Saturday, May 30, 2026

Who You Send to the Moon Matters More Than You Think

Astronauts working together in close proximity and for extended duration causes stress levels to increase. A team of researchers have modelled what this might look like in a lunar base. Image shows Jessica Watkins and Bob Hines working on XROOTS, an experiment using the Veggie facility of the ISS (Credit : NASA)

Building a permanent base on the Moon sounds like an engineering problem. Design the habitat, sort the power supply, figure out life support, and you're most of the way there. But the engineers who've spent time thinking hard about this will tell you the real challenge isn't the hardware — it's the humans inside it. Now researchers have built a virtual Moon base and run tens of thousands of simulated missions inside it, studying not the rocket engines or the radiation shielding, but the astronauts themselves. What they found could reshape how we plan humanity's return to the lunar surface.



Friday, May 29, 2026

MAVEN Spacecraft Finds New Plasma Squeezing at Mars

Artist’s illustration of the Zwan-Wolf effect at Mars, which is an atmospheric effect involving the solar wind, and was observed by NASA’s MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) spacecraft in December 2023. (Credit: LASP/CU Boulder)

A cloaked alien invasion force is approaching Earth and coming up on Mars. The first officer looks through a viewfinder and says, “Captain, the fourth planet’s atmosphere is behaving strangely. As though it were trying to block incoming energy.” The captain takes a moment, then his (already big) eyes get wide and he exclaims, “It’s a defense shield! The Earthlings are hiding on the fourth planet and are prepared to attack us! Abort the invasion!” The first officer responds, “Aye aye, Captain!”



Thursday, May 28, 2026

Earthly Hors d'oeuvres For Hungry Red Dwarfs

This illustration shows the red dwarf star TRAPPIST-1 and two of its rocky planets. Researchers detected several red dwarfs just like it that have appeared to have eaten their planets, though TRAPPIST-1 isn't one of them. Planetary engulfment is a rare yet possible outcome of normal planetary system evolution. Image Credit: ESA/Hubble. Licence Type: Attribution (CC BY 4.0)

We know that stars can engulf planets because stars that swell up to become red giants overwhelm any close-in planets. The Sun will do this to Venus, Mercury, and possibly Earth in a few billion years. But research shows that it can happen when low-mass stars first enter the main sequence. Lithium gives it away.



An Orbiting Satellite Triad Reveals Motions Inside Earth

Earth’s magnetic field is thought to be generated largely by an ocean of superheated, swirling liquid iron that makes up Earth’s outer core. That activity generates electric currents and thus the continuously changing electromagnetic field. Courtesy SA/AOES Medialab

Our planet's liquid iron outer core is slowly giving up its secrets to a trio of satellites launched by ESA in 2013. Called Swarm, the three probes have been studying Earth's magnetic field at the source. In the process, they've revealed startling changes in a molten layer region 2,200 kilometers beneath the Pacific Ocean. In 2010, material in that area of Earth's outer core changed direction. Insteading of moving slowly westward, it's now headed east and picking up speed. Scientists are working to figure out why by using the European Space Agency's (ESA) Swarm data and additional information from ESA's CryoSat mission and ground-based instruments.



Just Like Stars, Open Clusters Can Form Binary Pairs

An extended gaseous finger points to the Pismis 24 open star cluster in this JWST NIRCam image. Stars in a cluster are siblings, having been birthed from the same massive cloud of gas. But clusters themselves can also be siblings arranged in binary pairs, and recent research illuminates their heirarchical nature. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI; Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)

Open star clusters are prevalent stellar structures in the Milky Way. Astronomers think their could be 100,000 of them. But they're not all the same: some are binary clusters, and within those, there's a hierarchy based on how they form. Recent research explores the different types and how many of each type is in the Milky Way.



Wednesday, May 27, 2026

When Spacetime Crystallises, a Black Hole is Born

The Event Horizon Telescope captured this image of the black hole at the centre of the galaxy M87. Other black holes are thought to form out of the crystallisation of space time (Credit : Event Horizon Telescope)

Physicists have thought for decades that microscopic black holes can theoretically emerge not from exploding stars but from delicate "critical states" in which space and time organise themselves into a crystal like structure. Now, for the first time, researchers from TU Wien and Goethe University Frankfurt have derived an exact mathematical formula describing this bizarre phenomenon using a surprising trick involving infinitely many dimensions!



The Weirdness of Early Universe SMBHs Gets Even Weirder

This JWST NIRCam image shows Abell2744-QSO1, a prototypical Little Red Dot (LRD) discovered by the JWST. QS01 is magnified and tripled by gravitational lensing from the galaxy cluster Abell 2744. When scientists studied it in detail, they found a 50 million solar mass supermassive black hole (SMBH). It contains twice as much mass as its galaxy, throwing a curveball at astrophysicists trying to understand the growth of SMBH. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, L. Furtak (Ben-Gurion University), R. Maiolino (Cambridge), F. D'Eugenio (Cambridge), I. Juodžbalis (Cambridge), H. Übler (MPE), C. Marconcini (University of Florence). Image processing: A. Pagan

The JWST has shown us some strange things about supermassive black holes (SMBH) in the early Universe. Many of them are far more massive than we think they should be. Now astronomers working with the JWST have found one that seems to have formed before its galaxy did.