Monday, March 16, 2026

The Coming Age of Space Stations

International Space Station in 2011, as seen during the last spaceflight of the Space Shuttle Endeavor (STS-134). Credit: NASA

With the ISS set to retire in 2030, several plans are in place to replace it. These include existing space stations, proposals by rising national space agencies, and commercial space stations. With multiple outposts in orbit, the potential for research, development, and even conflict is considerable!



Are Rogue Exomoons the Newest Frontier in the Search for Habitability?

This AI-generated illustration shows an exomoon orbiting a free-floating planet. New research shows that there are some evolutionary pathways where exomoons orbiting rogue planets could be warm enough for liquid water. It also says that these habitable conditions could last for billions of years. There's at least a chance that complex life could arise in the right circumstances on rogue planet exomoons. Image Credit: D.Dahlbüdding / ChatGPT / DALL·E

There may be as many rogue planets or free-floating planets in the Milky Way as there are stars. If there are billions of these worlds, some of them have likely held onto their moons. New research reveals a pathway to habitability for these rogue exomoons.



Microscopic "Ski-Jumps" Could Shrink Spacecraft LiDAR to the Size of a Microchip

Image of the "ski jumps" on the photonic chip. Credit - MIT / M. Saha et al.

Every ounce counts when launching a rocket, which is why considerations for the Size, Weight, and Power (SWaP) of every component matters so much. For decades, one of the heaviest and most power-hungry components on a spacecraft has been its optical and communications hardware - specifically the bulky mechanical mirror used for LiDAR and free-space laser communications. But a new paper, published in Nature by researchers at MIT, MITRE, and Sandia National Laboratories, might have just fundamentally changed the SWaP considerations of LiDAR systems. Their technology, which they’re called a “photonic ski-jump” could one day revolutionize how spacecraft communicate.



Sunday, March 15, 2026

The Sun's Great Escape

The Sun is now thought to have left its original location in the Milky Way as part of a mass migration (Credit : Matúš Motlo)

Our Sun didn't always call this quiet corner of the Milky Way home. New research using data from the European Space Agency's Gaia satellite has uncovered evidence that the Sun fled the chaotic heart of our Galaxy four to six billion years ago and it didn't go alone. A vast migration of stars almost identical to our own swept outward together, a great exodus that may have made life on Earth possible. The story of how astronomers pieced this together is as remarkable as the discovery itself.



Is the Universe Defective? Part 2: The Persistence of Memory

Credit: Frank Summers (STScI), Martin White & Lars Hernquist (Harvard)

But here’s the thing about these defects. They can’t just go away. They’re stuck.



Saturday, March 14, 2026

The Seven Hour Explosion Nobody Could Explain

Positions on the sky of all gamma-ray bursts detected during the BATSE mission (Credit : NASA)

On 2 July 2025, NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope detected a gamma-ray burst lasting over seven hours, nearly twice the duration of anything previously recorded. Not only was it the longest ever seen, it repeated, firing off multiple distinct bursts across an entire day. GRB 250702B, as it became known, doesn't fit any known category of astronomical explosion. But a new paper in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society offers the explanation that a star torn apart by an intermediate mass black hole may well be the culprit! On 2 July 2025, NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope detected a gamma-ray burst lasting over seven hours, nearly twice the duration of anything previously recorded. Not only was it the longest ever seen, it repeated, firing off multiple distinct bursts across an entire day. GRB 250702B, as it became known, doesn't fit any known category of astronomical explosion. But a new paper in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society offers the explanation that a star torn apart by an intermediate mass black hole may well be the culprit!



NASA's DART Mission Also Changed Didymos' Orbit Around Sun

This image of asteroids Didymos, left, and Dimorphos was captured by NASA’s DART mission a few seconds before the spacecraft smashed into Dimorphos on Sept. 26th, 2022. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL

The spacecraft changed the binary system’s orbit, confirming that a kinetic impactor can be an effective planetary defense technique for deflecting a near-Earth object.