Mars Images: April 9-14, 2026 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
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Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Mars Images: April 9-14, 2026 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
NASA Artemis II Crew Recovery: Orion Spacecraft Hatch Opening
NASA Artemis II Crew Recovery: Orion Spacecraft Hatch Opening
The first crewed test flight of NASA’s Artemis program lifted off from Launch Pad 39B at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 6:35 p.m. EDT April 1, 2026, carrying the first astronauts to travel to the Moon in more than half a century.
During their nearly 10-day mission, the crew completed a record-setting lunar flyby, taking them 252,756 miles at their farthest distance from Earth and 4,067 miles above the lunar surface at their closest approach.
Artemis II splashed down at 8:07 p.m. April 10 in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego. Following splashdown and recovery, the four crew members underwent post-mission medical evaluations before returning to shore and boarding an aircraft bound for Houston. Upon arrival, the crew was welcomed by and reunited with their families, friends, and agency workforce. The crew now will begin their postflight reconditioning, medical and human performance evaluations, and lunar science debriefs.
Learn more about NASA's Artemis II Mission:
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-ii/
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-iii/
Monday, April 13, 2026
NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope: Final Testing Pre-launch
NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope: Final Testing Pre-launch
As staff at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center wrap up final testing and prepare the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope for shipment to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, watch how its hardware testing proceeded.
On track to launch in fall 2026, the Roman Space Telescope is NASA’s next flagship astrophysics mission. An infrared survey telescope with the same resolution as Hubble but at least 100 times the field of view, Roman is being built and tested at NASA Goddard. Partners worldwide are contributing to this effort.
https://www.stsci.edu/roman
https://science.nasa.gov/people/nancy-roman/
Duration: 1 minute, 26 seconds
Release Date: April 13, 2026
Comet C/2025 R3 Panstarrs: View from Namibia
Comet C/2025 R3 Panstarrs: View from Namibia
Astrophotographer Gerald Rhemann: "Although the comet was very low in Namibia, we gave it a try."
Discovered by the Pan-STARRS survey in September 2025, the comet is diving toward its closest approach to the sun (0.50 AU) on April 19, 2026, bringing it well inside the orbit of Venus. If current trends continue, the comet could brighten to magnitude +2, easily seen and photographed in the pre-dawn sky.
The comet's brightness will receive a further boost between April 24-25 when it passes almost directly between Earth and the Sun. The process is called "forward scattering." Sunlight passing through the comet's dusty atmosphere could be amplified 100-fold or more.
We will not be able to see the April 24 surge from Earth. The comet will be too close to the Sun. However, coronagraphs onboard the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) will have a great view of what could briefly become a truly magnificent object.
Namibia, officially the Republic of Namibia, is a country in southern Africa. Its borders include the Atlantic Ocean to the west, Angola and Zambia to the north, Botswana to the east and South Africa to the south; in the northeast, approximating a quadripoint, Zimbabwe lies less than 200 meters (660 feet) away along the Zambezi River near Kazungula, Zambia.
#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Comets #CometC2025R3Panstarrs #SolarSystem #Astrophotography #MichaelJaeger #GeraldRhemann #Astrophotographers #FarmTivoli #Namibia #Africa #STEM #Education
CRS-24 Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Docking | International Space Station
CRS-24 Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Docking | International Space Station
Filled with more than 11,000 pounds of research and supplies, the Northrop Grumman Cygnus XL spacecraft, carried on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, launched at 7:41 a.m. EDT on April 11, 2026, from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral in Florida. This mission is the second flight of the Cygnus XL, the larger, more cargo-capable version of the company’s solar-powered spacecraft.
Cygnus will remain at the International Space Station until October when it departs the orbiting laboratory. It will then dispose of several thousand pounds of debris through its re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere where it will harmlessly burn up.
Learn more about NASA's Commercial Resupply Missions:
https://www.nasa.gov/international-space-station/commercial-resupply/
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Andrey Fedyaev, Sergei Mikaev
NASA Artemis II Mission: Moments Around the Moon | Johnson Space Center
NASA Artemis II Mission: Moments Around the Moon | Johnson Space Center
Key moments from the Artemis II Mission capturing the astronauts’ journey . . .
During their nearly 10-day mission, the crew completed a record-setting lunar flyby, taking them 252,756 miles at their farthest distance from Earth and 4,067 miles above the lunar surface at their closest approach.
Artemis II splashed down at 8:07 p.m. April 10 in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego. Following splashdown and recovery, the four crew members underwent post-mission medical evaluations before returning to shore and boarding an aircraft bound for Houston. Upon arrival, the crew was welcomed by and reunited with their families, friends, and agency workforce. The crew now will begin their postflight reconditioning, medical and human performance evaluations, and lunar science debriefs.
Learn more about NASA's Artemis II Mission:
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-ii/
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-iii/
Video Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center
Duration: 2 minutes
Release Date: April 13, 2026
Planetary Defense: 3D Animation of Asteroids Discovered by Vera Rubin Observatory
Planetary Defense: 3D Animation of Asteroids Discovered by Vera Rubin Observatory
This animation shows the inner Solar System populated with known asteroids in dark blue and asteroids discovered by Rubin in light teal. As the discovered objects appear, their locations are shown at the time of each object's discovery. Over the course of the 1.6 years that the animation spans, the newly discovered asteroids disperse.
A total of 12,700 asteroids discovered with Rubin are shown here during the 1.6 years of observation. The discoveries come in three bursts: 73 were discovered during the first early test observations using Rubin’s Commissioning Camera in late 2024 and released as part of Rubin’s Data Preview 1 in Summer 2025. 1514 were discovered during First Look observations in April and May 2025, and the recent 11,000+ asteroids were discovered in Rubin’s early optimization surveys in Summer 2025.
Note that the number of asteroid discoveries may decrease with time as a portion may be connected to earlier observations by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Minor Planet Center, and hence reclassified as “recovered asteroids” and not discoveries.
Star map: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio. Gaia DR2: ESA/Gaia/DPAC
Image Processing: M. Zamani (NSF NOIRLab)
Asteroids Discovered by New Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile for Planetary Defense
Asteroids Discovered by New Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile for Planetary Defense
The left side shows objects in the inner Solar System on a linear scale; the right side extends to the outer Solar System on a logarithmic scale. The bulk of discoveries are main-belt asteroids (10,279), with significant populations of outer main-belt (234) and Mars-crossing (103) objects. Beyond Neptune, 380 newly discovered trans-Neptunian objects are visible at right, including two with extremely elongated orbits (eccentricity > 0.9) reaching roughly 1000 times Earth’s distance from the Sun. Near-Earth asteroids — Amors (27), Apollos (5), and Atens (1) — appear at low mean Sun-distance. Jupiter-coupled comets (57), Centaurs (7), Jupiter Trojans (1), and Neptune Trojans (3) round out the discoveries.
The pattern in the distribution of the main-belt asteroids is caused by underpopulated regions where Jupiter’s repeated gravitational nudges have cleared out asteroids over time. These so-called Kirkwood gaps are due to orbital resonances with Jupiter.
These objects were identified from approximately 1.6 months of preliminary observations, before the start of the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST).
Scientists at the NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory, jointly funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science (DOE), have submitted an unprecedented set of asteroid detections to the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Minor Planet Center, including hundreds of distant worlds beyond Neptune and 33 previously unknown near-Earth asteroids.
Using preliminary data from NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory, scientists have discovered over 11,000 new asteroids. The data were confirmed by the International Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center (MPC), making this the largest single batch of asteroid discoveries submitted in the past year. The discoveries were made using data from Rubin’s early optimization surveys and offer a powerful preview of the observatory’s transformative impact on Solar System science.
Rubin Observatory is a joint program of NSF NOIRLab and DOE’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory that cooperatively operate Rubin. NOIRLab is managed by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA).
The submission to MPC comprises approximately one million observations, taken over the span of a month and a half, of over 11,000 new asteroids and more than 80,000 already known asteroids, including a portion that had previously been observed but were later “lost” because their orbits were too uncertain to predict their future locations.
“This first large submission after Rubin First Look is just the tip of the iceberg and shows that the observatory is ready,” says Mario Juric, faculty at the University of Washington and Rubin Solar System Lead Scientist. “What used to take years or decades to discover, Rubin will unearth in months. We are beginning to deliver on Rubin’s promise to fundamentally reshape our inventory of the Solar System and open the door to discoveries we haven’t yet imagined.”
Among the newly identified objects are 33 previously unknown near-Earth objects (NEOs), which are small asteroids and comets whose closest approach to the Sun is less than 1.3 times the distance between Earth and the Sun. None of the newly discovered NEOs pose a threat to Earth, and the largest is about 500 meters wide. Objects larger than 140 meters are closely tracked as they could cause significant regional damage if they impact, yet scientists estimate that only about 40% of these mid-sized NEOs have been identified so far.
Once operating fully in survey mode, Rubin is expected to reveal an additional nearly 90,000 new NEOs, some of which may be potentially hazardous, and to nearly double the number of known NEOs larger than 140 meters to around 70%. By enabling early detection and continuous monitoring of these objects, Rubin will be a powerful tool for planetary defense.
The dataset also contains roughly 380 trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs)—icy bodies orbiting beyond Neptune. Two of the newly discovered TNOs—provisionally named 2025 LS2 and 2025 MX348—have been found to be on extremely large and elongated, or stretched out, orbits. At their most distant points, these two objects reach roughly 1000 times farther away from the Sun than the Earth is, placing them among the 30 most distant minor planets known.
The discoveries were enabled by Rubin Observatory’s unique combination of a large mirror, the world’s most powerful astronomical digital camera, and highly sophisticated, software-driven pipelines designed to detect faint, fast-moving objects against a crowded sky. Rubin can survey the southern sky at roughly six times the sensitivity of most current asteroid searches, allowing it to detect smaller and more distant objects than ever before. These capabilities will allow Rubin to build the most detailed census of our Solar System ever, and all of the discoveries will help scientists work out the story of the Solar System’s history.
“Rubin’s unique observing cadence required a whole new software architecture for asteroid discovery,” says Ari Heinze, University of Washington, who, together with Jacob Kurlander, a graduate student at the University of Washington, built the software that detected them. “We built it, and it works. Even with just early, engineering-quality data, Rubin discovered 11,000 asteroids and measured more precise orbits for tens of thousands more. It seems pretty clear this observatory will revolutionize our knowledge of the asteroid belt.”
Particularly striking is the rapid growth of the TNO population. The 380 candidates discovered by Rubin in less than two months add to the 5000 discovered over the past three decades. As with less distant asteroids, finding the TNOs depended critically on developing new sophisticated algorithms.
“Searching for a TNO is like searching for a needle in a field of haystacks—out of millions of flickering sources in the sky, teaching a computer to sift through billions of combinations and identify those that are likely to be distant worlds in our Solar System required novel algorithmic approaches,” says Matthew Holman, a Senior Astrophysicist at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian and former Director of the Minor Planet Center, who spearheaded the work on the TNO discovery pipeline.
“Objects like these offer a tantalizing probe of the Solar System’s outermost reaches, from telling us how the planets moved early on in the Solar System’s history, to whether a hitherto undiscovered 9th large planet may still be out there,” says Kevin Napier, a research scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who, with Holman, developed the algorithms to detect distant Solar System objects with Rubin data.
The MPC's verification of this large group of discoveries enables the entire global community to access the data, refine orbits, and begin analysis immediately. And these ~11,000 asteroids are just the start. Once the decade-long Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) begins later this year, scientists expect Rubin to discover this many asteroids every two to three nights during the early years of the survey. This will ultimately triple the number of known asteroids and increase the number of known TNOs by nearly an order of magnitude.
The new asteroid discoveries reported here are in addition to the ~1500 asteroid discoveries announced as part of Rubin First Look. When originally announced, 2104 of the asteroids were registered as new. Since then, 600 of the asteroids have been connected to earlier observations by the IAU Minor Planet Center, and hence reclassified as “recovered asteroids” and not discoveries.
This research is available at the Rubin Asteroid Discoveries Dashboard: https://sbx.dirac.dev/station/X05
Acknowledgements: Star map: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio. Gaia DR2: ESA/Gaia/DPAC
Image Processing: M. Zamani (NSF NOIRLab)
Release Date: April 2, 2026
Ryder Crater on Moon's Far Side | NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
Ryder Crater on Moon's Far Side | NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
Color shaded relief map centered on the South Pole–Aitken (SPA) Basin. Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) Wide Angle Camera (WAC) stereo model combined with Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter data
Ryder Crater is oblong (13 x 17 km) with a distinctive slump on its eastern side and is located in the South Pole–Aitken (SPA) Basin on the far side of the Moon. The basin is the largest at roughly 2,500 km in diameter (1,600 miles), and possibly oldest (estimated age of 4.3 billion years) basin on the Moon. The SPA basin is also the deepest one recognized on the Moon, between 6.2 and 8.2 km (3.9–5.1 mi) deep. It is estimated that it was formed approximately 4.2 to 4.3 billion years ago during the Pre-Nectarian epoch. It is among the largest known impact craters in the Solar System.
Because of its odd shape, scientists question whether Ryder is two craters or one. This distinctive landform could have formed when an impactor struck the surface at a grazing angle (<15° from the horizon), or when an asteroid split in two just before impact. However, there is another factor at play here. Ryder Crater formed on a steep ridge, and this kind of uneven terrain is often responsible for asymmetric craters.
The steep ridge Ryder formed upon is the degraded rim of an older crater that is ~70 km across with a vertical drop of over 3000 meters (approximately 10,000 feet) from its rim to its floor. Even this older crater may have been affected by the uneven terrain it was formed from. Its eastern rim appears to have formed on a topographic high perhaps related to the SPA basin, leaving it well above its western rim. The impactor that formed Ryder crater struck the very highest point of the older crater's rim, and in this case it is not hard to imagine that the final shape of Ryder crater was strongly affected by its encounter with the extra steep slope. The high point of Ryder's rim is approximately 1500 meters (5000 feet) higher than the low point of its rim.
Ryder Crater was named after Graham Ryder, a lunar scientist that worked at the Lunar and Planetary Institute and the NASA Johnson Space Center, studying lunar geology through detailed analyses of Apollo samples. Given his unique and important contributions to lunar science, it is fitting that such a striking crater bears his name.
These images were captured by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft (2009-2026).
LRO has made a 3-D map of the Moon's surface at 100-meter resolution and 98.2% coverage (excluding polar areas in deep shadow), including 0.5-meter resolution images of Apollo landing sites.
LRO has been studying the Moon from up close since 2009, making it the longest-lived lunar orbiting mission ever. The orbiter has mapped the Moon’s surface and measured its temperature, composition, and radiation environment in unprecedented detail. Data from LRO enables NASA, and our international and commercial partners, to select locations on the lunar surface where spacecraft and astronauts can safely land. The orbiter is also helping NASA identify areas near the Moon’s South Pole with crucial resources like water and extended sunlight that provides power for equipment and supports exploration activities.
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/lro/
Release Date: Oct. 19, 2020
Pierazzo Crater on The Moon's Far Side | NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
Pierazzo Crater on The Moon's Far Side | NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
The Artemis II crew spotted Pierazzo Crater on day five of their round-trip around the Moon. It is located within the north-northwestern section of the immense skirt of ejecta that surrounds the Mare Orientale impact basin. To the south is the Montes Cordillera mountain ring. To the west is the crater Lents. This crater produced a broad, wispy ray system that extends for more than 100 kilometers (km) in all directions. The ejecta blanket contains multiple lobate impact melt flows that extend to over 40 km from the center of the 9.3 km diameter crater and that appear dark in contrast to the surrounding material.
The pristine state of this crater looks as if it could have formed yesterday, however erosion happens slowly on the Moon. This oblique image was acquired late in 2017, and required the spacecraft to roll 65° towards the limb; due to the curvature of the Moon, the viewing angle of the crater is actually 74°. The geometry here is similar to viewing the distant landscape out of an airplane window, except that the Moon does not have an atmosphere that results in the hazy distant views seen on Earth. This image shows a reduced-scale view of the bright crater cavity and of the ejecta. There is dark material on the crater ejecta and interior with linear and flow-like patterns. The dark material consists of lunar rocks that were melted by the very high-speed impact event, flowed in places, and then froze into dark glassy deposits.
The farside rayed Pierazzo Crater was named by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in 2015 after Italian planetary scientist, Elisabetta “Betty” Pierazzo (1963-2011). Betty studied impact cratering, including the production of impact melt, so this 9.3-km diameter crater with abundant impact melt was well chosen to honor her.
The Planetary Science Institute (PSI) in the United States established the Betty Pierazzo Memorial Fund to support the Pierazzo International Student Travel Award that is given annually to an American graduate student to attend a planetary meting outside the U.S. and to a non-U.S. graduate student to attend a planetary meeting with the U.S. in order to promote international collaborations.
This image was captured by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft (2009-2026).
LRO has made a 3-D map of the Moon's surface at 100-meter resolution and 98.2% coverage (excluding polar areas in deep shadow), including 0.5-meter resolution images of Apollo landing sites.
LRO has been studying the Moon from up close since 2009, making it the longest-lived lunar orbiting mission ever. The orbiter has mapped the Moon’s surface and measured its temperature, composition, and radiation environment in unprecedented detail. Data from LRO enables NASA, and our international and commercial partners, to select locations on the lunar surface where spacecraft and astronauts can safely land. The orbiter is also helping NASA identify areas near the Moon’s South Pole with crucial resources like water and extended sunlight that provides power for equipment and supports exploration activities.
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/lro/
Release Date: Feb. 13, 2018
NASA's Artemis II Mission: Around the Moon in 10 days | European Space Agency
NASA's Artemis II Mission: Around the Moon in 10 days | European Space Agency
The European Space Agency (ESA) played a critical role in the mission’s success. The European Service Module powered and sustained Orion throughout the journey, providing propulsion, power, water, and breathable air for the crew.
Mostly built with contributions from 13 ESA Member States—Germany, Italy, France, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Austria, the United Kingdom and Luxembourg—the module represents Europe’s strength in international cooperation.
Looking ahead, ESA will continue to deliver on its commitments to the Artemis program while advancing Europe’s own ambitions in exploration. Work is underway to strengthen autonomy in key space capabilities and define Europe’s role across low Earth orbit, the Moon and Mars.
As a new era of exploration unfolds, Europe is positioning itself as a strong, reliable and competitive partner in the emerging lunar economy.
Duration: 3 minutes, 46 seconds
Release Date: April 13, 2026
Orion Spacecraft Recovery Post-landing | NASA Artemis II Moon Mission
Orion Spacecraft Recovery Post-landing | NASA Artemis II Moon Mission
The first crewed test flight of NASA’s Artemis program lifted off from Launch Pad 39B at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 6:35 p.m. EDT April 1, 2026, carrying the first astronauts to travel to the Moon in more than half a century.
During their nearly 10-day mission, the crew completed a record-setting lunar flyby, taking them 252,756 miles at their farthest distance from Earth and 4,067 miles above the lunar surface at their closest approach.
Artemis II splashed down at 8:07 p.m. April 10 in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego. Following splashdown and recovery, the four crew members underwent post-mission medical evaluations before returning to shore and boarding an aircraft bound for Houston. Upon arrival, the crew was welcomed by and reunited with their families, friends, and agency workforce. The crew now will begin their postflight reconditioning, medical and human performance evaluations, and lunar science debriefs.
Learn more about NASA's Artemis II Mission:
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-ii/
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-iii/
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Falcon 9 Close-up: Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Launch | International Space Station
Falcon 9 Close-up: Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Launch | International Space Station
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Andrey Fedyaev, Sergei Mikaev
Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Launch on Falcon 9 | International Space Station
Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Launch on Falcon 9 | International Space Station
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Andrey Fedyaev, Sergei Mikaev
Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Launch on Falcon 9 | International Space Station
Cygnus XL Cargo Spacecraft Launch on Falcon 9 | International Space Station
Station Commander: Sergey-Kud Sverchkov (Russia)
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Andrey Fedyaev, Sergei Mikaev
International Day of Human Space Flight | United Nations
International Day of Human Space Flight | United Nations
65 years ago, history was made when the first human space flight took place. April 12, 1961, was the date of the first human space flight, carried out by Yuri Gagarin, a Soviet citizen. This historic event opened the way for space exploration for the benefit of all humanity.
Learn more about the International Day of Human Space Flight:
https://www.un.org/en/observances/human-spaceflight-day
The United Nations General Assembly, in its resolution A/RES/65/271 of April 7, 2011, declared April 12 as the International Day of Human Space Flight “to celebrate each year at the international level the beginning of the space era for [humanity], reaffirming the important contribution of space science and technology in achieving sustainable development goals and increasing the well-being of States and peoples, as well as ensuring the realization of their aspiration to maintain outer space for peaceful purposes.”
The General Assembly expressed its deep conviction of the common interest of humanity in promoting and expanding the exploration and use of outer space, as the province of all human beings, for peaceful purposes and in continuing efforts to extend to all States the benefits derived there from.
Release Date: April 12, 2026


































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