Monday, May 5, 2025

African Space Agency takes flight

African Space Agency takes flight

On 20 April, 2025, the African Space Agency (AfSA) was formally launched at an inauguration ceremony in Cairo, Egypt. The decision to create AfSA was made by the African Union (AU) in 2016 to coordinate the continent's approach to space, and enact the African Space Policy and Strategy. AfSA will coordinate African space cooperation with Europe and other international partners.



Friday, May 2, 2025

The White House Releases its 2026 Budget Request for NASA. Cuts to SLS, Gateway and Orion

The White House Releases its 2026 Budget Request for NASA. Cuts to SLS, Gateway and Orion

The White House Releases its 2026 Budget Request for NASA. Cuts to SLS, Gateway and Orion



Kardashev Type 2 Civilizations Might Be An Unsustainable Fantasy

Kardashev Type 2 Civilizations Might Be An Unsustainable Fantasy

We tend to think of Extraterrestrial Intelligences (ETIs)—if they exist—as civilizations that have overcome the problems that still plague us. They're advanced, peaceful, disease-free technological societies that enjoy absolute political stability as they accomplish feats of impeccable engineering. Can that really be true in a Universe where entropy sets the stage upon which events unfold?



Juno Continues to Teach us About Jupiter and Its Moons

Juno Continues to Teach us About Jupiter and Its Moons

The Juno spacecraft circling in Jovian space is the planetary science gift that just keeps on giving. Although it's spending a lot of time in the strong (and damaging) Jovian radiation belts, the spacecraft's instruments are hanging in there quite well. In the process, they're peering into Jupiter's cloud tops and looking beneath the surface of the volcanic moon Io.



Thursday, May 1, 2025

Scientists Gain a New Understanding of How Stars and Planets Form

Scientists Gain a New Understanding of How Stars and Planets Form

As young stars form, they exert a powerful influence on their surroundings and create complex interactions between them and their environments. As they gobble up gas and dust, they generate a rotating disk of material. This protoplanetary disk is where planets form, and new research shows that stars can feed too quickly and end up regurgitating material back into the disk.



JWST Sees How Methanol Evolves in the Outer Solar system

JWST Sees How Methanol Evolves in the Outer Solar system

Understanding how life started on Earth means understanding the evolution of chemistry in the Solar System. It began in the protoplanetary disk of debris around the Sun and reached a critical point when life appeared on Earth billions of years ago. Close to the Sun, the chain of chemical evidence is broken by the Sun's radiation. But further out in the Solar System, billions of kilometres away, some of that ancient chemistry is preserved.



New Research Traces Heavy Elements to Collapsing Stars

New Research Traces Heavy Elements to Collapsing Stars

A team of researchers led by the Los Alamos National Laboratory examined the possibility that the jets coming from collapsing stars could be responsible for creating the heaviest elements in the Universe.