Wednesday, June 3, 2026

A New Map of Stars Shows That the Small Magellanic Cloud is Expanding

The arrows in this image show the proper motions of millions of stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud, one of the Milky Way's satellite galaxies. Stars are moving away from the dwarf galaxy's center, a clear sign that it's expanding. The culprit is its more massive neighbour and fellow satellite galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud. Image Credit: ESO/VISTA VMC/ AIP/ S. Vijayasree

A multi-year survey of millions of stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud shows that the dwarf galaxy is expanding rather than rotating. This is due to the influence of its larger neighbour, the Large Magellanic Cloud.



Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Blue Origin Issues Official Statement on New Glenn Explosion

The New Glenn rocket exploding as filmed by Spaceflight Now. Credit: Spaceflight Now

Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin is assessing damage to its launch pad after a rocket exploded during a test firing, creating a giant orange fireball seen and felt for miles around.



Astronomers Uncover Statistical Evidence for Recoiling Supermassive Black Holes

Artist's rendition of an Active Galactic Nucleus with the accretion disk highlighted. Credit - NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center’s Conceptual Image Lab

Galactic collisions are events of breathtaking proportions. The Supermassive Black Holes (SMBHs) at their centers plunge into a chaotic orbital dance that eventually coalesce into a single remnant. On their way to that point, they could eventually get “kicked” out of the center of their galaxy - and finding these “recoiling” black holes has been a challenge of cosmology for decades. A new paper, available on arXiv by an international team, used a novel idea to track down these fast-moving behemoths.



The Next-Generation Very Large Array Prototype (ngVLA) Gathers its First Light

Composite image featuring astrophotography by Alin Sosnovic along with more detailed radio data of the Crab Nebula collected by the NSF VLA.
Credit: NSF/AUI/NSF NRAO/A.Sosnovici/M.Weiss

The prototype ngVLA antenna tested its systems by observing and tracking the Crab Nebula, also known as Taurus A (3C144), the remnant of an exploded star.



Flash-Melted Glass from Chang'e-5 Reveals a High Levels of Iron on the Moon

Artist's depiction of the formation mechanism of the nanophase iron. Credit - NIGPAS

It might not seem like it, but the Moon is constantly being both sandblasted and baked. Its lack of a thick atmosphere allows micrometeorites to impact the surface at speed, and the solar wind isn’t held back either, baking the regolith with a constant flow of high-energy particles. These processes drive what is called “space weathering”, and it can drastically alter the physical and chemical properties of the lunar dirt over the course of billions of years. And we’re finally getting a better sense of what that means in practice thanks to two new papers from researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Peking University, which used advanced electron tomography and spectroscopic techniques to analyze samples returned from the Chang’e-5 mission to the near side of the Moon.



Monday, June 1, 2026

Are the JWST's Early Overrmassive Black Holes Just Normal-Range Outliers?

This artist's illustration shows the quasar J0313-1806, which was identified as the earliest known supermassive black hole, which weighs in at more than 1.6 billion times the mass of the Sun. It existed only about 670 million years after the Big Bang. The existence of these overmassive blackh holes posed a problem for researchers, since according to our understanding, didn't have enough time to grow so massive. New research suggests that it, and others like it, were misunderstood outliers. Image Credit: NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/J. da Silva (Spaceengine)

The JWST found an abundance of overmassive black holes at high redshifts, pushing the limits of black hole (BH) science in the early Universe. Results have claimed that these BHs are significantly more massive than expected from the BH mass-host galaxy stellar mass relation derived from the local Universe. But new research shows they were just outliers in the normal range of masses that don't require any special causes.



Astrobiology's Looming Statistical Crisis

Artist's depiction of an exoplanet orbiting a sun-like star. Credit - NASA

Multi-billion dollar space telescope programs aren’t only feats of aerospace engineering. They also feature “lies, damn lies, and statistics”. Or at least statistics. They definitely feature those, as does all good observational astronomy. The problem with statistics is, in order to get a clear definitive answer, you need lots of samples. And, to put it mildly, it’s hard to find lots of samples of planets with alien life on them. And even harder to prove that the signals we think are caused by alien life aren’t caused by some other non-biological process. Or at least that’s the theory underpinning a new paper available in pre-print on arXiv from David Kipping of Columbia University (and Cool Worlds YouTube fame).