Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Crawler-transporter 2: Artemis II Moon Rocket Launchpad Move | NASA Kennedy

Crawler-transporter 2: Artemis II Moon Rocket Launchpad Move | NASA Kennedy



NASA’s crawler-transporter 2 moves toward the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026. The crawler will transport NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the Orion spacecraft to Launch Complex 39B. The Artemis II SLS together with Orion will launch Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Mission Specialist Christina Koch from NASA, and Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen from the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), around the Moon and back to Earth no later than April 2026.

Launch is currently scheduled for "no later than April 2026."

Check the NASA Artemis II Mission page for updates:

Learn more about NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket: nasa.gov/sls

Follow updates on the Artemis blog: 

Credit: NASA/Ben Smegelsky
Image Date: Jan. 9, 2026
Release Date: Jan. 14, 2026

#NASA #Space #Science #Earth #Moon #Artemis #ArtemisII #OrionSpacecraft #SLS #SLSRocket #CrewedMissions #DeepSpace #MoonToMars #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #NASAKennedy #KSC #VAB #CrawlerTransporter2 #Florida #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

Crew-11 Dragon Departure: First Medical Evacuation | International Space Station

Crew-11 Dragon Departure: First Medical Evacuation | International Space Station

On Jan. 8, 2026, NASA announced its decision to return the agency’s SpaceX Crew-11 Mission to Earth from the International Space Station earlier than originally planned as teams monitor a medical concern with a crew member currently living and working aboard the orbital laboratory that is stable. Due to medical privacy, it is not appropriate for NASA to share more details about the crew member.

At 5:20 p.m. EST, on Wednesday, Jan. 14, NASA’s SpaceX Crew-11 Mission undocked from the International Space Station’s Harmony module aboard the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft. At 3:29 p.m. EST, the crew closed the hatch between the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft and the International Space Station in preparation for undocking and the return to Earth of NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Kimiya Yui, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Platonov of Russia. Crew-11 will then complete a parachute-assisted landing inside Dragon with a splashdown off the coast of California less than 12 hours later at about 3:40 a.m. on Thursday, Jan. 15. NASA and SpaceX support personnel will retrieve Dragon and the crew from the Pacific Ocean and return them to California before the crewmates fly back to their home agencies.

Follow Expedition 74:

Expedition 74 Crew
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
JAXA Flight Engineer (Japan): Kimiya Yui
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Oleg Platonov, Sergei Mikaev
NASA Flight Engineers: Mike Fincke, Zena Cardman, Chris Williams

Credit: Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX)
Duration: 29 seconds
Release Date: Jan. 14, 2025

#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Planets #Earth #SpaceXCrew11 #CrewSpacecraftDeparture #Astronauts #MikeFincke #ZenaCardman #KimiyaYui #CrewHealth #AstronautHealth #UnitedStates #Japan #JAXA #UnitedStates #Cosmonauts #OlegPlatonov #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Роскосмос #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition74 #STEM #Education #HD #Video

China's Chang'e-6 Lunar Sample Unveils Key Clues to Moon's Geological Evolution

China's Chang'e-6 Lunar Sample Unveils Key Clues to Moon's Geological Evolution

A group of Chinese researchers revealed that the volatile loss from the lunar mantle was induced by the giant impact that formed the South Pole-Aitken (SPA) Basin in the Moon's far side, providing crucial evidence for understanding the impact of large-scale collisions on the lunar evolution and for uncovering the causes of variations between the Moon's near side and far side.

The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026.

Since the formation of the Moon, asteroid impacts have been the dominant geological processes triggered by events outside the Moon, producing impact craters and basins across the lunar surface and profoundly modifying its topography and geochemical characteristics. However, the extent that large-scale impact events have affected the Moon's deep interior remains unclear.

A research team led by Tian Hengci from the Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, examined the isotopic compositions of potassium (K) in Chang'e-6 lunar basalts collected from the SPA basin.

The isotopic systems of moderately volatile elements, such as K, are prone to volatilization and fractionation under the high-temperature conditions generated by impacts. Their compositions can record information such as temperature, pressure, and material sources during impact events, making them key evidence for revealing impact scales, thermal histories, and their modifications to the lunar crust and mantle materials.

The team found that the Chang'e-6 lunar basalts exhibit significantly heavier K isotopic compositions than all previously reported lunar basalts from Apollo missions and lunar meteorites. Then they evaluated potential mechanisms that could modify K isotope composition, including long-term cosmic-ray irradiation, magmatic differentiation and impactor input. However, the result showed that such factors only exert minor effects.

Further research showed that the impact events altered the K isotope composition of the lunar mantle, leading to an increase in isotope values. During the high-temperature and high-pressure processes generated by impacts, lighter K isotopes were preferentially lost compared to heavier ones, leading to elevated isotopic ratios in the residual materials.

The study also implied that such volatile depletion may have suppressed magma generation and volcanic activity on the lunar far side, potentially contributing to the long-recognized asymmetry in volcanic activity between the near side and far side of the moon.

The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on January 13, 2026.

China's Chang'e-6 mission in 2024 accomplished humanity's first-ever sampling from the South Pole-Aitken Basin on the far side of the Moon. The Chang'e-5 probe landed in 2020 on the northwest region of the Ocean of Storms.


Video Credit: CCTV
Duration: 34 seconds
Release Date: Jan. 14, 2026

#NASA #CNSA #Change6  #嫦娥六号 #Space #Astronomy #Science #China #中国 #Moon #LunarSampleReturn #Geology #LunarNearSide #LunarFarSide #SouthPole #SpaceTechnology #SpaceExploration #CLEP #InternationalCooperation #Pakistan #SouthAfrica #France #Italy #ASI #Sweden #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Evolution in Slow Motion: Interacting Galaxies NGC 3921 in Ursa Major | Hubble

Evolution in Slow Motion: Interacting Galaxies NGC 3921 in Ursa Major | Hubble

It is known today that merging galaxies play a large role in the evolution of galaxies and the formation of elliptical galaxies in particular. However there are only a few merging systems close enough to be observed in depth. The pair of interacting galaxies picture seen here—known as NGC 3921—is one of these systems. It was discovered on April 14, 1789 by William Herschel, and was described as "pretty faint, small, round" by John Louis Emil Dreyer, the compiler of the New General Catalogue (NGC).

Distance from Earth: 270 million light years

NGC 3921—found in the constellation of Ursa Major (The Great Bear)—is an interacting pair of disc galaxies in the late stages of its merger. Observations show that both of the galaxies involved were about the same mass and collided about 700 million years ago. You can see clearly in this image the disturbed morphology, tails and loops characteristic of a post-merger.

The clash of galaxies caused a rush of star formation and previous Hubble observations showed over a thousand bright, young star clusters bursting to life at the heart of the galaxy pair.


Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA
Acknowledgement: Judy Schmidt 
Release Date: Sept. 14, 2015


#NASA #Hubble #Astronomy #Space #Science #Stars #Galaxies #InteractingGalaxies #NGC3921 #UrsaMajorConsetallation #Cosmos #Universe #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #ESA #GSFC #STScI #STEM #Education

Stars Flaring to Life in The Orion Molecular Cloud Complex | Hubble

Stars Flaring to Life in The Orion Molecular Cloud Complex | Hubble

Just-forming stars, called protostars, dazzle a cloudy landscape in the Orion Molecular Cloud complex (OMC). Protostar HOPS 181 is buried in layers of dusty gas clouds, but its energy shapes the material that surrounds it.
A protostar wrapped in obscuring dust creates a cavity with glowing walls while its jet streams into space. The bright star in the lower right quadrant called CVSO 188 might seem like the diva in this image, but HOPS 310, located just to the left of center behind the dust, is the true hidden star. This protostar is responsible for the large cavity with bright walls that has been carved into the surrounding cloud of gas and dust by its jets and stellar winds. Running diagonally to the top right is one of the bipolar jets of the protostar. These jets consist of particles launched at high speeds from the protostar’s magnetic poles. Background galaxies are visible in the upper right of the image.
A protostar wrapped in obscuring dust creates a cavity with glowing walls while its jet streams into space. The bright protostar to the left in this Hubble image is located within the Orion Molecular Clouds. Its stellar winds—ejected, fast-flowing particles that are spurred by the star’s magnetic field—have carved a large cavity in the surrounding cloud. In the top right, background stars speckle the image.

These three new images from the NASA/European Space Agency Hubble Space Telescope were taken as part of an effort to learn more about the envelopes of gas and dust surrounding the protostars, as well as the outflow cavities where stellar winds and jets from the developing stars have carved away at the surrounding gas and dust. The Orion Molecular Cloud complex (OMC) lies within the “sword” of the constellation Orion, roughly 1,300 light-years away.

Scientists used these Hubble observations as part of a broader survey to study protostellar envelopes, or the gas and dust around the developing star. Researchers found no evidence that the outflow cavities were growing as the protostar moved through the later stages of star formation. They also found that the decreasing accretion of mass onto the protostars over time and the low rate of star formation in the cool, molecular clouds cannot be explained by the progressive clearing out of the envelopes.


Image Credit: NASA, ESA, and T. Megeath (University of Toledo); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America)
Release Date: Jan. 14, 2026

#NASA #Hubble #Astronomy #Space #Science #Stars #Protostars #OrionMolecularCloud #OMC #CVSO188 #HOPS310 #Nebulae #StellarNurseries #OrionConsetallation #Cosmos #Universe #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #ESA #GSFC #STScI #STEM #Education

New Earth Views from Japanese Astronaut Kimiya Yui | International Space Station

New Earth Views from Japanese Astronaut Kimiya Yui | International Space Station

Expedition 74 flight engineer and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Kim Yui: ". . . this will probably be the last timelapse footage I introduce from the ISS. Please enjoy this packed nightscape full of highlights like the aurora, North America, moonrise, Central America, South America, the Milky Way, swarming satellites, sunrise, and more! Even after returning to Earth, I'll post the videos and photos I couldn't cover."

Follow Expedition 74:

Expedition 74 Crew
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
JAXA Flight Engineer (Japan): Kimiya Yui
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Oleg Platonov, Sergei Mikaev
NASA Flight Engineers: Mike Fincke, Zena Cardman, Chris Williams

Image Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center
Release Date: Jan. 9, 2025

#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Planets #Earth #Moonrise #CentralAmerica #SouthAmerica #Astronauts #KimiyaYui #AstronautVideography #UnitedStates #Japan #日本 #JAXA #宇宙航空研究開発機構 #UnitedStates #Cosmonauts #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Роскосмос #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition74 #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Are Lakes on Saturn's Moon Titan Teeming with Primitive Cells?

Are Lakes on Saturn's Moon Titan Teeming with Primitive Cells?

Could exotic lifeforms be brewing on Titan? Saturn’s largest moon is covered with the carbon-based building blocks of life and is the only place that we know of besides Earth with large lakes on its surface—made from super-chilled methane instead of water.

In 2017, NASA discovered that Titan’s thick, hazy atmosphere contains acrylonitrile, a lipid-like molecule that could cluster together within the moon’s lakes to form vesicles. These hollow spheres strongly resemble cell membranes on Earth, but a follow-up study determined that vesicles would be unlikely to form on Titan without an additional source of energy, casting doubt on their emergence. Now, a recent study coauthored by NASA shows that the missing spark could come from rainfall.

Learn more: https://science.nasa.gov/science-research/planetary-science/astrobiology/path-toward-protocells-on-titan/


Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Dan Gallagher: Producer/Writer
Christian Mayer: Scientist
Conor Nixon: Scientist
Katy Mersmann: Host/Writer
Kim Dongjae: Lead Animator
Jenny McElligott: Animator
Wes Buchanan: Animator
Jonathan North: Animator
Dan Gallagher: Animator
Michael Lentz: Art Director
Walt Feimer: Project Coordinator
Caela Barry: Support
Lonnie Shekhtman: Support
Aaron E. Lepsch: Technical Support
Duration: 2 minutes, 30 seconds
Release Date: Jan. 14, 2026

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Planets #Saturn #Moons #Titan #Lakes #Seas #Hydrocarbons #Methane #Acrylonitrile #Precipitation #Astrobiology #SolarSystem #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

The Andromeda Galaxy | International Space Station

The Andromeda Galaxy | International Space Station

Expedition 74 flight engineer and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Kim Yui: "Tomorrow, we will finally depart from the ISS and return to Earth. Before that, I was able to capture the Andromeda Galaxy, which I wanted to photograph from space. While gazing at the light from when the history of the genus Homo began, I thought about humanity 2.5 million years from now. If we can act while considering the next generations, it will surely become an unimaginably wonderful era!"

Follow Expedition 74:

Expedition 74 Crew
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
JAXA Flight Engineer (Japan): Kimiya Yui
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Oleg Platonov, Sergei Mikaev
NASA Flight Engineers: Mike Fincke, Zena Cardman, Chris Williams

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: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)/K. Yui
Release Date: Jan. 13, 2026

#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Galaxies #AndromedaGalaxy #Messier31 #M31 #NGC224 #AndromedaConstellation #Astronauts #KimiyaYui #AstronautPhotography #UnitedStates #Japan #日本 #JAXA #宇宙航空研究開発機構 #UnitedStates #Cosmonauts #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Роскосмос #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition74 #STEM #Education

Final Steps Underway for NASA’s First Crewed Artemis Moon Mission

Final Steps Underway for NASA’s First Crewed Artemis Moon Mission


As NASA moves closer to launch of the Artemis II test flight, the agency soon will roll its Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft to the launch pad for the first time at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida to begin final integration, testing, and launch rehearsals.

NASA is targeting no earlier than Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026, to begin the multi-hour trek from the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) to Launch Pad 39B. The four-mile journey on the crawler-transporter-2, at a careful speed of roughly 1 mile per hour, will take up to 12 hours. The massive crawler keeps the mobile launcher and rocket perfectly level throughout the trip, even on the gentle slopes of the crawlerway. Once at the pad, the stack will be secured, ground support systems will be connected, and teams will conduct a full wet dress rehearsal at the end of January to practice fueling and countdown procedures in preparation for flight.

Teams are working around the clock to close out all tasks ahead of rollout. However, this target date is subject to change if additional time is needed for technical preparations or weather.

Launch is currently scheduled for "no later than April 2026."

Check the NASA Artemis II Mission page for updates:

Follow updates on the Artemis blog: 

Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky
Image Date: Dec. 20, 2025
Release Date: Jan. 11, 2026

#NASA #Space #Science #Earth #Moon #Artemis #ArtemisII #OrionSpacecraft #SLS #SLSRocket #CrewedMissions #DeepSpace #MoonToMars #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #NASAKennedy #KSC #VAB #Florida #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

Commercial Recoverable Spacecraft Completes Suborbital Test Flight in China

Commercial Recoverable Spacecraft Completes Suborbital Test Flight in China

A Chinese spacecraft designed for space tourism on January 12, 2026, completed its suborbital flight test mission in northwest China. Using a parachute-recovery system, the recoverable payload capsule landed safely and was retrieved at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (JSLC).

The flight test demonstrated the re-entry deceleration and completed the verification of recoverable payload module, and showcased the precision landing-control technology for the spacecraft's sub-stage, paving the way for the development of future space tourism activities, according to its developer, commercial Chinese aerospace enterprise CAS Space.

Designated Lihong-1 Y1, the spacecraft can reach altitudes of approximately 120 kilometers. It has low launch costs, a high level of flexibility, and the capability to recover experimental payloads.

For payloads, it can provide a highly stable and multi-functional experimental environment lasting more than 300 seconds, the company said.

"The aim of Lihong-1 Y1 is not to remain in outer space for a long time. Instead, its journey is more like a flash delivery—namely, sending an experimental device to a microgravity environment and returning to Earth once the experiment is finished. The payload module safely retrieved the valuable experimental samples and the firsthand experimental data, providing a very flexible new model for carrying out high-frequency and low-cost space microgravity experiments in the future," said Zhou Yu, designer of Lihong-1 Y1.

Shi Xiaoning, chief designer and project commander of Lihong-1 said that onboard payloads included microgravity laser additive manufacturing equipment and Chinese rose seed samples.

The flower seeds spent 300 seconds in space, where they were exposed to cosmic radiation that can induce gene mutations, he said. Once the samples are returned to Earth, scientists will cultivate them to develop new, high-quality rose varieties and establish an aerospace rose germplasm bank.

Shi said that they will upgrade the subsequent returnable payload module to an orbital-grade, space-manufactured spacecraft capable of staying in orbit for at least one year and allowing for a minimum of 10 reuses.

"In the future, we will upgrade the payload module to a larger size. Additionally, we will add a control system, a landing deceleration system, and a reuse system to enable manned travel, long-term orbit retention, and precise re-entry into and return from orbit," said Shi Xiaoning, chief designer and project commander of Lihong-1.

The Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (JSLC) is a Chinese spaceport located between Ejin, Alxa, Inner Mongolia and Hangtian Town, Jinta County, Jiuquan, Gansu Province. It is part of the Dongfeng Aerospace City.


Video Credit: CCTV
Duration: 1 minute
Release Date: Jan. 13, 2026

#NASA #Space #Satellites #Earth #CASSpace #Lihong1Y1 #ReusableRockets #SuborbitalRockets #LaunchVehicles #RocketLaunches #China #中国 #CASSpace #中科宇航 #CAS #中国科学院 #SpaceTourism #MicrogravityExperiments #CommercialSpace #JSLC #InnerMongolia #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Planning Astronaut Observations of The Moon | NASA Artemis II Mission

Planning Astronaut Observations of The Moon NASA Artemis II Mission

“I cannot wait to hear their voices when they get to the far side of the Moon . . . There are a lot of places that human eyes have never seen.” Artemis II lunar science deputy lead Marie Henderson is training astronauts to capture and document their views of the lunar surface for all of us back home. 

Launch is currently scheduled for "no later than April 2026."

Check the NASA Artemis II Mission page for updates:

Follow updates on the Artemis blog: 

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Scientific Visualization Studio
Lead Producer: James Tralie (eMITS)
Animators:
        Dan Gallagher (eMITS)
        Walt Feimer (eMITS)
        Jonathan North (eMITS)
        Michael Lentz (eMITS)
Videographers:
    Rob Andreoli (eMITS)
    John D. Philyaw (eMITS)
Duration: 2 minutes, 29 seconds
Release Date: Jan. 13, 2026

#NASA #Space #Science #Earth #Moon #Artemis #ArtemisII #OrionSpacecraft #SLS #SLSRocket #CrewedMissions #DeepSpace #MoonToMars #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #NASAKennedy #KSC #VAB #Florida #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Journey to The Heart of The Circinus Galaxy | NASA Goddard

Journey to The Heart of The Circinus Galaxy | NASA Goddard

This zoom-in video shows the location of the Circinus galaxy on the sky. It begins with a ground-based photo of the constellation Circinus by the late astrophotographer, Akira Fujii. The video closes in on the Circinus galaxy, using views from the Digitized Sky Survey and the Dark Energy Survey Camera aboard the Víctor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory. The video lands on the visible light image of the galaxy from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, then zooms in even more to the image of the galaxy’s core from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s Near-Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (NIRISS) in near-infrared light.


Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI
Duration: 28 seconds
Release Date: Jan. 13, 2026

#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Galaxies #SeyfertGalaxies #CircinusGalaxy #ESO97G13 #GalacticCores #BlackHoles #CircinusConstelllations #Universe #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #JamesWebbSpaceTelescope #JWST #WebbTelescope #Europe #CSA #Canada #GSFC #STScI #DSS #NOIRLab #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Looking into The Heart of The Circinus Galaxy | James Webb Space Telescope

Looking into The Heart of The Circinus Galaxy | James Webb Space Telescope

This image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope shows the Circinus galaxy. A close-up of its core from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope shows the inner face of the hole of the donut-shaped disk of gas disk glowing in infrared light. The outer ring appears as dark spots.

This artist’s concept depicts the central engine of the Circinus galaxy.
At the center is the supermassive black hole, shown as a bright, compact core. You do not see the black hole itself, but the intense glow from material heating up as it spirals inward. Surrounding the center is a thick, donut-shaped disk of gas and dust (the torus). In Circinus, this torus, about 16 light-years across, is optically dense, meaning visible light cannot penetrate.
The illustration emphasizes that this dusty structure is brightest close to the black hole, matching the newest finding from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope that most of the light is coming from hot dust feeding the black hole rather than being blown away.
The narrow, bright beams shooting outward represent jets, streams of energized material launched perpendicular to the disk.
The soft, hazy glow around everything represents the surrounding galaxy and diffuse material.

The Circinus Galaxy (ESO 97-G13) is a Seyfert galaxy in the constellation of Circinus. It is located about 13 million light-years away and is one of the closest major galaxies to the Milky Way. The Circinus Galaxy contains an active supermassive black hole that continues to influence its evolution. The largest source of infrared light from the region closest to the black hole itself was thought to be outflows, or streams of superheated matter that fire outward. 

Now, new observations by the James Webb Space Telescope provide evidence that reverses this thinking, suggesting that most of the hot, dusty material is actually feeding the central black hole. The technique used to gather this data also has the potential to analyze the outflow and accretion components for other nearby black holes.

The research, which includes the sharpest image of a black hole’s surroundings ever taken by Webb, published Tuesday in Nature
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-66010-5

Outflow Question
Supermassive black holes like those in Circinus remain active by consuming surrounding matter. Infalling gas and dust accumulates into a donut-shaped ring around the black hole, known as a torus. As supermassive black holes gather matter from the torus’ inner walls, they form an accretion disk, similar to a whirlpool of water swirling around a drain. This disk grows hotter through friction, eventually becoming hot enough to emit light. 

This glowing matter can become so bright that resolving details within the galaxy’s center with ground-based telescopes is difficult. It is made even harder due to the bright, concealing starlight within Circinus. Further, since the torus is incredibly dense, the inner region of the infalling material, heated by the black hole, is obscured from our point of view. For decades, astronomers contended with these difficulties, designing and improving models of Circinus with as much data as they could gather.

“In order to study the supermassive black hole, despite being unable to resolve it, they had to obtain the total intensity of the inner region of the galaxy over a large wavelength range and then feed that data into models,” said lead author Enrique Lopez-Rodriguez of the University of South Carolina. 

Early models would fit the spectra from specific regions, such as the emissions from the torus, those of the accretion disk closest to the black hole, or those from the outflows, each detected at certain wavelengths of light. However, since the region could not be resolved in its entirety, these models left questions at several wavelengths. For example, certain telescopes could detect an excess of infrared light, but lacked the resolution to determine where exactly it was coming from.

“Since the ‘90s, it has not been possible to explain excess infrared emissions that come from hot dust at the cores of active galaxies, meaning the models only take into account either the torus or the outflows, but cannot explain that excess,” said Lopez-Rodriguez.

Such models found that most of the emission (and, therefore, mass) close to the center came from outflows. To test this theory, then, astronomers needed two things: the ability to filter the starlight that previously prevented a deeper analysis, and the ability to distinguish the infrared emissions of the torus from those of the outflows. Webb, sensitive and technologically sophisticated enough to meet both challenges, was necessary to advance our understanding.

Webb’s Innovative Technique
To look into the center of Circinus, Webb needed the Aperture Masking Interferometer tool on its Near-Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (NIRISS) instrument.

On Earth, interferometers usually take the form of telescope arrays: mirrors or antennae that work together as if they were a single telescope. An interferometer does this by gathering and combining the light from whichever source it is pointed toward, causing the electromagnetic waves that make up light to “interfere” with each other (hence, “interfere-ometer”) and creating interference patterns. These patterns can be analyzed by astronomers to reconstruct the size, shape, and features of distant objects with much greater detail than non-interferometric techniques. 

The Aperture Masking Interferometer allows Webb to become an array of smaller telescopes working together as an interferometer, creating these interference patterns by itself. It does this by utilizing a special aperture made of seven small, hexagonal holes, which, like in photography, controls the amount and direction of light that enters the telescope’s detectors.

“These holes in the mask are transformed into small collectors of light that guide the light toward the detector of the camera and create an interference pattern,” said Joel Sanchez-Bermudez, co-author based at the National University of Mexico.

With new data in hand, the research team was able to construct an image from the central region's interference patterns. To do so, they referenced data from previous observations to ensure their data from Webb was free of any artifacts. This resulted in the first extragalactic observation from an infrared interferometer in space.

"By using an advanced imaging mode of the camera, we can effectively double its resolution over a smaller area of the sky," Sanchez-Bermudez said. "This allows us to see images twice as sharp. Instead of Webb’s 6.5-meter diameter, it’s like we are observing this region with a 13-meter space telescope." 

The data showed that contrary to the models predicting that the infrared excess comes from the outflows, around 87% of the infrared emissions from hot dust in Circinus come from the areas closest to the black hole, while less than 1% of emissions come from hot dusty outflows. The remaining 12% comes from distances farther away that could not previously be told apart. 

“It is the first time a high-contrast mode of Webb has been used to look at an extragalactic source,” said Julien Girard, paper co-author and senior research scientist at the Space Telescope Science Institute. “We hope our work inspires other astronomers to use the Aperture Masking Interferometer mode to study faint, but relatively small, dusty structures in the vicinity of any bright object.”

Universe of Black Holes
While the mystery of Circinus’ excess emissions has been solved, there are billions of black holes in our universe. Those of different luminosities, the team notes, may have an influence on whether most of the emissions come from a black hole’s torus or their outflows.

“The intrinsic brightness of Circinus’ accretion disk is very moderate,” Lopez-Rodriguez said. “So it makes sense that the emissions are dominated by the torus. But maybe, for brighter black holes, the emissions are dominated by the outflow.” 

With this research, astronomers now have a tested technique to investigate whichever black holes they want, so long as they are bright enough for the Aperture Masking Interferometer to be useful. Studying additional targets will be essential to building a catalog of emission data to figure out if Circinus’ results were unique or characteristic of a pattern. 

“We need a statistical sample of black holes, perhaps a dozen or two dozen, to understand how mass in their accretion disks and their outflows relate to their power,” Lopez-Rodriguez said.

The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).


Image Credit #1: NASA, ESA, CSA, Enrique Lopez-Rodriguez (University of South Carolina), Deepashri Thatte (STScI); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI); Acknowledgment: NSF's NOIRLab, CTIO
Image Credit #2: Artwork: NASA, ESA, CSA, Ralf Crawford (STScI)
Release Date: Jan. 13, 2026

#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Galaxies #SeyfertGalaxies #CircinusGalaxy #ESO97G13 #GalacticCores #BlackHoles #CircinusConstelllations #Cosmos #Universe #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #JamesWebbSpaceTelescope #JWST #WebbTelescope #UnfoldTheUniverse #Europe #CSA #Canada #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

Moons Circling Planet Saturn | Hubble Space Telescope

Moons Circling Planet Saturn | Hubble Space Telescope

This Hubble Space Telescope timelapse video shows the orbits of several icy moons of Saturn as they circle the planet over an 18-hour period. The video is composed of 33 Hubble snapshots of the planet, taken June 19 to 20, 2019, by the Wide Field Camera 3. The closer the moon is to Saturn, the faster it orbits, according to the laws of gravity.


Credits: NASA, ESA, OPAL Team, Amy Simon (NASA-GSFC), Michael Wong (UC Berkeley), Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
Release Date: Jan. 12, 2026

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Monday, January 12, 2026

Meteor Dust over Eastern China

Meteor Dust over Eastern China

What is happening to this meteor? It is shedding its outer layers as it passes through the Earth's atmosphere and heats up. The sudden high temperatures not only cause the bright glow along the dramatic streak but also melt and vaporize the meteor's component rock and ice, creating dust. Wind in the atmosphere typically blows this dust away over the next few seconds, leaving no visible trace after only a few minutes. Much of this dust will eventually settle down to the Earth. This image was captured in mid-December 2025, coincident with the Geminids meteor shower. On the upper left is Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky, while in the foreground is fog-engulfed Huangshan, the Yellow Mountains of eastern China.

Meteors come from leftover comet particles and bits from asteroids. When these objects come around the Sun, they leave a dusty trail behind them. Every year Earth passes through these debris trails. This allows the bits to collide with our atmosphere where they disintegrate to create fiery and colorful streaks in the sky. Unlike most meteor showers which originate from comets, the Geminids originate from an Apollo asteroid named 3200 Phaethon. 

Learn about the Geminid Meteor shower:
https://science.nasa.gov/solar-system/meteors-meteorites/geminids/

Image Description: A view of mountains over clouds shows a starfield with a purple glow. Prominent on the right is the trail of a bright meteor. To the left of the meteor and connecting to the meteor is something unusual—a light brown triangular puff. 


Image Credit & Copyright: Xu Chen
Image Date: Mid-December 2025
Release Date: Jan. 12, 2026

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Departing Crew-11 Members Suit Up | International Space Station

Departing Crew-11 Members Suit Up | International Space Station

Four SpaceX Crew-11 members gather together for a crew portrait wearing their Dragon pressure suits during a suit verification check inside the International Space Station's Kibo laboratory module. Clockwise from bottom left are, NASA astronaut Mike Fincke, Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Platonov of Russia, NASA astronaut Zena Cardman, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Kimiya Yui.

Updates: NASA astronaut Mike Fincke handed over command of the International Space Station to Roscosmos cosmonaut Sergey Kud-Sverchkov of Russia at 2:35 p.m. EST, Monday, January 12, 2026. The traditional Change of Command Ceremony precedes the targeted departure of Fincke with Zena Cardman of NASA, Kimiya Yui of Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), and Oleg Platonov of Roscosmos of Russia aboard the SpaceX Dragon crew spacecraft.

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-11 mission is targeted undock from the Harmony module’s space-facing port at 5:05 p.m. EST on Wednesday, Jan. 14. Crew-11 will then complete a parachute-assisted landing inside Dragon to a splashdown off the coast of California less than 12 hours later at about 3:40 a.m. on Thursday, Jan. 15. NASA and SpaceX support personnel will retrieve Dragon and the crew from the Pacific Ocean and return them to California before the crewmates fly back to their home agencies.

Follow Expedition 74:

Expedition 74 Crew
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
JAXA Flight Engineer (Japan): Kimiya Yui
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Oleg Platonov, Sergei Mikaev
NASA Flight Engineers: Mike Fincke, Zena Cardman, Chris Williams

Image Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center
Release Date: Jan. 9, 2025

#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Planets #Earth #SpaceXCrew11 #Astronauts #MikeFincke #ZenaCardman #KimiyaYui #CrewHealth #AstronautHealth #UnitedStates #Japan #JAXA #UnitedStates #Cosmonauts #OlegPlatonov #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Роскосмос #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition74 #STEM #Education