Friday, January 23, 2026

The Sun's Red Dwarf Neighbors Provide Clues to Origins of Carbon and Oxygen

An artist's concept of a red dwarf that lies about 8 light-years away from the Sun. Courtesy NASA/Walt Feimer

We live near a fusion reactor in space that provides all our heat and light. That reactor is also responsible for the creation of various elements heavier than hydrogen, and that's true of all stars. So, how do we know that stars are element generators?



The Many Faces of Monster Galaxies

Artist's rendering of COSMOS-AzTEC-1 (Credit : National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)

The earliest galaxies in the universe earned the nickname "monster galaxies" for good reason, they formed stars at rates hundreds of times faster than the Milky Way, growing rapidly after the dawn of time. Astronomers using ALMA and the James Webb Space Telescope have now revealed that three such monsters each achieved their extraordinary growth through completely different mechanisms. By comparing where stars are forming today with where they formed in the past, researchers discovered that galaxy collisions, internal instability, and minor mergers can all trigger these growth spurts, fundamentally changing our understanding of how the universe's most massive galaxies came to be.



An Almost-Famous Galaxy Cluster Is The JWST's Picture Of The Month

This is MACS J1149, a massive galaxy cluster used as a gravitational lens. It's about 5 billion light-years away and contains at least 300 galaxies, and likely many hundreds more. It's been selected as the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope Picture of the Month. Image Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, C. Willott (National Research Council Canada), R. Tripodi (INAF - Astronomical Observatory of Rome). LICENCE: CC BY 4.0 INT or ESA Standard Licence

Gravitational lensing is a powerful tool that brings impossibly distant galaxies into reach. The JWST uses galaxy clusters and their overpowering to magnify background galaxies that are otherwise beyond our observational capabilities. One cluster, named MACS J1149.5+2223, is 5 billion light-years away and holds at least 300 galaxies, probably many more. It's been chosen as the JWST's Picture Of The Month.



Electric Shocks Could Enforce a Lunar Speed Limit

Showing how a PSR is affected by the electron flow that can remove charge. Credit - NASA

As they roll across shadowed regions of the moon's surface, future lunar rovers could develop hazardous buildups of electric charge on their wheels. Through new analysis published in Advances in Space Research, Bill Farrell at the Space Science Institute in Colorado, together with Mike Zimmerman at Johns Hopkins University, outline realistic precautions for mitigating this risk—offering valuable guidance for engineers designing future lunar missions.



Thursday, January 22, 2026

Mysterious No More: Astronomers Used The Hubble To Solve The Blue Straggler Problem

Astronomers have puzzled over a type of star called Blue Stragglers for decades. They're more luminous and bluer than they should be. This makes them look young for their ages. Astronomers find them in globular clusters, and now they think they know why. This image features NGC 3201 (left), one of the looser clusters in new data, and Messier 70, which is the the densest cluster in the new research. Image Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA

How do blue stragglers defy the aging that turns their mates red? Blue stragglers are found in ancient star clusters, where they outshine stars the same age, looking far bluer and younger than their true age. Astrophysicists have tried to understand blue stragglers for decades. New research using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope is finally revealing how these ageless stars come to be and why they thrive in quieter cosmic neighbourhoods.



Gazing Into The Eye Of Sauron With The JWST

The image of the Helix Nebula on the left is from the ESO's VISTA telescope in Chile, a visual and infrared telescope with a 4.1 meter primary mirror. On the right is a JWST image of the nebula taken with its NIRCam instrument. Image Credit: ESO, VISTA, NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, J. Emerson (ESO); Acknowledgment: CASU

The Helix Nebula is one of the closest and brightest planetary nebula. It's what's left of a dying star and has nothing to do with planets. Our Sun will end up as one of these sumptuous displays, and a new JWST image reveals even more detail in the stunning nebula.



Probing the Mysteries of the Solar Corona with ESA’s Proba-3

An artist's conception of the Proba-3 mission in orbit. Credit: ESA.

Some really unique science can be done during a total solar eclipse. Totality is the one time we can see the elusive corona of the Sun, the pearly white segment of our host star’s lower atmosphere where space weather activity originates. The trouble is, totality is fleeting. What researchers really need are eclipses on demand. ESA’s innovative Proba-3 mission does just that, by making use of a free-flying occulting disk. Launched in late 2024, we’re now seeing some unique science and images from the space observatory.