Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Is the Universe Older Than We Think? Part 1: The Cosmological Clock

Is the Universe Older Than We Think? Part 1: The Cosmological Clock

When I say that the universe is 13.77 billion years old, it sounds rather authoritative.



Red Giant Stars Can't Destroy All Gas Giants. Some Are Hardy Survivors

This artist's illustration shows a planet orbiting a white dwarf. Planets like this have a tough time surviving a star's transition to a white dwarf. They can be engulfed, torn apart by tidal forces, and vapourized. But some survive, and researchers are trying to understand which ones can endure the calamity and which can't. Image Credit: W. M. Keck Observatory/Adam Makarenko

Astronomers haven't found many gas giants orbiting white dwarfs. But is that because they're so difficult to spot? Or is it because their survival rate is so low? New research probes the issue.



Reading the Moon’s Diary, One Speck of Dust at a Time

Chang'e-5 Moon Sample. Credit - China News Service

Magnetism on the Moon has always been a bit confusing. Remote sensing probes have noted there is some magnetic signature, but far from the strong cocoon that surrounds Earth itself. Previous attempts to detect it in returned regolith samples blended together all of the rocks in those samples, leading to confusion about the source - whether they were caused by a strong inner dynamo in ages past, or by powerful asteroid impacts that magnetized the rocks they hit. A new study from Yibo Yang of Zhejiang University and Lin Xing of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, published recently in the journal Fundamental Research, shows that the right answer seems to be - a little of both.



Monday, February 2, 2026

Elon Musk lays out a new vision of AI satellites as SpaceX acquires xAI

An artist's conception shows a Starship upper stage deploying a satellite in orbit. (SpaceX Illustration)

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk says he’s making space-based artificial intelligence the “immediate focus” of a newly expanded company that not only builds rockets and satellites, but also controls xAI’s generative-AI software and the X social-media platform. That’s the upshot of Musk's announcement that SpaceX has acquired xAI.



The Magnetic Superhighways That Drive Galaxy Evolution

Researchers used ALMA to image the magnetic fields of the galactic disk and dusty and molecular outflow of the merging galaxy Arp220. They found that a magnetic superhighway funnels material between galaxy cores, and that powerful winds move material along the fields into the circumgalactic medium. Image Credit: Lopez-Rodriguez, E. (USC; polarization data), Girart, J.M. (ICE-CSIC and IEEC; polarization data); (Barcos-Muñoz, L. (NRAO; 3GHz data)

Arp 220 is a well-known pair of galaxies that are merging. New ALMA observations of polarized light reveal the complex and powerful magnetic fields that shape the process.



Hubble And The Fingerprints Of An Ancient Merger

NGC 7722 is a lenticular galaxy about 185 million light-years away. The Hubble captured this image when following up on a supernova that was detected here in 2022. The supernova isn't visible in the image, but this dramatic portrait doesn't need an exploding stellar diva to capture out attention. Image Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, R. J. Foley (UC Santa Cruz), Dark Energy Survey/DOE/FNAL/DECam/CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA; Acknowledgment: Mehmet Yüksek

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image shows NGC 7722, a lenticular galaxy about 187 million light-years away in the constellation Pegasus. This “lens-shaped” galaxy sits in between more familiar spiral alaxies and elliptical galaxies in the galaxy classification scheme. The dark, dramatic dust lanes are the fingerprints of an ancient galaxy merger.



Friday, January 30, 2026

Boron Could Be Astrobiology’s Unsung Hero

Daybreak at Mars'Gale Crater Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

The light, rare element boron, better known as the primary component of borax, a longtime household cleaner, was almost mined to exhaustion in parts of the old American West. But boron could arguably be an unsung hero in cosmic astrobiology, although it's still not listed as one of the key elements needed for the onset of life.