Monday, February 2, 2026

Hubble And The Fingerprints Of An Ancient Merger

NGC 7722 is a lenticular galaxy about 185 million light-years away. The Hubble captured this image when following up on a supernova that was detected here in 2022. The supernova isn't visible in the image, but this dramatic portrait doesn't need an exploding stellar diva to capture out attention. Image Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, R. J. Foley (UC Santa Cruz), Dark Energy Survey/DOE/FNAL/DECam/CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA; Acknowledgment: Mehmet Yüksek

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows NGC 7722, a lenticular galaxy about 187 million light-years away in the constellation Pegasus. This “lens-shaped” galaxy sits in between more familiar spiral alaxies and elliptical galaxies in the galaxy classification scheme. The dark, dramatic dust lanes are the fingerprints of an ancient galaxy merger.



Friday, January 30, 2026

Boron Could Be Astrobiology’s Unsung Hero

Daybreak at Mars'Gale Crater Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

The light, rare element boron, better known as the primary component of borax, a longtime household cleaner, was almost mined to exhaustion in parts of the old American West. But boron could arguably be an unsung hero in cosmic astrobiology, although it's still not listed as one of the key elements needed for the onset of life.



"Red Geyser" Galaxies Have Plenty of Star-Forming Gas But Don't Form Stars

These illustrations show what happens to prevent Red Geyser galaxies from forming new stars. Mergers can send clouds of cool gas toward a galaxy's center. The gas can feed the galaxy's black hole so that the black hole's feedback heats up the gas. Hot gas is the enemy of star formation, so despite having plenty of gas, Red Geysers are quenched. Image Credit: UC Santa Cruz

Red Geysers are an unusual class of galaxy that contain only old stars. Despite having plenty of star-forming gas, Red Geysers are quenched. Astronomers have mapped the flow of gas in these galaxies and figure out why they're dormant.



Thursday, January 29, 2026

New Research Reveals the Ingredients for Life Form on Their Own in Space

A new study led by researchers from Aarhus University showed that amino acids spontaneously bond in space, producing peptides that are essential to life as we know it. Their findings suggest that the building blocks of life are far more common throughout space than previously thought, with implications for astrobiology and SETI.



NASA Fires Up Nuclear Future for Deep Space Travel

Engineers install a flight reactor engineering development unit into Test Stand 400 in preparation for cold flow testing (Credit : NASA/Adam Butt)

NASA has completed its first major testing of nuclear reactor hardware for spacecraft propulsion in over 50 years, marking a crucial step toward faster, more capable deep space missions. Engineers at Marshall Space Flight Center conducted more than 100 ‘cold flow’ tests on a full scale reactor engineering development unit throughout 2025, gathering vital data on how propellant flows through the system under various conditions.



Finding A Frozen Earth In Old Data

This artist's illustration shows HD 137010 b, a so-called Cold Earth detected around a Sun-like star about 146 light-years away. It's only slightly larger than Earth, and has nearly the same length orbit. It's on the outskirts of the star's habitable zone, and is even colder than Mars. It's a good target for meaningful follow-up observations. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Keith Miller (Caltech/IPAC)

Finding Earth-like planets is the primary driver of exoplanet searches because as far as we know, they're the ones most likely to be habitable. Astronomers sifting through data from NASA's Kepler Space Telescope have found a remarkably Earth-like planet, but with one critical difference: it's as cold as Mars.



Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Solving the Century Old Puzzle of Our Galaxy's Neighborhood

High redshift galaxy candidates in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, 2012 reveal the large scale expansion of the universe (Credit : NASA, ESA, R. Ellis-Caltech)

Nearly a century after Edwin Hubble discovered the universe's expansion, astronomers have finally explained the nagging mystery of why most nearby galaxies rush away from us as if the Milky Way's gravity doesn't exist? The answer lies in a vast, flat sheet of dark matter stretching tens of millions of light years around us, with empty voids above and below that make the expansion appear smoother than it should.