Monday, June 16, 2025

The Mother of All Meteor Showers Could Threaten Satellites

Asteroid 2024 YR 4 could strike the Moon in 2032. The resulting cloud of impact debris could pose a threat to satellites while also causing a dramatic meteor shower. Image Credit: NASA SVS

Shortly after astronomers detected asteroid 2024 YR4 on December 27th, 2024, they realized it posed no threat to Earth. But it still might impact the Moon in 2032. The impact debris could threaten satellites and trigger an extraordinarily stunning meteor shower.



NASA's PUNCH Mission Captured Images of a Huge Solar Eruption

The Narrow Field Imager (NFI) camera, mounted on one of the four spacecraft of NASA’s PUNCH mission, imaged a large coronal mass ejection (CME) in exquisite detail on June 3, 2025. Credit: NASA/SwRI

During its commissioning phase, NASA's [*Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere*](https://ift.tt/o31gU5H) (PUNCH) mission captured high-resolution images of a [Coronal Mass Ejection](https://ift.tt/Dt5PZUd) (CME) in greater detail than was previously possible.



Saturday, June 14, 2025

A Better Way to Turn Solar Sails

Illustration of a solar sail. (Credit: NASA)

Solar sails are space's ultimate free ride, they get their propulsion from the Sun, so they don't need to carry propellant, but they come with their own challenges. A sail has a large surface area but a low mass, which creates a huge moment of inertia and makes it difficult to control, especially with reaction wheels. A team of engineers have cracked it though with "smart mirrors" that can instantly switch their reflectivity on command, transforming sunlight from an unruly force into a precision steering tool.



Webb Sees the Galaxies that Cleared Out the Cosmic Fog

White diamonds show the locations of 20 of the 83 young, low-mass, starburst galaxies found in infrared images of the giant galaxy cluster Abell 2744. This composite incorporates images taken through three NIRCam filters (F200W as blue, F410M as green, and F444W as red). The F410M filter is highly sensitive to light emitted by doubly ionized oxygen — oxygen atoms that have been stripped of two electrons — at a time when reionization was well underway. Emitted as green light, the glow was stretched into the infrared as it traversed the expanding universe over billions of years. The cluster’s mass acts as a natural magnifying glass, allowing astronomers to see these tiny galaxies as they were when the universe was about 800 million years old. NASA/ESA/CSA/Bezanson et al. 2024 and Wold et al. 2025

The early universe was shrouded in darkness. Just hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang, a thick fog of hydrogen gas choked the cosmos, blocking light from traveling far. At some point, this gas became ionized, stripped of its electrons. Thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have identified the culprit: low-mass starburst galaxies emitting huge amounts of ultraviolet light. In just one patch of sky. They discovered 83 of these galactic powerhouses in one part of the sky at a time when the Universe was only 800 million years old.



Telescopes in Chile Capture Images of the Earliest Galaxies in the Universe

This all-sky image of the cosmic microwave background, created from data collected by the European Space Agency's Planck satellite's first all-sky survey. Credit: ESA/LFI & HFI Consortia

An international team of astronomers using the [*Cosmology Large Angular Scale Surveyor*](https://ift.tt/6tOo2jE) (CLASS) [reported the first-ever measurement](https://ift.tt/O1K8Mhb) announced the first-ever detection of radiation from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) interacting with the first stars in the Universe.



Friday, June 13, 2025

The Universe is Filled With Natural Telescope Lenses. Roman Will Use Them to Study Dark Matter

This image shows a simulated observation from NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope with an overlay of its Wide Field Instrument’s field of view. More than 20 gravitational lenses, with examples shown at left and right, are expected to pop out in every one of Roman’s vast observations. Roman will use these lenses to detect small dark matter haloes around dwarf galaxies to test the Lambda CDM model. (Image: NASA, Bryce Wedig, Tansu Daylan and Joseph DePasquale)

We don't know what dark matter is, but that doesn't stop astronomers from using it to their advantage. Dark matter is part of what makes gravitational lensing so effective. Astronomers expect the Roman Space Telescope to find 160,000 gravitational lenses, and dark matter makes a crucial contribution to these lenses.



Thursday, June 12, 2025

Distant Galaxy Has Similar Icy Dust to the Milky Way. So, Similar Planets?

A dust cloud near Cassiopeia A reflects light from a nearby supernova. Dust clouds throughout galaxies reflect, absorb, and re-emit light in the infrared, making JWST's MIRI infrared-sensitive instrument a good way to study the dust. Courtesy NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Jacob Jencson (Caltech/IPAC)

For most of us, dust is just something we have to clean up. For astronomers, interstellar dust is a hindrance when they want to study distant objects. However, recent James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observations of a distant galaxy are changing that. This infrared-sensitive observatory is letting them find a way to use dust to understand the evolution of early galaxies. In addition, it uncovered a special property of that galaxy's ice-covered dust, indicating it could be similar to the materials that formed our Solar System.