Tuesday, May 26, 2026

When the Sun Tries to Explode and Fails

When observed in white light coronagraph imagery, CMEs sometimes resemble a light bulb, possessing a bright bulb like outer shell surrounding a dark void and compact inner structure. A new discovery reveals why some solar eruptions fail before reaching CME status (Credit : NASA/SOHO)

Scientists have captured one of the most detailed observations ever of a failed solar eruption, a powerful blast from the Sun that built into what should have been a billion tonne plasma ejection, then stalled and collapsed back to the surface. Using data from five spacecraft simultaneously, the team identified a double magnetic process that strangled the eruption from both above and below.



The Definitive Census of Multiple Star Systems Within 10 Parsecs

Artist's concept of a planet orbiting a binary star system. Credit - NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Chris Smith (USRA)

Our Sun is a loner. It lacks a stellar companion hurtling through interstellar space with it. But we’ve known for a long time that’s actually relatively rare - most stars have at least one gravitationally bound partner. Understanding how exactly those stars are related to each other is critical for observational campaigns - especially for those of exoplanets. So a new paper from researchers at the University of Madrid that categorizes almost every star within ten light years into companion categories is a welcome addition to the literature on the subject, and could be used to inform the next round of planet habitable planet hunting satellites.



Monday, May 25, 2026

NASA's Next-Generation AI Processor Passes Early Testing

Small enough to fit in the palm of a hand, NASA’s High Performance Spaceflight Computing processor packs the power of a full system-on-a-chip. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

As part of a commercial partnership, NASA is developing a sophisticated chip that will give spacecraft the processing capabilities to think for themselves.



Ultrahigh-energy Cosmic Rays May Be Ultraheavy in Origin

Artist’s impression of an ultra-high energy cosmic ray reaching Earth. Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University/Kyoto University L-INSIGHT/Ryuunosuke Takeshige

New research led by Penn State scientists suggests that some of the highest-energy cosmic rays may consist of atomic nuclei heavier than iron and could help narrow down the cosmic sources capable of accelerating these particles.



Early Life on Earth May Have Thrived in Impact Craters

This artist's illustration shows a pair of asteroids passing by the modern-day Earth. New research shows that impact craters on the ancient Earth could have created "oxygen oases," where hydrothermal activity supercharged the growth of cyanobacteria and their stromatolite structures. It suggests that the Late Heavy Bombardment could have played a role in the oxygenation of Earth's atmosphere, paving the way for complex life. Image Credit: ESA/P.Carril

A team of South Korean scientists has uncovered new evidence that could help explain how Earth’s atmosphere became rich in oxygen, one of the most transformative events in the planet’s history. Researchers from the Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM) report the finding of stromatolites, layered structures formed by microbial communities, within the Hapcheon impact crater on the Korean Peninsula. While the Hapcheon crater is only about 40,000 years old, it shows how stromatolites got a boost from the heat in impact crater hydrothermal systems.



Sunday, May 24, 2026

Alien life may be missed by current space missions, but AI might help

Illustration depicting how alien life could be incorrectly identified on some worlds while being correctly identified on other worlds. (Credit: NASA)

It’s 2035 and NASA’s Dragonfly quadcopter has been “hopping” around the surface of Saturn’s largest moon Titan for just over a year taking images, scanning pebbles, drilling holes, and analyzing surface material for potential signs of life. You’re at NASA JPL and just moved to Blue Team (12am-8am) from Red Team (4pm-12am), so you’re hyped up on coffee, Red Bull, and will power. It’s 3:30am, you’ve been analyzing data since you clocked in, and you keep discarding what you’ve been told looks like positive signs of life but is more commonly known as false positives. In the meantime, some microbes on Titan that got scanned by Dragonfly keep posing in front of its main camera with signs saying, “We’re here!”



Friday, May 22, 2026

Is Dust the Best Thing in the Universe? Part 4: We Owe Dust Our Lives

The protoplanetary disk around the young star HL Tau, imaged by ALMA. The dark gaps are where dust has accumulated into proto-planets, with the bright rings showing the dust grains that haven't yet combined into anything larger. (CC BY 4.0, ALMA / ESO / NAOJ / NRAO)

No dust, no way to cool a collapsing gas cloud. No way to cool it, no stars. No dust, no first rung on the ladder from grain to pebble to planet. The substance I spent two articles complaining about turns out to be the substance that makes me possible.