Friday, August 29, 2025

A Veil in Ophiuchus: Dark Nebulae LDN 234 & LDN 204

A Veil in Ophiuchus: Dark Nebulae LDN 234 & LDN 204

The diffuse hydrogen-alpha glow of emission region Sh2-27 fills this cosmic scene. This field of view spans nearly 3 degrees across the nebula-rich constellation Ophiuchus toward the central Milky Way. A dark veil of wispy interstellar dust clouds draped across the foreground is chiefly identified as LDN 234 and LDN 204 from the 1962 Catalog of Dark Nebulae by American astronomer Beverly Lynds. Sh2-27 itself is the large but faint HII region surrounding runaway O-type star Zeta Ophiuchi. Along with the Zeta Oph HII region, LDN 234 and LDN 204 are likely 500 or so light-years away. At that distance, this telescopic frame would be about 25 light-years wide.

An H II region is a region of interstellar atomic hydrogen that is ionized. It is typically in a molecular cloud of partially ionized gas where star formation has recently taken place with a size ranging from one to hundreds of light years, and density from a few to about a million particles per cubic centimeter.


Image Credit & Copyright: Katelyn Beecroft
Katelyn's website: https://app.astrobin.com/u/kates.universe#gallery
Release Date: Aug. 29, 2025

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #HIIRegion #Sh227 #Nebulae #DarkNebulae #LDN234 #LDN204 #Ophiuchus #Constellations #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #Astrophotography #KatelynBeecroft #Astrophotographers #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #APoD

Artemis II Launch Abort Sytem Installed on Orion Crew Spacecraft | NASA Kennedy

Artemis II Launch Abort Sytem Installed on Orion Crew Spacecraft | NASA Kennedy



The launch abort tower on NASA’s Artemis II Orion spacecraft is pictured inside the Launch Abort System Facility (LASF) at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025, after teams with NASA’s Exploration Ground Systems (EGS) Program installed the tower on Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2025.

Positioned at the top of Orion, the 44-foot-tall launch abort system is designed to carry the crew to safety in the event of an emergency during launch or ascent, with its three solid rocket motors working together to propel Orion—and astronauts inside—away from the rocket for a safe landing in the ocean, or detach from the spacecraft when it is no longer needed. The final step to complete integration will be the installation of the ogive fairings, which are four protective panels that will shield the crew module from the severe vibrations and sounds it will experience during launch. 

The Artemis II test flight will send NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency (CSA) astronaut Jeremy Hansen around the Moon and return them safely back home.

The Artemis II crew will be sent on a ten-day Moon journey no earlier than April 2026.

Check the NASA Artemis II Mission page for updates:

Follow updates on the Artemis blog: 

Image Credit: NASA/Cory Huston
Image Date: Aug. 27, 2025

#NASA #Space #Science #Moon #ArtemisProgram #ArtemisII #OrionSpacecraft #LaunchAbortSystem #LASF #ArtemisIICrewModule #Astronauts #CrewedMission #DeepSpace #MoonToMars #SpaceEngineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #NASAKennedy #KSC #MerrittIsland #Florida #UnitedStates #Europe #STEM #Education

Marsquake Data Reveals Nature of Martian Interior | NASA Insight Lander

Marsquake Data Reveals Nature of Martian Interior | NASA Insight Lander

Scientists believe giant impacts—like the one depicted in this artist’s concept—occurred on Mars 4.5 billion years ago, injecting debris from the impact deep into the planet’s mantle. NASA’s InSight lander detected this debris before the mission’s end in 2022.
A cutaway view of Mars in this artist’s concept (not to scale) reveals debris from ancient impacts scattered through the planet’s mantle. On the surface at left, a meteoroid impact sends seismic signals through the interior; at right is NASA’s InSight lander.

NASA’s InSight took this selfie in 2019 using a camera on its robotic arm. The lander also used its arm to deploy the mission’s seismometer. Its data was used in a 2025 study showing massive impacts left chunks of debris deep in the planet’s interior. 

Rocky material that impacted Mars lies scattered in giant lumps throughout the planet’s mantle, offering clues about Mars’ interior and its ancient past.

What appear to be fragments from the aftermath of massive impacts on Mars that occurred 4.5 billion years ago have been detected deep below the planet’s surface. The discovery was made thanks to NASA’s now-retired InSight lander. It recorded the findings before the mission’s end in 2022. The ancient impacts released enough energy to melt continent-size swaths of the early crust and mantle into vast magma oceans, simultaneously injecting the impactor fragments and Martian debris deep into the planet’s interior.

There is no way to tell exactly what struck Mars. The early solar system was filled with a range of rocky objects that could have done so, including ones so large they were effectively protoplanets. The remains of these impacts still exist in the form of lumps that are as large as 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) across and scattered throughout the Martian mantle. They offer a record preserved only on worlds like Mars. Its lack of tectonic plates has kept its interior from being churned up the way Earth’s is through a process known as convection.

The finding was reported Thursday, Aug. 28, 2025, in a study published by the journal Science:
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adk4292

“We’ve never seen the inside of a planet in such fine detail and clarity before,” said the paper’s lead author, Constantinos Charalambous of Imperial College London. “What we’re seeing is a mantle studded with ancient fragments. Their survival to this day tells us Mars’ mantle has evolved sluggishly over billions of years. On Earth, features like these may well have been largely erased.”

InSight, which was managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, placed the first seismometer on Mars’ surface in 2018. The extremely sensitive instrument recorded 1,319 marsquakes before the lander’s end of mission in 2022.

Quakes produce seismic waves that change as they pass through different kinds of material, providing scientists a way to study the interior of a planetary body. To date, the InSight team has measured the size, depth, and composition of Mars’ crust, mantle, and core. This latest discovery regarding the mantle’s composition suggests how much is still waiting to be discovered within InSight’s data.

“We knew Mars was a time capsule bearing records of its early formation, but we didn’t anticipate just how clearly we’d be able to see with InSight,” said Tom Pike of Imperial College London, coauthor of the paper.

Quake hunting
Mars lacks the tectonic plates that produce the temblors many people in seismically active areas are familiar with. However, there are two other types of quakes on Earth that also occur on Mars: those caused by rocks cracking under heat and pressure, and those caused by meteoroid impacts.
Of the two types, meteoroid impacts on Mars produce high-frequency seismic waves that travel from the crust deep into the planet’s mantle, according to a paper published earlier this year in Geophysical Research Letters. Located beneath the planet’s crust, the Martian mantle can be as much as 960 miles (1,550 kilometers) thick and is made of solid rock that can reach temperatures as high as 2,732 degrees Fahrenheit (1,500 degrees Celsius).

Scrambled signals

The new Science paper identifies eight marsquakes whose seismic waves contained strong, high-frequency energy that reached deep into the mantle, where their seismic waves were distinctly altered.
“When we first saw this in our quake data, we thought the slowdowns were happening in the Martian crust,” Pike said. “But then we noticed that the farther seismic waves travel through the mantle, the more these high-frequency signals were being delayed.”

Using planetwide computer simulations, the team saw that the slowing down and scrambling happened only when the signals passed through small, localized regions within the mantle. They also determined that these regions appear to be lumps of material with a composition distinct from the surrounding mantle.

With one riddle solved, the team focused on another—how those lumps got there.

Turning back the clock, they concluded that the lumps likely arrived as giant asteroids or other rocky material that struck Mars during the early solar system, generating those oceans of magma as they drove deep into the mantle, bringing with them fragments of crust and mantle.

Charalambous likens the pattern to shattered glass—a few large shards with many smaller fragments. The pattern is consistent with a large release of energy that scattered many fragments of material throughout the mantle. It also fits well with current thinking that in the early solar system, asteroids and other planetary bodies regularly bombarded the young planets.

On Earth, the crust and uppermost mantle is continuously recycled by plate tectonics pushing a plate’s edge into the hot interior, where, through convection, hotter, less-dense material rises and cooler, denser material sinks. Mars, by contrast, lacks tectonic plates, and its interior circulates far more sluggishly. The fact that such fine structures are still visible today, Charalambous said, “tells us Mars hasn’t undergone the vigorous churning that would have smoothed out these lumps.”

And in that way, Mars could point to what may be lurking beneath the surface of other rocky planets that lack plate tectonics, including Venus and Mercury.

More about InSight

JPL managed InSight for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. InSight was part of NASA’s Discovery Program, managed by the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Lockheed Martin Space in Denver built the InSight spacecraft, including its cruise stage and lander, and supported spacecraft operations for the mission.

A number of European partners, including France’s Centre National d’Études Spatiales (CNES) and the German Aerospace Center (DLR), supported the InSight mission. CNES provided the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure (SEIS) instrument to NASA, with the principal investigator at IPGP (Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris). Significant contributions for SEIS came from IPGP; the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Germany; the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) in Switzerland; Imperial College London and Oxford University in the United Kingdom; and JPL. DLR provided the Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package (HP3) instrument, with significant contributions from the Space Research Center (CBK) of the Polish Academy of Sciences and Astronika in Poland. Spain’s Centro de Astrobiología (CAB) supplied the temperature and wind sensors.

For more information on InSight, visit:
https://mars.nasa.gov/insight/


Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech 
Release Date: Aug. 28, 2025


#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Planets #Mars #Mantle #RedPlanet #Marsquakes #Asteroids #AsteroidImpacts #InsightLander #Geoscience #Geology #SolarSystem #Exploration #DLR #Deutschland #CNES #France #JPL #Caltech #UnitedStates #Art #Illustrations #STEM #Education

Rocket Lab's New Launch Complex 3 for Reusable Medium-lift Neutron Rocket

Rocket Lab's New Launch Complex 3 for Reusable Medium-lift Neutron Rocket


This video is all about Launch Complex 3 Rocket Lab's test, launch, and landing site for its medium-lift reusable rocket Neutron. Rocket Lab Corporation, a leader in launch services and space systems, celebrated the official opening of Launch Complex 3 on Aug. 28, 2025, its dedicated test, launch, and landing facility for its reusable rocket Neutron. Neutron promises to deliver "an alternative, reliable, and responsive" launch capability from U.S. soil with its next-generation medium-lift reusuable rocket. Located within the Virginia Spaceport Authority’s (VSA) Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS) at Pad 0D on Wallops Island, Virginia, Launch Complex 3 will support Rocket Lab’s reusable Neutron launch vehicle capable of launching 13,000kg (33,000 pounds) to space for commercial constellations and interplanetary missions, and eventually human spaceflight.

Video Credit: Rocket Lab
Duration: 3 minutes
Release Date: Aug. 29, 2025


#NASA #Space #Planets #Earth #LEO #Satellites #SatelliteConstellations #InterplanetaryMissions #Spacecraft #RocketLab #NeutronRockets #MediumLiftRockets #CommercialSpace #PeterBeck #NASAStennis #StennisSpaceCenter #MARS #Spaceport #WallopsIsland #Virginia #UnitedStates #SpaceExploration #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Orbital Moonrise over Mexico | International Space Station

Orbital Moonrise over Mexico | International Space Station

The scenery changes quickly for the crew of the International Space Station. Traveling at a speed of 5 miles (8 kilometers) per second, the station completes one orbit of Earth about every 90 minutes.

This time-lapse video offers a flavor of the earthly and celestial phenomena visible from about 400 kilometers (250 miles) above the surface in just over five minutes of travel time. It consists of 315 photographs taken by an astronaut aboard the station as it orbited over the eastern Pacific Ocean and North America on June 22, 2025.

Mexico comes into view in the first part of the video. The land is mostly dark in the early morning hours (about 2:30 a.m. Central Standard Time), but lights appear in developed areas and illuminate clouds from below. Selected frames capture flashes of lightning. Later in the video, lights along the U.S. Gulf Coast and across southern states appear, and sunrise approaches.

Above the lower atmosphere, where most of the planet’s weather occurs, a diffuse layer of green and orange arcs along the horizon. This band of light is airglow, produced when sunlight strikes atoms and molecules in the upper atmosphere and causes them to eject photons.

Stars fill the blackness of space above Earth’s limb, forming the backdrop for the appearance of several bright objects within our solar system. The Moon rises in the center of the scene in the waning crescent phase. Although the side facing Earth was only 13 percent lit, the crescent cannot be discerned in these images because of its relative brightness and the camera’s exposure settings. Shortly after moonrise, Venus emerges above the horizon to the right of the Moon. Objects on the left side of the video moving parallel to the horizon are satellites. They can appear in astronaut time-lapses prior to sunrises.

Although the Moon appears exceptionally bright in this video, astronaut photos can depict its varied terrain. People on Earth’s surface can also observe these lunar details with the naked eye, through binoculars, or on a virtual tour, among other methods. International Observe the Moon Night offers many opportunities for lunar science and exploration. The next one occurs on October 4, 2025, when the Moon will be around first quarter and shadows will enhance its cratered surface.


Expedition 73 Crew
Station Commander: Sergey Ryzhikov (Roscosmos)
JAXA Flight Engineer (Japan): Kimiya Yui
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Alexey Zubritskiy, Oleg Platonov
NASA Flight Engineers: Jonny Kim, Zena Cardman, Mike Fincke

An international partnership of space agencies provides and operates the elements of the International Space Station (ISS). The principals are the space agencies of the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada.

Astronaut photographs ISS073-E-310920 through ISS073-E-311235 were acquired on June 22, 2025, with a Nikon Z9 digital camera using a focal length of 24 millimeters.


Video Credit:  ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit at NASA Johnson Space Center
Text Credit: Lindsey Doermann
Duration: 32 seconds
Capture Date: June 22, 2025
Release Date: Aug. 29, 2025

#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Stars #Planets #Earth #Atmosphere #Airglow #Moon #Moonrise #Astronauts #UnitedStates #Japan #日本 #JAXA #Cosmonauts #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition73 #STEM #Education #HD #Video

French Polynesia in South Pacific Ocean | International Space Station

French Polynesia in South Pacific Ocean | International Space Station

Expedition 73 flight engineer and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Kimiya Yui: "Good morning, everyone! I've been around the Earth many times so far, and I thought I'd seen most places, but I still come across scenery that makes me think, 'There's a place like this?' And while thinking, 'I want to protect such beautiful scenery,' I took a photo."

French Polynesia (Polynésie française) is an overseas collectivity of France and its sole overseas country. It is made up of 121 geographically dispersed islands and atolls stretching over more than 2,000 kilometers (1,200 mi) in the South Pacific Ocean.

Follow Expedition 73:

Expedition 73 Crew
Station Commander: Sergey Ryzhikov (Roscosmos)
JAXA Flight Engineer (Japan): Kimiya Yui
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Alexey Zubritskiy, Oleg Platonov
NASA Flight Engineers: Jonny Kim, Zena Cardman, Mike Fincke

An international partnership of space agencies provides and operates the elements of the International Space Station (ISS). The principals are the space agencies of the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada.

Learn more about the important research being operated on Station:
https://www.nasa.gov/iss-science

For more information about STEM on Station:
https://www.nasa.gov/stemonstation
Science, Technology, Engineering, Math (STEM)

Image Credit: Kimiya Yui/JAXA
Release Date: Aug. 28, 2025


#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Planets #Earth #SouthPacificOcean #FrenchPolynesia #Polynésiefrançaise #Astronauts #KimiyaYui #AstronautPhotography #Japan #日本 #JAXA #Cosmonauts #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Роскосмос #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition73 #UnitedStates  #STEM #Education

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Close-up: Galaxy Messier 96 in Leo—A New Look | Hubble Space Telescope

Close-up: Galaxy Messier 96 in LeoA New Look | Hubble Space Telescope

This NASA/European Space Agency Hubble Space Telescope picture features a galaxy whose asymmetric appearance may be the result of a galactic tug of war. Located 35 million light-years away in the constellation Leo, the spiral galaxy Messier 96 is the brightest of the galaxies in its group. The gravitational pull of its galactic neighbors may be responsible for Messier 96’s uneven distribution of gas and dust, asymmetric spiral arms, and off-center galactic core. 

This galaxy's asymmetric appearance is on full display. This new Hubble image incorporates observations made in ultraviolet and optical light. Hubble images of Messier 96 have been released previously in 2015 and 2018. Each successive image has added new data, building up a beautiful and scientifically valuable view of the galaxy.

This third version gives an entirely new perspective on Messier 96’s star formation. The bubbles of pink gas in this image surround hot, young, massive stars, illuminating a ring of star formation in the outskirts of the galaxy. These young stars are still embedded within the clouds of gas where they were born. The new data included for the first time in this image will be used to study how stars are born within giant dusty gas clouds, how dust filters starlight, and how stars affect their environments.

Image Description: A spiral galaxy, tilted nearly face-on to us, with a slightly unusual shape. Its spiral arms form an oval-shaped ring around the galaxy’s disc, filled with blue light from stars, as well as pink glowing gas bubbles where new stars are forming. Threads of dark red dust swirl around the brightly glowing core, partly blocking its light. The dust lanes extend into and follow the spiral arms.


Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, F. Belfiore, D. Calzetti, N. Bartmann (ESA/Hubble)
Duration: 30 seconds
Release Date: Aug. 25, 2025

#NASA #Astronomy #Hubble #Space #Science #Galaxies #InteractingGalaxies #Galaxy #Messier96 #Asymmetry #Stars #StarFormation #Leo #Constellations #Astrophysics #Cosmos #Universe #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #ESA #Europe #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Swarming: Using Tiny Spacecraft to Reach Star Proxima Centauri | NASA Space Tech

Swarming: Using Tiny Spacecraft to Reach Star Proxima Centauri | NASA Space Tech

Could a swarm of tiny spacecraft reach another star in just 20 years?

Four light-years away, orbiting the dim red dwarf star Proxima Centauri, lies an intriguing exoplanet: Proxima Centauri b. It is the closest Earth-like planet we have found outside our solar system. Today’s spacecraft would take 75,000 years to get there . . . but a revolutionary new idea could cut that down to just twenty years. Instead of sending a single spacecraft, this concept proposes launching thousands of autonomous micro-probes, each just a few grams in weight, and propelling them with laser light.

NASA 360 takes a look at the NASA Innovative Advanced Concept (NIAC) that could help us explore an Earth-like exoplanet up-close. To learn more visit: https://go.nasa.gov/408MnEv

To watch the in-depth presentation about this topic please visit the 2024 NIAC Symposium Vimeo site: https://vimeo.com/showcase/10973241?video=1008860866#t=8471s

Shining brightly in this Hubble image is our closest stellar neighbor: Proxima Centauri.

Proxima Centauri lies in the constellation of Centaurus (The Centaur), just over four light-years from Earth. Although it looks bright through the eye of Hubble, as you might expect from the nearest star to the Solar System, Proxima Centauri is not visible to the naked eye. Its average luminosity is very low, and it is quite small compared to other stars, at only about an eighth of the mass of the Sun.

However, on occasion, its brightness increases. Proxima is what is known as a “flare star”, meaning that convection processes within the star’s body make it prone to random and dramatic changes in brightness. The convection processes not only trigger brilliant bursts of starlight but, combined with other factors, mean that Proxima Centauri is in for a very long life. Astronomers predict that this star will remain middle-aged—or a “main sequence” star in astronomical terms—for another four trillion years, some 300 times the age of the current Universe.

These observations were taken using Hubble’s Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2). Proxima Centauri is actually part of a triple star system—its two companions, Alpha Centauri A and B, lie out of frame.

Although by cosmic standards it is a close neighbor, Proxima Centauri remains a point-like object even using Hubble’s eagle-eyed vision, hinting at the vast scale of the Universe around us.


Video Credit: NASA Space Technology
Duration: 2 minutes
Release Date: Aug. 27, 2025


#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Stars #StarSystems #Star #ProximaCentauri #RedDwarfs #Exoplanet #ProximaCentaurib #Centaurus #Constellations #MilkyWayGalaxy #Universe #Swarms #Microprobes #Nanotechnology #LaserTechnology #SpaceTechnology #Engineering #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

SpaceX Starship 10th Test Flight: Landing Burn & Splashdown in Indian Ocean

SpaceX Starship 10th Test Flight: Landing Burn & Splashdown in Indian Ocean

SpaceX: "View of Starship landing burn and splashdown on Flight 10, made possible by SpaceX’s recovery team. Starship made it through reentry with intentionally missing tiles, completed maneuvers to intentionally stress its flaps, had visible damage to its aft skirt and flaps, and still executed a flip and landing burn that placed it approximately 3 meters from its targeted splashdown point."
The SpaceX Starship on a Super Heavy booster successfully launched from Starbase Texas at 6:30pm Central Time (CT) on Tuesday, August 26, 2025 for the Tenth Test Flight. 
→ Watch full flight here: https://t.co/UIwbeGoo2B 
After about 10 minutes, Starship’s Super Heavy Booster stage softly landed in the Gulf of Mexico as had been planned. Next, Starship performed an orbital payload demonstration test with eight Starlink simulators being deployed. The Starship spacecraft then continued on a suborbital flight before a controlled splashdown in the Indian Ocean at the intended landing site, where a Starlink-equipped camera buoy captured the Starship's arrival in real-time. Of course, SpaceX purposefully stressed the Starship during reentry to better understand how the spacecraft responds to extreme conditions. The above are significant improvements in comparison with the last few test flights.

SpaceX’s Starship spacecraft and Super Heavy rocket—collectively referred to as Starship—represent a fully reusable transportation system designed to carry crew and cargo to Earth orbit, the Moon, Mars and beyond. Starship is currently the "world’s most powerful launch vehicle ever developed", capable of carrying up to 150 metric tonnes fully reusable and 250 metric tonnes expendable.

Key Starship Parameters:
Height: 123m/403ft
Diameter: 9m/29.5ft
Payload to LEO: 100–150t (fully reusable)

"Starship is essential to both SpaceX’s plans to deploy its next-generation Starship system as well as for NASA, which will use a lunar lander version of Starship for landing astronauts on the Moon during the Artemis III mission through the Human Landing System (HLS) program."

Learn more about Starship:

Download the Free Starship User Guide (PDF):


Credit: Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX)
Duration: 32 seconds
Capture Date: Aug. 26, 2025

#NASA #SpaceX #Space #Earth #Mars #Moon #MoonToMars #ArtemisProgram #ArtemisIII #Starship #StarshipSpacecraft #Starship10 #StarshipTestFlight10 #SuperHeavyBooster #SuperHeavyRocket #ElonMusk #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #CommercialSpace #SpaceExploration #StarbaseTexas #Texas #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

What is the Big Bang? | NASA Astrophysics

What is the Big Bang? | NASA Astrophysics

What is (or was) the Big Bang? Learn this and more with “Astro-Investigates,” the video series that explores and explains important astrophysics topics with the help of NASA scientists.

In this episode, you will hear from:

Dida Markovic - NASA JPL Astrophysicist

Alina Kiessling - NASA JPL Astrophysicist

Ami Choi - NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Astrophysicist

Sangeeta Malhotra - NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Astrophysicist

To learn more about the Big Bang theory and NASA missions studying the strange history of the universe, visit: 


Video Credit: NASA Science
Host and Co-Producer: Chelsea Gohd 
Editor/Director/Co-Producer: Keith Miller (Caltech-IPAC) 
Science Visualizations/Co-Producer: Robert Hurt (Caltech-IPAC) 
Cinematographer: Isabel Swafford
Duration: 6 minutes
Release Aug. 28, 2025

#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #NASAScientists #Stars #Supernovae #BlackHoles #Galaxies #Universe #Astrophysics #Cosmology #HubbleSpaceTelescope #Hubble #HST #JWST #NASAChandra #SpaceTelescopes #GSFC #JPL #STScI #UnitedStates #Europe #CSA #Canada #Animation #Art #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Star's Inner Conflict Pre-explosion Revealed | NASA Chandra [Alert: To be Canceled)

Star's Inner Conflict Pre-explosion Revealed | NASA Chandra [Alert: To be Canceled)

A new study from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory has revealed that the insides of a star turned on itself before it spectacularly exploded. This happened in the star that created the Cassiopeia A, or Cas A, supernova remnant, which is one of the best-known, well-studied objects in the sky.

Over three hundred years ago, however, it was a giant star on the brink of self-destruction. The new Chandra result reveals that just hours before it exploded, the star’s interior violently rearranged itself. This last-minute shuffling of its stellar belly has profound implications for understanding how massive stars explode and how their remains behave afterwards.

NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory is being canceled in NASA's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Request, along with 18 other active science missions. NASA's science budget is being reduced by nearly 50%. NASA's total budget will become the lowest since 1961, after accounting for inflation.

Contact your representatives in the United States Congress, House and Senate, to express your concerns about severe budget cuts at NASA:

As massive stars age, increasingly heavy elements form in their interiors by nuclear reactions, creating onion-like layers of different elements. Their outer layer is mostly made of hydrogen, followed by layers of helium, carbon and progressively heavier elements—extending all the way down to the center of the star.

Once iron starts forming in the core of the star, the game changes. As soon as the iron core grows beyond a certain mass, about 1.4 times the mass of the Sun, it can no longer support its own weight and collapses. The outer part of the star falls onto the collapsing core, and rebounds as a core-collapse supernova.

The new research with Chandra data reveals a change that happened deep within the star at the very last moments of its life. After living for more than a million years, Cas A underwent major changes in its final hours before exploding. Just before the star in Cas A collapsed, part of an inner layer with large amounts of silicon traveled outwards and broke into a neighboring layer with lots of neon. During this violent event, the barrier between these two layers of the onion, so to speak, would have disappeared.

There are several significant implications for this inner turmoil inside of the doomed star. First, it may directly explain the lopsided rather than symmetrical appearance of the Cas A remnant. Second, a lopsided explosion and debris field may have given a powerful kick to the remaining core of the star, now a neutron star, explaining the high observed speed of this object. Finally, the strong turbulent flows created by the star’s internal changes may have promoted the development of the supernova blast wave, facilitating the star’s explosion.

After more than a quarter century of observations of Cas A, this is just the latest example of how Chandra continues to find new discoveries about this iconic exploded star and its impact on astrophysics.


Video Credit: NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory
Duration: 3 minutes, 24 seconds
Release Date: Aug. 28, 2025


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Stars #NeutronStars #SupernovaRemnants #CassiopeiaA #CasA #Cassiopeia #Constellations #Cosmos #Universe #NASAChandra #ChandraObservatory #SpaceTelescopes #XrayAstronomy  #MSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

SpaceX Starship 10th Test Flight Liftoff: Super Heavy Engine view | Starbase Texas

SpaceX Starship 10th Test Flight Liftoff: Super Heavy Engine view | Starbase Texas

Super Heavy is the first stage, or booster, of the Starship launch system. Powered by 33 Raptor engines using sub-cooled liquid methane (CH4) and liquid oxygen (LOX), Super Heavy is fully reusable and it re-enters Earth's atmosphere to land back at the launch site. Watch the SpaceX Starship on a Super Heavy booster successfully lift off from Starbase Texas at 6:30pm Central Time (CT) on Tuesday, August 26, 2025 for the Tenth Test Flight. 
→ Watch full flight here: https://t.co/UIwbeGoo2B 
After about 10 minutes, Starship’s Super Heavy Booster stage softly landed in the Gulf of Mexico as had been planned. Next, Starship performed an orbital payload demonstration test with eight Starlink simulators being deployed. The Starship spacecraft then continued on a suborbital flight before a controlled splashdown in the Indian Ocean at the intended landing site, where a Starlink-equipped camera buoy captured the Starship's arrival in real-time. Of course, SpaceX purposefully stressed the Starship during reentry to better understand how the spacecraft responds to extreme conditions. The above are significant improvements in comparison with the last few test flights.

SpaceX’s Starship spacecraft and Super Heavy rocket—collectively referred to as Starship—represent a fully reusable transportation system designed to carry crew and cargo to Earth orbit, the Moon, Mars and beyond. Starship is currently the "world’s most powerful launch vehicle ever developed", capable of carrying up to 150 metric tonnes fully reusable and 250 metric tonnes expendable.

Key Starship Parameters:
Height: 123m/403ft
Diameter: 9m/29.5ft
Payload to LEO: 100–150t (fully reusable)

"Starship is essential to both SpaceX’s plans to deploy its next-generation Starship system as well as for NASA, which will use a lunar lander version of Starship for landing astronauts on the Moon during the Artemis III mission through the Human Landing System (HLS) program."

Learn more about Starship:

Download the Free Starship User Guide (PDF):


Credit: Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX)
Duration: 32 seconds
Capture Date: Aug. 26, 2025

#NASA #SpaceX #Space #Earth #Mars #Moon #MoonToMars #ArtemisProgram #ArtemisIII #Starship #StarshipSpacecraft #Starship10 #StarshipTestFlight10 #SuperHeavyBooster #SuperHeavyRocket #ElonMusk #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #CommercialSpace #SpaceExploration #StarbaseTexas #Texas #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

SpaceX CRS-33 Resupply Mission: Cargo Dragon Arrival | International Space Station

SpaceX CRS-33 Resupply Mission: Cargo Dragon Arrival | International Space Station







At 7:05 a.m. EDT, Monday, August 25, 2025, the SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft docked to the forward port of the International Space Station’s Harmony module. 

The spacecraft carried over 5,000 pounds of scientific investigations and cargo to the orbiting laboratory on SpaceX’s 33rd commercial resupply services mission for NASA. The mission launched at 2:45 a.m. on Aug. 24 atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral in Florida. 

Research conducted aboard the International Space Station advances future space exploration—including Artemis missions to the Moon and astronaut missions Mars—that are intended to "provide benefits to humanity." 

Learn about NASA's Commercial Resupply Services (CRS) Program:
https://www.nasa.gov/international-space-station/commercial-resupply/

Follow Expedition 73:

Expedition 73 Crew
Station Commander: Sergey Ryzhikov (Roscosmos)
JAXA Flight Engineer (Japan): Kimiya Yui
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Alexey Zubritskiy, Oleg Platonov
NASA Flight Engineers: Jonny Kim, Zena Cardman, Mike Fincke


An international partnership of space agencies provides and operates the elements of the International Space Station (ISS). The principals are the space agencies of the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada.

Image Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center
Date: Aug. 25, 2025


#NASA #Space #ISS #Earth #Science #SpaceX #DragonCargoSpacecraft #CRS33 #Docking #CommercialResupplyServices #Astronauts #Cosmonauts #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceTechnology #SpaceResearch #SpaceLaboratory #UnitedStates #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Japan #Expedition73 #STEM #Education

The Butterfly Star: A Dusty Planet-forming Disc in Taurus | Webb Telescope

The Butterfly Star: A Dusty Planet-forming Disc in Taurus | Webb Telescope

This NASA/European Space Agency/Canadian Space Agency James Webb Space Telescope picture provides a close-up view of IRAS 04302+2247, a planet-forming disc located about 525 light-years away in a dark cloud within the Taurus star-forming region. With Webb, researchers can study the properties and growth of dust grains within protoplanetary discs like this one, shedding light on the earliest stages of planet formation.

In stellar nurseries across the galaxy, baby stars are forming in giant clouds of cold gas. As young stars grow, the gas surrounding them collects in narrow, dusty protoplanetary discs. This sets the scene for the formation of planets, and observations of distant protoplanetary discs can help researchers understand what took place roughly 4.5 billion years ago in our own Solar System, when the Sun, Earth, and the other planets formed.

IRAS 04302+2247, or IRAS 04302 for short, is a beautiful example of a protostar—a young star that is still gathering mass from its environment—surrounded by a protoplanetary disc where baby planets might be forming. Webb is able to measure the disc at 65 billion km across—several times the diameter of our Solar System. From Webb’s vantage point, IRAS 04302’s disc is oriented edge-on, so we see it as a narrow, dark line of dusty gas that blocks the light from the budding protostar at its center. This dusty gas is fuel for planet formation, providing an environment where young planets can bulk up and pack on mass.

When seen face-on, protoplanetary discs can have a variety of structures, like rings, gaps and spirals. These structures can be signs of baby planets that are burrowing through the dusty disc, or they can point to phenomena unrelated to planets, like gravitational instabilities or regions where dust grains are trapped. The edge-on view of IRAS 04302’s disc shows instead the vertical structure, including how thick the dusty disk is. Dust grains migrate to the midplane of the disc, settle there and form a thin, dense layer that is conducive to planet formation; the thickness of the disc is a measure of how efficient this process has been.

The dense streak of dusty gas that runs vertically across this image cocoons IRAS 04302, blotting out its bright light such that Webb can more easily image the delicate structures around it. As a result, treated to the sight of two gauzy nebulae on either side of the disc. These are reflection nebulae, illuminated by light from the central protostar reflecting off of the nebular material. Given the appearance of the two reflection nebulae, IRAS 04302 has been nicknamed the 'Butterfly Star'.

This view of IRAS 04302 combines observations from Webb, the NASA/European Space Agency Hubble Space Telescope, and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). Webb contributed data from both its Near-InfraRed Camera (NIRCam) and its Mid-InfraRed Instrument (MIRI).

Together, these three powerful facilities paint a fascinating multiwavelength portrait of a planetary birthplace. Webb reveals the distribution of tiny dust grains as well as the reflection of near-infrared light off of dusty material that extends a large distance from the disc. Hubble focuses on the dust lane as well as clumps and streaks surrounding the dust that suggest the star is still collecting mass from its surroundings as well as shooting out jets and outflows. ALMA detects the glow of larger dust grains within the disk, showing that for a disc as young as IRAS 04302, the dust has yet to settle into a narrow plane as is expected for more evolved discs.

The Webb observations of IRAS 04302 were taken as part of the Webb GO program#2562 (PI F. Ménard, K. Stapelfeldt). This program investigates four protoplanetary discs that are oriented edge-on from our point of view, aiming to understand how dust evolves within these discs. The growth of dust grains in protoplanetary discs is believed to be an important step toward planet formation.

Image Description: A detailed view of IRAS 16594-4656 captured by the James Webb Space Telescope. A bright central region is bisected by a thin, horizontal line of dark dust. Symmetrical lobes of glowing gas extend above and below, with soft blue, purple, and orange hues blending outward into surrounding space.


Credits: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, M. Villenave et al.; CC BY 4.0
Release Date: Aug. 27, 2025

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Stars #Protostars #ButterflyStar #IRAS165944656 #Planets #Exoplanets #ReflectionNebulae #Taurus #Constellations #MilkyWayGalaxy #Universe #SpaceTelescopes #JWST #UnfoldTheUniverse #InfraredAstronomy #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #ESA #Europe #CSA #Canada #STEM #Education

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Planet WISPIT 2b in Aquila | European Southern Observatory [AI Narration]

Planet WISPIT 2b in Aquila | European Southern Observatory [AI Narration]


What is that yellow spot? It is a young planet outside our Solar System. This image from the Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile surprisingly captures a distant scene much like our own Solar System's birth, around 4.5 billion years ago. Although we cannot look into the past and see Earth's formation directly, telescopes let us watch similar processes unfolding around distant stars. At the center of this frame lies a young Sun-like star, hidden behind a coronagraph that blocks its bright glare. Surrounding the star is a bright, dusty protoplanetary disk—the raw material of planets. Gaps and concentric rings mark where a newborn world is gathering gas and dust under its gravity, clearing the way as it orbits the star. Although astronomers have imaged disk-embedded planets before, this is the first-ever observation of an exoplanet actively carving a gap within a disk—the earliest direct glimpse of planetary sculpting in action.

The image shows white protoplanetary disc at the center of the picture taking up most of the frame. The elliptical cloud of dust and gas consists of gaps creating a ring-like structure to the cloud. In of the larger gaps/rings a little dot, in this case a planet is visible. It has accumulated the dust in its orbit and hence created the ring-shaped gap.

What appears to be a ripple in space is this picture depicts a newborn planet eating its way through its dusty cradle as it orbits its host star. This image, taken with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile, is the first clear detection of a baby planet in a disc with multiple rings. 

These so-called protoplanetary discs surround young stars and appear as disc-shaped structures of gas and dust, often with rings like the one in this image. They are the birthplace of planets, and the rings are thought to indicate the presence of (hungry) planets in the disc. Initially, little particles in the spinning disc begin to accumulate and grow as gravity takes over, stealing more material from the native disc until they evolve into embryo planets. 

The clear detection of the planet WISPIT 2b in this image is an important step forward in our understanding of how planets form. It is about 5 times the mass of Jupiter, and its host star is a younger version of our Sun. It also reinforces the idea that gaps can be created by newly formed planets—a prediction only made in theory that has now been verified observationally.  

While looking for stars hosting young planets, the team of researchers were lucky enough to find a planet so young that is still embedded in its birth disc. This discovery was published in a paper led by Richelle van Capelleveen at the University of Leiden, Netherlands, in collaboration with an international team of astronomers from the University of Galway and the University of Arizona. It was made possible through the precise observations of the planet-hunting SPHERE instrument on the VLT. SPHERE blocks the light of the central star and corrects atmospheric turbulence with adaptive optics, delivering crisp images of the surroundings of the star. The University of Arizona's MagAO-X AO system on the 6.5m Magellan telescope in Chile detected hydrogen gas falling onto the planet, confirming that it is accreting matter from its surroundings. Further observations of this system might reveal new insights about how our own Solar System may have looked in its early days. 


Credit: ESO/R. F. van Capelleveen et al.
Duration: 1 minute, 45 seconds
Release Date: Aug. 26, 2025


#NASA #ESO #Space #Astronomy #Science #Stars #Exoplanets #Planets #WISPIT2b #CircumstellarMaterial #ProtoplanetaryDisks #Aquila #Constellations #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #VLT #SPHERE #ParanalObservatory #Chile #SouthAmerica #Europe #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Planet WISPIT 2b in Aquila | European Southern Observatory

Planet WISPIT 2b in Aquila | European Southern Observatory

What is that yellow spot? It is a young planet outside our Solar System. This image from the Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile surprisingly captures a distant scene much like our own Solar System's birth, around 4.5 billion years ago. Although we cannot look into the past and see Earth's formation directly, telescopes let us watch similar processes unfolding around distant stars. At the center of this frame lies a young Sun-like star, hidden behind a coronagraph that blocks its bright glare. Surrounding the star is a bright, dusty protoplanetary disk—the raw material of planets. Gaps and concentric rings mark where a newborn world is gathering gas and dust under its gravity, clearing the way as it orbits the star. Although astronomers have imaged disk-embedded planets before, this is the first-ever observation of an exoplanet actively carving a gap within a disk—the earliest direct glimpse of planetary sculpting in action.

The image shows white protoplanetary disc at the center of the picture taking up most of the frame. The elliptical cloud of dust and gas consists of gaps creating a ring-like structure to the cloud. In of the larger gaps/rings a little dot, in this case a planet is visible. It has accumulated the dust in its orbit and hence created the ring-shaped gap.

What appears to be a ripple in space is this picture depicts a newborn planet eating its way through its dusty cradle as it orbits its host star. This image, taken with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile, is the first clear detection of a baby planet in a disc with multiple rings. 

These so-called protoplanetary discs surround young stars and appear as disc-shaped structures of gas and dust, often with rings like the one in this image. They are the birthplace of planets, and the rings are thought to indicate the presence of (hungry) planets in the disc. Initially, little particles in the spinning disc begin to accumulate and grow as gravity takes over, stealing more material from the native disc until they evolve into embryo planets. 

The clear detection of the planet WISPIT 2b in this image is an important step forward in our understanding of how planets form. It is about 5 times the mass of Jupiter, and its host star is a younger version of our Sun. It also reinforces the idea that gaps can be created by newly formed planets—a prediction only made in theory that has now been verified observationally.  

While looking for stars hosting young planets, the team of researchers were lucky enough to find a planet so young that is still embedded in its birth disc. This discovery was published in a paper led by Richelle van Capelleveen at the University of Leiden, Netherlands, in collaboration with an international team of astronomers from the University of Galway and the University of Arizona. It was made possible through the precise observations of the planet-hunting SPHERE instrument on the VLT. SPHERE blocks the light of the central star and corrects atmospheric turbulence with adaptive optics, delivering crisp images of the surroundings of the star. The University of Arizona's MagAO-X AO system on the 6.5m Magellan telescope in Chile detected hydrogen gas falling onto the planet, confirming that it is accreting matter from its surroundings. Further observations of this system might reveal new insights about how our own Solar System may have looked in its early days. 


Credit: ESO/R. F. van Capelleveen et al.
Release Date: Aug. 26, 2025


#NASA #ESO #Space #Astronomy #Science #Stars #Exoplanets #Planets #WISPIT2b #CircumstellarMaterial #ProtoplanetaryDisks #Aquila #Constellations #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #VLT #SPHERE #ParanalObservatory #Chile #SouthAmerica #Europe #UnitedStates #STEM #Education