Space

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

More Stories in Space

  1. Space

    Space junk falls back to Earth faster as sunspot numbers climb

    A new study links the sun's 11-year cycle to accelerated orbital loss, with debris falling faster once sunspot numbers near their cycle peak.

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  2. Planetary Science

    A small object past Pluto may have a thin atmosphere

    A brief stellar eclipse suggests the tiny 2002 XV93 has a thin atmosphere — a first for any solar system body farther from the sun than Pluto.

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  3. Planetary Science

    Uranus has weird rings. Astronomers now know the source of two of them

    The Nu ring seems to be fed by unknown rocky bodies, whereas the Mu ring appears rich in water ice and linked to the moon Mab.

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  4. Astronomy

    The earliest evidence of the first stars may lie in a distant gas clump

    James Webb data reveal pristine gas irradiated by energetic light some 450 million years after the Big Bang — a sign it may house primordial stars.

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  5. Astronomy

    Clouds of water ice thread stellar nurseries in the Milky Way

    NASA’s SPHEREx mapped water ice across vast regions of the galaxy, confirming that an essential molecule for life on Earth abounds in space.

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  6. Space

    Artemis II ends its historic lunar journey

    After looping around the moon, the Artemis II crew — and their capsule’s heat shield — passed the mission’s final major test: coming home.

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  7. Cosmology

    Exploding black holes could explain an antimatter mystery

    Shock waves from tiny black holes in the early universe could explain how antimatter became so rare while matter is common.

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  8. Space

    Even before splashdown, Artemis II is delivering a scientific treasure trove

    The Artemis II moon flyby may be over, but the hunt for scientific treasures in the trove of data collected is just starting.

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  9. Space

    The first-ever ‘Earthset’ image marks another Artemis II milestone

    As NASA’s Orion spacecraft slipped behind the farside of the moon, the astronauts captured the crescent of Earth setting over the moon’s horizon.

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