Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Hellish Venus-Like Planets May Be More Prevalent Than True ExoEarths

Processed using ultraviolet (365nm & 283nm) filtered images of Venus taken by Akatsuki on December 23 2016. JAXA/ISAS/DARTS/Kevin M. Gill via Wikipedia

Exoplanet hunters are keen to find the next extrasolar earthlike planet, one that may harbor life as we know it. But preliminary results from a new study indicate that our galaxy may be filled with a plethora of exo-Venuses. Yet as one exoplanetary researcher notes: the template for such exo-worlds --- our own Venus --- has been ‘criminally underexplored.’



NASA's Psyche Mission Says Goodbye to Mars and Heads for its Metal-Rich Target

NASA's Psyche captured this false colour image of Mars during its recent flyby of the planet on May 15th. The spacecraft captured this image with its multispectral imager. The flyby was a trial run for its encounter with the asteroid Psyche, and was also a gravity-assist maneuver that helped send the spacecraft on its way. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU

Spacecraft often use planets for gravity-assist or "slingshot" maneuvers. NASA's Psyche mission used Mars for that purpose during a May 15th flyby. The flyby accelerated the spacecraft and aimed it at its eventual destination, the asteroid 16 Psyche. The flyby was also an opportunity to take some pictures of Mars, and to test and calibrate the spacecraft's science instruments.



It Looks Like Europa Doesn't Have Plumes of Water Vapour After All

This artist's illustration shows what the water vapour plumes tentatively detected on Jupiter's icy moon Europa would look like. A 2014 paper based on Hubble observations showed that these intermittent plumes reach 200 km above Europa's surface. In the following couple of years, subsequent research also found them. But new research from the original discoverers is reconsidering the original findings. Image Credit: University of Cologne.

In 2014, researchers presented the discovery of water vapour plumes being emitted from Jupiter's moon Europa. This caused quite a stir; it meant that the moon's buried ocean was accessible without contending with the thick ice shell that concealed it. But new research by the same researchers questions those detections.



Hearing the Heavens - Book Review of The Echoing Universe

Cover image of The Echoing Universe. Credit - Dr. Emma Chapman / Basic Books

Typically when we think of astronomy, we think of pictures of M87 captured on a backyard telescope or the soaring colorful peaks of the Eagle Nebula seen by Hubble. But perhaps the most influential type of astronomy of the last 100+ years doesn’t directly result in the stunning pictures we’re so accustomed to today. It captures radio waves from some of the most interesting objects in the universe. And in her new book, The Echoing Universe: How Radio Astronomy Helps Us See the Invisible, Dr. Emma Chapman, a radio astronomer at the University of Nottingham, tracks how these longest wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum have influenced the practice of astronomy and our understanding of our place in the universe.



Is Dust the Best Thing in the Universe? Part 1: The Apology Begins

Apollo 17 commander Gene Cernan on the lunar surface, his spacesuit caked in moondust that proved to be one of the most persistent engineering problems of the mission. (Public domain, NASA)

Years of grievance against dust. It ruins lungs, suits, rovers, and Mars missions. The first installment of an apology, sort of, to the most annoying substance in the cosmos.



Tuesday, May 19, 2026

A Brief-ish History of SETI. Part VI: The Great Silence and the Great Filter

The Allen Telescope Array in Northern California is dedicated to astronomical observations and a simultaneous search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). Credit: Seth Shostak/SETI Institute

In the closing decades of the 20th century, several proposed explanations were put forward for why humanity has not yet found evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence in the cosmos.



An Explanation for the Massive Black Holes the JWST Found in the Early Universe

This artist's illustration shows a supermassive black hole (SMBH) in the early Universe. The JWST found galaxies in the very early Universe that were extremely massive compared to their host galaxies. New research has an explanation for those puzzling findings. Image Credit: NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/J. da Silva (Spaceengine)

Ever since the JWST found over-massive black holes in the early Universe, researchers have been trying to understand them. Theory showed that black holes and their galaxies grew in synchronization with each other. That can't explain the JWST's findings, but new research might.