Thursday, March 19, 2026

JUICE is Planning To Do Science On Jupiter's "Minor" Moons Too

Artist's impression of JUICE arriving at the Jupiter system. Credit - ESA (acknowledgement: ATG Medialab)

The European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) probe is on its (very long) way to Jupiter, and will finally arrive at the King of Planets in 2031. Its primary mission is to focus on the “big three” icy moons - Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto. But while JUICE is busy mapping Ganymede’s magnetic field, it will also be keeping a sharp eye on the other 94 moons in the Jupiter system. A recent paper published in Space Science Reviews by Tilmann Denk of DLR, Germany’s space research association, and his co-authors showcases just how much “bonus science” JUICE is expected to squeeze out of these other targets.



Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Something is Changing the Small Magellanic Cloud

The Small Magellanic Cloud Imaged by the Herschel mission, Planck observatory, Infrared Astronomical Satellite, and Cosmic Background Explorer. Credits: ESA/NASA/JPL-Caltech/CSIRO/NANTEN2/C. Clark (STScI)

A strange lack of stellar orbits around the core of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) mystified astronomers for decades. Not only that, but the SMC has a strange, irregular shape, and sports a tidal. Now, a team of observers led by graduate student Himansch Rathore at the University of Arizona, has tracked down the reason why the stars don't orbit. It's because the SMC crashed directly through its neighbor, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), in the distant past. That huge collision disrupted stellar motions and [sent them on wildly different trajectories](https://ift.tt/7Obtc31). It also disturbed the clouds of gas within the SMC and created a tail of gas stretching out across space.



NASA Exoplanet-Hunting CubeSat Delivers "First Light" Images

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With the first images from the spacecraft now in hand, the team behind NASA’s Star-Planet Activity Research CubeSat (SPARCS) is ready to begin charting the energetic lives of the galaxy’s most common stars to help answer one of humanity’s most profound questions: Which distant worlds beyond our solar system might be habitable?



Tuesday, March 17, 2026

CERN Adds a New Particle to Large Hadron Collider's Subatomic Zoo

An artist’s impression shows the composition of the newly discovered subatomic particle, with two charm quarks and one down quark. (Credit: CERN)

Scientists at Europe's CERN research center say the Large Hadron Collider's LHCb experiment has discovered a "doubly charmed" particle that's like a proton, but four times as weighty.



Scientists Find Evidence of Worlds Colliding ... 11,000 Light-Years Away

An artist's conception shows a planetary collision around a distant star. (Credit: Andy Tzanidakis / Univ. of Washington)

Astronomers say unusual readings from a star system 11,000 light-years away suggest that two of the planets circling the star crashed into each other, creating a huge, light-obscuring cloud of rocks and dust.



Is the Universe Defective? Part 4: Hiding in Plain Darkness

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/M. Markevitch; Optical/Lensing: NASA/STScI, Magellan/U. Arizona/D. Clowe; Lensing map: ESO WFI

The WHAT? Yeah, the vortons. It’s not an anime monster-hunting show. It’s not some AI startup company. It’s a…it’s a thing. I think.



New Study Complicates the Search for Alien Oxygen

Artist's depiction of TRAPPIST-1 b. Credit - NASA, ESA, CSA, J. Olmsted (STScI), T. P. Greene (NASA Ames), T. Bell (BAERI), E. Ducrot (CEA), P. Lagage (CEA)

Oxygen has been the most important gas in our search for life among the cosmos thus far. On Earth, we have it in abundance because it is produced by biological synthesis. But that might not be the case on other planets, so even if we do find a very clear high oxygen signal in the atmosphere of an exoplanet, it might not be a clear indication that life exists there. A new paper, available in pre-print on arXiv, from Margaret Turcotte Seavey and a team of researchers from institutions like the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and Johns Hopkins University, adds some additional context to what else might be going on in those atmospheres. In particular, they note that if there’s even a little bit of water vapor, it can make a big difference in whether a lifeless rock looks like a living, thriving world.