Thursday, May 15, 2025

Axiom Mission 4 Crew: Falcon 9 Launch Preparations | International Space Station

Axiom Mission 4 Crew: Falcon 9 Launch Preparations | International Space Station

From left to right: Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland, and Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary
From left to right: Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary, Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, and Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland
From left to right: Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland, Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, and Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary
From left to right: Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary, Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, and Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland
From left to right: Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary, Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, and Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland
From left to right: Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland, Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, and Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary
From left to right: Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary, Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, and Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland
Axiom Mission 4 Patch

SpaceX is now targeting no earlier than Sunday, June 8, 2025, for Falcon 9 to launch Ax-4, for Axiom Space's fourth mission to the International Space Station, from Pad 39A in Florida.

The Axiom Space Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4) is the company’s fourth commercial astronaut mission to the International Space Station. The Ax-4 crew includes Commander Peggy Whitson of the United States, Mission Pilot Shubhanshu Shukla of India, Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of the European Space Agency (ESA)/Poland, and Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary. 

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch the Ax-4 crew aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft to the International Space Station from Florida. Once docked, the Ax-4 astronauts plan to spend up to 14 days onboard implementing a full mission comprised of microgravity research, technology demonstrations, educational outreach, and media events.

The Ax-4 mission will “realize the return” to human spaceflight for India, Poland, and Hungary, with each nation’s first government-sponsored flight in more than 40 years. While Ax-4 marks these countries' second human spaceflight mission in history, it will be the first time all three nations will execute a mission on board the International Space Station. This historic mission underscores how Axiom Space is elevating national space programs globally.

The Ax-4 research complement includes around 60 scientific studies and activities representing 31 countries, including the U.S., India, Poland, Hungary, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, Nigeria, UAE, and nations across Europe. This will be the most research and science-related activities conducted on an Axiom Space mission aboard the International Space Station to date, underscoring the mission's global significance and collaborative nature to advance microgravity research in low-Earth orbit (LEO).

Ax-4 Crew


Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski (Poland)
https://www.axiomspace.com/astronaut/slawosz-uznanski


Image Credits: SpaceX, Axiom Space
Release Dates: Jan. 30-May 15, 2025

#NASA #Space #ISS #AxiomSpace #Ax4Mission #Ax4 #SpaceX #CrewDragonSpacecraft #PeggyWhitson #UnitedStates #ShubhanshuShukla #India #BhāratGaṇarājya #SławoszUznańskiWiśniewski #Poland #Polska #TiborKapu #Hungary #Magyarország #CommercialSpace #Astronauts #Europe #STEM #Education

Lunar Eclipse over Cerro Tololo in Chile

Lunar Eclipse over Cerro Tololo in Chile


A total lunar eclipse as viewed from Cerro Tololo in Chile during March 2025. Cerro Tololo is located at an altitude of 2,200 meters above sea level.

This can occur only when the Sun, Earth, and Moon are exactly or very closely aligned with Earth between the other two. During these rare events, the full Moon rapidly darkens and then glows red as it enters the Earth's shadow. A small amount of indirect sunlight is still reaching the Moon, passing through Earth's atmosphere, resulting in a reddish hue. This light appears reddish due to the Rayleigh scattering of blue light—the same reason sunrises and sunsets are more orange than during the day.


Credit: NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/O. Smékal
Release Date: May 14, 2025

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Sun #Earth #CerroTololo #Chile #Moon #LunarEclipse #LunarEclipse2025 #Astrophotography #STEM #Education

25 Years of NASA Student Launch

25 Years of NASA Student Launch

Students from the University of Massachusetts Amherst team carry their high-powered rocket toward the launch pad at NASA’s 2025 Student Launch launch day competition in Toney, Alabama, on May 4, 2025. More than 980 middle school, high school, and college students from across the nation launched more than 40 high-powered amateur rockets just north of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. This year marked the 25th anniversary of the competition.

To compete, students follow the NASA engineering design lifecycle by going through a series of reviews for nine months leading up to launch day. Each year, a payload challenge is issued to the university teams, and this year’s task focused on communication. Teams were required to have “reports” from STEMnauts, non-living objects inside their rocket, that had to relay real-time data to the student team’s mission control. This Artemis Student Challenge took inspiration from the agency’s Artemis missions, where NASA will send astronauts to explore the Moon for scientific discovery, economic benefit, and to build the foundation for the first crewed missions to Mars.

Learn about NASA's Student Launch Program: 
nasa.gov/studentlaunch


Image Credit: NASA/Charles Beason
Text Credit: NASA/Beth Ridgeway
Release Date: May 9, 2025


#NASA #Space #Earth #Aerospace #Rocketry #Rockets #RocketLaunch #RocketCompetition #Students #StudentLaunch #ArtemisProgram #ArtemisGeneration #University #College #HighSchool #MiddleSchool #Schools #NASAMarshall #MSFC #Huntsville #Alabama #UnitedStates #Technology #Engineering #Teamwork #STEM #Education 

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Espacio A Tierra | Selfie de caminata espacial: 9 de mayo 2025

Espacio A Tierra | Selfie de caminata espacial: 9 de mayo 2025

Espacio a Tierra, la versión en español de las cápsulas Space to Ground de la NASA, te informa semanalmente de lo que está sucediendo en la Estación Espacial Internacional.

Aprende más sobre la ciencia a bordo de la estación espacial: https://www.nasa.gov/international-space-station/space-station-research-and-technology/ciencia-en-la-estacion/


Producción: NASA
Duration: 5 minutes, 38 seconds
Release Date: May 14, 2025


#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Earth #NASAenespañol #español #Astronauts #AnneMcClain #NicholeAyers #Spacewalk #Spacewalk93 #EVA #UnitedStates #Japan #日本 #JAXA #Cosmonauts #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Роскосмос #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #Expedition73 #STEM #Education #HD #Video

The Robin's Egg Nebula in Fornax: NGC 1360

The Robin's Egg Nebula in Fornax: NGC 1360

This unique nebula lies around 1,500 light-years away. Its shape and color are reminiscent of a robin's egg in this telescopic view. The cosmic cloud spans about 3 light-years, nestled securely within the boundaries of the southern constellation of the Furnace (Fornax). 

Recognized as a planetary nebula, egg-shaped NGC 1360 does not represent a beginning, though. Instead, it corresponds to a brief and final phase in the evolution of an aging star. In fact, visible at the center of the nebula, the central star of NGC 1360 is known to be a binary star system likely consisting of two evolved white dwarf stars, less massive but much hotter than the Sun. Their intense and otherwise invisible ultraviolet radiation has stripped away electrons from the atoms in their mutually surrounding gaseous shroud. The blue-green hue inside of NGC 1360 seen here is the strong emission produced as electrons recombine with doubly ionized oxygen atoms.

Image Description: "A dark starfield highlights a blue and pink nebula in its center. Dark lanes of dust are visible at the nebula's center."


Image Credit & Copyright: Andrea Iorio, Vikas Chander & ShaRA Team
Andrea's website: 
Release Date: May 14, 2025

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Nebulae #Nebula #RobinsEggNebula #PlanetaryNebula #NGC1360 #BinaryStarSystem #Fornax #Constellation #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #Astrophotography #AndreaIorio #VikasChander #ShaRATeam #Astrophotographer #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #APoD

Planet Mars Images: May 13-14, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers

Planet Mars Images: May 13-14, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers

MSL - sol 4539
Mars 2020 - sol 1504
Mars 2020 - sol 1503
Mars 2020 - sol 1503
Mars 2020 - sol 1504
Mars 2020 - sol 1503
MSL - sol 4537
MSL - sol 4537

Celebrating 12+ Years on Mars (2012-2024)
Mission Name: Mars Science Laboratory (MSL)
Rover Name: Curiosity
Main Job: To determine if Mars was ever habitable to microbial life. 
Launch: Nov. 6, 2011
Landing Date: Aug. 5, 2012, Gale Crater, Mars

Celebrating 4+ Years on Mars
Mission Name: Mars 2020
Rover Name: Perseverance
Main Job: Seek signs of ancient life and collect samples of rock and regolith (broken rock and soil) for return to Earth.
Launch: July 30, 2020    
Landing: Feb. 18, 2021, Jezero Crater, Mars

For more information on NASA's Mars missions, visit: mars.nasa.gov

Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS
Processing: Kevin M. Gill
Image Release Dates: May 13-14, 2025

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Mars #RedPlanet #Planet #Astrobiology #Geology #CuriosityRover #MSL #MountSharp #GaleCrater #PerseveranceRover #Mars2020 #JezeroCrater #Robotics #SpaceTechnology #SpaceEngineering #MSSS #JPL #Caltech #UnitedStates #CitizenScience #KevinGill #STEM #Education

Saturn's Moon Titan: Cloudy with Occasional Methane Showers | Webb Telescope

Saturn's Moon Titan: Cloudy with Occasional Methane Showers | Webb Telescope

Titan (Webb and Keck image - July 11 & 14, 2023)
Titan (Webb image - July 11, 2023)

A science team has combined data from the NASA/European Space Agency/Canadian Space Agency James Webb Space Telescope and the Keck II telescope to see evidence of cloud convection on Saturn’s moon Titan in the northern hemisphere for the first time. Most of Titan’s lakes and seas are located in that hemisphere, and are likely replenished by an occasional rain of methane and ethane. Webb also has detected a key carbon-containing molecule that gives insight into the chemical processes in Titan’s complex atmosphere.

Saturn’s moon Titan is an intriguing world cloaked in a yellowish, smoggy haze. Similar to Earth, the atmosphere is mostly nitrogen and has weather, including clouds and rain. Unlike Earth, whose weather is driven by evaporating and condensing water, frigid Titan has a methane (CH4) cycle. It evaporates from the surface and rises into the atmosphere, where it condenses to form methane clouds. Occasionally it falls as a chilly, oily rain onto a solid surface where water ice is hard as rocks.

“Titan is the only other place in our Solar System that has weather like Earth, in the sense that it has clouds and rainfall onto a surface,” explained lead author Conor Nixon of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

The team observed Titan in November 2022 and July 2023 using Webb and one of the twin ground-based W.M. Keck telescopes. Those observations not only showed clouds in the mid and high northern latitudes on Titan—the hemisphere where it is currently summer—but also showed those clouds apparently rising to higher altitudes over time. While previous studies have observed cloud convection at southern latitudes, this is the first time evidence for such convection has been seen in the north. This is significant because most of Titan’s lakes and seas are located in its northern hemisphere and evaporation from lakes is a major potential methane source. 

On Earth the lowest layer of the atmosphere, or troposphere, extends up to an altitude of about 12 kilometers. However, on Titan, whose lower gravity allows the atmospheric layers to expand, the troposphere extends up to about 45 kilometers. Webb and Keck used different infrared filters to probe to different depths in Titan’s atmosphere, allowing astronomers to estimate the altitudes of the clouds. The science team observed clouds that appeared to move to higher altitudes over a period of days, although they were not able to directly see any precipitation occurring.

“Webb’s observations were taken at the end of Titan’s northern summer, which is a season that we were unable to observe with the Cassini-Huygens mission,” said Thomas Cornet of the European Space Agency, a co-author of the study. “Together with ground-based observations, Webb is giving us precious new insights into Titan’s atmosphere, that we hope to be able to investigate much closer-up in the future with a possible ESA mission to visit the Saturn system.”

Titan’s Chemistry
Titan is an object of high astrobiological interest due to its complex organic (carbon-containing) chemistry, despite its frigid temperature of about -180 degrees Celsius. Organic molecules form the basis of all life on Earth, and studying them on a world like Titan may help scientists understand the processes that led to the origin of life on Earth.

The basic ingredient that drives much of Titan's chemistry is methane. Methane in Titan’s atmosphere gets split apart by sunlight or energetic electrons from Saturn’s magnetosphere, and then recombines with other molecules to make substances like ethane (C2H6) along with more complex carbon-bearing molecules.

Webb’s data provided a key missing piece for our understanding of the chemical processes: a definitive detection of the methyl radical CH3. This molecule (called “radical” because it has a "free" electron that is not in a chemical bond) forms when methane is broken apart. Detecting this substance means that scientists can see chemistry in action on Titan for the first time, rather than just the starting ingredients and the end products.

“For the first time we can see the chemical cake while it’s rising in the oven, instead of just the starting ingredients of flour and sugar, and then the final, iced cake,” said co-author Stefanie Milam of the Goddard Space Flight Center.

The Future of Titan’s Atmosphere
This hydrocarbon chemistry has long-term implications for the future of Titan. When methane is broken apart in the upper atmosphere, a portion of it recombines to make other molecules that eventually end up on Titan’s surface in one chemical form or another, while some hydrogen escapes from the atmosphere. As a result, methane will be depleted over time, unless there is some source to replenish it.

A similar process occurred on Mars, where water molecules were broken up and the resulting hydrogen lost to space. The result was the dry, desert planet we see today.

“On Titan, methane is a consumable. It’s possible that it is being constantly resupplied and fizzing out of the crust and interior over billions of years. If not, eventually it will all be gone and Titan will become a mostly airless world of dust and dunes,” said Nixon.

This data was taken as part of Heidi Hammel’s Guaranteed Time Observations program to study the Solar System. The results were published in the journal Nature Astronomy.

More information

Webb is the largest, most powerful telescope ever launched into space. Under an international collaboration agreement, the European Space Agency (ESA) provided the telescope’s launch service, using the Ariane 5 launch vehicle. Working with partners, ESA was responsible for the development and qualification of Ariane 5 adaptations for the Webb mission and for the procurement of the launch service by Arianespace. ESA also provided the workhorse spectrograph NIRSpec and 50% of the mid-infrared instrument MIRI, that was designed and built by a consortium of nationally funded European Institutes (The MIRI European Consortium) in partnership with JPL and the University of Arizona.

Webb is an international partnership between NASA, ESA and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).

Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Keck Observatory
Release Date: May 14, 2025

#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #JWST #JamesWebb #WebbTelescope #KeckTelescopeII #Planet #Saturn #Moon #Titan #Atmosphere #Precipitation #Lakes #Seas #Hydrocarbons #SolarSystem #UnfoldTheUniverse #Europe #CSA #Canada #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #Infographics #STEM #Education

Will the Sun Ever Burn Out? We Asked a NASA Expert

Will the Sun Ever Burn Out? We Asked a NASA Expert


Will the Sun ever burn out? Not quite, but it will change dramatically. Like all stars, it is going through a life cycle powered by nuclear fusion. Right now, it is halfway through its 10-billion-year lifetime.

Eventually, the Sun will expand into a red giant, engulfing the inner planets, then collapse into a white dwarf—a small, hot, dim remnant of its former self.

A NASA scientist explains what is ahead for our star.

Learn more about our Sun: https://nasa.gov/sun


Video Credit: NASA
Producers: Scott Bednar, Pedro Cota, Jessie Wilde
Editor: James Lucas
Duration: 1 minute
Release May 14, 2025

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Stars #Sun #SolarSystem #StellarEvolution #RedGiant #WhiteDwarfs #Heliophysics #Astrophysics #Cosmos #Universe #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Animation #HD #Video

Rain Clouds, New Molecule Found on Saturn's Moon Titan | Webb Telescope

Rain Clouds, New Molecule Found on Saturn's Moon Titan | Webb Telescope

Of all the alien worlds in our solar system, one in particular resembles our home planet. Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, is the only other place we know of where you could walk along the seashore or stand in the rain. However, Titan’s exotic seas and its oily raindrops are not made of water, but of the natural gases methane and ethane, super-chilled into liquid form. Now, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has revealed a crucial, missing step in how ethane is formed, and its discovery could tell us about the future of Titan’s atmosphere.


Video Credit: James Webb Space Telescope
Duration: 5 minutes
Release Date: May 14, 2025

#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #JWST #JamesWebb #WebbTelescope #Planet #Saturn #Moon #Titan #Atmosphere #Precipitation #Lakes #Seas #Hydrocarbons #SolarSystem #UnfoldTheUniverse #Europe #CSA #Canada #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video
    

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

SpaceX Starship Static Fire Test Before Ninth Flight | Starbase Texas

SpaceX Starship Static Fire Test Before Ninth Flight | Starbase Texas




Starship completed a long duration six-engine static fire and is undergoing final preparations for the ninth flight test. 

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 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):


Image Credit: Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX)
Release Date: May 13, 2025

#NASA #SpaceX #Space #Earth #Mars #Moon #MoonToMars #ArtemisProgram #ArtemisIII #Starship #Spacecraft #Starship9 #StarshipTestFlight9 #SuperHeavyBooster #SuperHeavyRocket #Mechazilla #ElonMusk #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #CommercialSpace #SpaceExploration #Starbase #BocaChica #Texas #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

SpaceX Starship: Preparing for Ninth Flight Test | Starbase Texas

SpaceX Starship: Preparing for Ninth Flight Test | Starbase Texas

Static fire test of Starship at Starbase Texas ahead of Flight Test#9.

SpaceX’s Starship spacecraft and Super Heavy rocket—collectively referred to as Starship—represent a fully reusable transportation system designed to carry both crew and cargo to Earth orbit, the Moon, Mars and beyond. Starship is 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):


Video Credit: Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX)
Duration: 1 minute
Release Date: May 13, 2025

#NASA #SpaceX #Space #Earth #Mars #Moon #MoonToMars #ArtemisProgram #ArtemisIII #Starship #Spacecraft #Starship9 #StarshipTestFlight9 #SuperHeavyBooster #SuperHeavyRocket #Mechazilla #ElonMusk #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #CommercialSpace #SpaceExploration #Starbase #BocaChica #Texas #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

NASA Artemis III Moon Rocket Core Stage: Thermal Protection System Applied

NASA Artemis III Moon Rocket Core Stage: Thermal Protection System Applied

In February 2025, NASA crews from the Michoud Assembly Facility (MAF) and from Boeing, the Space Launch System (SLS) core stage prime contractor, completed the thermal protection system on the external structure of the rocket’s liquid hydrogen propellant fuel tank, using a robotic tool in what is now the largest single application in spaceflight history. MAF is an 832-acre manufacturing complex owned by NASA in New Orleans East, Louisiana.

The robotically controlled operation coated the tank with spray-on foam insulation, distributing 107 feet of the foam to the tank in 102 minutes. When the foam is applied to the core stage, it gives the rocket a canary yellow color. The Sun's ultraviolet rays naturally “tan” the thermal protection, giving the SLS core stage its signature orange color, like the space shuttle external tank. Overall, the rocket’s core stage is 212 feet with a diameter of 27.6 feet, the same diameter as the space shuttle’s external tank. 

The liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen tanks feed four RS-25 engines for approximately 500 seconds. This produces more than two million pounds of thrust to help launch NASA’s Orion spacecraft, astronauts, and supplies beyond Earth’s orbit and to the lunar surface for Artemis. The core stage of SLS is the largest NASA has ever built by length and volume, and it was manufactured at Michoud using state-of-the-art manufacturing equipment. 

Over the course of about 30 days, the Artemis III astronauts will travel to lunar orbit, where two crew members will descend to the surface and spend approximately a week near the South Pole of the Moon conducting new science before returning to lunar orbit to join their crew for the journey back to Earth. Launch is currently scheduled for mid-2027.

Learn more about the Artemis campaign: 
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/artemis/

Follow updates on the Artemis blog: 
https://blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/

NASA's Space Launch System (SLS)
https://www.nasa.gov/sls


Read the Artemis Plan (74-page PDF Free Download): 
https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/artemis_plan-20200921.pdf

NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility (MAF)
https://www.nasa.gov/michoud-assembly-facility/

Video Credit: NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center
Duration: 1 minute
Release Date: May 13, 2025

#NASA #Space #Earth #Moon #Artemis #ArtemisIII #SLS #SLSRocket #CoreStage #LiquidHydrogenTank #LH2Tank #Boeing #ULA #CrewedMissions #DeepSpace #MoonToMars #Science #Engineering #SpaceTechnology #HumanSpaceflight #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #MSFC #MAF #NewOrleans #Louisiana #UnitedStates #STEM #Education 

Arches National Park: A Red Rock Wonderland in Utah | Landsat-8 Earth Satellite

Arches National Park: A Red Rock Wonderland in Utah | Landsat-8 Earth Satellite

Utah’s Arches National Park Landsat-8 Earth satellite image - April 9, 2025
A USGS Landsat-8 satellite image shows Arches National Park from above. Several features including Balanced Rock, Devils Garden, Landscape Arch, The Windows, and Courthouse Towers are labeled. All of these features are made of sandstone and appear as narrow orange features flanked by dark shadows.
This more detailed view shows the Park Avenue and Courthouse Towers section of the park. The 400-foot (122-meter) Queen Victoria Rock and 500-foot Tower of Babel stand out clearly and are labeled.
Park Avenue and Courthouse Towers - 2019 photo
Balanced Rock - NPS/Kait Thomas
Balancing Rock - 2025 photo
Landscape Arch - 2002 photo

Arches National Park is celebrated for its many natural arches, pillars, and windows formed from towering monoliths of red sandstone. The striking rock features, a photographer’s dream, jut from flat, arid landscapes found north of Moab in southeastern Utah. In an area twice the size of Washington, D.C., time, water, and erosion sculpted more than 2,000 sandstone arches, giving this area the highest concentration of rock arches in the world.

Most of these arches—including the iconic Delicate Arch—were chiseled from blocks of Entrada Sandstone, a rock type formed 150 million years ago from dunes within a large coastal desert. Standing as steep cliffs and huge blocks of rock that make up many of the park’s tallest features, the erosion-resistant layer stands out in satellite imagery, appearing as distinct wrinkle-like ridges flanked by dark shadows.

These images were captured by the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Landsat-8 satellite on April 9, 2025 with Entrada Sandstone features visible in several parts of the park.

In the center of this satellite image, shadows cast by Balanced Rock and several arches in the Windows section of the park are also visible. In the upper part of the image, more Entrada Sandstone features jut up in the Devils Garden portion of the park, which is home to Landscape Arch.

Salt Valley, visible as the wide band of gray and orange across the center of the satellite image, exposes rocks from the Paradox Formation, an underlying layer of salt and other evaporites that are among the oldest rocks in the park. In the Salt Valley area, the weight of the overlying rock formations caused these buried evaporites to liquefy and flow at times, squeezing the salt upward into a dome-shaped bulge called a salt anticline. When the protrusion fractured and collapsed, it formed the modern-day valley and exposed some of the evaporites to the surface.

Paradox Formation evaporites also played a key role in the development of the park’s arches. As salt beneath the surface bulged upward into domes, the overlying sandstone fractured into a distinctive pattern of parallel lines, as seen in the Devils Garden area. Over time, erosion of these narrow sandstone walls of rock, or fins, produced windows, hoodoos, and arches. Water is the key ingredient that fuels erosion at Arches, infiltrating cracks, dissolving minerals, and chiseling away at sandstone as it freezes and expands during the winter and melts during the spring.

In 1956 and 1957, the writer Edward Abbey worked as a seasonal ranger in what was then Arches National Monument, living in what he described as “a little tin government house trailer.” The trailer was located near Balanced Rock, a towering boulder of sandstone (below) precariously perched on an eroding pedestal of mudstone. 

During those two years, Abbey immersed himself in the park’s remarkable landscapes. That nature had formed objects as “weird, lovely, and fantastic” as Delicate Arch, he later wrote in Desert Solitaire, “has the curious ability to remind us that—like rock and sunlight and wind and wildflowers—that out there is a different world, older and greater and deeper by far than ours, a world which sustains the little world of man as sea and sky surround and sustain a ship.”



Satellite Image Credit: Michala Garrison/USGS Landsat data
Additional Photos: Michala Garrison (Courthouse Towers), Adam Voiland (Balancing Rock), and Neal Herbert/NPS (Landscape Arch)
Article Credit: Adam Voiland
Satellite Image Date: April 9, 2025
Release Date: May 10, 2025

#NASA #Space #Science #Satellite #Landsat8 #Landsat #Planet #Earth #Geology #Utah #ArchesNationalPark #NPS #ParadoxFormation #EarthObservation #RemoteSensing #Environment #GSFC #USGS #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

Earth's Atmosphere | International Space Station

Earth's Atmosphere | International Space Station

Expedition 73 flight engineer and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Takuya Onishi: "When I look at Earth from the ISS, I’m always overwhelmed by the large-scale circulation of the atmosphere. Recalling the meteorology knowledge I studied during my pilot days, I find it interesting to imagine the movement of the troposphere’s atmosphere, thinking things like (there’s a front forming over there)." 😃

This is Onishi’s second trip to the International Space Station. After being selected as an astronaut by JAXA in 2009, he flew as a flight engineer for Expeditions 48 and 49, becoming the first Japanese astronaut to robotically capture the Cygnus spacecraft. He also constructed a new experimental environment aboard Kibo, the station’s Japanese experiment module. After his first spaceflight, Onishi became certified as a JAXA flight director, leading the team responsible for operating Kibo from JAXA Mission Control in Tsukuba, Japan. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Aeronautics and Astronautics from the University of Tokyo.

JAXA astronaut Mission Specialist Takuya Onishi Biography:
https://humans-in-space.jaxa.jp/en/astronaut/onishi-takuya/


Follow Expedition 73:

Expedition 73 Crew
Station Commander: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) Flight Engineer Takuya Onishi
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: 
Kirill Peskov, Sergey Ryzhikov, Alexey Zubritskiy
NASA Flight Engineers: Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers, Jonny Kim

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: JAXA/T. Onishi
Release Date: May 11, 2025


#NASA #Space #ISS #Science #Earth #Atmosphere #Meteorology #Weather #Astronauts #TakuyaOnishi #Japan #日本 #JAXA #AnneMcClain #NicholeAyers #JonnyKim #UnitedStates #Cosmonauts #Russia #Россия #Roscosmos #Роскосмос #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceLaboratory #InternationalCooperation #JSC #Expedition73 #STEM #Education

New Illustrations of The Milky Way Galaxy from Europe's Gaia Mission Data

New Illustrations of The Milky Way Galaxy from Europe's Gaia Mission Data


Image 1: What does our Milky Way Galaxy look like from the side? Of course, because we are on the inside, humanity cannot obtain an actual picture. Recently, however, just such a map has been made using location data for over a billion stars from the European Space Agency’s Gaia Mission. The resulting illustration shows that just like many other spiral galaxies, our Milky Way has a very thin central disk. Our Sun and all the stars we see at night are in this disk. Although hypothesized before, perhaps more surprising is that the disk appears curved at the outer edges. The colors of our Galaxy's warped central band derive mostly from dark dust, bright blue stars, and red emission nebulas. Although data analysis is ongoing, Gaia was deactivated in March 2025 after a successful mission.

Image 2: This illustration shows that just like many other spiral galaxies, our Milky Way has distinct spiral arms. Our Sun and most of the bright stars we see at night are in just one arm: Orion. Gaia data bolsters previous indications that our Milky Way has more than two spiral arms. Our Galaxy's center sports a prominent bar. The colors of our Galaxy's thin disk derive mostly from dark dust, bright blue stars, and red emission nebula.

Learn more about ESA's Gaia Mission:

Illustration Credit: ESA, Gaia, DPAC, Stefan Payne-Wardenaar
Stefan Payne-Wardenaar's website: https://bsky.app/profile/stefanpw.bsky.social
Release Dates: May 12-13, 2025

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Rocket Launch Dazzles Visitors at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona

Rocket Launch Dazzles Visitors at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lights up the sky as seen in this image taken last summer from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO), a Program of NSF NOIRLab, near Tucson, Arizona. Although the rocket lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base about 890 kilometers (550 miles) away in California, the recently set Sun lit up the rocket’s exhaust plume for miles as the plume dramatically expanded in Earth’s upper atmosphere.

With 23 optical and two radio telescopes, Kitt Peak National Observatory is the largest, most diverse gathering of astronomical instruments in the northern hemisphere. The observatory is located in Arizona’s Quinlan mountains in the Schuk Toak District on the Tohono O'odham Nation. In the foreground of this image is the 0.9-meter SARA Kitt Peak Telescope operated by the Southeastern Association for Research in Astronomy (SARA). KPNO offers daytime and nighttime public tours where visitors can explore facilities, observe through telescopes, and even stay all night to image deep-sky objects under clear, dark skies.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is used, among other things, to put Starlink satellites in orbit around Earth. These satellites provide Internet connectivity to remote areas, but also have the unfortunate effect of adding to the light pollution at night. NOIRLab is actively engaged with industry to mitigate the effects of this light pollution. 

Rob Sparks, the photographer, is a NOIRLab Audiovisual Ambassador.

Learn more about KPNO:
https://kpno.noirlab.edu/


Credit: KPNO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/R. Sparks
Release Date: May 7, 2025

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #SpaceX #Falcon9Rocket #Falcon9Launch #Starlink #Satellites #LightPollution #DarkSkies #KPNO #KittPeakNationalObservatory #Arizona #NOIRLab #NSF #AURA #Astrophotographer #RobSparks #CitizenScience #STEM #Education