Monday, April 13, 2026

A New Study Narrows the Search for Water on the Moon

The locations of ice, in blue, at the moon's South Pole, left, and North Pole, right, as detected by the Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft. Credit: NASA

A new study challenges old assumptions by revealing that water on the Moon likely came from multiple sources over billions of years, rather than from a single major deposit long ago.



Sunday, April 12, 2026

Are Neutrinos Their Own Evil Twins? Part 2: The Weak Left-Hander

Chien-Shiung Wu, ca. 1950s. Smithsonian Institution / Flickr Commons. No known copyright restrictions.

The weak nuclear force is the eccentric cousin of the four forces — the one that only shakes hands with left-handed particles. That bizarre preference turns out to be absolutely critical for stars, nuclear fusion, and the existence of most matter. And neutrinos love it. There's just one problem: neutrinos appear to only exist in one handedness, which makes no sense at all.



The Craters that Made Us

Craters like 'Meteor Crater' in Arizona may well have been the spark that created life on Earth (Credit : National Map Seamless Server)

What if the same collisions we think of as forces of destruction were actually the spark that created life on Earth? New research published in the Journal of Marine Science and Engineering is making a compelling case that meteor impacts didn't just reshape our planet's surface, instead that they may have built the very cradles where life first emerged.



The Moon Just Got a New Scar

The LROC team discovered a new crater that formed since LRO entered orbit, identifiable in the above image by its bright ejecta rays. (Credit : NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University)

A crater the size of two football pitches has appeared on the Moon and for the first time, scientists have been able to watch exactly what happened. Captured by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter before and after the impact, this remarkable discovery is giving planetary scientists an unprecedented close up of one of the Solar System's most fundamental processes. Here's what they found.



Saturday, April 11, 2026

Are Neutrinos Their Own Evil Twins? Part 1: So We're Going to Redefine "Particle"

Ettore Majorana, ca. 1930. Unknown author / Mondadori Collection. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

A brilliant physicist vanished in 1938, leaving behind one strange, quiet paper. It described something that shouldn't exist: a particle that is its own antiparticle. To understand why that matters, we first need to rethink what a particle even is — and that means getting weird with chirality, the Higgs field, and the neutrino's stubborn refusal to follow the rules.



Friday, April 10, 2026

Student Team Finds One of the Oldest Stars in the Universe that Migrated to the Milky Way

One of the oldest stars in the Universe migrated to the Milky Way from another galaxy. Credit: NASA/ESA/STScI/Univ. of Michigan/CfA

A class of undergraduate students at University of Chicago has used data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to discover one of the oldest stars in the universe, a star that formed in a companion galaxy and migrated to the Milky Way.



Why Does Jupiter Have More Large Moons than Saturn?

Jupiter's four largest moons are known as the Galilean moons. This composite image shows from left to right, Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. Credit: NASA/JPL/DLR

The two largest planets in our Solar System, Jupiter and Saturn, have the largest systems of moons. However, Jupiter has more large moons than Saturn, which has only one. Since both planets are gas giants, the reasons for the differences in these satellite systems have long puzzled astronomers. This motivated a collaborative team of researchers from Japan and China to develop a physically consistent model that can explain this.