Friday, February 20, 2026

Researchers Examine How We Could Achieve Sustainable Water Systems for Space

The Environmental Control and Life Support Systems (ECLSS) aboard the ISS. Credit: NASA

If humans want to live in space, whether on spacecraft or the surface of Mars, one of the first problems to solve is that of water for drinking, hygiene, and life-sustaining plants. Even bringing water to the International Space Station (ISS) in low Earth orbit costs on the order of tens of thousands of dollars. Thus, finding efficient, durable, and trustworthy ways to source and reuse water in space is a clear necessity for long-term habitation there.



NASA's Techno-Wizardry Grants The Perseverance Rover Greater Autonomy

Panorama images like this one are helping Perseverance be more autonomous on Mars. The rover uses a new algorithm to compare these images to orbital images and pinpoint its location Mars without human help. The system is called Mars Global Localization. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

When the Perseverance rover was sent to Mars, it was largely dedicated to astrobiology. It's driving around an ancient paleolake, Jezero Crater, looking for evidence of past life. But the rover mission is also a testbed for greater autonomous operations. Now, NASA has given the inquisitive rover a way to better navigate the Martian surface with less human intervention.



Thursday, February 19, 2026

Report Blames NASA and Boeing for Botched Starliner Flight Test

Boeing’s Starliner craft sits in the New Mexico desert after its uncrewed return to Earth in 2024. (Boeing Photo)

Nearly two years after Boeing’s botched Starliner mission to the International Space Station, NASA put the mishap in the same category as the Challenger and Columbia space shuttle disasters — and said the spacecraft wouldn’t carry another crew until dozens of corrective actions are taken.



No Supernova Needed. This Star Collapsed Directly Into A Black Hole

In this illustration, a star has collapsed directly into a black hole. The black hole is surrounded by the star's envelope, expelled prior to collapse. A white ball of heated gas in the center is falling into the black hole. Direct-collapse black holes shouldn't be that rare according to theory, though observational evidence is scarce. Image Credit: Keith Miller, Caltech/IPAC - SELab

Theory says that, under the right conditions, massive stars can collapse directly into black holes without exploding as supernovae. But observational evidence of the phenomenon has been hard to get. Now astronomers have found some sequestered in archival data.



Ancient Massive Stars Enriched Early Clusters and Birthed First Black Holes

An artist’s impression of a globular cluster near its birth (left), hosting extremely massive stars with powerful stellar winds that enrich the cluster with elements processed at extremely high temperatures. (Right), an ancient globular cluster as we observe it today: surviving low-mass stars retain traces of the winds from those extremely massive stars, which have since collapsed into intermediate-mass black holes. Credits: Fabian Bodensteiner; background: image of the Milky Way globular cluster Omega Centauri, captured with the WFI camera at ESO’s La Silla Observatory.

The early Universe was a busy place. As the infant cosmos exanded, that epoch saw the massive first stars forming, along with protogalaxies. It turns out those extremely massive early stars were stirring up chemical changes in the first globular clusters, as well. Not only that, many of those monster stars ultimately collapsed as black holes.



Hubble and Euclid Team Up To Identify A Dark Matter Galaxy

Candidate Dark Galaxy 2 (CDG-2) contains only a few stars and is dominated by dark matter, making it very dim. It was detected by observing its four globular clusters and the galaxy's very faint emissions. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Dayi Li (UToronto); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI)

We know galaxies by their powerful illumination, generated by multitudes of stars. But some galaxies can be very dim. These are hypothesized to be dark galaxies, or dark matter galaxies. They're theoretical, and only candidates have been identified, but researchers may have confirmed the very first one.



Flexible Force Fields Can Protect Our Return to the Moon

Some of the EDS samples used in the research. Credit - F. I. Pacelli et al.

Lunar dust remains one of the biggest challenges for a long-term human presence on the Moon. Its jagged, clingy nature makes it naturally stick to everything from solar panels to the inside of human lungs. And while we have some methods of dealing with it, there is still plenty of experimentation to do here on Earth before we use any such system in the lunar environment. A new paper in Acta Astronautica from Francesco Pacelli and Alvaro Romero-Calvo of Georgia Tech and their co-authors describes two types of flexible Electrodynamic Dust Shields (EDSs) that could one day be used in such an environment.