James Webb Space Telescope will study Milky Way's monster black hole
James Webb Space Telescope will study Milky Way's monster black hole | Fly over Mercury in this stunning video from BepiColombo's flyby | Space Quiz: The 5-planet alignment in the sky right now is super rare. When will happen again?
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The supermassive black hole dubbed Sagittarius A* (Event Horizon Telescope collaboration)
Astronomers needed a telescope the size of Earth to image the monster black hole at the center of the Milky Way - and next time they tackle the continuing observations, they'll have help from NASA's next-generation observatory in space.
The James Webb Space Telescope, also known as JWST or Webb, launched in December 2021 and is wrapping up preparations to begin observing the universe. Among the tasks scheduled for the new observatory's first year of work is teaming up with the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), the global array of observatories that published the first-ever photo of a black hole in April 2019.
A new video released by the European Space Agency on June 27 shows the crater-riddled surface of the solar system's smallest planet Mercury as captured during a super close flyby of the BepiColombo spacecraft.
After months of delays, NASA's next mission to the moon is finally ready to launch. Early Tuesday (June 28), Rocket Lab will launch NASA's small CAPSTONE cubesat to the moon from New Zealand on an Electron booster and you can watch it live online. Liftoff is at 5:55 a.m. EDT (0955 GMT), with NASA's broadcast beginning in the window above at 5 a.m. EDT (0900 GMT).
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Early Tuesday, Neptune will enter retrograde whereby the planet's eastward movement across the night sky stops and its westward movement begins.
After Tuesday, Neptune "will commence a westward retrograde loop that will last until early December," writes geophysicist Chris Vaughan, amateur astronomer with SkySafari Software who oversees Space.com's Night Sky calendar.
Alien rocky worlds cocooned in hydrogen and helium could prove habitable to life as we know it for billions of years, with key features such as temperate conditions and liquid water, a new study finds.
On Earth, there is life virtually wherever there is water. As such, the search for extraterrestrial life has often focused on worlds whose surfaces are temperate enough to host liquid water, which astronomers dub as habitable. Aside from this prerequisite, scientists remain uncertain to what extent exoplanets have to resemble Earth in order to support life.
A solar-sailing mission is now marking three years of spaceflight, but is unlikely to celebrate a fourth anniversary.
The Planetary Society's LightSail 2 is a crowdfunded solar sail that launched June 25, 2019. It was expected to last a year in an assessment of how well a spacecraft could perform using only the power of the sun.
The signal was picked up by the Five Hundred Meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST), located in southwest China's Guizhou Province (Jeff Dai (TWAN) / NASA)
An article reporting the signal was posted on the website of China's state-backed Science and Technology Daily newspaper, but was later removed.(opens in new tab) So have astronomers finally found evidence of intelligent found life beyond Earth? And is it being hushed up?
We should be intrigued, but not too excited (yet). An interesting signal has to go through a lot of tests to check whether it truly carries the signature of extraterrestrial technology or is just the result of an unexpected source of terrestrial interference.
The Celestron Advanced VX 8-inch EdgeHD is a versatile telescope system for intermediate to advanced amateur astronomers, but still small and lightweight enough to transport easily for observing out in the country. The 8-inch aperture is enough to view and photograph all types of celestial objects, and the computerized equatorial mount makes it easy to find and track them.
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