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In this QA episode, I wonder if there could be a galactic panspermia, why I'm always stealing articles from Fraser Cain from Universe Today, and where the Universe came from. Subscribe to our podcasts: Universe Today Guide to Space Audio: iTunes - RSS Astronomy Cast: iTunes - RSS Weekly Space Hangout: iTunes - RSS
Our understanding of exoplanets is growing in leaps and bounds. Not only are astronomers discovering new planets, but they're starting to actually study their atmospheres to understand what they're made of. Astronomers recently announced the analysis of a planet with swirling clouds of iron and silicates.
Astronomy Cory Schmitz from Photographingspace.com was in the right place and the right time to capture an amazing event: an occultation of Saturn behind the Moon. Of course, Cory captured every moment of this event, watching as Saturn passed behind the Moon. You'll want to see all the pictures.
Okay, everyone can stop asking me now. On April 10th, just under a week now, an international team of astronomers will be reporting the science results from the Event Horizon Telescope. That was a worldwide consortium of telescopes that viewed the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way. Prepare yourself, it's going to be a blob, but a scientifically fascinating blob.
The race is on to deliver high-speed internet to every spot on Earth. First SpaceX and now Jeff Bezos' Amazon/Blue Origin has announced plans to build a constellation of internet satellites. Called "Project Kuiper", it'll involve launching 3,236 satellites in low-Earth orbit to provide high speed internet to 95% of the Earth's population. Read the story by Alan Boyle.
It's been a rough month for Boeing, and now it looks like the company's Starliner capsule has slipped in its schedule. Originally expected to launch in April, the first test date has been pushed back to August 2019. And this means that test flights with humans on board probably won't happen until 2020.
The journey to the world's first fully reusable rocket took another step this week with the first hop test of the SpaceX Starhopper prototype. On April 3rd, the rocket fired for 11 seconds, at the SpaceX Boca Chica launch facility, performing a short tethered hop. SpaceX is now hoping to demonstrate a full scale orbital prototype by this summer.
In 2013, NASA's Curiosity rover detected the faint whiff of methane increasing in its location on Mars. Although this could be from natural volcanic emissions, an exciting possibility is that it came from microbial life in the region. And it turns out that Curiosity wasn't alone. ESA's Mars Express spacecraft detected the same spike of methane from space, confirming the event, and providing more evidence that something is generating methane down there on the surface of Mars.
Mission controllers announced on Thursday that the Beresheet lander from Israel was officially in lunar orbit. This is a tremendous accomplishment, the first ever private spacecraft to go into orbit around the Moon. The spacecraft will now go into tighter and tighter orbits until it's ready to attempt a landing.
One of the most exciting experiments going to Mars with the 2020 rover will be the tiny Mars Helicopter, designed to test if it's possible to use flying vehicles in the thin Martian atmosphere. A recent test flight in a simulated Martian environment demonstrated that the helicopter can spin its rotors fast enough to generate lift. When it actually goes to Mars, it'll just do short, 90-second flights, serving as a precursor to future flying missions to Mars.
Last week India announced that they had joined the "we can destroy satellites" club, smashing one of their own satellites with a ground-based missile. Unfortunately, the cloud of debris this caused has sent some chunks into a higher orbit than the International Space Station, which has increased the risks to astronaut safety. Needless to say, NASA wasn't pleased. It's time for that regular reminder that we live in a cosmic shooting gallery. Last December, a spacerock crashed into the Earth's atmosphere, lighting up the skies above the Bering Sea. Nobody saw it happen, but NASA's Terra satellite was flying overhead, and caught the explosion on five of its cameras. It released about half the energy of the recent Chelyabinsk meteor, which crashed into the atmosphere in 2013.
Check out this amazing 3-dimensional scan of asteroid Bennu, captured by NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. The mission has been using its (Canadian-built) Laser Altimeter to make more than 11-million measurements of the distance between it and the spacerock. Some parts haven't been fully mapped yet, which is why there are blank spots in the animation. Other Interesting Space Stuff Time for a photograph of the Milky Way rising over sand dunes in Australia. This photograph was taken by Trevor Dobson, when he was in the Nambung Desert a few hours north of Perth. We have featured nearly 1,000 astrophotographers on our Instagram page, which has more than 164,000 followers. Want to do a takeover? Use the hashtag #universetoday and I'll check out your photos.
Find your way across the night sky. Choose a variety of astronomy gear. Follow the Moon and the planets. Find deep sky objects across the seasons in both hemispheres. Observe comets, asteroids, satellites and space stations. Learn to do astrophotography. Get it on Amazon for only $18.89. Here are some other options. |