Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Mercury Scout Mission Concept with Solar Sail Propulsion

Image of Mercury obtained by NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft in 2008. (Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Arizona State University/Carnegie Institution of Washington)

The planet Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun, and also the most difficult for spacecraft to visit and explore. This is because as spacecraft get closer to Mercury, the Sun’s enormous gravity pulls in the spacecraft, greatly increasing its speed and making it hard to slow down without large amounts of fuel. But what if a spacecraft could both travel to and explore Mercury without fuel? This could drastically reduce mission costs while delivering impactful science.



KYTHERA Mission Concept Targets 200-Day Mission to Venus Surface

Panoramic image of the Venusian surface taken by the Soviet Venera 13 lander in 1982. (Credit: Russian Academy of Sciences / Ted Stryk)

The planet Venus is often called “Earth’s twin” due to the similar sizes, but the reality couldn’t be farther from the truth. Unlike Earth, which is hospitable to an estimated billions of lifeforms, Venus is not hospitable to life as we know it, at least on its surface. This is because the surface of Venus not only experiences an average temperature of 464 degrees Celsius (867 degrees Fahrenheit), but it also has crushing pressures approximately 92 times of Earth, or equivalent to approximately 1 kilometer (3,000 feet) below the ocean. These extreme surface conditions are why the longest spacecraft to survive on the Venusian surface is just over two hours.



Optical Fiber Arrays May Unlock Mysteries Of The Moon’s Deep Interior

The Passive Seismic Experiment was the first seismometer placed on the Moon’s surface. It detected lunar "moonquakes" and provided information about the internal structure of the Moon. Credit: NASA

Ordinary telecoms grade optical fiber could help planetary scientists better characterize the moon’s deep interior as well as its lava tubes, say two new journal papers.



A New Theory Connects Early Cosmic Inflation and Quantum Gravity

A Venn Diagram of how the main theories of physics are interconnected. Credit: CMG Lee

The Universe expanded rapidly soon after the Big Bang, and we aren't sure why. But a theory of quadratic quantum gravity might be the answer.



Monday, March 30, 2026

Uranus Mission Concept CASMIUS to Probe Ice Giant Secrets

Image of Uranus taken by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope's Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam). Along with the rings, this image also shows nine of Uranus' 27 moons. (Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI)

The ice giant Uranus is one of the most fascinating objects in the solar system, with its sideways rotation, intricate ring system, and unique family of moons. However, it is also one of the least explored objects in the solar system, owing to its extreme distance from the Sun. With NASA’s Voyager 2 spacecraft remaining as the only spacecraft to visit Uranus, scientists continue to design and envision mission concepts for returning to explore Uranus and its icy secrets.



NASA Narrows Artemis Landing Sites to 9 Key Regions

Credit: NASA

Less than two days from now, NASA’s Artemis II mission is scheduled to lift off for its historic 10-day journey around the Moon, marking the first time humans have ventured beyond Low Earth Orbit for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972, and possibly even set new distance records for traveling beyond Earth. However, Artemis II is only scheduled as a flyby mission and will not be landing humans on the lunar surface, with this endeavor being scheduled for later missions.



Oldest Carbon-rich Stars Open a Window to Early Cosmic Chemistry

This image shows stars in the ultra-faint dwarf galaxy, Pictor II, a satellite galaxy of the Large Magellanic Cloud. Astronomers discovered a star here, PicII-503, with the lowest iron content ever measured outside of the Milky Way and an overabundance of carbon. It's the clearest example of a star within a primordial system that preserves the chemical enrichment of the Universe’s first stars and a missing link that connects carbon-enhanced stars observed in the Milky Way halo to an origin in ancient dwarf galaxies. Courtesy NOIRLab.

Astronomers studying the ultra-faint dwarf galaxy Pictor II have found an extremely chemically peculiar star that contains traces of elements created by the first stars in the Universe. It's called PicII-503, a "second-generation star" that is one of the most chemically primitive stars ever found.