies at 91 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 5 ways to achieve interstellar travel, ranked from least to most likelymnewman
    Want to visit an interesting exoplanet, or dip dangerously close to a black hole? It is not impossible – there’s no law of physics that forbids humans from traveling through space – but it’s just really, really hard. Here are some potential ways we could travel amongst the stars, ranked from least to most likely.Continue reading "5 ways to achieve interstellar travel, ranked from least to most likely" The post 5 ways to achieve interstellar travel, ranked from least to most likely appeared first
     

5 ways to achieve interstellar travel, ranked from least to most likely

By: mnewman
July 12th 2024 at 9:03 pm

Want to visit an interesting exoplanet, or dip dangerously close to a black hole? It is not impossible – there’s no law of physics that forbids humans from traveling through space – but it’s just really, really hard. Here are some potential ways we could travel amongst the stars, ranked from least to most likely.Continue reading "5 ways to achieve interstellar travel, ranked from least to most likely"

The post 5 ways to achieve interstellar travel, ranked from least to most likely appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • This NASA project could create staggeringly powerful telescopesTom Metcalfe
    Powerful space telescopes like the 6.5-meter James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will appear like toys compared to future telescopes with liquid mirrors spanning 10 to 100 times that size. Such a dream could indeed become a reality — NASA has now granted the so-called Fluidic Telescope (FLUTE) project three more years of funding to studyContinue reading "This NASA project could create staggeringly powerful telescopes" The post This NASA project could create staggeringly powerful telescopes appeare
     

This NASA project could create staggeringly powerful telescopes

July 12th 2024 at 8:44 pm

Powerful space telescopes like the 6.5-meter James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will appear like toys compared to future telescopes with liquid mirrors spanning 10 to 100 times that size. Such a dream could indeed become a reality — NASA has now granted the so-called Fluidic Telescope (FLUTE) project three more years of funding to studyContinue reading "This NASA project could create staggeringly powerful telescopes"

The post This NASA project could create staggeringly powerful telescopes appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The history of astronomical almanacsRaymond Shubinski
    Each September, almanacs start to appear across America. Most notable is The Old Farmer’s Almanac, which has been in print since 1792. Its cover states that it is “Useful, with a Pleasant Degree of Humor,” and the little book is filled with astronomical information, weather predictions, and more. The U.S. government is also in theContinue reading "The history of astronomical almanacs" The post The history of astronomical almanacs appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The history of astronomical almanacs

July 12th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Each September, almanacs start to appear across America. Most notable is The Old Farmer’s Almanac, which has been in print since 1792. Its cover states that it is “Useful, with a Pleasant Degree of Humor,” and the little book is filled with astronomical information, weather predictions, and more. The U.S. government is also in theContinue reading "The history of astronomical almanacs"

The post The history of astronomical almanacs appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Andromeda over Tash RabatM
    Basudeb Chakrabarti from Kolkata, India The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) hangs in the sky over the mountains of Kyrgyzstan near Tash Rabat in this image taken with a Nikon Z 6II full-frame mirrorless camera and a 135mm lens at f/2. The sky frames consist of sixty 20-second exposures at ISO 1000; the foreground was captured withContinue reading "Andromeda over Tash Rabat" The post Andromeda over Tash Rabat appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Andromeda over Tash Rabat

By: M
July 12th 2024 at 2:59 pm

Basudeb Chakrabarti from Kolkata, India The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) hangs in the sky over the mountains of Kyrgyzstan near Tash Rabat in this image taken with a Nikon Z 6II full-frame mirrorless camera and a 135mm lens at f/2. The sky frames consist of sixty 20-second exposures at ISO 1000; the foreground was captured withContinue reading "Andromeda over Tash Rabat"

The post Andromeda over Tash Rabat appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from July 12 to 19: An occultation in VirgoAlison Klesman
    Friday, July 12The Moon reaches apogee, the farthest point from Earth in its orbit, at 4:11 A.M. EDT. At that time, Luna will sit 251,259 miles (404,362 kilometers) away.   Look east a few hours after sunset and you’ll find the cross-shaped constellation Cygnus the Swan already high above the horizon and still climbing. TheContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 12 to 19: An occultation in Virgo" The post The Sky This Week from July 12 to 19: An occultation in Virgo appeared first on Astro
     

The Sky This Week from July 12 to 19: An occultation in Virgo

July 12th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, July 12The Moon reaches apogee, the farthest point from Earth in its orbit, at 4:11 A.M. EDT. At that time, Luna will sit 251,259 miles (404,362 kilometers) away.   Look east a few hours after sunset and you’ll find the cross-shaped constellation Cygnus the Swan already high above the horizon and still climbing. TheContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 12 to 19: An occultation in Virgo"

The post The Sky This Week from July 12 to 19: An occultation in Virgo appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Mars is bombarded by more meteorites than previously thoughtElizabeth Gamillo
    Scientists have long wondered why more bowl-shaped craters from asteroid strikes haven’t been found on Mars, despite the Red Planet sitting next to the asteroid belt and its sparse atmosphere being just 1 percent as thick as Earth’s. A new study suggests roughly 300 basketball-sized meteorites pockmark Mars’ surface every year, raising previous estimates byContinue reading "Mars is bombarded by more meteorites than previously thought" The post Mars is bombarded by more meteorites than previously
     

Mars is bombarded by more meteorites than previously thought

July 11th 2024 at 6:12 pm

Scientists have long wondered why more bowl-shaped craters from asteroid strikes haven’t been found on Mars, despite the Red Planet sitting next to the asteroid belt and its sparse atmosphere being just 1 percent as thick as Earth’s. A new study suggests roughly 300 basketball-sized meteorites pockmark Mars’ surface every year, raising previous estimates byContinue reading "Mars is bombarded by more meteorites than previously thought"

The post Mars is bombarded by more meteorites than previously thought appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How do Cepheid variables indicate distance?Astronomy Staff
    How do Cepheid variables indicate distance? Roger BradyTamal, California Cepheid variables are a type of star that undergo regular pulsations. The length of a Cepheid’s pulsations is always related to its intrinsic, or absolute, brightness in a simple way: The longer its pulsations last, the larger and brighter the star. This means that if youContinue reading "How do Cepheid variables indicate distance?" The post How do Cepheid variables indicate distance? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How do Cepheid variables indicate distance?

July 11th 2024 at 5:50 pm

How do Cepheid variables indicate distance? Roger BradyTamal, California Cepheid variables are a type of star that undergo regular pulsations. The length of a Cepheid’s pulsations is always related to its intrinsic, or absolute, brightness in a simple way: The longer its pulsations last, the larger and brighter the star. This means that if youContinue reading "How do Cepheid variables indicate distance?"

The post How do Cepheid variables indicate distance? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Bold in blueM
    Fernando Oliveira de Menezes, taken from Munhoz, Minas Gerais, Brazil The reflection nebula IC 4605 is lit by the star 22 Scorpii, and is one of the most prominent features in the colorful Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex. The orange wash at the bottom of the frame is another reflection nebula — but one imbued with theContinue reading "Bold in blue" The post Bold in blue appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Bold in blue

By: M
July 10th 2024 at 1:30 pm

Fernando Oliveira de Menezes, taken from Munhoz, Minas Gerais, Brazil The reflection nebula IC 4605 is lit by the star 22 Scorpii, and is one of the most prominent features in the colorful Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex. The orange wash at the bottom of the frame is another reflection nebula — but one imbued with theContinue reading "Bold in blue"

The post Bold in blue appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Famed celestial mapmaker Wil Tirion has diedMichael E. Bakich
    Dutch celestial cartographer Wil Tirion, who created two landmark star atlases used worldwide by amateur astronomers, died July 5. He was 81 years old. Tirion’s most popular work, Sky Atlas 2000.0, first published in 1981 by Sky Publishing Corporation and Cambridge University Press, contained 26 pages of maps that displayed stars as faint as magnitudeContinue reading "Famed celestial mapmaker Wil Tirion has died" The post Famed celestial mapmaker Wil Tirion has died appeared first on Astronomy M
     

Famed celestial mapmaker Wil Tirion has died

July 10th 2024 at 12:34 am

Dutch celestial cartographer Wil Tirion, who created two landmark star atlases used worldwide by amateur astronomers, died July 5. He was 81 years old. Tirion’s most popular work, Sky Atlas 2000.0, first published in 1981 by Sky Publishing Corporation and Cambridge University Press, contained 26 pages of maps that displayed stars as faint as magnitudeContinue reading "Famed celestial mapmaker Wil Tirion has died"

The post Famed celestial mapmaker Wil Tirion has died appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Here’s how astronauts splash back to EarthElizabeth Gamillo
    For about 15 minutes on July 21, 1961, American astronaut Gus Grissom felt at the top of the world – and indeed he was. Grissom crewed the Liberty Bell 7 mission, a ballistic test flight that launched him through the atmosphere from a rocket. During the test, he sat inside a small capsule and reached a peak ofContinue reading "Here’s how astronauts splash back to Earth" The post Here’s how astronauts splash back to Earth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Here’s how astronauts splash back to Earth

July 9th 2024 at 7:15 pm

For about 15 minutes on July 21, 1961, American astronaut Gus Grissom felt at the top of the world – and indeed he was. Grissom crewed the Liberty Bell 7 mission, a ballistic test flight that launched him through the atmosphere from a rocket. During the test, he sat inside a small capsule and reached a peak ofContinue reading "Here’s how astronauts splash back to Earth"

The post Here’s how astronauts splash back to Earth appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 20 things to see on the Moon: An observer’s guide to lunar namesRobert Reeves
    For over 400 years, legions of lunar cartographers have been surveying the surface of the Moon — first by telescope and then by spacecraft — charting and naming its features. The resulting lunar map is constantly evolving. Over time, new names are added while existing names are dropped or changed after research shows a featureContinue reading "20 things to see on the Moon: An observer’s guide to lunar names" The post 20 things to see on the Moon: An observer’s guide to lunar names appeared first
     

20 things to see on the Moon: An observer’s guide to lunar names

July 9th 2024 at 4:30 pm

For over 400 years, legions of lunar cartographers have been surveying the surface of the Moon — first by telescope and then by spacecraft — charting and naming its features. The resulting lunar map is constantly evolving. Over time, new names are added while existing names are dropped or changed after research shows a featureContinue reading "20 things to see on the Moon: An observer’s guide to lunar names"

The post 20 things to see on the Moon: An observer’s guide to lunar names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A knotty tailM
    Chris Schur from Payson, Arizona Comet 13P/Olbers reached perihelion (its closest approach to the Sun) on June 30, flaunting a faint but intricate ion tail that appears to corkscrew off of the nucleus. This image was taken with 30 minutes of data on a 8-inch f/2 RASA scope. The post A knotty tail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

A knotty tail

By: M
July 9th 2024 at 1:18 am

Chris Schur from Payson, Arizona Comet 13P/Olbers reached perihelion (its closest approach to the Sun) on June 30, flaunting a faint but intricate ion tail that appears to corkscrew off of the nucleus. This image was taken with 30 minutes of data on a 8-inch f/2 RASA scope.

The post A knotty tail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Spy two planets in the Bull: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    Over the next couple of weeks, you’ll be able to spot Jupiter and Mars moving through the constellation Taurus and past two of the sky’s most famous star clusters — the Hyades and the Pleiades (M45). This will be visible early on the morning of July 15, or any morning within a few days of thatContinue reading "Spy two planets in the Bull: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Spy two planets in the Bull: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Spy two planets in the Bull: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

July 8th 2024 at 9:37 pm

Over the next couple of weeks, you’ll be able to spot Jupiter and Mars moving through the constellation Taurus and past two of the sky’s most famous star clusters — the Hyades and the Pleiades (M45). This will be visible early on the morning of July 15, or any morning within a few days of thatContinue reading "Spy two planets in the Bull: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Spy two planets in the Bull: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Short trips to space can have a toll on an astronaut’s bodyElizabeth Gamillo
    Only about 600 people have ever traveled to space. The vast majority of astronauts over the past six decades have been middle-aged men on short-duration missions of fewer than 20 days. Today, with private, commercial and multinational spaceflight providers and flyers entering the market, we are witnessing a new era of human spaceflight. Missions have ranged fromContinue reading "Short trips to space can have a toll on an astronaut’s body" The post Short trips to space can have a toll on an astro
     

Short trips to space can have a toll on an astronaut’s body

July 8th 2024 at 5:24 pm

Only about 600 people have ever traveled to space. The vast majority of astronauts over the past six decades have been middle-aged men on short-duration missions of fewer than 20 days. Today, with private, commercial and multinational spaceflight providers and flyers entering the market, we are witnessing a new era of human spaceflight. Missions have ranged fromContinue reading "Short trips to space can have a toll on an astronaut’s body"

The post Short trips to space can have a toll on an astronaut’s body appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Hardy desert moss might survive on MarsElizabeth Gamillo
    A desert moss with a knack for tolerating harsh conditions on Earth might survive Mars’ desolate landscape, too, according to research published July 1 in The Innovation. The moss, Syntrichia caninervis, can survive drought, frigid temperatures as low as –320.8 degrees Fahrenheit (–196 degrees Celsius), and high radiation levels — as well as all threeContinue reading "Hardy desert moss might survive on Mars" The post Hardy desert moss might survive on Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Hardy desert moss might survive on Mars

July 6th 2024 at 1:00 am

A desert moss with a knack for tolerating harsh conditions on Earth might survive Mars’ desolate landscape, too, according to research published July 1 in The Innovation. The moss, Syntrichia caninervis, can survive drought, frigid temperatures as low as –320.8 degrees Fahrenheit (–196 degrees Celsius), and high radiation levels — as well as all threeContinue reading "Hardy desert moss might survive on Mars"

The post Hardy desert moss might survive on Mars appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to take your own wide-field sky imagesshill
    I love taking wide-field images of the night sky. Revealing the hidden depths of a large swath of the heavens in a long-exposure photograph shows me that space isn’t actually empty — it’s filled with unfathomably large amounts of gas and dust. And with today’s cameras and specialized filters, amateurs can produce stunning views ofContinue reading "How to take your own wide-field sky images" The post How to take your own wide-field sky images appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to take your own wide-field sky images

By: shill
July 5th 2024 at 4:30 pm

I love taking wide-field images of the night sky. Revealing the hidden depths of a large swath of the heavens in a long-exposure photograph shows me that space isn’t actually empty — it’s filled with unfathomably large amounts of gas and dust. And with today’s cameras and specialized filters, amateurs can produce stunning views ofContinue reading "How to take your own wide-field sky images"

The post How to take your own wide-field sky images appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from July 5 to 12: Saturn hides Titan from viewAlison Klesman
    Friday, July 5Earth’s orbit around the Sun is not perfectly circular, such that our planet sits marginally farther from the Sun in July and closer to it in January. Today, Earth reaches aphelion, that farthest point from the Sun, at 1 A.M. EDT. At that time, we are 94.5 million miles (151 million kilometers) fromContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 5 to 12: Saturn hides Titan from view" The post The Sky This Week from July 5 to 12: Saturn hides Titan from view appeared first on Astronom
     

The Sky This Week from July 5 to 12: Saturn hides Titan from view

July 5th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, July 5Earth’s orbit around the Sun is not perfectly circular, such that our planet sits marginally farther from the Sun in July and closer to it in January. Today, Earth reaches aphelion, that farthest point from the Sun, at 1 A.M. EDT. At that time, we are 94.5 million miles (151 million kilometers) fromContinue reading "The Sky This Week from July 5 to 12: Saturn hides Titan from view"

The post The Sky This Week from July 5 to 12: Saturn hides Titan from view appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth?Astronomy Staff
    What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth? Anthony RicoLexington, Kentucky Our planet is safe from being ripped apart by either a black hole or dark matter. The gravity between objects in our solar system overcomes the gravity from the Milky Way’s dark matter, so that rules out thisContinue reading "What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth?" The post What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth? appeared firs
     

What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth?

July 3rd 2024 at 11:07 pm

What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth? Anthony RicoLexington, Kentucky Our planet is safe from being ripped apart by either a black hole or dark matter. The gravity between objects in our solar system overcomes the gravity from the Milky Way’s dark matter, so that rules out thisContinue reading "What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth?"

The post What are the chances of dark matter or a black hole ripping apart Earth? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon?Astronomy Staff
    Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon? Ryan FrazBuffalo, North Dakota Ryan is referring to the so-called Moon illusion. Sometimes as the Moon just climbs above the horizon, it looks positively enormous. Some people see it, others don’t, and nobody knows the final answer on the Moon illusion.Continue reading "Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon?" The post Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon? appeared
     

Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon?

July 3rd 2024 at 9:08 pm

Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon? Ryan FrazBuffalo, North Dakota Ryan is referring to the so-called Moon illusion. Sometimes as the Moon just climbs above the horizon, it looks positively enormous. Some people see it, others don’t, and nobody knows the final answer on the Moon illusion.Continue reading "Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon?"

The post Why does the Moon look so large sometimes as it rises on the horizon? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Asteroid Bennu sample shows more signs of a watery pastTheo Nicitopoulos
    Bennu is a roughly 0.3-mile-wide (500 meters) asteroid that orbits in near-Earth space. Scientists suspect it’s a chunk of a larger asteroid that broke off due to a collision farther out. Telescope observations and data collected by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft showed that Bennu has minerals that have been altered by water. Hence, scientists suspect theContinue reading "Asteroid Bennu sample shows more signs of a watery past" The post Asteroid Bennu sample shows more signs of a watery past appea
     

Asteroid Bennu sample shows more signs of a watery past

July 3rd 2024 at 6:37 pm

Bennu is a roughly 0.3-mile-wide (500 meters) asteroid that orbits in near-Earth space. Scientists suspect it’s a chunk of a larger asteroid that broke off due to a collision farther out. Telescope observations and data collected by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft showed that Bennu has minerals that have been altered by water. Hence, scientists suspect theContinue reading "Asteroid Bennu sample shows more signs of a watery past"

The post Asteroid Bennu sample shows more signs of a watery past appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Scientists want to study the heliosphere- here’s how they might do itElizabeth Gamillo
    The Sun warms the Earth, making it habitable for people and animals. But that’s not all it does, and it affects a much larger area of space. The heliosphere, the area of space influenced by the Sun, is over a hundred times larger than the distance from the Sun to the Earth. The Sun is a star thatContinue reading "Scientists want to study the heliosphere- here’s how they might do it" The post Scientists want to study the heliosphere- here’s how they might do it appeared first on Astronomy Magazin
     

Scientists want to study the heliosphere- here’s how they might do it

July 3rd 2024 at 6:14 pm

The Sun warms the Earth, making it habitable for people and animals. But that’s not all it does, and it affects a much larger area of space. The heliosphere, the area of space influenced by the Sun, is over a hundred times larger than the distance from the Sun to the Earth. The Sun is a star thatContinue reading "Scientists want to study the heliosphere- here’s how they might do it"

The post Scientists want to study the heliosphere- here’s how they might do it appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Tale of two trailsM
    Giovanni Passalacqua, taken from Sicily, Italy The trails left by glowing balls of gas and chunks of molten rock complement each other in this photo of Mount Etna erupting on June 28. The post Tale of two trails appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     
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  • SERA, Blue Origin offer trips to edge of space for $2.50mnewman
    The U.S.-based Space Exploration and Research Agency (SERA), which describes itself as a “space agency for everyone,” will fly citizens from India, Nigeria, and the small island developing states (SIDS) to the edge of the atmosphere in partnership with Blue Origin, the space tourism venture of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Each nation is allotted one seat onContinue reading "SERA, Blue Origin offer trips to edge of space for $2.50" The post SERA, Blue Origin offer trips to edge of space for $2.50 a
     

SERA, Blue Origin offer trips to edge of space for $2.50

By: mnewman
July 2nd 2024 at 8:20 pm

The U.S.-based Space Exploration and Research Agency (SERA), which describes itself as a “space agency for everyone,” will fly citizens from India, Nigeria, and the small island developing states (SIDS) to the edge of the atmosphere in partnership with Blue Origin, the space tourism venture of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Each nation is allotted one seat onContinue reading "SERA, Blue Origin offer trips to edge of space for $2.50"

The post SERA, Blue Origin offer trips to edge of space for $2.50 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Legos, made out of Moon dust, could one day solve a lunar problemElizabeth Gamillo
    Scientists at the European Space Agency (ESA) collaborated with Lego to 3D-print bricks made from space dust. The material — and the interlocking way that Lego bricks snap together — could one day help solve the problem of how to build things on the Moon, such as shelters for astronauts. “No one has ever builtContinue reading "Legos, made out of Moon dust, could one day solve a lunar problem" The post Legos, made out of Moon dust, could one day solve a lunar problem appeared first on Astronomy M
     

Legos, made out of Moon dust, could one day solve a lunar problem

July 1st 2024 at 11:15 pm

Scientists at the European Space Agency (ESA) collaborated with Lego to 3D-print bricks made from space dust. The material — and the interlocking way that Lego bricks snap together — could one day help solve the problem of how to build things on the Moon, such as shelters for astronauts. “No one has ever builtContinue reading "Legos, made out of Moon dust, could one day solve a lunar problem"

The post Legos, made out of Moon dust, could one day solve a lunar problem appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Greenhouse gases could indicate alien life — if we ever find themElizabeth Gamillo
    In a new study published in The Astrophysical Journal, astronomers propose looking for greenhouse gases in the atmospheres of exoplanets using tools like the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). But rather than searching for an advanced species suffering the consequences of climate change, such gases might be a sign of something else: terraforming. Terraforming isContinue reading "Greenhouse gases could indicate alien life — if we ever find them" The post Greenhouse gases could indicate alien life
     

Greenhouse gases could indicate alien life — if we ever find them

July 1st 2024 at 11:03 pm

In a new study published in The Astrophysical Journal, astronomers propose looking for greenhouse gases in the atmospheres of exoplanets using tools like the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). But rather than searching for an advanced species suffering the consequences of climate change, such gases might be a sign of something else: terraforming. Terraforming isContinue reading "Greenhouse gases could indicate alien life — if we ever find them"

The post Greenhouse gases could indicate alien life — if we ever find them appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • See the hottest astronomy products of JulyAstronomy Staff
    Sturdy contender Explore Scientific Springdale, AR The EXOS2-GT PMC-Eight mount with WiFi and Bluetooth can handle up to 28 pounds (12.7 kilograms) for astrophotography and up to 40 pounds (18.1 kg) for visual scopes. The mount can be controlled wirelessly with a phone or tablet — an upgrade over the previous version of this product.Continue reading "See the hottest astronomy products of July" The post See the hottest astronomy products of July appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

See the hottest astronomy products of July

July 1st 2024 at 9:30 pm

Sturdy contender Explore Scientific Springdale, AR The EXOS2-GT PMC-Eight mount with WiFi and Bluetooth can handle up to 28 pounds (12.7 kilograms) for astrophotography and up to 40 pounds (18.1 kg) for visual scopes. The mount can be controlled wirelessly with a phone or tablet — an upgrade over the previous version of this product.Continue reading "See the hottest astronomy products of July"

The post See the hottest astronomy products of July appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Spot the Moon and the Pleiades: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    The best of the solar system and our galaxy’s deep-sky objects make a joint appearance in our sky this week, as the Moon slides by the Pleiades (M45). In the early morning sky of July 2, observers in the Americas will see a slender, waning crescent Moon just a few degrees away from the PleiadesContinue reading "Spot the Moon and the Pleiades: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Spot the Moon and the Pleiades: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magaz
     

Spot the Moon and the Pleiades: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

July 1st 2024 at 9:09 pm

The best of the solar system and our galaxy’s deep-sky objects make a joint appearance in our sky this week, as the Moon slides by the Pleiades (M45). In the early morning sky of July 2, observers in the Americas will see a slender, waning crescent Moon just a few degrees away from the PleiadesContinue reading "Spot the Moon and the Pleiades: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Spot the Moon and the Pleiades: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The fight against light pollutionChristopher Cokinos
    On a crisp night last fall in the Arizona desert, I stood amid sand and scrub at the intersection of Valencia and Kolb on the outskirts of Tucson and beheld a gleaming gas station. To say that this coruscating beacon of convenience was well lit would be like calling a dinosaur incinerated by the ChicxulubContinue reading "The fight against light pollution" The post The fight against light pollution appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The fight against light pollution

July 1st 2024 at 4:30 pm

On a crisp night last fall in the Arizona desert, I stood amid sand and scrub at the intersection of Valencia and Kolb on the outskirts of Tucson and beheld a gleaming gas station. To say that this coruscating beacon of convenience was well lit would be like calling a dinosaur incinerated by the ChicxulubContinue reading "The fight against light pollution"

The post The fight against light pollution appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

What’s in the sky this month? Look for Mercury and Venus in the evening, then Neptune, Mars, Uranus, and Jupiter

July 1st 2024 at 3:30 pm

The planets are spreading out this month. Mercury and Venus lie in the evening sky; after midnight the next set of planets rises one after the other, led by Saturn. It’s followed into the early-morning sky by Neptune, Mars, Uranus, and Jupiter. Saturn in particular is stunning, with the rings at their narrowest for theContinue reading "What’s in the sky this month? Look for Mercury and Venus in the evening, then Neptune, Mars, Uranus, and Jupiter"

The post What’s in the sky this month? Look for Mercury and Venus in the evening, then Neptune, Mars, Uranus, and Jupiter appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • NASA selects SpaceX to bring ISS out of orbit in 2030Elizabeth Gamillo
    NASA announced this week it has selected SpaceX to design a vehicle to take the International Space Station (ISS) out of orbit when its mission ends in 2030. “Selecting a U.S. Deorbit Vehicle for the International Space Station will help NASA and its international partners ensure a safe and responsible transition in low Earth orbitContinue reading "NASA selects SpaceX to bring ISS out of orbit in 2030" The post NASA selects SpaceX to bring ISS out of orbit in 2030 appeared first on Astronomy Mag
     

NASA selects SpaceX to bring ISS out of orbit in 2030

June 28th 2024 at 10:49 pm

NASA announced this week it has selected SpaceX to design a vehicle to take the International Space Station (ISS) out of orbit when its mission ends in 2030. “Selecting a U.S. Deorbit Vehicle for the International Space Station will help NASA and its international partners ensure a safe and responsible transition in low Earth orbitContinue reading "NASA selects SpaceX to bring ISS out of orbit in 2030"

The post NASA selects SpaceX to bring ISS out of orbit in 2030 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Explore Gateway: The first space station to orbit the MoonElizabeth Gamillo
    NASA has just unveiled a new 3D animation that showcases the exterior of the upcoming Gateway Space Station. Gateway is designed to serve as a crucial stopover for longer space missions. Set to launch its first modules in 2025, Gateway will be the first space station to orbit the Moon. The feat is a collaborationContinue reading "Explore Gateway: The first space station to orbit the Moon" The post Explore Gateway: The first space station to orbit the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Explore Gateway: The first space station to orbit the Moon

June 28th 2024 at 7:19 pm

NASA has just unveiled a new 3D animation that showcases the exterior of the upcoming Gateway Space Station. Gateway is designed to serve as a crucial stopover for longer space missions. Set to launch its first modules in 2025, Gateway will be the first space station to orbit the Moon. The feat is a collaborationContinue reading "Explore Gateway: The first space station to orbit the Moon"

The post Explore Gateway: The first space station to orbit the Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Making waves in CygnusM
    David Gluchowski, from Brooklyn, New York; imaged from Brooklyn and the Catskills Swells of Hydrogen-alpha emission at left frame this vista of a pair of emission nebulae — Sharpless 2–115 at upper right, and the small planetary nebula Sh 2–116 at lower right. “I like the sense of depth the different cloud structures give toContinue reading "Making waves in Cygnus" The post Making waves in Cygnus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Making waves in Cygnus

By: M
June 28th 2024 at 6:48 pm

David Gluchowski, from Brooklyn, New York; imaged from Brooklyn and the Catskills Swells of Hydrogen-alpha emission at left frame this vista of a pair of emission nebulae — Sharpless 2–115 at upper right, and the small planetary nebula Sh 2–116 at lower right. “I like the sense of depth the different cloud structures give toContinue reading "Making waves in Cygnus"

The post Making waves in Cygnus appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Devil’s bargain: Remembering MW 18014, 80 years laterBen Evans
    History’s pages are sprinkled with a litany of ironies, few sourer than a fearsome weapon of war that became a vehicle for peace, evolving from a tool to end human lives in their thousands to one that pushed human life into space. In the final months of World War II, Nazi Germany’s V-2 (Vergeltungswaffe-2, orContinue reading "Devil’s bargain: Remembering MW 18014, 80 years later" The post Devil’s bargain: Remembering MW 18014, 80 years later appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Devil’s bargain: Remembering MW 18014, 80 years later

By: Ben Evans
June 28th 2024 at 5:43 pm

History’s pages are sprinkled with a litany of ironies, few sourer than a fearsome weapon of war that became a vehicle for peace, evolving from a tool to end human lives in their thousands to one that pushed human life into space. In the final months of World War II, Nazi Germany’s V-2 (Vergeltungswaffe-2, orContinue reading "Devil’s bargain: Remembering MW 18014, 80 years later"

The post Devil’s bargain: Remembering MW 18014, 80 years later appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from June 28 to July 5: Catch some cosmic fireworksAlison Klesman
    Friday, June 28The Moon passes 0.3° north of Neptune at 5 A.M. EDT. Roughly half a day later, at 5:53 P.M. EDT, the Moon reaches Last Quarter as it slowly wanes from Full to New. We’ll catch up with Neptune in the morning sky later this week. Tonight, with no Moon to interfere, let’s visitContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 28 to July 5: Catch some cosmic fireworks" The post The Sky This Week from June 28 to July 5: Catch some cosmic fireworks appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Sky This Week from June 28 to July 5: Catch some cosmic fireworks

June 28th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, June 28The Moon passes 0.3° north of Neptune at 5 A.M. EDT. Roughly half a day later, at 5:53 P.M. EDT, the Moon reaches Last Quarter as it slowly wanes from Full to New. We’ll catch up with Neptune in the morning sky later this week. Tonight, with no Moon to interfere, let’s visitContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 28 to July 5: Catch some cosmic fireworks"

The post The Sky This Week from June 28 to July 5: Catch some cosmic fireworks appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Gemini North celebrates its 25th birthday with a glorious photo of NGC 4449Elizabeth Gamillo
    On June 25, 1999, the 8.1-meter Gemini North Telescope atop Maunakea, Hawaii, revealed its first light images. Since then, the telescope has peered into the universe with its twin, the Gemini South Telescope in Chile. Consisting of both telescopes together, the International Gemini Observatory has made numerous groundbreaking images of the universe, including taking theContinue reading "Gemini North celebrates its 25th birthday with a glorious photo of NGC 4449" The post Gemini North celebrates
     

Gemini North celebrates its 25th birthday with a glorious photo of NGC 4449

June 27th 2024 at 11:30 pm

On June 25, 1999, the 8.1-meter Gemini North Telescope atop Maunakea, Hawaii, revealed its first light images. Since then, the telescope has peered into the universe with its twin, the Gemini South Telescope in Chile. Consisting of both telescopes together, the International Gemini Observatory has made numerous groundbreaking images of the universe, including taking theContinue reading "Gemini North celebrates its 25th birthday with a glorious photo of NGC 4449"

The post Gemini North celebrates its 25th birthday with a glorious photo of NGC 4449 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • ISS astronauts briefly take cover after Russian satellite Resurs-P1 breaks upMark Zastrow
    A defunct Russian satellite broke up in low-Earth orbit on June 26, U.S. government and private space-tracking organizations have confirmed. The break-up resulted in over 100 pieces of trackable debris, according to U.S. Space Command in a June 27 statement. That number is likely to grow as the full extent of the debris cloud becomesContinue reading "ISS astronauts briefly take cover after Russian satellite Resurs-P1 breaks up" The post ISS astronauts briefly take cover after Russian satellite R
     

ISS astronauts briefly take cover after Russian satellite Resurs-P1 breaks up

June 27th 2024 at 11:25 pm

A defunct Russian satellite broke up in low-Earth orbit on June 26, U.S. government and private space-tracking organizations have confirmed. The break-up resulted in over 100 pieces of trackable debris, according to U.S. Space Command in a June 27 statement. That number is likely to grow as the full extent of the debris cloud becomesContinue reading "ISS astronauts briefly take cover after Russian satellite Resurs-P1 breaks up"

The post ISS astronauts briefly take cover after Russian satellite Resurs-P1 breaks up appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk space feud reignites with Blue Origin requestmnewman
    The billionaire space race between Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and Elon Musk’s SpaceX has taken a dramatic turn. Last week, Blue Origin filed a public comment to the FAA requesting that the regulator limit the number of launches of SpaceX’s Starship—the largest and most powerful rocket ever built—out of Launch Complex-39A at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, which currentlyContinue reading "Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk space feud reignites with Blue Origin request" The post Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk space feud
     

Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk space feud reignites with Blue Origin request

By: mnewman
June 27th 2024 at 10:02 pm

The billionaire space race between Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and Elon Musk’s SpaceX has taken a dramatic turn. Last week, Blue Origin filed a public comment to the FAA requesting that the regulator limit the number of launches of SpaceX’s Starship—the largest and most powerful rocket ever built—out of Launch Complex-39A at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, which currentlyContinue reading "Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk space feud reignites with Blue Origin request"

The post Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk space feud reignites with Blue Origin request appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • What’s in this most recent hole NASA drilled on Mars? We might know soonMichael E. Bakich
    NASA’s Curiosity rover is continuing to perform experiments in Mars’ Gale Crater, even after more than 4,200 days on the martian surface. On Curiosity’s sol (the name given to a martian day) 4,214, which corresponds to June 12, 2024, the rover was given commands to drill a 0.63-inch (1.6 centimeters) hole in a rock dubbedContinue reading "What’s in this most recent hole NASA drilled on Mars? We might know soon" The post What’s in this most recent hole NASA drilled on Mars? We might know soon app
     

What’s in this most recent hole NASA drilled on Mars? We might know soon

June 27th 2024 at 7:01 pm

NASA’s Curiosity rover is continuing to perform experiments in Mars’ Gale Crater, even after more than 4,200 days on the martian surface. On Curiosity’s sol (the name given to a martian day) 4,214, which corresponds to June 12, 2024, the rover was given commands to drill a 0.63-inch (1.6 centimeters) hole in a rock dubbedContinue reading "What’s in this most recent hole NASA drilled on Mars? We might know soon"

The post What’s in this most recent hole NASA drilled on Mars? We might know soon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Webb examines how planets form around Beta PictorisElizabeth Gamillo
    The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is unlocking secrets about how planets form around nearby stars in the galaxy. While the formation of rocky planets can span millions of years, catching glimpses of their evolution may occur within human lifetimes. One of these places exists in the circumstellar disk surrounding the star Beta Pictoris. BetaContinue reading "Webb examines how planets form around Beta Pictoris" The post Webb examines how planets form around Beta Pictoris appeared first on Astr
     

Webb examines how planets form around Beta Pictoris

June 27th 2024 at 5:30 pm

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is unlocking secrets about how planets form around nearby stars in the galaxy. While the formation of rocky planets can span millions of years, catching glimpses of their evolution may occur within human lifetimes. One of these places exists in the circumstellar disk surrounding the star Beta Pictoris. BetaContinue reading "Webb examines how planets form around Beta Pictoris"

The post Webb examines how planets form around Beta Pictoris appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • You can see something in a void. Explore a ‘holy grail’ of astronomyStephen James O'Meara
    Usually I don’t write much about deep, “holy grail” objects, but for the Boötes Void, I’ll make an exception. Specifically, I’m wondering what’s the smallest telescope needed to see the galaxies in the Boötes Void. If that sounds like an oxymoron — seeing something in a void — it’s not. Originally known as the GreatContinue reading "You can see something in a void. Explore a ‘holy grail’ of astronomy" The post You can see something in a void. Explore a ‘holy grail’ of astronomy appeared first on
     

You can see something in a void. Explore a ‘holy grail’ of astronomy

June 28th 2024 at 6:20 pm

Usually I don’t write much about deep, “holy grail” objects, but for the Boötes Void, I’ll make an exception. Specifically, I’m wondering what’s the smallest telescope needed to see the galaxies in the Boötes Void. If that sounds like an oxymoron — seeing something in a void — it’s not. Originally known as the GreatContinue reading "You can see something in a void. Explore a ‘holy grail’ of astronomy"

The post You can see something in a void. Explore a ‘holy grail’ of astronomy appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Soar through the Pillars of Creation with NASA’s stunning new videoElizabeth Gamillo
    The Pillars of Creation, a series of elongated clouds teeming with star formation, have intrigued researchers and wowed the public ever since the Hubble Space Telescope captured their famous portrait in 1995. In collaboration with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the star-birthing clouds are featured in a new video that renders them in 3D.Continue reading "Soar through the Pillars of Creation with NASA’s stunning new video" The post Soar through the Pillars of Creation with NASA’s stunning
     

Soar through the Pillars of Creation with NASA’s stunning new video

June 26th 2024 at 7:18 pm

The Pillars of Creation, a series of elongated clouds teeming with star formation, have intrigued researchers and wowed the public ever since the Hubble Space Telescope captured their famous portrait in 1995. In collaboration with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the star-birthing clouds are featured in a new video that renders them in 3D.Continue reading "Soar through the Pillars of Creation with NASA’s stunning new video"

The post Soar through the Pillars of Creation with NASA’s stunning new video appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • In a first, JWST captures ultra-detailed image of aligned jets in the Serpens NebulaElizabeth Gamillo
    Within the Serpens Nebula, found 1,300 light-years from Earth, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has spotted the jets of several young protostars lining up in the same direction — a first. JWST’s new image, taken with its Near Infrared Camera, NIRCam, reveals a fascinating look at the forming baby stars. It captures outflows asContinue reading "In a first, JWST captures ultra-detailed image of aligned jets in the Serpens Nebula" The post In a first, JWST captures ultra-detailed image of alig
     

In a first, JWST captures ultra-detailed image of aligned jets in the Serpens Nebula

June 26th 2024 at 4:35 pm

Within the Serpens Nebula, found 1,300 light-years from Earth, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has spotted the jets of several young protostars lining up in the same direction — a first. JWST’s new image, taken with its Near Infrared Camera, NIRCam, reveals a fascinating look at the forming baby stars. It captures outflows asContinue reading "In a first, JWST captures ultra-detailed image of aligned jets in the Serpens Nebula"

The post In a first, JWST captures ultra-detailed image of aligned jets in the Serpens Nebula appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Did we find signs of life on K2-18 b? Not yet, but we might.Astronomy Staff
    Welcome to the Astronomy.com roundtable where our editors help explain (and sometimes debate) hot topics. This week, Astronomy’s Dave Eicher, Alison Klesman, Daniela Mata, and Mark Zastrow weigh in on the possibility of life on the exoplanet K2-18 b. Astronomy.com:  The exoplanet known as K2-18 b was discovered with the Kepler Space Telescope in 2015.Continue reading "Did we find signs of life on K2-18 b? Not yet, but we might." The post Did we find signs of life on K2-18 b? Not yet, but we migh
     

Did we find signs of life on K2-18 b? Not yet, but we might.

June 26th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Welcome to the Astronomy.com roundtable where our editors help explain (and sometimes debate) hot topics. This week, Astronomy’s Dave Eicher, Alison Klesman, Daniela Mata, and Mark Zastrow weigh in on the possibility of life on the exoplanet K2-18 b. Astronomy.com:  The exoplanet known as K2-18 b was discovered with the Kepler Space Telescope in 2015.Continue reading "Did we find signs of life on K2-18 b? Not yet, but we might."

The post Did we find signs of life on K2-18 b? Not yet, but we might. appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

Researchers say Earth’s crust is filled with a self-healing material that can power, protect the guts of spacecraft

June 25th 2024 at 6:32 pm

The space environment is harsh and full of extreme radiation. Scientists designing spacecraft and satellites need materials that can withstand these conditions. In a paper published in January 2024, my team of materials researchers demonstrated that a next-generation semiconductor material called metal-halide perovskite can actually recover and heal itself from radiation damage. Metal-halide perovskites are a class of materials discovered in 1839 that are found abundantly inContinue reading "Researchers say Earth’s crust is filled with a self-healing material that can power, protect the guts of spacecraft"

The post Researchers say Earth’s crust is filled with a self-healing material that can power, protect the guts of spacecraft appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • ‘It’s going to be awesome’: How the Vera C. Rubin Observatory will survey space and timeElizabeth Gamillo
    When the Vera C. Rubin Observatory comes online, perhaps at full bore in 2025, this powerful and unique survey telescope, at high altitude in Chile, will survey the heavens in a new and unprecedented way.   Originally named the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, the observatory was renamed to honor the great Vera Rubin, who diedContinue reading "‘It’s going to be awesome’: How the Vera C. Rubin Observatory will survey space and time" The post ‘It’s going to be awesome’: How the Vera C. Rubin Obser
     

‘It’s going to be awesome’: How the Vera C. Rubin Observatory will survey space and time

June 25th 2024 at 4:31 pm

When the Vera C. Rubin Observatory comes online, perhaps at full bore in 2025, this powerful and unique survey telescope, at high altitude in Chile, will survey the heavens in a new and unprecedented way.   Originally named the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, the observatory was renamed to honor the great Vera Rubin, who diedContinue reading "‘It’s going to be awesome’: How the Vera C. Rubin Observatory will survey space and time"

The post ‘It’s going to be awesome’: How the Vera C. Rubin Observatory will survey space and time appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Hamburger’s tailmnewman
    Sergey Trudolyubov from Los Alamos, New Mexico NGC 3628 — sometimes called the Hamburger Galaxy — is perhaps best known as part of the Leo Triplet of galaxies. But it takes a solo bow in this HαLRGB image, taken over 14.1 hours with a 10-inch f/4.0 scope. Visible to the galaxy’s left is its extendedContinue reading "The Hamburger’s tail" The post The Hamburger’s tail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

The Hamburger’s tail

By: mnewman
June 25th 2024 at 3:17 am

Sergey Trudolyubov from Los Alamos, New Mexico NGC 3628 — sometimes called the Hamburger Galaxy — is perhaps best known as part of the Leo Triplet of galaxies. But it takes a solo bow in this HαLRGB image, taken over 14.1 hours with a 10-inch f/4.0 scope. Visible to the galaxy’s left is its extendedContinue reading "The Hamburger’s tail"

The post The Hamburger’s tail appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Eagle and the Omega: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    This week, Dave’s breaking down another pair of deep-sky objects that are situated nicely in the evening sky right now: the Eagle Nebula (M16) and the Omega Nebula (M17). Both of these are large clouds of gas, condensing down to form stars. You’ve probably seen the Eagle Nebula’s most famous feature — the Pillars ofContinue reading "The Eagle and the Omega: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post The Eagle and the Omega: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astrono
     

The Eagle and the Omega: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

June 25th 2024 at 12:38 am

This week, Dave’s breaking down another pair of deep-sky objects that are situated nicely in the evening sky right now: the Eagle Nebula (M16) and the Omega Nebula (M17). Both of these are large clouds of gas, condensing down to form stars. You’ve probably seen the Eagle Nebula’s most famous feature — the Pillars ofContinue reading "The Eagle and the Omega: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post The Eagle and the Omega: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal that struck Earth and formed the Moon?Astronomy Staff
    Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal body that struck Earth and resulted in the formation of the Moon? Colton BrooksVirginia Beach, Virginia Psyche appears to be an iron core, or part of one, produced during the history of collisions experienced by a fairly large asteroid with other large asteroids. The collision or collisionsContinue reading "Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal that struck Earth and formed the Moon?" The post Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal that st
     

Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal that struck Earth and formed the Moon?

June 24th 2024 at 10:30 pm

Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal body that struck Earth and resulted in the formation of the Moon? Colton BrooksVirginia Beach, Virginia Psyche appears to be an iron core, or part of one, produced during the history of collisions experienced by a fairly large asteroid with other large asteroids. The collision or collisionsContinue reading "Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal that struck Earth and formed the Moon?"

The post Could Psyche be the core of the planetesimal that struck Earth and formed the Moon? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Unusual glimpse of Cosmic Gems could be a breakthrough for astronomersmnewman
    Several compact clusters of stars that formed near the Big Bang could provide a key insight into a little-understood time in the universe’s history. And we can only see them because of a quirk of astronomy. A new study published in Nature details the findings of Cosmic Gems Arc, a galaxy that can only beContinue reading "Unusual glimpse of Cosmic Gems could be a breakthrough for astronomers" The post Unusual glimpse of Cosmic Gems could be a breakthrough for astronomers appeared first on Astrono
     

Unusual glimpse of Cosmic Gems could be a breakthrough for astronomers

By: mnewman
June 24th 2024 at 9:14 pm

Several compact clusters of stars that formed near the Big Bang could provide a key insight into a little-understood time in the universe’s history. And we can only see them because of a quirk of astronomy. A new study published in Nature details the findings of Cosmic Gems Arc, a galaxy that can only beContinue reading "Unusual glimpse of Cosmic Gems could be a breakthrough for astronomers"

The post Unusual glimpse of Cosmic Gems could be a breakthrough for astronomers appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Solar eclipse: Plan for the next big one in North AmericaMichael E. Bakich
    The total solar eclipse set to occur August 12, 2045, will dazzle everyone who views it. And with a maximum duration of totality above 6 minutes, it will be well worth the effort to travel to where conditions are best. However, potential observers might have some questions. Where exactly in the U.S. will totality beContinue reading "Solar eclipse: Plan for the next big one in North America" The post Solar eclipse: Plan for the next big one in North America appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Solar eclipse: Plan for the next big one in North America

July 1st 2024 at 4:40 pm

The total solar eclipse set to occur August 12, 2045, will dazzle everyone who views it. And with a maximum duration of totality above 6 minutes, it will be well worth the effort to travel to where conditions are best. However, potential observers might have some questions. Where exactly in the U.S. will totality beContinue reading "Solar eclipse: Plan for the next big one in North America"

The post Solar eclipse: Plan for the next big one in North America appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Why does Earth have only one Moon?mnewman
    Why do some planets have moons and some don’t? – Siddharth, age 6, Texas On Earth, you can look up at night and see the Moon shining bright from hundreds of thousands of miles away. But if you went to Venus, that wouldn’t be the case. Not every planet has a moon – so whyContinue reading "Why does Earth have only one Moon?" The post Why does Earth have only one Moon? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Why does Earth have only one Moon?

By: mnewman
June 24th 2024 at 4:51 pm

Why do some planets have moons and some don’t? – Siddharth, age 6, Texas On Earth, you can look up at night and see the Moon shining bright from hundreds of thousands of miles away. But if you went to Venus, that wouldn’t be the case. Not every planet has a moon – so whyContinue reading "Why does Earth have only one Moon?"

The post Why does Earth have only one Moon? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Staring down the IrisM
    Michael Telesco from New Canaan, Connecticut The Iris Nebula (LBN 487) is a reflection nebula 1,300 light-years away in Cepheus lit by the open star cluster NGC 7023 that lies within it. The imager obtained this data for this starless rendition with a 2-inch scope and 6.7 hours of exposure at the 2023 Black ForestContinue reading "Staring down the Iris" The post Staring down the Iris appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Staring down the Iris

By: M
June 22nd 2024 at 9:04 pm

Michael Telesco from New Canaan, Connecticut The Iris Nebula (LBN 487) is a reflection nebula 1,300 light-years away in Cepheus lit by the open star cluster NGC 7023 that lies within it. The imager obtained this data for this starless rendition with a 2-inch scope and 6.7 hours of exposure at the 2023 Black ForestContinue reading "Staring down the Iris"

The post Staring down the Iris appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • One-shot fast radio bursts may emerge from Milky Way-like galaxies, new research suggestsmnewman
    For more than a decade now, astronomers have been puzzling over the origins of so-called fast radio bursts (FRB), which are fleeting yet energy-packed flashes of light in deep space. In fractions of a second, these bursts blast into space as much energy as the Sun radiates in a single day. Nearly 800 of theseContinue reading "One-shot fast radio bursts may emerge from Milky Way-like galaxies, new research suggests" The post One-shot fast radio bursts may emerge from Milky Way-like galaxies, new
     

One-shot fast radio bursts may emerge from Milky Way-like galaxies, new research suggests

By: mnewman
June 21st 2024 at 9:10 pm

For more than a decade now, astronomers have been puzzling over the origins of so-called fast radio bursts (FRB), which are fleeting yet energy-packed flashes of light in deep space. In fractions of a second, these bursts blast into space as much energy as the Sun radiates in a single day. Nearly 800 of theseContinue reading "One-shot fast radio bursts may emerge from Milky Way-like galaxies, new research suggests"

The post One-shot fast radio bursts may emerge from Milky Way-like galaxies, new research suggests appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Mars rover discovers a strange Red Planet rockMichael E. Bakich
    NASA’s Perseverance rover, which has been on Mars since February 2021, recently found a light-colored boulder on the surface of Mount Washburn, a hill inside Jezero Crater. Measuring 18 by 14 inches (45 by 35 centimeters), the rock is now named “Atoko Point,” because it resembles, in color, a similarly named cliff within Arizona’s GrandContinue reading "Mars rover discovers a strange Red Planet rock" The post Mars rover discovers a strange Red Planet rock appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Mars rover discovers a strange Red Planet rock

June 21st 2024 at 8:43 pm

NASA’s Perseverance rover, which has been on Mars since February 2021, recently found a light-colored boulder on the surface of Mount Washburn, a hill inside Jezero Crater. Measuring 18 by 14 inches (45 by 35 centimeters), the rock is now named “Atoko Point,” because it resembles, in color, a similarly named cliff within Arizona’s GrandContinue reading "Mars rover discovers a strange Red Planet rock"

The post Mars rover discovers a strange Red Planet rock appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry MoonAlison Klesman
    Friday, June 21June’s Full Moon occurs at 9:08 P.M. EDT, just over a day after the summer solstice marked the beginning of that season in the Northern Hemisphere. June’s Full Moon is also called the Strawberry Moon, and you can catch it rising opposite the Sun, peeking over the eastern horizon less than half anContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon" The post The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon appeared first on Astr
     

The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon

June 21st 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, June 21June’s Full Moon occurs at 9:08 P.M. EDT, just over a day after the summer solstice marked the beginning of that season in the Northern Hemisphere. June’s Full Moon is also called the Strawberry Moon, and you can catch it rising opposite the Sun, peeking over the eastern horizon less than half anContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon"

The post The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxiesmnewman
    In 2020 when astronomers using the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) discovered ghostly circles of radio emissions in the sky that were so gigantic, they surpassed our Milky Way’s size tenfold. And so far, no known cosmic phenomenon could explain how they came to existence and what they even are. The supremely inflated profilesContinue reading "Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies" The post Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ coul
     

Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies

By: mnewman
June 20th 2024 at 10:55 pm

In 2020 when astronomers using the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) discovered ghostly circles of radio emissions in the sky that were so gigantic, they surpassed our Milky Way’s size tenfold. And so far, no known cosmic phenomenon could explain how they came to existence and what they even are. The supremely inflated profilesContinue reading "Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies"

The post Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happenmnewman
    At the center of an average joe galaxy 300 million light-years away, something has just happened that has astronomers at the edge of their seats. Suddenly, a supermassive black hole inhabiting the center of a distant galaxy has come to life. The galaxy, SDSS1335+0728, is otherwise unremarkable, and even the supermassive black hole at theContinue reading "A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen" The post A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen appea
     

A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen

By: mnewman
June 20th 2024 at 7:07 pm

At the center of an average joe galaxy 300 million light-years away, something has just happened that has astronomers at the edge of their seats. Suddenly, a supermassive black hole inhabiting the center of a distant galaxy has come to life. The galaxy, SDSS1335+0728, is otherwise unremarkable, and even the supermassive black hole at theContinue reading "A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen"

The post A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • 15 things kids should know about space travelMichael E. Bakich
    Professional and amateur astronomers alike love to share facts about our amazing universe: “The brightest star is…,” “A black hole is…,” and lots more. These facts are so incredible that we sometimes overlook our own little corner of the cosmos and how humans have ventured into it. Space exploration, however, goes hand in hand withContinue reading "15 things kids should know about space travel" The post 15 things kids should know about space travel appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

15 things kids should know about space travel

June 20th 2024 at 6:32 pm

Professional and amateur astronomers alike love to share facts about our amazing universe: “The brightest star is…,” “A black hole is…,” and lots more. These facts are so incredible that we sometimes overlook our own little corner of the cosmos and how humans have ventured into it. Space exploration, however, goes hand in hand withContinue reading "15 things kids should know about space travel"

The post 15 things kids should know about space travel appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025Starmus
    Tenerife/La Palma – June 18, 2024 — STARMUS, the most ambitious science and music festival — founded by Garik Israelian, PhD in astrophysics and the Queen guitarist Brian May, also a PhD in astrophysics — announced today its next edition to be held on the island of La Palma next April 2025. At a pressContinue reading "Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025" The post Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025 appeared first on As
     

Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025

By: Starmus
June 19th 2024 at 4:48 pm

Tenerife/La Palma – June 18, 2024 — STARMUS, the most ambitious science and music festival — founded by Garik Israelian, PhD in astrophysics and the Queen guitarist Brian May, also a PhD in astrophysics — announced today its next edition to be held on the island of La Palma next April 2025. At a pressContinue reading "Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025"

The post Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy.mnewman
    In the coming decade, more people will go to space than ever before as human spaceflight enters a new era. NASA, the European Space Agency and other governmental agencies are partnering to develop crewed missions beyond the Moon. At the same time, these agencies are collaborating with private companies using new technologies to drive down the priceContinue reading "How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy." The post How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy. ap
     

How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy.

By: mnewman
June 18th 2024 at 10:41 pm

In the coming decade, more people will go to space than ever before as human spaceflight enters a new era. NASA, the European Space Agency and other governmental agencies are partnering to develop crewed missions beyond the Moon. At the same time, these agencies are collaborating with private companies using new technologies to drive down the priceContinue reading "How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy."

The post How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy. appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Dunes of LadakhM
    Anushtup Roychoudhury, from Kolkata, India Cygnus and the core region of the Milky Way grace the skies above the white sand dunes of Ladahk, India’s first dark-sky reserve. This mosaic is 7 vertical panels of five 15-second subframes each, taken with a Sony a7 II mirrorless camera at ISO 10000 on a 14mm f/2.8 lens.Continue reading "Dunes of Ladakh" The post Dunes of Ladakh appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Dunes of Ladakh

By: M
June 18th 2024 at 12:49 am

Anushtup Roychoudhury, from Kolkata, India Cygnus and the core region of the Milky Way grace the skies above the white sand dunes of Ladahk, India’s first dark-sky reserve. This mosaic is 7 vertical panels of five 15-second subframes each, taken with a Sony a7 II mirrorless camera at ISO 10000 on a 14mm f/2.8 lens.Continue reading "Dunes of Ladakh"

The post Dunes of Ladakh appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • 2024 Full Moon calendar: The ‘Strawberry Moon’ risesJake Parks
    The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: The ‘Strawberry Moon’ rises" The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: The ‘Strawberry Moon’ rises appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

2024 Full Moon calendar: The ‘Strawberry Moon’ rises

June 21st 2024 at 4:17 pm

The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: The ‘Strawberry Moon’ rises"

The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: The ‘Strawberry Moon’ rises appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry MoonAlison Klesman
    Friday, June 21June’s Full Moon occurs at 9:08 P.M. EDT, just over a day after the summer solstice marked the beginning of that season in the Northern Hemisphere. June’s Full Moon is also called the Strawberry Moon, and you can catch it rising opposite the Sun, peeking over the eastern horizon less than half anContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon" The post The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon appeared first on Astr
     

The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon

June 21st 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, June 21June’s Full Moon occurs at 9:08 P.M. EDT, just over a day after the summer solstice marked the beginning of that season in the Northern Hemisphere. June’s Full Moon is also called the Strawberry Moon, and you can catch it rising opposite the Sun, peeking over the eastern horizon less than half anContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon"

The post The Sky This Week from June 21 to 28: Embrace June’s Strawberry Moon appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxiesmnewman
    In 2020 when astronomers using the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) discovered ghostly circles of radio emissions in the sky that were so gigantic, they surpassed our Milky Way’s size tenfold. And so far, no known cosmic phenomenon could explain how they came to existence and what they even are. The supremely inflated profilesContinue reading "Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies" The post Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ coul
     

Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies

By: mnewman
June 20th 2024 at 10:55 pm

In 2020 when astronomers using the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) discovered ghostly circles of radio emissions in the sky that were so gigantic, they surpassed our Milky Way’s size tenfold. And so far, no known cosmic phenomenon could explain how they came to existence and what they even are. The supremely inflated profilesContinue reading "Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies"

The post Mysterious Cloverleaf ‘odd radio circle’ could be a merger of a dozen galaxies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happenmnewman
    At the center of an average joe galaxy 300 million light-years away, something has just happened that has astronomers at the edge of their seats. Suddenly, a supermassive black hole inhabiting the center of a distant galaxy has come to life. The galaxy, SDSS1335+0728, is otherwise unremarkable, and even the supermassive black hole at theContinue reading "A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen" The post A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen appea
     

A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen

By: mnewman
June 20th 2024 at 7:07 pm

At the center of an average joe galaxy 300 million light-years away, something has just happened that has astronomers at the edge of their seats. Suddenly, a supermassive black hole inhabiting the center of a distant galaxy has come to life. The galaxy, SDSS1335+0728, is otherwise unremarkable, and even the supermassive black hole at theContinue reading "A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen"

The post A distant black hole reawakens, and astronomers watch it happen appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 15 things kids should know about space travelMichael E. Bakich
    Professional and amateur astronomers alike love to share facts about our amazing universe: “The brightest star is…,” “A black hole is…,” and lots more. These facts are so incredible that we sometimes overlook our own little corner of the cosmos and how humans have ventured into it. Space exploration, however, goes hand in hand withContinue reading "15 things kids should know about space travel" The post 15 things kids should know about space travel appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

15 things kids should know about space travel

June 20th 2024 at 6:32 pm

Professional and amateur astronomers alike love to share facts about our amazing universe: “The brightest star is…,” “A black hole is…,” and lots more. These facts are so incredible that we sometimes overlook our own little corner of the cosmos and how humans have ventured into it. Space exploration, however, goes hand in hand withContinue reading "15 things kids should know about space travel"

The post 15 things kids should know about space travel appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and namesJake Parks
    The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names" The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names

June 20th 2024 at 4:09 pm

The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names"

The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025Starmus
    Tenerife/La Palma – June 18, 2024 — STARMUS, the most ambitious science and music festival — founded by Garik Israelian, PhD in astrophysics and the Queen guitarist Brian May, also a PhD in astrophysics — announced today its next edition to be held on the island of La Palma next April 2025. At a pressContinue reading "Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025" The post Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025 appeared first on As
     

Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025

By: Starmus
June 19th 2024 at 4:48 pm

Tenerife/La Palma – June 18, 2024 — STARMUS, the most ambitious science and music festival — founded by Garik Israelian, PhD in astrophysics and the Queen guitarist Brian May, also a PhD in astrophysics — announced today its next edition to be held on the island of La Palma next April 2025. At a pressContinue reading "Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025"

The post Starmus returns to the Canary Islands for ‘Starmus La Palma’ in April 2025 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and namesJake Parks
    The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names" The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names

June 19th 2024 at 3:54 pm

The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names"

The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy.mnewman
    In the coming decade, more people will go to space than ever before as human spaceflight enters a new era. NASA, the European Space Agency and other governmental agencies are partnering to develop crewed missions beyond the Moon. At the same time, these agencies are collaborating with private companies using new technologies to drive down the priceContinue reading "How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy." The post How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy. ap
     

How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy.

By: mnewman
June 18th 2024 at 10:41 pm

In the coming decade, more people will go to space than ever before as human spaceflight enters a new era. NASA, the European Space Agency and other governmental agencies are partnering to develop crewed missions beyond the Moon. At the same time, these agencies are collaborating with private companies using new technologies to drive down the priceContinue reading "How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy."

The post How do you keep astronauts healthy in space? It’s not easy. appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and namesJake Parks
    The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names" The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names

June 18th 2024 at 4:09 pm

The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names"

The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Dunes of LadakhM
    Anushtup Roychoudhury, from Kolkata, India Cygnus and the core region of the Milky Way grace the skies above the white sand dunes of Ladahk, India’s first dark-sky reserve. This mosaic is 7 vertical panels of five 15-second subframes each, taken with a Sony a7 II mirrorless camera at ISO 10000 on a 14mm f/2.8 lens.Continue reading "Dunes of Ladakh" The post Dunes of Ladakh appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Dunes of Ladakh

By: M
June 18th 2024 at 12:49 am

Anushtup Roychoudhury, from Kolkata, India Cygnus and the core region of the Milky Way grace the skies above the white sand dunes of Ladahk, India’s first dark-sky reserve. This mosaic is 7 vertical panels of five 15-second subframes each, taken with a Sony a7 II mirrorless camera at ISO 10000 on a 14mm f/2.8 lens.Continue reading "Dunes of Ladakh"

The post Dunes of Ladakh appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Neptune-like planet ‘Phoenix’ baffles astronomers with its atmospheremnewman
    Astronomers have discovered a planet beyond our solar system that’s so cozy with its host star, its supremely puffy atmosphere should have been stripped down to bare rock billions of years ago. Yet the planet’s thick air has endured its star’s immense radiation for possibly billions of years, challenging conventional theories about how planets ageContinue reading "Neptune-like planet ‘Phoenix’ baffles astronomers with its atmosphere" The post Neptune-like planet ‘Phoenix’ baffles astronomers wit
     

Neptune-like planet ‘Phoenix’ baffles astronomers with its atmosphere

By: mnewman
June 17th 2024 at 10:52 pm

Astronomers have discovered a planet beyond our solar system that’s so cozy with its host star, its supremely puffy atmosphere should have been stripped down to bare rock billions of years ago. Yet the planet’s thick air has endured its star’s immense radiation for possibly billions of years, challenging conventional theories about how planets ageContinue reading "Neptune-like planet ‘Phoenix’ baffles astronomers with its atmosphere"

The post Neptune-like planet ‘Phoenix’ baffles astronomers with its atmosphere appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large onesAlison Klesman
    It’s well known that all massive galaxies like the Milky Way host supermassive black holes millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun in their centers. These galaxies and their black holes are intertwined, with the evolution of one significantly impacting the evolution of the other. But what about lower-mass galaxies, such asContinue reading "Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones" The post Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies tha
     

Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones

June 17th 2024 at 7:50 pm

It’s well known that all massive galaxies like the Milky Way host supermassive black holes millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun in their centers. These galaxies and their black holes are intertwined, with the evolution of one significantly impacting the evolution of the other. But what about lower-mass galaxies, such asContinue reading "Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones"

The post Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guideshill
    Since the early 1990s, the Hubble Space Telescope has captured breathtaking images of tens of thousands of celestial objects, inspiring a generation of professional scientists and amateur astronomers. Some of its most captivating images are of nebulae like the famous Pillars of Creation at the heart of the Eagle Nebula (M16), rendered in vibrant greens,Continue reading "How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide" The post How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-pr
     

How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide

By: shill
June 17th 2024 at 5:59 pm

Since the early 1990s, the Hubble Space Telescope has captured breathtaking images of tens of thousands of celestial objects, inspiring a generation of professional scientists and amateur astronomers. Some of its most captivating images are of nebulae like the famous Pillars of Creation at the heart of the Eagle Nebula (M16), rendered in vibrant greens,Continue reading "How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide"

The post How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and namesJake Parks
    The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names" The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names

June 17th 2024 at 4:49 pm

The phenomenon of a Full Moon arises when our planet, Earth, is precisely sandwiched between the Sun and the Moon. This alignment ensures the entire side of the Moon that faces us gleams under sunlight. Thanks to the Moon’s orbit around Earth, the angle of sunlight hitting the lunar surface and being reflected back toContinue reading "2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names"

The post 2024 Full Moon calendar: Dates, times, types, and names appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skiesAlison Klesman
    Friday, June 14First Quarter Moon occurs at 1:18 A.M. EDT this morning. At 9:35 A.M. EDT, the Moon reaches apogee, the farthest point from Earth in its orbit. It will then sit 251,082 miles (404,077 kilometers) away. By evening, the Moon is setting in the west, standing amid the sparkling stars of Virgo. In justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies" The post The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies appeared first on Astronomy Mag
     

The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies

June 14th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, June 14First Quarter Moon occurs at 1:18 A.M. EDT this morning. At 9:35 A.M. EDT, the Moon reaches apogee, the farthest point from Earth in its orbit. It will then sit 251,082 miles (404,077 kilometers) away. By evening, the Moon is setting in the west, standing amid the sparkling stars of Virgo. In justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies"

The post The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronautsshill
    NASA has set its sights on the Moon, aiming to send astronauts back to the lunar surface by 2026 and establish a long-term presence there by the 2030s. But the Moon isn’t exactly a habitable place for people. Cosmic rays from distant stars and galaxies and solar energetic particles from the Sun bombard the surface,Continue reading "Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts" The post Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astrona
     

Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts

By: shill
June 13th 2024 at 5:28 pm

NASA has set its sights on the Moon, aiming to send astronauts back to the lunar surface by 2026 and establish a long-term presence there by the 2030s. But the Moon isn’t exactly a habitable place for people. Cosmic rays from distant stars and galaxies and solar energetic particles from the Sun bombard the surface,Continue reading "Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts"

The post Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to see T Coronae Borealis, the ‘brightest nova of the generation’Elizabeth Gamillo
    A star that hasn’t been seen with the naked eye since the 1940s will appear for a fleeting moment in our night sky this year. The luminous point of light is the effect of an outburst, called a nova, from a star system known as T Coronae Borealis (T CrB). T CrB has charmed manyContinue reading "How to see T Coronae Borealis, the ‘brightest nova of the generation’" The post How to see T Coronae Borealis, the ‘brightest nova of the generation’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

How to see T Coronae Borealis, the ‘brightest nova of the generation’

June 12th 2024 at 7:00 pm

A star that hasn’t been seen with the naked eye since the 1940s will appear for a fleeting moment in our night sky this year. The luminous point of light is the effect of an outburst, called a nova, from a star system known as T Coronae Borealis (T CrB). T CrB has charmed manyContinue reading "How to see T Coronae Borealis, the ‘brightest nova of the generation’"

The post How to see T Coronae Borealis, the ‘brightest nova of the generation’ appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old?

June 12th 2024 at 5:30 pm

How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old? And how can we detect light 46 billion light-years away when the universe has been in existence for a fraction of that time? Joe MurchisonPlacerville, California Astronomers widely accept that the universe formed in theContinue reading "How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old?"

The post How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?Astronomy Staff
    Ancient archaeological sites (like Stonehenge) were constructed so that the Sun would shine through a certain opening on some special day (typically a solstice). Wouldn’t Earth’s precession change the geometry of the situation over the years? Michael C. WestBethesda, Maryland If you are lucky enough to stand in the center of Stonehenge on the summerContinue reading "Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?" The post Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstic
     

Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?

June 11th 2024 at 4:26 pm

Ancient archaeological sites (like Stonehenge) were constructed so that the Sun would shine through a certain opening on some special day (typically a solstice). Wouldn’t Earth’s precession change the geometry of the situation over the years? Michael C. WestBethesda, Maryland If you are lucky enough to stand in the center of Stonehenge on the summerContinue reading "Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?"

The post Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • A Stonehenge mystery could be solved this Junemnewman
    When it comes to its connection to the sky, Stonehenge is best known for its solar alignments. Every midsummer’s night tens of thousands of people gather at Stonehenge to celebrate and witness the rising Sun in alignment with the Heel stone standing outside of the circle. Six months later a smaller crowd congregates around the Heel stone to witness the midwinterContinue reading "A Stonehenge mystery could be solved this June" The post A Stonehenge mystery could be solved this June appeared first
     

A Stonehenge mystery could be solved this June

By: mnewman
June 11th 2024 at 4:05 pm

When it comes to its connection to the sky, Stonehenge is best known for its solar alignments. Every midsummer’s night tens of thousands of people gather at Stonehenge to celebrate and witness the rising Sun in alignment with the Heel stone standing outside of the circle. Six months later a smaller crowd congregates around the Heel stone to witness the midwinterContinue reading "A Stonehenge mystery could be solved this June"

The post A Stonehenge mystery could be solved this June appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large onesAlison Klesman
    It’s well known that all massive galaxies like the Milky Way host supermassive black holes millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun in their centers. These galaxies and their black holes are intertwined, with the evolution of one significantly impacting the evolution of the other. But what about lower-mass galaxies, such asContinue reading "Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones" The post Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies tha
     

Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones

June 17th 2024 at 7:50 pm

It’s well known that all massive galaxies like the Milky Way host supermassive black holes millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun in their centers. These galaxies and their black holes are intertwined, with the evolution of one significantly impacting the evolution of the other. But what about lower-mass galaxies, such asContinue reading "Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones"

The post Massive black holes may eat differently in small galaxies than in large ones appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guideshill
    Since the early 1990s, the Hubble Space Telescope has captured breathtaking images of tens of thousands of celestial objects, inspiring a generation of professional scientists and amateur astronomers. Some of its most captivating images are of nebulae like the famous Pillars of Creation at the heart of the Eagle Nebula (M16), rendered in vibrant greens,Continue reading "How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide" The post How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-pr
     

How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide

By: shill
June 17th 2024 at 5:59 pm

Since the early 1990s, the Hubble Space Telescope has captured breathtaking images of tens of thousands of celestial objects, inspiring a generation of professional scientists and amateur astronomers. Some of its most captivating images are of nebulae like the famous Pillars of Creation at the heart of the Eagle Nebula (M16), rendered in vibrant greens,Continue reading "How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide"

The post How to take Hubble-like photos: Filters and post-processing guide appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skiesAlison Klesman
    Friday, June 14First Quarter Moon occurs at 1:18 A.M. EDT this morning. At 9:35 A.M. EDT, the Moon reaches apogee, the farthest point from Earth in its orbit. It will then sit 251,082 miles (404,077 kilometers) away. By evening, the Moon is setting in the west, standing amid the sparkling stars of Virgo. In justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies" The post The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies appeared first on Astronomy Mag
     

The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies

June 14th 2024 at 8:30 am

Friday, June 14First Quarter Moon occurs at 1:18 A.M. EDT this morning. At 9:35 A.M. EDT, the Moon reaches apogee, the farthest point from Earth in its orbit. It will then sit 251,082 miles (404,077 kilometers) away. By evening, the Moon is setting in the west, standing amid the sparkling stars of Virgo. In justContinue reading "The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies"

The post The Sky This Week from June 14 to 21: Say hello to summer skies appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronautsshill
    NASA has set its sights on the Moon, aiming to send astronauts back to the lunar surface by 2026 and establish a long-term presence there by the 2030s. But the Moon isn’t exactly a habitable place for people. Cosmic rays from distant stars and galaxies and solar energetic particles from the Sun bombard the surface,Continue reading "Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts" The post Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astrona
     

Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts

By: shill
June 13th 2024 at 5:28 pm

NASA has set its sights on the Moon, aiming to send astronauts back to the lunar surface by 2026 and establish a long-term presence there by the 2030s. But the Moon isn’t exactly a habitable place for people. Cosmic rays from distant stars and galaxies and solar energetic particles from the Sun bombard the surface,Continue reading "Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts"

The post Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old?

June 12th 2024 at 5:30 pm

How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old? And how can we detect light 46 billion light-years away when the universe has been in existence for a fraction of that time? Joe MurchisonPlacerville, California Astronomers widely accept that the universe formed in theContinue reading "How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old?"

The post How can the visible universe be 46 billion light-years in radius when the universe is only 13.8 billion years old? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?Astronomy Staff
    Ancient archaeological sites (like Stonehenge) were constructed so that the Sun would shine through a certain opening on some special day (typically a solstice). Wouldn’t Earth’s precession change the geometry of the situation over the years? Michael C. WestBethesda, Maryland If you are lucky enough to stand in the center of Stonehenge on the summerContinue reading "Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?" The post Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstic
     

Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?

June 11th 2024 at 4:26 pm

Ancient archaeological sites (like Stonehenge) were constructed so that the Sun would shine through a certain opening on some special day (typically a solstice). Wouldn’t Earth’s precession change the geometry of the situation over the years? Michael C. WestBethesda, Maryland If you are lucky enough to stand in the center of Stonehenge on the summerContinue reading "Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice?"

The post Will the Sun always shine through Stonehenge on the solstice? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Monkeying aroundM
    Kfir Simon, taken from Tivoli Farm, Namibia The Monkey Head Nebula (NGC 2174) is an emission nebula and star-forming region 6,400 light-years away in the constellation Orion. This SHORGB image was taken with four hours of exposure on a 24-inch scope at f/4.5. The post Monkeying around appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Monkeying around

By: M
June 11th 2024 at 3:58 pm

Kfir Simon, taken from Tivoli Farm, Namibia The Monkey Head Nebula (NGC 2174) is an emission nebula and star-forming region 6,400 light-years away in the constellation Orion. This SHORGB image was taken with four hours of exposure on a 24-inch scope at f/4.5.

The post Monkeying around appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Ephemeral morning frost discovered atop Mars’ tallest volcanoesmnewman
    In early 2022, then-Ph.D. student Adomas Valantinas was at the University of Bern, sorting thousands of images of Mars snapped by the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) spacecraft when he noticed vast swaths of odd material near the planet’s equator. Sifting through the pictures, he soon saw a pattern: the bluish deposits,Continue reading "Ephemeral morning frost discovered atop Mars’ tallest volcanoes" The post Ephemeral morning frost discovered atop Mars’ tallest volcanoes a
     

Ephemeral morning frost discovered atop Mars’ tallest volcanoes

By: mnewman
June 10th 2024 at 6:30 pm

In early 2022, then-Ph.D. student Adomas Valantinas was at the University of Bern, sorting thousands of images of Mars snapped by the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) spacecraft when he noticed vast swaths of odd material near the planet’s equator. Sifting through the pictures, he soon saw a pattern: the bluish deposits,Continue reading "Ephemeral morning frost discovered atop Mars’ tallest volcanoes"

The post Ephemeral morning frost discovered atop Mars’ tallest volcanoes appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Starmus spotlights planet Earth: This Week in Astronomy with Dave EicherDavid J. Eicher
    The seventh Starmus Festival took place May 12–17 in Bratislava, Slovakia, and was a smashing success all around. Starmus stands for stars and music, and this celebration has grown into the greatest science festival in the world. It is the creation of astronomer Garik Israelian, the director, and his friend Brian May, who is anContinue reading "Starmus spotlights planet Earth: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher" The post Starmus spotlights planet Earth: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eich
     

Starmus spotlights planet Earth: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher

June 10th 2024 at 6:16 pm

The seventh Starmus Festival took place May 12–17 in Bratislava, Slovakia, and was a smashing success all around. Starmus stands for stars and music, and this celebration has grown into the greatest science festival in the world. It is the creation of astronomer Garik Israelian, the director, and his friend Brian May, who is anContinue reading "Starmus spotlights planet Earth: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher"

The post Starmus spotlights planet Earth: This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • NASA’s asteroid Bennu sample return mission was a prime time to study an artificial meteormnewman
    Earth is constantly bombarded by fragments of rock and ice, also known as meteoroids, from outer space. Most of the meteoroids are as tiny as grains of sand and small pebbles, and they completely burn up high in the atmosphere. You can see meteoroids larger than about a golf ball when they light up asContinue reading "NASA’s asteroid Bennu sample return mission was a prime time to study an artificial meteor" The post NASA’s asteroid Bennu sample return mission was a prime time to study an artifi
     

NASA’s asteroid Bennu sample return mission was a prime time to study an artificial meteor

By: mnewman
June 10th 2024 at 5:32 pm

Earth is constantly bombarded by fragments of rock and ice, also known as meteoroids, from outer space. Most of the meteoroids are as tiny as grains of sand and small pebbles, and they completely burn up high in the atmosphere. You can see meteoroids larger than about a golf ball when they light up asContinue reading "NASA’s asteroid Bennu sample return mission was a prime time to study an artificial meteor"

The post NASA’s asteroid Bennu sample return mission was a prime time to study an artificial meteor appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

  • ✇Astronomy Magazine
  • Explore the sky with Celestron’s autoguidershill
    Perhaps you have always wanted to try astroimaging, but were intimidated by the technical aspects, the equipment requirements, the level of expertise needed — you know, the works. The hardware requirements alone can be daunting for the novice. Luckily, Celestron has now made leaping into this endeavor a lot easier for a beginner with theirContinue reading "Explore the sky with Celestron’s autoguider" The post Explore the sky with Celestron’s autoguider appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Explore the sky with Celestron’s autoguider

By: shill
June 10th 2024 at 4:30 pm

Perhaps you have always wanted to try astroimaging, but were intimidated by the technical aspects, the equipment requirements, the level of expertise needed — you know, the works. The hardware requirements alone can be daunting for the novice. Luckily, Celestron has now made leaping into this endeavor a lot easier for a beginner with theirContinue reading "Explore the sky with Celestron’s autoguider"

The post Explore the sky with Celestron’s autoguider appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • When black holes merge, is the diameter of the new black hole bigger?Astronomy Staff
    When black holes merge, does the actual diameter of the new black hole increase, or just its mass? Richard RobinsonClay, New York The short answer is yes: When two black holes merge, the resulting black hole has both more mass and a larger diameter. How much bigger? Let’s find out! When astronomers talk about theContinue reading "When black holes merge, is the diameter of the new black hole bigger?" The post When black holes merge, is the diameter of the new black hole bigger? appeared first on
     

When black holes merge, is the diameter of the new black hole bigger?

June 10th 2024 at 4:00 pm

When black holes merge, does the actual diameter of the new black hole increase, or just its mass? Richard RobinsonClay, New York The short answer is yes: When two black holes merge, the resulting black hole has both more mass and a larger diameter. How much bigger? Let’s find out! When astronomers talk about theContinue reading "When black holes merge, is the diameter of the new black hole bigger?"

The post When black holes merge, is the diameter of the new black hole bigger? appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • William Anders, NASA Astronaut and US Air Force Major General, dies at 90Elizabeth Gamillo
    William “Bill” Anders, former Apollo 8 astronaut, died in a plane crash on Friday, June 7, 2024. Anders was piloting a small aircraft in Roche Harbor, Washington State. The craft dove into the water and sank, according to a San Juan County press release.  The death was confirmed by his son, Greg, as reported byContinue reading "William Anders, NASA Astronaut and US Air Force Major General, dies at 90" The post William Anders, NASA Astronaut and US Air Force Major General, dies at 90 appeared fir
     

William Anders, NASA Astronaut and US Air Force Major General, dies at 90

June 8th 2024 at 5:40 am

William “Bill” Anders, former Apollo 8 astronaut, died in a plane crash on Friday, June 7, 2024. Anders was piloting a small aircraft in Roche Harbor, Washington State. The craft dove into the water and sank, according to a San Juan County press release.  The death was confirmed by his son, Greg, as reported byContinue reading "William Anders, NASA Astronaut and US Air Force Major General, dies at 90"

The post William Anders, NASA Astronaut and US Air Force Major General, dies at 90 appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Program, and Public Engagement after ApolloElizabeth Gamillo
    The following is an excerpt from The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Program, and Public Engagement after Apollo by Amy Paige Kaminski. The book will be published June 11, 2024, by the University of Pittsburgh Press. It was a most unusual sight, surreal and sublime all at once. Two space shuttle orbiters faced one another, nose toContinue reading "The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Program, and Public Engagement after Apollo" The post The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Progra
     

The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Program, and Public Engagement after Apollo

June 7th 2024 at 9:07 pm

The following is an excerpt from The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Program, and Public Engagement after Apollo by Amy Paige Kaminski. The book will be published June 11, 2024, by the University of Pittsburgh Press. It was a most unusual sight, surreal and sublime all at once. Two space shuttle orbiters faced one another, nose toContinue reading "The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Program, and Public Engagement after Apollo"

The post The People’s Spaceship: NASA, the Shuttle Program, and Public Engagement after Apollo appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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  • Stars and starfishM
    Rob Lyons, from Vancouver, British Columbia The imager tells how he got this spectacular shot: I have attempted to take this photograph for three years during my annual trips to Tofino, British Columbia. The first year, I couldn’t find any starfish at all. In the second year, I found some and made an image, butContinue reading "Stars and starfish" The post Stars and starfish appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.
     

Stars and starfish

By: M
June 7th 2024 at 7:53 pm

Rob Lyons, from Vancouver, British Columbia The imager tells how he got this spectacular shot: I have attempted to take this photograph for three years during my annual trips to Tofino, British Columbia. The first year, I couldn’t find any starfish at all. In the second year, I found some and made an image, butContinue reading "Stars and starfish"

The post Stars and starfish appeared first on Astronomy Magazine.

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