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Aug 1, 2023

Get Ready For a Rare Double Supermoon: The Last For a Long Time

Posted by in category: space

Once in a blue moon, Earth’s skies host a ‘blue supermoon’, and the beautifully bright sight is one that you don’t want to miss.

Otherwise, you won’t have a chance to glimpse a similar phenomenon until 2032.

Continue reading “Get Ready For a Rare Double Supermoon: The Last For a Long Time” »

Jul 31, 2023

New clues to the source of the universe’s magnetic fields

Posted by in category: space

It isn’t just your refrigerator that has magnets on it. The Earth, the stars, galaxies, and the space between galaxies are all magnetized, too. The more places scientists have looked for magnetic fields across the universe, the more they’ve found them. But the question of why that is the case and where those magnetic fields originate from has remained a mystery and a subject of ongoing scientific inquiry.

Published in the journal Physical Review Letters, a new paper by Columbia researchers offers insight into the source of these fields. The team used models to show that magnetic fields may spontaneously arise in turbulent plasma. Plasma is a kind of matter often found in ultra-hot environments like that near the surface of the sun, but plasma is also scattered across the in low-density environments, like the expansive between ; the team’s research focused on those low-density environments.

Their simulations showed that, in addition to generating new magnetic fields, the turbulence of those plasmas can also amplify magnetic fields once they’ve been generated, which helps explain how magnetic fields that originate on small scales can sometimes eventually reach to stretch across vast distances.

Jul 31, 2023

Euclid space telescope sends back amazing first images of the cosmos

Posted by in category: space

The European Space Agency’s Euclid telescope launched on 1 July, and now it has delivered its first stunning pictures of stars and galaxies across the cosmos.

By Leah Crane

Jul 31, 2023

The ‘doomed Phobos moon’ is about the crash into Mars

Posted by in category: space

When NASA’s Perseverance Rover observed an image from Mars of its moon Phobos eclipsing the Sun, it was a reminder that the astronomical body is doomed to crash into the planet. Phobos is the closest of Mars’ two moons and it is due to fall out of orbit relatively soon.

Jul 30, 2023

New spacesuit technology helps astronauts keep their underwear clean

Posted by in categories: futurism, space

In the ongoing quest for human habitation on the Moon, the issue of cleanliness within spacesuits is a critical one. Future astronauts venturing to the lunar surface will be equipped with a new generation of spacesuits designed to endure the harsh lunar environment, thanks to the European Space Agency’s PExTex project.

However, as these suits provide safety and comfort, they could also offer a conducive environment for harmful microbial growth. This issue is further exacerbated as astronauts may potentially share these suits.

PExTex is addressing this issue by assessing suitable textiles for future spacesuit designs. Collaborating with the Austrian Space Forum, they have launched a project named BACTeRMA. This project is focusing on ways to prevent microbial growth within the inner linings of the suits.

Jul 30, 2023

L-72 Forecast: 80% Favorable for Antares Launch

Posted by in categories: climatology, space

The Wallops Range forecast issued today for the Tuesday, Aug. 1, launch of Northrop Grumman’s 19th resupply mission to the International Space Station puts weather at 80% favorable.

A weak area of high pressure will move off the coast Sunday evening, as a weak upper-level disturbance tracks toward the Wallops region with a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms Monday morning through late Monday evening. The upper-level trough will remain over the Wallops Region Tuesday with a chance of an afternoon, sea breeze, pop-up shower or thunderstorms during the countdown. At this time, the primary concern for launch is a slight chance of cumulus clouds.

NASA commercial cargo provider Northrop Grumman is targeting 8:31 p.m. EDT Tuesday, Aug. 1, for the launch.

Jul 30, 2023

Moon mining gains momentum as private companies plan for a lunar economy

Posted by in categories: economics, space

A number of entrepreneurial groups have shared their strategies to turn the moon into a hustle and bustle world of marketable services.

Jul 30, 2023

Hubble watches extreme exoplanet being stripped by its star

Posted by in category: space

A Neptune-sized planet orbits close enough to its star that it is bombarded by dramatic flares which cook the planet with radiation and strip its atmosphere.

Jul 30, 2023

The Challenges of Building Human Habitats in Space

Posted by in categories: habitats, space

In October of 2021, NASA’s next-generation infrared observatory, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), will be launched. As the most advanced and complex space telescope ever built, the James Webb will characterize exoplanets, explore our Solar System, and address the deepest cosmological mysteries of all.

Jul 29, 2023

NASA launches its own streaming platform

Posted by in category: space

NASA+ will be a “no subscription required” streaming service for viewing rocket launches and NASA science, with app integration coming later this year.

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