Tuesday, February 10, 2026

NASA's SPHEREx Mission Spots 3I/ATLAS's Bright Envelope

Images of 3I/ATLAS acquired by the SPHEREx mission in December 2025. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Observations by NASA’s SPHEREx (Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer) show the infrared light emitted by the dust, water, organic molecules, and carbon dioxide contained within comet 3I/ATLAS’s coma.



Are there Hidden Dimensions to the Universe? Part 4: Looking Past the Universe

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So we did that. And we found nothing. So far, with all of our experiments around the world, we find no evidence of missing momentum, and no signs of towers of gravitons slipping away into hidden dimensions.



Peering Into the Energetic Turbulence Around Supermassive Black Holes

We know they're there but have never seen them like this before. New observations show that supermassive black holes reside in the calm center of all the chaos they create in their surroundings. The new observations come from the XRISM spacecraft, a powerful and perceptive x-ray space telescope launched by NASA/JAXA/ESA.

Astronomers used the XRISM x-ray satellite to observe two supermassive black holes in two separate galaxy clusters. Researchers know that SMBH have powerful effects on star formation and galaxy evolution. The observations reveal new details in how it all works.



How a Single Martian Storm Triggered Massive Water Loss

Diagram showing the different types of ways dust storms can affect the destruction of water on Mars. Credit - Brines, Aoki, Daerden et al., 2026, Communications: Earth & Environment.

Mars’ water disappeared somewhere, but scientists have been disagreeing for years about where exactly it went. Data from rovers like Perseverance and Curiosity, along with orbiting satellites such as the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and ExoMars have shown that Mars used to be a wet world with an active hydrodynamic cycle. Obviously it isn’t anymore, but where did all the water go? A new paper that collects data from at least six different instruments on three different spacecraft provides some additional insight into that question - by showing that dust storms push water into the Red Planet’s atmosphere, where it is actively destroyed, all year round.



Monday, February 9, 2026

Research Reveals Why Tatooine Planets are Rare

An artist's depiction of a planet, represented by the black circle, orbiting a pair of stars — a so-called binary star system. Credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Why are planets rarely found orbiting a pair of stars? UC Berkeley and American University of Beirut physicists find that general relativity makes the orbit of a tight binary pair precess. As the orbit shrinks because of tidal effects, the precesion increases. Eventually the precession matches the orbital precession of any circumbinary planet, creating a resonance that makes the planet’s orbit wildly eccentric. The planet either gets expelled from the system or is engulfed by one of the stars.



Are there Hidden Dimensions to the Universe? Part 3: The Graviton Tower

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To test it, I want you to imagine rolling up a piece of paper into a tight cylinder. Or, if you happen to be near a source of paper, doing it in real life. The analogy works either way.



A Dense Clump Of Dark Matter, Not A Supermassive Black Hole, Could Reside In The Milky Way's Center.

This illustration shows the Milky Way with a dense core of dark matter instead of a supermassive-black hole (SMBH). The DM could be responsible for evidence usually attributed to an SMBH, even shaping the orbital motions of stars on the galaxy's outer regions. Image Credit: Valentina Crespi et al. Licence type: Attribution (CC BY 4.0)

There's been widespread agreement that a supermassive black hole resides in the Milky Way's Center. But that may not be true. Researchers say that a dense clump of fermionic dark matter can also explain the motions of stars and gas clouds in the region. Crucially, it can also explain the famous Event Horizon Telescope image of the SMBH.