Last update:

Scientists pin down the origins of the moon's tenuous atmosphere

While the moon lacks any breathable air, it does host a barely-there atmosphere. Since the 1980s, astronomers have observed a very thin layer of atoms bouncing over the moon's surface. This delicate atmosphere—technically ...

Astronomers use AI to find elusive stars 'gobbling up' planets

Astronomers have recently found hundreds of "polluted" white dwarf stars in our home galaxy, the Milky Way. These are white dwarfs caught actively consuming planets in their orbit. They are a valuable resource for studying ...

Predicting solar storms before they leave the sun

When giant solar storms hit Earth, they trigger beautiful auroral displays high in Earth's atmosphere. There's a dark side to this solar activity, though. The "space weather" it sets off also threatens our technology. The ...

Astrophysicists build model to explain to rapid planet formation

Our solar system is our immediate cosmic neighborhood. We know it well: the sun at the center; then the rocky planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars; and then the asteroid belt; followed by the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn; ...

Additional planet orbiting the star TOI-1408 discovered

Using NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, an international team of astronomers has detected a second planet orbiting a distant main sequence star known as TOI-1408. The newfound alien world, designated TOI-1408 ...

DART mission sheds new light on target binary asteroid system

In studying data collected from NASA's DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) mission, which in 2022 sent a spacecraft to intentionally collide with the asteroid moonlet Dimorphos, the mission's science team has discovered ...

Solar storms could cause more auroras

Massive explosions on the sun have triggered warnings of geomagnetic storms that could create dazzling auroras in the northern United States, Europe and southern Australia from Tuesday night.

Spacecraft to swing by Earth, moon on path to Jupiter

A spacecraft launched last year will slingshot back around Earth and the moon next month in a high-stakes, world-first maneuver as it pinballs its way through the solar system to Jupiter.

More news

Planetary Sciences
Kepler's 1607 pioneering sunspot sketches solve solar mysteries 400 years later
Planetary Sciences
Is this how you get hot Jupiters?
Planetary Sciences
How solar storms play havoc with our lives
Astrobiology
Perseverance rover discovers rock with potential signs of ancient life
Planetary Sciences
Carbon oxides on Uranus' moon Ariel hint at hidden ocean, Webb telescope reveals
Planetary Sciences
Geoscientists narrow timing of enormous 'magmatic event' on the moon more precisely
Planetary Sciences
A pair of CubeSats using ground penetrating radar could map the interior of near-Earth asteroids
Planetary Sciences
What lunar caves tell us about the shared origins of the Earth and the moon
Astronomy
Image: A Saturnian summer
Planetary Sciences
Webb images nearest super-Jupiter, opening a new window to exoplanet research
Planetary Sciences
Roadmap details how to improve exoplanet exploration using the James Webb Space Telescope
Astrobiology
The ultraviolet habitable zone may set a time limit on the formation of life
Space Exploration
Producing oxygen from rock is harder in lower gravity, modeling study shows
Planetary Sciences
NASA's ICON mission ends with several ionospheric breakthroughs
Planetary Sciences
Chinese lunar probe finds water in moon samples
Planetary Sciences
NASA rocket discovers new energization process in upper atmosphere
Space Exploration
Moon dust could contaminate lunar explorers' water supply
Astrobiology
Effects of stellar magnetism could expand criteria for exoplanet habitability
Planetary Sciences
Image: NASA's Juno mission captures the colorful and chaotic clouds of Jupiter
Astronomy
New dawn for space storm alerts could help shield Earth's tech

Other news

Cell & Microbiology
New compound found to be effective against 'flesh-eating' bacteria
Earth Sciences
Not the day after tomorrow: Why we can't predict the timing of climate tipping points
General Physics
Cosmic microwave background experiments could probe connection between cosmic inflation, particle physics
Nanophysics
First 3D visualization of an aluminum nanocomposite for the auto industry
Optics & Photonics
New 'game-changing' discovery for light-driven artificial intelligence
Analytical Chemistry
Machine learning discovers 'hidden-gem' materials for heat-free gas separation
Ecology
Ancient Antarctic microorganisms are aggressive predators
Environment
Scientists find a human 'fingerprint' in the upper troposphere's increasing ozone
Materials Science
Researchers develop a concept for efficiency-enhanced noble-metal catalysts
Ecology
Genetic mutation prompts 'deadbeat dad' fish to start raising their offspring
Cell & Microbiology
Scientists reveal transport mechanism of norepinephrine transporter and binding mode of small molecule and peptide drugs
Plants & Animals
Big sharks equal big impact, but there's a big problem: Those most affected by fishing are most needed for ocean health
Polymers
Solving the doping problem: Enhancing performance in organic semiconductors
Molecular & Computational biology
Genetic signatures of domestication identified in pigs and chickens
Social Sciences
Potential terrorists can be identified from social media posts, new research shows
Quantum Physics
Cold antimatter for quantum state-resolved precision measurements
Archaeology
'Screaming Woman' mummy may have died in agony 3,500 years ago
Molecular & Computational biology
Researchers demonstrate mechanism that may have stabilized the first RNA molecules
Environment
More microbes found that break down the carbon-fluorine bonds found in some unsaturated PFAS
Biotechnology
Scientists 'cautiously optimistic' about AI's role in drug discovery

Aerocapture is a 'free lunch' in space exploration

When spacecraft return to Earth, they don't need to shed all their velocity by firing retro-rockets. Instead, they use the atmosphere as a brake to slow down for a soft landing. Every planet in the solar system except Mercury ...

Research team describes the composition of asteroid Phaethon

Asteroid Phaethon, which is five kilometers in diameter, has been puzzling researchers for a long time. A comet-like tail is visible for a few days when the asteroid passes closest to the sun during its orbit.

Astronomers find 'tilted' planets even in pristine solar systems

Scientists have long puzzled over why all of the planets in Earth's solar system have slightly slanted orbits around the sun. But a new, Yale-led study suggests this phenomenon may not be so unusual after all. Even in "pristine" ...

Where are all the double planets?

A recent study published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society examines formation mechanisms for how binary planets—two large planetary bodies orbiting each other—can be produced from a type of tidal ...

What would happen to Earth if a rogue star came too close?

Stars are gravitationally fastened to their galaxies and move in concert with their surroundings. But sometimes, something breaks the bond. If a star gets too close to a supermassive black hole, for example, the black hole ...