All's not as it appears, this tale has many twists -
but if I wasn't here documenting the story
would that mean that the plot did not exist?

— Peter Hammill

Universe Today

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Space and Astronomy News from Universe Today
Updated: 7 hours 41 min ago

The Risk of Stellar Flybys and GJ 710

Tue, 05/26/2026 - 10:12am

In a stellar flyby, a star approaches our Solar System close enough to create gravitational mayhem. The last one was 70,000 years ago. There are more in the future, and it's possible that they could disrupt comets from the Oort Cloud and send them into the inner Solar System, with the risk of catastrophic impact.

Categories: Astronomy

How Mars Can Help Us Understand 'Marginal' Exoplanets

Mon, 05/25/2026 - 5:43pm

We've discovered large numbers of small rocky exoplanets, but they're at such great distances that habitability is extremely difficult to determine. New research suggests than since Mars is on the edge of being habitable, studying it in detail can shed light on rocky exoplanets. If we can understand things like tectonic activity and atmospheric escape on Mars, we can understand how they may play out on rocky exoplanets.

Categories: Astronomy

Ultrahigh-energy Cosmic Rays May Be Ultraheavy in Origin

Mon, 05/25/2026 - 4:28pm

New research led by Penn State scientists suggests that some of the highest-energy cosmic rays may consist of atomic nuclei heavier than iron and could help narrow down the cosmic sources capable of accelerating these particles.

Categories: Astronomy

NASA's Next-Generation AI Processor Passes Early Testing

Mon, 05/25/2026 - 4:28pm

As part of a commercial partnership, NASA is developing a sophisticated chip that will give spacecraft the processing capabilities to think for themselves.

Categories: Astronomy

Early Life on Earth May Have Thrived in Impact Craters

Mon, 05/25/2026 - 2:25pm

A team of South Korean scientists has uncovered new evidence that could help explain how Earth’s atmosphere became rich in oxygen, one of the most transformative events in the planet’s history. Researchers from the Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM) report the finding of stromatolites, layered structures formed by microbial communities, within the Hapcheon impact crater on the Korean Peninsula. While the Hapcheon crater is only about 40,000 years old, it shows how stromatolites got a boost from the heat in impact crater hydrothermal systems.

Categories: Astronomy

A Brief-ish History of SETI. Part VII: Brief Windows and Transcendence

Sun, 05/24/2026 - 7:27pm

Could the "Great Silence" be the result of extraterrestrial civilizations dying out before they can make contact, or will they evolve to the point where communication with them is no longer possible?

Categories: Astronomy

Alien life may be missed by current space missions, but AI might help

Sun, 05/24/2026 - 6:47pm

It’s 2035 and NASA’s Dragonfly quadcopter has been “hopping” around the surface of Saturn’s largest moon Titan for just over a year taking images, scanning pebbles, drilling holes, and analyzing surface material for potential signs of life. You’re at NASA JPL and just moved to Blue Team (12am-8am) from Red Team (4pm-12am), so you’re hyped up on coffee, Red Bull, and will power. It’s 3:30am, you’ve been analyzing data since you clocked in, and you keep discarding what you’ve been told looks like positive signs of life but is more commonly known as false positives. In the meantime, some microbes on Titan that got scanned by Dragonfly keep posing in front of its main camera with signs saying, “We’re here!”

Categories: Astronomy

Mars Fungi Could Make Red Planet Regolith Fertile for Crops

Fri, 05/22/2026 - 10:56pm

You’re on the fourth human mission to Mars, and you’ve been tasked with establishing the first self-sustaining food crop on a Martian settlement. You’re nervous because you’re using a new type of fungi called beneficial fungi, which you’re told will help enhance Martian regolith, enabling it to be used for growing crops. You were privately told that doing this will not only get a high school named after you, but you will successfully feed future settlers without the need to bring food from Earth. But you really only care about having your name on a high school.

Categories: Astronomy