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NASA provides update on Artemis II mission

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Scientific American · 12h
NASA’s Artemis moon missions are a game changer for astronomy
After decades of planning, NASA’s Artemis program is giving astronomers their long-awaited moonshot

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 · 1d · on MSN
NASA releases new images from Artemis II mission as crew heads home
 · 1d · on MSN
The new photos of the moon from NASA's Artemis II mission are unbelievable
 · 1d
Artemis II astronauts head back to Earth
The Orion spacecraft reached its maximum distance of nearly four- hundred- and- seven- thousand kilometres from the home planet - a new record for the furthest distance travelled by humans in space.

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 · 1d
Artemis II astronauts break records and take in unprecedented views in historic moon flyby
 · 11h
NASA shares photo of Milky Way captured by Artemis II
 · 1d
Artemis II astronauts make first-ever moonship-to-spaceship call
The highlight: an Earthset photo reminiscent of Apollo 8's Earthrise shot from 1968.

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 · 1d
NASA’s Artemis II mission sets stage for 2028 moon landing
 · 20h
NASA shares photos from Artemis II mission
8h

Student research on coronal holes improves space weather forecasting

Fast solar winds originating from the sun can have direct impacts on Earth—disrupting systems like GPS, aviation, electrical grids, and satellite and radio communications. A new paper by New Mexico State University astronomy graduate student Khagendra Katuwal examines the connection between coronal holes and solar wind streams,
NPR
1y

Why Astronomy 101 is 'perfect' for teaching climate change

Introduction to Astronomy is a college class usually filled with excitement and a lot of questions about outer space. Questions like: What are black holes? Are there planets out there that are habitable? Why is Venus's climate so different from Earth's ...
8d

April 2026 Astronomy: What's in the North Texas sky this month?

Look up in April 2026 for Venus and Jupiter, the Lyrids peak, zodiacal light after the new moon, and a short window to catch a planet parade.
2don MSN

Astronomers thought the early universe was full of hydrogen: Now they've found it

The Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment (HETDEX) has discovered tens of thousands of gigantic hydrogen gas halos, called "Lyman-alpha nebulae," surrounding galaxies 10 billion to 12 billion years ago.
UVA Today
6mon

Astronomy students travel the world to peer deep into space

Have telescope, will travel, sometimes really far. The University of Virginia Occultation Group, astronomy undergraduates who observe and track asteroids and small planets, make most of their observations locally. But they also travel around the country ...
The News-Herald
2d

Geauga Park District to offer online programs on astronomy

Nat” Chris Mentrek invites anyone interested in astronomy to sign up and log on for his free virtual programs this spring. This season’s virtual programs are: “Black Holes” on
SETI Institute
4h

Middlesex Community College Collaborates with SETI Institute on ARISE Labs

Middlesex Community College is working with the SETI Institute to allow students to participate in the ARISE Labs. Through this collaboration, students in MCC Professor of Physics Madhu Dhar’s astronomy class gain access to live digital data from the Allen Telescope Array (ATA).
Astronomy
5mon

REVIEW: Player One Astronomy’s Zeus camera

One day, while I was looking at the credits for an attractive image on AstroBin, I noticed the camera listed was “Player One.” I wondered who that company was. As time went by, I saw similar credits for other images. Something was going on and I wanted ...
Outside
1y

How Backyard Astronomy Helped Me Deal With Stress—and Can Help You, Too

I never expected to destress from double-postponing my wedding by staring into space, yet there I was, spying on the heavens from my backyard in light-polluted Cleveland for the umpteenth night in a row. “That one’s Jupiter,” I whispered to my dog ...
YouTube on MSN
6d

Astronomy’s unsung hero is a plain ol’ aluminum ball

Description: In 1965, MIT's Lincoln Laboratory saw their Lincoln Calibration Sphere 1 (LCS-1) launched into Earth orbit. It was an empty aluminum sphere and couldn't do any science of its own. But the world's most boring disco ball has played a huge support role in astronomy,
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