The Stars & Planet Earth: Orbital Night Activities | International Space Station
Friends of NASA (FoN) is an independent non-governmental organization (NGO) dedicated to building international support for peaceful space exploration, commerce, scientific discovery, and STEM education.
Saturday, October 04, 2025
The Stars & Planet Earth: Orbital Night Activities | International Space Station
Women also play key roles in global space exploration | IAC 2025
Women also play key roles in global space exploration | IAC 2025
At the 76th International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Sydney, Australia, September 29-October 3, 2025, organized by the International Astronautical Federation (IAF), CGTN reporter Wu Lei had an opportunity to ask pioneers like Yi So-yeon, South Korea's first astronaut, and veteran Canadian astronaut Julie Payette about their insights on women's growing involvement in space. While Dr. Yi emphasized the urgent need for more female participation to expand critical medical data for long-duration missions, Payette encouraged young girls to build every skill and be ready when opportunity calls. Their messages capture our attention as women, like Chinese taikonauts Liu Yang, Wang Yaping and Wang Haoze, continue making history aboard China's space station—proving that space belongs to all who dare to dream.
https://www.iafastro.org
Duration: 2 minutes, 15 seconds
Release Date: Oct. 3, 2025
The Belt of Venus | International Space Station
The Belt of Venus | International Space Station
NASA astronaut Don Pettit: "The Belt of Venus [as] seen from the International Space Station. An atmospheric phenomena where the setting sun projects light past Earth's horizon curve, layered over its shadow. Twilight observers on Earth see a pink band over the approaching dark, opposite the sun. From orbit we see it all at once. I took these images on my first mission to the ISS in 2003. They are old, but great visuals of the effect."
https://www.nasa.gov/iss-science
Science, Technology, Engineering, Math (STEM)
Image Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center/D. Pettit
Release Date: Oct. 2, 2025
#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #SolarSystem #Sun #Starlight #Planets #Earth #Atmosphere #BeltOfVenus #Astronauts #DonPettit #AstronautPhotography #UnitedStates #Japan #JAXA #Cosmonauts #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition6 #STEM #Education
Friday, October 03, 2025
Aurora Borealis: An October Night in Rural Saskatchewan
Aurora Borealis: An October Night in Rural Saskatchewan
On Earth, auroras are mainly created by particles originally emitted by the Sun in the form of solar wind. When this stream of electrically charged particles gets close to our planet, it interacts with the magnetic field, which acts as a gigantic shield. While it protects Earth’s environment from solar wind particles, it can also trap a small fraction of them. Particles trapped within the magnetosphere—the region of space surrounding Earth in which charged particles are affected by its magnetic field—can be energized and then follow the magnetic field lines down to the magnetic poles. There, they interact with oxygen and nitrogen atoms in the upper layers of the atmosphere, creating the flickering, colorful lights visible in the polar regions here on Earth.
Image Details: Sony ILCE-7M3, Viltrox 16mm F1.8 FE
Image Date: October 1, 2025
'Break the Ice Winner' Tests Lunar Rover Tech in NASA Thermal Vacuum Chamber
'Break the Ice Winner' Tests Lunar Rover Tech in NASA Thermal Vacuum Chamber
One year after winning second place in NASA’s Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, members of the small business, Starpath, visited NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, as part of their prize opportunity to test their upgraded lunar regolith excavation and transportation rover in the center’s 20-foot thermal vacuum chamber.
The technology startup headquartered in Hawthorne, California, won second place overall at the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge’s live demonstration and finale in June 2024. This competition, one of NASA’s Centennial Challenges, tasked competitors to design, build, and demonstrate robotic technologies that could excavate and transport the icy, rocky dirt—otherwise known as regolith—found on the Moon.
As a future landing site for NASA’s Artemis missions, which will send astronauts to the Moon and prepare to send the first Americans to Mars, the South Pole region of the Moon is known to contain ice within its regolith. This was the leading inspiration behind the development of the Break the Ice Lunar Challenge, as NASA will require robust technologies that can excavate and transport lunar ice for extraction, purification, and use as drinking water or rocket fuel.
nasa.gov/winit
Duration: 2 minutes, 33 seconds
Release Date: Sept. 26, 2025
Mars Images: Sept. 30-Oct. 2, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
Mars Images: Sept. 30-Oct. 2, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
Shape of Gemini Constellation in Three Dimensions | Space Telescope Science Institute
Shape of Gemini Constellation in Three Dimensions | Space Telescope Science Institute
This visualization reveals the stars of the Gemini constellation in three dimensions. Watch as the familiar pattern on the sky distorts into a whole new perspective.
The sequence begins with a night sky view, and the constellations Orion and Taurus just above the horizon. As the camera pans up, the constellation Gemini (The Twins) takes center stage with its brightest stars, Castor and Pollux, at the top. The constellation Auriga can be found in the lower right with its bright stars forming a pentagon shape. Above and a bit left of Gemini, the Beehive Cluster, in the constellation Cancer, is an open star cluster containing over 1,000 stars.
As the view begins to orbit, and the constellation distorts into 3D space, Castor and Pollux reveal themselves as the closest stars. Approaching a sideways view, multiple star clusters pass below the right side of the constellation, including the Hyades cluster and the Pleiades (both in Taurus). The dark cloud of dust in that region is the Taurus Molecular Cloud, a star-forming region 430 light years from the Sun. The two most distant stars in the Gemini constellation are Mekbuda and Mebsuta, at 1,200 light years and 900 light years from the Sun, respectively. Note that the Beehive Cluster remains visible above the constellation during the entire spin.
This visualization features over 11 million stars down to a magnitude of 13.5 across the sky. The positions, colors, and luminosities are based on the Gaia and Hipparcos star catalogs, complemented by the HYG Database. This includes data from the Yale and Gliese catalogs. Interstellar dust is visualized using data from the Edenhofer et al map out to a distance of 1.25 kiloparsecs (~4,000 ly) from the Sun and from the Lallement et al data out to 3 kiloparsecs (~9,800 ly). The rest of the Milky Way plane is recreated using simulated spiral galaxy data for stars and dust from the Horizon GalMer database.
Visualization: Christian Nieves, Frank Summers (STScI)
Motion Graphics: Ralf Crawford (STScI)
Duration: 1 minute, 54 seconds
Lunar Electric Rover Field Testing in Arizona | NASA Artemis Moon Program
Lunar Electric Rover Field Testing in Arizona | NASA Artemis Moon Program
#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Earth #Moon #ArtemisProgram #LunarElectricRover #LER #Prototype #ResearchandTechnologyStudies #RATS #CommercialSpace #Robotics #SpaceTechnology #Engineering #SpaceExploration #SolarSystem #Desert #BlackPointLavaFlow #Arizona #UnitedStates #STEM #Education
Comet C/2025 A6 Lemmon: View from New Mexico
Comet C/2025 A6 Lemmon: View from New Mexico
Comet Lemmon is brightening and moving into morning northern skies. Besides Comet SWAN25B and Comet ATLAS, Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) is now the third comet currently visible with binoculars and on long camera exposures. Comet Lemmon was discovered early this year and is still headed into the inner Solar System. The comet will round the Sun on November 8, but first it will pass its nearest to the Earth—at about half the Earth-Sun distance—on October 21.
Although the brightnesses of comets are notoriously hard to predict, optimistic estimates have Comet Lemmon then becoming visible to the unaided eye. The comet should be best seen in predawn skies until mid-October, when it also becomes visible in evening skies.
New Mexico is a state in the Southwestern region of the United States. It is one of the Mountain States of the southern Rocky Mountains, sharing the Four Corners region with Utah, Colorado, and Arizona. It also borders the state of Texas to the east and southeast, Oklahoma to the northeast, and shares an international border with the Mexican states of Chihuahua and Sonora to the south.
Location: Astrottica Observatory, New Mexico, USA
Image Date: Oct. 2, 2025
#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Comets #CometC2025A6Lemmon #Coma #CometaryTails #SolarSystem #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #Astrophotography #RolandoLigustri #Astrophotographers #NewMexico #UnitedStates #STEM #Education
Thursday, October 02, 2025
Close-up: Galaxy NGC 2775—Spiral, elliptical or neither? | Hubble
Close-up: Galaxy NGC 2775—Spiral, elliptical or neither? | Hubble
Is it spiral or elliptical—or neither?
Since we can only view NGC 2775 from one angle, it is difficult to say for certain. Researchers have classified NGC 2775 as a spiral galaxy because of its feathery ring of stars and dust and as a lenticular galaxy. Lenticular galaxies have features common to spiral and elliptical galaxies.
It is not yet known exactly how lenticular galaxies come to be. They can form in a variety of ways. Lenticular galaxies might be spiral galaxies that have merged with other galaxies, or that have mostly run out of star-forming gas and lost their prominent spiral arms. They also might have started out more similar to elliptical galaxies, then collected gas into a disk around them.
Evidence suggests that NGC 2775 has merged with other galaxies in the past. Invisible in this Hubble image, NGC 2775 has a tail of hydrogen gas that stretches almost 100,000 light-years around the galaxy. This faint tail could be the remnant of one or more galaxies that wandered too close to NGC 2775 before being stretched apart and absorbed. If NGC 2775 merged with other galaxies in the past, it could explain the galaxy’s strange appearance today.
A Hubble image of NGC 2775 was previously released in 2020. The new version adds observations of a specific wavelength of red light that is emitted by clouds of hydrogen gas surrounding massive young stars.
Image Description: A galaxy seen face-on with a slightly elliptical disc that appears to have a hole in the center like a doughnut. In the hole, the core is a brightly glowing point that shines light out beyond the edge of the disc. Around the hole is an inner ring of dust, and at the galaxy’s edge is a thicker outer ring of dust, with a swirling web of dust strands in between. Blue stars and red nebulae are visible behind the dust.
Release Date: Sept. 22, 2025
#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Hubble #Stars #Galaxies #NGC2775 #SpiralGalaxies #EllipticalGalaxies #LenticularGalaxies #Cancer #Constellations #Cosmos #Universe #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #Europe #STEM #Education #HD #Video
Close-up: Spiral Galaxy NGC 6000 in Scorpius | Hubble
Close-up: Spiral Galaxy NGC 6000 in Scorpius | Hubble
This galaxy has a glowing yellow center and glittering blue outskirts. The colors reflect the average ages, masses and temperatures of the galaxy’s stars. In the heart of the galaxy, the stars tend to be older and smaller. Less massive stars are cooler than more massive stars, and somewhat counterintuitively, cooler stars are redder, while hotter stars are bluer. Farther out along NGC 6000’s spiral arms, brilliant star clusters host young, massive stars that appear distinctly blue.
Hubble collected the data for this image while surveying the sites of recent supernova explosions in nearby galaxies. NGC 6000 has hosted two recent supernovae: SN 2007ch in 2007 and SN 2010as in 2010. Using Hubble’s sensitive detectors, researchers are able to discern the faint glow of supernovae years after the initial explosion. These observations help to constrain the masses of supernova progenitor stars and can indicate if they had any stellar companions.
By zooming in to the right side of the galaxy’s disc in this image, you may see something else yellow and blue: a set of four thin lines. These are an asteroid in our Solar System. It was drifting across Hubble’s field of view as it gazed at NGC 6000. The four streaks are due to exposures that were recorded one after another with slight pauses in between. These were combined to create this final image. The colors appear this way because each exposure used a filter to collect only specific wavelengths of light, in this case around red and blue. Having these separate exposures is important to study and compare stars by their colors—but it also makes asteroid interlopers very obvious!
Image Description: An oval-shaped spiral galaxy where only the center and lower half is in frame. Its center is mainly golden in color with a white glowing core. Its thick spiral arms are mostly blue, particularly at the outskirts; the colors merge in between. Dark lanes of dust swirl through the center, blocking some of its light. Stars and distant galaxies can be seen around the edges on a black background.
Acknowledgement: M. H. Özsaraç, N. Bartmann (ESA/Hubble)
Release Date: Sept. 29, 2025
#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Hubble #Stars #Galaxies #NGC6000 #SpiralGalaxies #Scorpius #Constellations #Cosmos #Universe #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #Europe #STEM #Education #HD #Video
'Waves' of Earth Aurora | International Space Station
'Waves' of Earth Aurora | International Space Station
Expedition 73 flight engineer and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Kimiya Yui: "Recently, the aurora has been beautiful, so I tried filming a time-lapse video in between my workouts. Please enjoy the footage of the aurora surging in like waves, and then feeling like you're sailing through a sea of aurora. While drawing power from the Earth, let's keep pushing forward together this October, too!"
Auroras happen when charged particles from the Sun interact with Earth's magnetic field, creating dazzling light shows in the sky. Auroras occurs in an upper layer of Earth’s atmosphere called the ionosphere.
https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/
Release Date: Sept. 30, 2025
Xanthe Terra Region of Planet Mars: Simulated Fly Over | ESA Mars Express
Xanthe Terra Region of Planet Mars: Simulated Fly Over | ESA Mars Express
Billions of years ago, water surged through this channel, creating many of the features we see today. The tour culminates in a spectacular view of a 100 km-wide impact crater, smashed out of Mars’s surface when it collided with a space rock.
Xanthe Terra is a large area on Mars, centered just north of the Martian equator. Its coordinates are 3°N 312°E and its diameter is 1867.65 km. Its name means "golden-yellow land." It is in the Lunae Palus quadrangle, the Coprates quadrangle, the Margaritifer Sinus quadrangle, and the Oxia Palus quadrangle.
Ravi Vallis, Aromatum Chaos, Ophir, Ganges Chasma, Nanedi Valles, Shalbatana Vallis, Orson Welles Crater, Mutch Crater, and Da Vinci Crater are examples of major features in Xanthe Terra.
Over twenty years of observations from Mars Express have solidified our picture of Mars as a once-habitable planet with warmer and wetter epochs that may have been oases for ancient life.
Processing notes:
This video was created using the Mars Express High Resolution Stereo Camera Mars Chart (HMC30) data, an image mosaic made from single orbit observations of the mission’s High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC). The mosaic image, centred at 5°N/320°E, is combined with topography information from the digital terrain model to generate a three-dimensional landscape.
For every second of the movie, 50 separate frames are rendered following a predefined camera path in the scene. The vertical exaggeration used for the animation is three-fold. Atmospheric effects, like clouds and haze, have been added to conceal the limits of the terrain model. The haze starts building up at a distance of 250 km.
The HRSC camera on Mars Express is operated by the German Aerospace Center (DLR). The systematic processing of the camera data took place at the DLR Institute for Planetary Research in Berlin-Adlershof. The working group of Planetary Science and Remote Sensing at Freie Universität Berlin used the data to create the film.
Duration: 3 minutes, 23 seconds
Release Date: Oct. 2, 2025
The Area around Rogue Planet Cha 1107-7626—Visible Light & Infrared Views
The Area around Rogue Planet Cha 1107-7626—Visible Light & Infrared Views
Location in the sky of the rogue planet Cha 1107-7626 in visible light and infrared. Astronomers have found an intense ‘growth spurt’ in this planet that does not orbit a star. Observations with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) reveal that this free-floating planet is eating up gas and dust from its surroundings at a rate of six billion tonnes a second, the strongest ever found for a planet of any kind.
The newly studied object, with a mass five to 10 times the mass of Jupiter, is located about 620 light-years away in the constellation Chamaeleon. Officially named Cha 1107-7626, this rogue planet is still forming and is fed by a surrounding disc of gas and dust. This material constantly falls onto the free-floating planet, a process known as accretion. However, the team led by Almendros-Abad has now found that the rate at which the young planet is accreting is not steady.
Release Date: October 2, 2025
Journey to Rogue Planet Cha 1107-7626 in Chamaeleon | ESO
Journey to Rogue Planet Cha 1107-7626 in Chamaeleon | ESO
This video zooms in on Cha 1107-7626, located about 620 light-years away in the constellation Chamaeleon. This rogue planet is 5-10 times more massive than Jupiter and doesn’t orbit a star.
The video combines images taken with telescopes at unique times and wavelengths. It begins with a wide view of the night sky in visible light. As we zoom in, we switch to an infrared view taken with European Southern Observatory’s Visible and Infrared Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA). Finally, we show an artist’s animation of the planet, which is eating up gas and dust from a disc around it. Using ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), astronomers have found this is now happening at a rate of about 6 billion tonnes per second.
Duration: 1 minute
Release Date: Oct. 2, 2025
#NASA #ESO #Space #Astronomy #Science #Stars #Planets #Exoplanets #Cha11077626 #Accretion #Chamaeleon #Constellations #Astrophysics #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #VLT #ParanalObservatory #Chile #SouthAmerica #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video
Rogue Planet Found Growing at Record Rate | European Southern Observatory
Rogue Planet Found Growing at Record Rate | European Southern Observatory
Astronomers have found an intense ‘growth spurt’ in a rogue planet––a planet that does not orbit a star. Observations with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) reveal that this free-floating planet is eating up gas and dust from its surroundings at a rate of six billion tonnes a second, the strongest ever found for a planet of any kind. This video summarizes the discovery.
The newly studied object, with a mass five to 10 times the mass of Jupiter, is located about 620 light-years away in the constellation Chamaeleon. Officially named Cha 1107-7626, this rogue planet is still forming and is fed by a surrounding disc of gas and dust. This material constantly falls onto the free-floating planet, a process known as accretion. However, the team led by Almendros-Abad has now found that the rate at which the young planet is accreting is not steady.
By August 2025, the planet was accreting about eight times faster than just a few months before, at a rate of six billion tonnes per second! “This is the strongest accretion episode ever recorded for a planetary-mass object,” says Almendros-Abad. The discovery, published today in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, was made with the X-shooter spectrograph on ESO’s VLT, located in Chile’s Atacama Desert. The team also used data from the James Webb Space Telescope, operated by the US, European and Canadian space agencies, and archival data from the SINFONI spectrograph on ESO's VLT.
"The origin of rogue planets remains an open question: are they the lowest-mass objects formed like stars, or giant planets ejected from their birth systems?” asks co-author Aleks Scholz, an astronomer at the University of St Andrews, United Kingdom. The findings indicate that rogue planets may share a similar formation path to stars since similar bursts of accretion have been spotted in young stars before. As co-author Belinda Damian, also an astronomer at the University of St Andrews, explains: “This discovery blurs the line between stars and planets and gives us a sneak peek into the earliest formation periods of rogue planets.”
Directed by: Angelos Tsaousis and Martin Wallner
Editing: Angelos Tsaousis
Written by: Malika Nora Duffek
Footage and photos: ESO, Luis Calçada, Martin Kornmesser, Angelos Tsaousis, Christoph Malin, Digitized Sky Survey 2, Meingast et al.
Scientific consultant: Paola Amico, Mariya Lyubenova
Based on research by: V. Almendros-Abad et al., ApJL
Release Date: Oct. 2, 2025
#NASA #ESO #Space #Astronomy #Science #Stars #Planets #Exoplanets #Cha11077626 #Accretion #Chamaeleon #Constellations #Astrophysics #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #VLT #ParanalObservatory #Chile #SouthAmerica #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video


Gerry%20Pocha.jpg)










Rolando%20Ligustri.jpg)

