Astronomy & Space News

Today's Astronomy News

If you are interested in astronomy, space and universe news you can read these here. We have several news sources like:

  • NASA - Published Content
  • NASA Image of the Day
  • Astronomy.com - Astronomy News
  • Sky & Telescope - Astronomy News
  • ScienceDaily - Astronomy News
You can get exciting news about Solar System, Galaxies, Stars, Planets, Asteroids and so on.

Select below the tab of the source news that you are interested in, or take a look to every source.


NASA - Published Content

    Source: NASA

  • NASA, Boeing Welcome Starliner Spacecraft to Earth, Close Mission
    7 September 2024, 6:38 am
    NASA and Boeing safely returned the uncrewed Starliner spacecraft following its landing at 10:01 p.m. MDT Sept. 6 at White Sands Space Harbor in New Mexico, concluding a three-month flight test to the International Space Station. “I am extremely proud of the work our collective team put into this entire flight test, and we are […]

  • Academic Semester Legal Externships (HQ)
    6 September 2024, 10:22 pm
    Externships with NASA Headquarters Office of the General Counsel NASA’s Office of the General Counsel (OGC) periodically has externships for highly qualified law students. OGC offers unpaid, part-time and full-time externships during the law school academic year (for law school credit). These externships are intended to expose law students to the rewards of Federal service […]

  • NASA Selects Companies for Commercial SmallSat Services Award
    6 September 2024, 10:13 pm
    NASA has selected eight companies for a new award to help acquire Earth observation data and provide related services for the agency. The Commercial SmallSat Data Acquisition Program On-Ramp1 Multiple Award contract is a firm-fixed-price indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity multiple-award contract with a maximum value of $476 million, cumulatively amongst all the selected contractors, and a performance period […]

  • NASA to Take Part in Hidden Figures Congressional Gold Medal Ceremony
    6 September 2024, 9:15 pm
    NASA Administrator Bill Nelson will represent the agency during a Congressional Gold Medal ceremony at 3 p.m. EDT Wednesday, Sept. 18, recognizing the women who contributed to the space race, including the NASA mathematicians who helped land the first astronauts on the Moon under the agency’s Apollo Program. Hosted by House Speaker Mike Johnson, the […]

  • NASA Scientific Balloon Takes Flight With Student-Built Payloads
    6 September 2024, 8:59 pm
    NASA’s Scientific Balloon Program’s fifth balloon mission of the 2024 fall campaign took flight Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2024, from the agency’s Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in Fort Sumner, New Mexico. The HASP 1.0 (High-Altitude Student Platform) mission remained in flight over 11 hours before it safely touched down. Recovery is underway. HASP is a partnership […]

  • NASA Sets Coverage for Crew Launch; Trio to Join Expedition 71
    6 September 2024, 8:20 pm
    NASA astronaut Don Pettit will launch aboard the Roscosmos Soyuz MS-26 spacecraft, accompanied by cosmonauts Alexey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner, to the International Space Station where they will join the Expedition 71 crew in advancing scientific research. Pettit, Ovchinin, and Vagner will lift off at 12:23 p.m. EDT Wednesday, Sept. 11 (9:23 p.m. Baikonur time) […]

  • NASA Invites Media to Discuss Europa Clipper Mission
    6 September 2024, 7:30 pm
    NASA will hold a media teleconference at 4 p.m. EDT, Monday, Sept. 9, to provide an update on Europa Clipper, a mission that will study whether Jupiter’s moon Europa could be hospitable to life. The teleconference will occur after a key decision point meeting earlier that day regarding next steps for the mission. Audio of […]

  • NASA Summer Camp Inspires Future Climate Leaders
    6 September 2024, 6:12 pm
    From July 15-19, 2024, the Coastal Equity and Resilience Hub at the Georgia Institute of Technology collaborated with the University of Georgia (UGA) Marine Extension and Georgia Sea Grant to host a week-long NASA Sea Level Changemakers Summer Camp. The camp introduced 14 rising 7th-8th graders to how coastal areas are changing due to sea […]

  • CubeSats are pictured after being deployed into Earth orbit
    6 September 2024, 5:35 pm
    Tiny satellites, also known as CubeSats, are pictured after being deployed into Earth orbit from a small satellite orbital deployer on the outside of the International Space Station’s Kibo laboratory module. The CubeSats were delivered aboard the Northrop Grumman Cygnus space freighter and will serve a variety of educational and research purposes for public and […]

  • OSAM-1 Partnership Opportunity: Request for Information 
    6 September 2024, 3:07 pm
    NASA is exploring potential partnerships for alternate use cases for the On-orbit Servicing, Assembly, and Manufacturing 1 (OSAM-1) flight hardware, test facilities, and experienced personnel. Through a Request for Information for OSAM-1 Partnerships released Sept. 5, 2024, NASA seeks interest from U.S. organizations that will benefit commercial, civil, and national objectives, thereby advancing domestic leadership […]

NASA Image of the Day

    Source: NASA

  • CubeSats are pictured after being deployed into Earth orbit
    6 September 2024, 5:36 pm
    Tiny satellites, also known as CubeSats, are pictured after being deployed into Earth orbit from a small satellite orbital deployer on the outside of the International Space Station's Kibo laboratory module.

  • Ames Wind Tunnel
    5 September 2024, 4:50 pm
    Construction of the world’s largest wind tunnel and its original 40- by 80-foot test section. A later expansion created an additional 80- by 120-foot test section. A Navy blimp, which would have been based at Hangars 2 and 3 at Moffett Field, patrols in the background.

  • Gateway’s Propulsion System Testing Throttles Up
    4 September 2024, 6:51 pm
    In this image, PPE engineers successfully tested the integration of Aerojet Rocketdyne’s thruster with Maxar’s power procession unit and Xenon Flow Controller.

  • Great Aurora
    3 September 2024, 9:13 pm
    A vivid aurora streams over the Earth as the International Space Station orbited 273 miles above the southern Indian Ocean in between Australia and Antarctica.

  • T-38 Flyover of Artemis I on Launch Pad
    30 August 2024, 4:51 pm
    NASA T-38s fly in formation above the Space Launch System rocket on Launch Pad 39B.

  • Saharan Dust in the Wind
    29 August 2024, 7:55 pm
    Dense bands of dust streamed offshore from southern Morocco in summer 2024. The VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) on the Suomi NPP satellite acquired this image of a plume of Saharan dust as winds lofted it over the Atlantic Ocean on Aug. 24, 2024.

  • A SAFER Way
    28 August 2024, 9:26 pm
    Backdropped against the blue and white Earth 130 nautical miles below, astronaut Mark C. Lee tests the new Simplified Aid for EVA Rescue (SAFER) system on Sept. 16, 1994.

  • Hubble Pinpoints a Dim, Starry Mini-galaxy
    27 August 2024, 7:53 pm
    The Pegasus Dwarf spheroidal galaxy, also known as Andromeda VI, is one of at least 13 dwarf galaxies that orbit the Andromeda galaxy.

  • Dr. Irene Duhart Long
    26 August 2024, 9:12 pm
    When this picture was taken in July 1994, Dr. Irene Duhart Long was director of the Biomedical Operations and Research Office at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. She was responsible for the program management of the center's aerospace and occupational medicine, life sciences research, environmental health programs, and the operations management of the life sciences support facilities. Dr. Long also was responsible for providing the coordinating medical, environmental monitoring and environmental health support to launch and landing activities and day-to-day institutional functions.

  • First Look at Hybrid Electric Research Aircraft
    23 August 2024, 7:21 pm
    The Dash 7 that will be modified into a hybrid electric research vehicle under NASA’s Electrified Powertrain Flight Demonstration (EPFD) project on display with its new livery for the first time. In front of the plane is an electric powertrain that magniX will integrate into the current aircraft to build a hybrid electric propulsion system.

  • Sunrise Begins
    22 August 2024, 8:42 pm
    The International Space Station was orbiting on a northeast track 261 miles above the Pacific Ocean when this photograph captured the first rays of an orbital sunrise illuminating Earth's atmosphere.

  • Rare Blue Supermoon 8/19/24
    21 August 2024, 8:23 pm
    A supermoon rises over Huntsville, Alabama, home to NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, Aug. 19. Visible through Wednesday, Aug. 21, the full Moon is both a supermoon and a Blue Moon. Supermoons are the biggest and brightest full Moons of the year because the Moon is within 90% of its closest point to Earth. While not blue in color, the third full Moon in a season with four full Moons is called a “Blue Moon.” Huntsville is known as the “Rocket City” because of its proximity to NASA Marshall, which manages vital propulsion systems and hardware, launch vehicles, engineering technologies, and cutting-edge science for the agency.

  • Tortoise Takes a Leisurely Stroll
    20 August 2024, 9:32 pm
    Slow and steady wins the race for this gopher tortoise, ambling along the Launch Pad 39B beach road on NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Gopher tortoises are dry-land turtles that live in scrub, dry hammock, pine flatwood, coastal grassland and dune habitats.

  • Revisiting OSIRIS-REx
    19 August 2024, 8:39 pm
    A training model of the sample return capsule is seen is seen during a drop test in preparation for the retrieval of the sample return capsule from NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission, Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023, at the Department of Defense's Utah Test and Training Range.

  • Rings and Things
    16 August 2024, 9:30 pm
    The subject of this week’s circular Hubble Picture of the Week is situated in the Perseus Cluster, also known as Abell 426, 320 million light-years from Earth. It’s a barred spiral galaxy known as MCG+07-07-072, seen here among a number of photobombing stars that are much closer to Earth than it is. MCG+07-07-072 has quite an unusual shape, for a spiral galaxy, with thin arms emerging from the ends of its barred core to draw a near-circle around its disc.

Astronomy.com

Sky & Telescope

ScienceDaily

    Source: ScienceDaily - Astronomy News

  • Astrophysics: AI shines a new light on exoplanets
    6 September 2024, 8:17 pm
    A team models the atmospheres of distant planets using neural networks.

  • Massive merger: Study reveals evidence for origin of supermassive black hole at galaxy's center
    6 September 2024, 8:13 pm
    Researchers have discovered compelling evidence suggesting that the supermassive black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy, known as Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), is likely the result of a past cosmic merger. The study builds on recent observations from the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), which captured the first direct image of Sgr A* in 2022.

  • Researchers discover a space oddity -- an exoplanet moving in mysterious ways
    5 September 2024, 6:09 pm
    A research team has discovered a small planet that displays peculiar orbital motion. The shimmying planet, located 455 light-years from Earth, shows that planetary systems can be considerably more complex than researchers have previously thought.

  • Distorted galaxy forming cosmic question mark
    4 September 2024, 8:15 pm
    It's 7 billion years ago, and the universe's heyday of star formation is beginning to slow. What might our Milky Way galaxy have looked like at that time? Astronomers have found clues in the form of a cosmic question mark, the result of a rare alignment across light-years of space.

  • Gigantic asteroid impact shifted the axis of Solar System's biggest moon
    3 September 2024, 8:49 pm
    Around 4 billion years ago, an asteroid hit the Jupiter moon Ganymede. Now, a researcher realized that the Solar System's biggest moon's axis has shifted as a result of the impact, which confirmed that the asteroid was around 20 times larger than the one that ended the age of the dinosaurs on Earth, and caused one of the biggest impacts with clear traces in the Solar System.

  • How bright is the universe's glow? Study offers best measurement yet
    3 September 2024, 8:49 pm
    Over billions of years, the universe's stars and galaxies shined their light into space, leaving behind an imperceptibly faint night light known as the cosmic optical background. NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has traveled to the edge of Earth's solar system and captured the most accurate measurement of this glow to date.

  • Dancing galaxies make a monster at the cosmic dawn
    30 August 2024, 4:32 am
    Astronomers have spotted a pair of galaxies in the act of merging 12.8 billion years ago. The characteristics of these galaxies indicate that the merger will form a monster galaxy, one of the brightest types of objects in the Universe.

  • Dark matter could have helped make supermassive black holes in the early universe
    28 August 2024, 9:50 pm
    Supermassive black holes typically take billions of years to form. But the James Webb Space Telescope is finding them not that long after the Big Bang -- before they should have had time to form. Astrophysicists have discovered that if dark matter decays, the photons it emits keep the hydrogen gas hot enough for gravity to gather it into giant clouds and eventually condense it into a supermassive black hole. In addition to explaining the existence of very early supermassive black holes, the finding lends support for the existence of a kind of dark matter capable of decaying into particles such as photons.

  • Highest-resolution observations yet from the surface of Earth
    27 August 2024, 4:50 pm
    Astronomers have achieved the highest resolution ever obtained from the surface of Earth. They managed this feat by detecting light from distant galaxies at a frequency of around 345 GHz, equivalent to a wavelength of 0.87 mm. They estimate that in future they will be able to make black hole images that are 50% more detailed than was possible before, bringing the region immediately outside the boundary of nearby supermassive black holes into sharper focus. They will also be able to image more black holes than they have done so far. The new detections are part of a pilot experiment.

  • Six new rogue worlds: Star birth clues
    27 August 2024, 4:49 pm
    The James Webb Space Telescope has spotted six likely rogue worlds -- objects with planet-like masses but untethered from any star's gravity -- including the lightest ever identified with a dusty disk around it. The elusive objects offer new evidence that the same cosmic processes that give birth to stars may also play a common role in making objects only slightly bigger than Jupiter.

  • Astrophysicists use AI to precisely calculate universe's 'settings'
    26 August 2024, 7:13 pm
    The new estimates of the parameters that form the basis of the standard model of cosmology are far more precise than previous approaches using the same galaxy distribution data.

  • Early galaxies were not too big for their britches after all
    26 August 2024, 7:13 pm
    According to a new study, some of the earliest galaxies observed with the James Webb Space Telescope are in fact much less massive than they first appeared. Black holes in some of these galaxies make them appear much brighter and bigger than they really are. This helps resolve the debate over whether the size of early galaxies requires a revision of the standard model of cosmology.

  • NASA's DART impact permanently changed the shape and orbit of asteroid moon
    23 August 2024, 8:16 pm
    A new study provides insights on the geophysics behind asteroid formation and evolution.

  • Meteor showers shed light on where comets formed in the early solar system
    22 August 2024, 7:00 pm
    Researchers studying meteor showers have found that not all comets crumble the same way when they approach the Sun. In a new study, they ascribe the differences to the conditions in the protoplanetary disk where comets formed 4.5 billion years ago.

  • Extraterrestrial chemistry with earthbound possibilities
    21 August 2024, 9:00 pm
    Who are we? Why are we here? We are stardust, the result of chemistry occurring throughout vast clouds of interstellar gas and dust. To better understand how that chemistry could create prebiotic molecules, researchers investigated the role of low-energy electrons created as cosmic radiation traverses through ice particles. Their findings may also inform medical and environmental applications on our home planet.