Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Webb's Picture of the Month Features Two Planet-Forming Disks and a Possible Planet

Two images of protoplanetary discs side-by-side, courtesy of the JWST. Credit: ESA/NASA/CSA/ESO/NAOJ/NRAO/G. DuchĂȘne/M. Villenave

Two images of protoplanetary disks side-by-side. The left image shows a dark horizontal band covering the star, with broad, colorful, conical outflows above and below it, and a narrow jet pointing directly up and down from the star. The right image shows the star within a yellow dusty disk, with scattered dust creating purple lobes above and below the disk. Each is on a black background with several galaxies or stars around it.



A Mercury Rover Could Explore the Planet by Sticking to the Terminator

A view of Mercury's Terminator region, as seen by NASA's MESSENGER probe. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

A Mercury lander mission would create opportunities to sample unique geological features. However, extreme temperature fluctuations on Mercury’s surface pose challenges for exploration on the planetary surface. In a narrow region near the terminator, temperate conditions would allow a rover to run on solar power and collect data and surface samples without needing to withstand the extreme heat.



A New Class of Star: Merger Remnant

This artist's illustration shows two white dwarf stars merging. Usually, the merger creates a supernova, but new research concludes that two separate and unusual white dwarfs are best explained as merger remnants. The researchers say they are a new class of object. Image Credit: University of Warwick/Mark Garlick

In the vastness of the Universe, any new object with interesting properties can spur the search for similar objects, potentially establishing a new class of stars. In a paper published in Astronomy & Astrophysics and an arXiv preprint, researchers from the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) describe two stellar remnants that share five properties, including X-ray emission, despite being isolated objects. According to the team, these two remnants are sufficient to define a new class of stars.



Meet Orpheus - A Hopper Mission Built To Hunt For Life In Martian Volcanoes

Image of part of Cerberus Fossae near the Athabasca Valles takes by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Credit - NASA / JPL-Caltech / University of Arizona

We’ve spent decades scratching the surface of Mars trying to uncover life there. But we’ve been searching a barren wasteland bombarded by radiation and bathed in toxic perchlorates. The entire time, it's likely that it’s been too hostile to harbor extant life. So if we want a better shot at finding currently living life on Mars, we need to go underground. That is exactly the purpose of Orpheus, a proposed Mars vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) hopper mission put forth by Connor Bunn and Pascal Lee of the SETI Institute at the 57th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC).



Tuesday, April 7, 2026

SuperCDM Experiment Reaches Critical Temperature, Bringing it One Step Closer to Detecting Dark Matter

University of Minnesota researchers are working on the design of the low-background shield, which creates a zone free of trace radioactivity that could overwhelm the faint dark matter signal. Credit: Greg Stewart/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

The Super Cryogenic Dark Matter Search (SuperCDMS) experiment has reached its coldest operating temperature, hundreds of times colder than outer space.



The Outer Solar System Contributed Nothing To Earth

Earth as imaged by Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman. There are many questions about how Earth formed, where the material originated, and how it got its water. A new study of isotopic compositions among meteorites and asteroids shows that Earth may have formed entirely from inner Solar System material. Image Credit: NASA/Reid Wiseman

New research shows that Earth formed from inner Solar System material. Isotopic geochemistry analysis found no evidence that material from beyond Jupiter contributed to Earth's bulk composition. The results also support the idea that Earth's water wasn't delivered by comets.



JAXA Plans To Bring Back Pristine Early Solar System Samples From A Comet

Artist's concept of a Jupiter-Class comet similar to 289P/Blanpain. Credit - NASA, ESA, CSA, Ralf Crawford (STScI)

Japan’s space agency, JAXA, has been knocking it out of the park with small-body exploration missions for decades. They had historic successes with both Hayabusa and Hayabusa2, and they are going to visit the Martian Moons soon with the Martian Moons eXploration (MMX) mission. But after that, they are aiming for something much more pristine and arguably more difficult - a comet. The Next Generation Small-Body Return (NGSR) was recently described in a paper at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC), and is under assessment as a large-class mission for the 2030s.