The Automated Daily - Space News Edition

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  1. SMILE opens global magnetosphere imaging & Starlink adds 24 satellites - Space News (May 20, 2026)

    1일 전

    SMILE opens global magnetosphere imaging & Starlink adds 24 satellites - Space News (May 20, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily - Invest Like the Pros with StockMVP - https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: SMILE opens global magnetosphere imaging - ESA and the Chinese Academy of Sciences launched SMILE on Vega-C to deliver the first time-resolved, panoramic soft X-ray images of Earth’s dayside magnetosphere. The mission pairs global imaging with in-situ plasma and magnetic-field measurements to sharpen space-weather science and forecasting. Starlink adds 24 satellites - SpaceX launched another batch of Starlink satellites from Vandenberg, continuing 2026’s rapid deployment cadence and expanding an already multi-thousand-spacecraft broadband network. The steady buildout highlights both the capability of reusable launch operations and the growing debate over megaconstellation sustainability. Starship Flight 12 slips again - SpaceX’s Starship Flight 12, the first mission of the upgraded V3 configuration and the debut of Starbase Pad 2, slipped to no earlier than 21 May 2026. The shifting date underscores the reality of test-flight development for super-heavy launch systems central to future Moon and Mars plans. Vast delays Haven-1 to 2027 - Commercial station developer Vast pushed Haven-1’s first launch from 2026 to no earlier than Q1 2027, with first crew potentially later still. The delay reflects the difficulty of building private orbital habitats as NASA and industry plan for a post-ISS low Earth orbit economy. Minor R1 radio blackouts - NOAA tracked minor R1-level radio blackout conditions driven by solar activity, a reminder that even modest space weather can affect HF communications and satellite operations. SMILE’s new magnetosphere views are designed to help connect solar-wind inputs to Earth’s real-time geospace response. Episode Transcript SMILE opens global magnetosphere imaging First up, a major step for space-weather science: SMILE, the Solar wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer, successfully launched on 19 May 2026. It’s a joint European Space Agency and Chinese Academy of Sciences mission that rode a Vega‑C rocket from Kourou, reached its intended high-Earth orbit, deployed solar arrays, and confirmed stable early operations. The mission’s big promise is something magnetospheric researchers have wanted for decades: global, time-resolved images of Earth’s dayside boundaries—especially the magnetopause—using soft X‑ray emissions produced when solar-wind ions swap charge with neutral atoms around Earth. SMILE pairs that Soft X‑ray Imager with a UV auroral imager plus in-situ instruments—an ion analyzer and a magnetometer—so scientists can tie panoramic views to local plasma and magnetic-field conditions and, over time, improve the models used to anticipate geomagnetic impacts on technology. Starlink adds 24 satellites Next, SpaceX kept the pressure on the launch cadence with another Starlink deployment from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The mission lofted 24 broadband satellites into low Earth orbit, continuing a year where Starlink flights have become routine and the total population in orbit has climbed into the many thousands. Strategically, Vandenberg enables higher-inclination routes that help fill out coverage at higher latitudes, while continued upgrades—like broader use of inter-satellite laser links—push Starlink from a simple relay system toward a more capable orbital network. At the same time, the scale of these deployments keeps the spotlight on collision-avoidance requirements, debris risk, spectrum management, and the unresolved question of how global rules should adapt to megaconstellations. Starship Flight 12 slips again Now to Starship: SpaceX’s twelfth Starship test flight, Flight 12, slipped again within this reporting window and is now scheduled no earlier than Thursday evening, 21 May 2026. The key reason the flight is drawing attention isn’t just the schedule churn—it’s the hardware. This is expected to be the first outing of the substantially upgraded V3 configuration for both stages, and it’s also slated to mark the debut of Starbase Pad 2. Even if the mission remains uncrewed and primarily a data-gathering test, its performance will be read as a signal for how quickly Starship can transition from experimental flights toward repeatable operations, which matters for everything from high-mass commercial payloads to NASA’s Artemis architecture that relies on a Starship-derived lunar lander. Vast delays Haven-1 to 2027 In low Earth orbit habitats, Vast revised the timeline for its first commercial station, Haven‑1. The company has delayed the launch to no earlier than the first quarter of 2027, and it could be longer before the outpost hosts its first crew. That shift is significant because Haven‑1 has been framed as a potential “first” in the emerging commercial station era, but it also reflects a broader reality: designing, certifying, integrating, and financing a private station is hard, especially as the market is still forming and government demand is being reshaped. In parallel, NASA’s post‑ISS planning continues to evolve, including discussions of transition strategies that could blend NASA-owned elements with commercially provided modules to seed future free-flying stations while maintaining continuity of research and operations. Minor R1 radio blackouts Finally, space weather provided a timely backdrop. NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center tracked minor R1-level radio blackout conditions, the kind of event that can degrade high-frequency communications on Earth’s sunlit side and serve as a real-world test for forecasting pipelines. Even weak events matter operationally: they can complicate communications, shift ionospheric behavior, and contribute to drag variability for low-orbit spacecraft—an issue that scales with the number of satellites sharing the environment. SMILE’s arrival is well-timed in that context, because its global images of magnetospheric boundaries and auroral response are designed to fill a major observational gap between upstream solar-wind monitors and the actual, system-level way Earth’s magnetosphere reacts. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English * Spotify English * RSS English Spanish French - Top news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - Tech news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish Spanish * RSS English Spanish French - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - AI news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube LinkedIn X (Twitter)

    5분
  2. New circumbinary planets from TESS & Starship V3 Flight 12 slips - Space News (May 19, 2026)

    2일 전

    New circumbinary planets from TESS & Starship V3 Flight 12 slips - Space News (May 19, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: New circumbinary planets from TESS - Astronomers report 27 new circumbinary planet candidates using a purpose-built TESS data-mining method that can handle non-periodic transits in eclipsing binaries. If confirmed, the find could more than double the known population of “two-sun” worlds and reshape exoplanet demographics. Starship V3 Flight 12 slips - SpaceX’s first upgraded Starship V3 test, Flight 12, has moved to a no-earlier-than May 21 window as final readiness and coordination continue. The delay highlights the difficulty—and potential payoff—of achieving fully reusable super-heavy launch capability. Quiet Sun, low blackout risk - NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center says solar activity is currently low, with only minor R1 radio-blackout potential in the near-term forecast. Even in quiet periods, constant monitoring remains essential as satellite fleets and space-based services keep growing. Roman to weigh neutron stars - Studies suggest NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope could discover and measure masses of otherwise invisible isolated neutron stars via microlensing. Roman’s precise photometry and astrometry may turn gravitational lensing into a large-scale census of compact objects. JWST, Mars, and LEO shifts - A rapid-fire set of updates spans JWST discoveries of dusty early galaxies and extreme black holes, surprising corundum “ruby and sapphire” grains detected by Perseverance on Mars, and big strategic shifts in low-Earth orbit—from ISS cargo science to Artemis III’s redesigned docking-focused mission and the push toward commercial stations. Episode Transcript New circumbinary planets from TESS Astronomers have identified twenty-seven new candidate circumbinary planets—worlds that orbit two stars—using a new semi-automated search pipeline applied to NASA’s TESS data. The method, designed specifically for eclipsing binary systems, first models and subtracts the deep binary eclipses, then searches for transit-like dips without requiring strict periodicity, which is crucial because circumbinary transits can shift in timing and depth as orbits precess. If follow-up observations confirm most of these candidates, the known sample of circumbinary planets would more than double, turning a rare category into a statistically meaningful population and forcing planet-formation models to better account for the complex disks and gravitational dynamics around binary stars. Starship V3 Flight 12 slips On the launch side, SpaceX’s Starship Flight 12—set to be the first test of the upgraded Starship V3 configuration—has slipped again, now targeting no earlier than May 21. The plan remains a suborbital-style mission: the Ship aims for a partial lap of Earth with splashdown in the Indian Ocean, while the Super Heavy booster attempts a controlled descent into the Gulf of Mexico, and the flight is also tied to validating a newly prepared Pad 2 at Starbase. These short, repeated delays are typical of new-hardware campaigns, but the stakes are especially high here, because Starship’s promised combination of super-heavy lift and rapid reusability underpins everything from future lunar landers to large next-generation commercial space station modules. Quiet Sun, low blackout risk Space weather is comparatively calm right now. NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center reports low solar activity with a quiet-looking solar disk and only minor R1-level radio-blackout risk—effects that are usually weak and brief on the sunlit side of Earth. For satellite operators and power-grid managers, that’s welcome breathing room, but it’s also a reminder that the operational dependence on space-based infrastructure keeps rising, so forecasting and monitoring have to be robust even when the Sun is behaving. Investments in space communications and monitoring capacity, including ongoing upgrades to ground infrastructure, matter most when conditions swing back toward stronger storms later in the solar cycle. Roman to weigh neutron stars Looking ahead, NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope could help solve a long-standing census problem: finding isolated neutron stars that emit little or no detectable light. New work suggests Roman’s microlensing survey—watching background stars brighten and subtly shift position as a foreground object passes—could detect and even measure the masses of dozens of these hidden remnants. Roman’s advantage is that it’s designed to capture both the photometric brightening and the tiny astrometric displacement with high precision, letting researchers infer lens masses and distances. If it works as projected, Roman would deliver a new, gravity-selected sample of compact objects and sharpen constraints on dense-matter physics that are otherwise hard to test. JWST, Mars, and LEO shifts In another “invisible physics” storyline, researchers are exploring whether gravitational waves can carry signatures of dark matter environments. By comparing waveform predictions for black hole mergers in vacuum versus mergers embedded in dense dark matter, one analysis of events from LIGO–Virgo–KAGRA’s first observing runs found that most signals match vacuum expectations—but one event, GW190728, showed a statistical preference for a dark-matter-influenced model. It’s not a detection, and the authors stress uncertainties, but it sketches a practical framework: as catalogs grow and models improve, gravitational waves could become a probe of where dense dark matter structures might exist around compact-object systems. Story 6 Across the broader astronomy beat, JWST and ALMA observations continue to reshape galaxy evolution stories, including evidence for faint, dusty star-forming galaxies very early in cosmic time—potential ‘missing links’ between extreme starbursts and later quiescent galaxies. JWST is also helping characterize unusually extreme black hole systems, including reports of an ultramassive black hole pair whose combined mass estimate reaches tens of billions of Suns, consistent with dramatic ‘core scouring’ in a post-merger galaxy center. Together, these results push on a central question: how quickly massive structures—dusty galaxies and enormous black holes—can assemble in the universe’s first chapters. Story 7 Planetary science delivered a striking mineralogical twist on Mars: Perseverance has detected tiny corundum grains—minerals that form rubies and sapphires on Earth—within rocks near Jezero Crater, using SuperCam’s spectroscopy and luminescence measurements. The leading idea is that meteorite impacts may have created the high-pressure, high-temperature conditions needed to form corundum on a planet without Earth-like plate tectonics, adding a shock-process layer to Jezero’s history alongside water-driven geology. Meanwhile, in the Saturn system, simulations continue to build a dramatic hypothesis that Titan may have been reshaped by a relatively recent giant impact involving a now-lost moon, potentially linked to the youthfulness inferred for Saturn’s rings—an idea still under scrutiny but emblematic of how dynamic moon systems can be. Story 8 Finally, low-Earth orbit operations and strategy keep evolving. The ISS remains busy: a recent SpaceX cargo delivery brought thousands of pounds of supplies and experiments, including studies of microgravity simulation fidelity, biomedical investigations, and instruments to better understand charged particles in near-Earth space. Beyond the station, NASA’s Artemis planning is shifting too, with Artemis III described as an Earth-orbit-focused rendezvous and docking demonstration with commercial lander elements rather than a first landing attempt—an effort to de-risk key integration steps before pushing back to the lunar surface. And looming over it all is the post-ISS transition: proposals for commercial stations, and even ideas involving a NASA-owned core module strategy, are being debated as policymakers and companies try to ensure research continuity and a viable market once the ISS era ends. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English * Spotify English * RSS English Spanish French - Top news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - Tech news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish Spanish * RSS English Spanish French - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - AI news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube LinkedIn X (Twitter)

    7분
  3. Asteroid 2026 JH2 Close Approach & SpaceX CRS-34 ISS Docking - Space News (May 18, 2026)

    2일 전

    Asteroid 2026 JH2 Close Approach & SpaceX CRS-34 ISS Docking - Space News (May 18, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: Asteroid 2026 JH2 Close Approach - Asteroid 2026 JH2 passes extremely close to Earth at 91,000 km distance, discovered just eight days ago, raising awareness about near-Earth objects monitoring. SpaceX CRS-34 ISS Docking - SpaceX Dragon spacecraft successfully docks with International Space Station carrying 6,500 pounds of scientific experiments including bone scaffold research and planetary formation studies. Moon Venus Conjunction Tonight - Closest Moon-Venus conjunction of 2026 visible tonight, creating a striking celestial pairing in western sky after sunset, best viewing opportunity of evening apparition. SMILE Mission Launch Tomorrow - ESA-China SMILE mission launches tomorrow to study solar wind-magnetosphere interactions, first major joint space mission between European and Chinese space agencies. Starship Version 3 Debut - SpaceX prepares for Starship Version 3 debut with significant redesigns, aiming to demonstrate full and rapid reuse capabilities for future lunar missions. Episode Transcript Asteroid 2026 JH2 Close Approach Starting with today's most attention-grabbing story: Asteroid 2026 JH2, recently dubbed 'Death Rock' in some media circles, is making an extremely close approach to Earth today. Discovered just eight days ago on May 10th, this space rock measuring between 50 and 115 feet across will pass within 91,000 kilometers of our planet—closer than many communication satellites orbit. While NASA confirms there's no collision risk, the proximity has scientists closely monitoring its trajectory. What makes this particularly noteworthy is how quickly it was detected after entering our observational range, highlighting both the capabilities and limitations of our planetary defense systems. This event serves as a timely reminder of why continued investment in near-Earth object tracking remains crucial for planetary safety. SpaceX CRS-34 ISS Docking In International Space Station news, SpaceX's CRS-34 cargo mission successfully docked with the orbital laboratory yesterday morning at approximately 6:37 a.m. Eastern Time. The Dragon spacecraft, which launched from Cape Canaveral on Friday evening, delivered about 6,500 pounds of scientific experiments and crew supplies. Among the payload are several noteworthy investigations: a bone scaffold made from wood that could lead to new osteoporosis treatments, an instrument studying charged particles that affect power grids and satellites, and research that may provide fundamental insights into planetary formation. The spacecraft will remain attached to the station until mid-June before returning to Earth with time-sensitive research samples. This mission marks another successful chapter in the ongoing partnership between NASA and commercial space providers for maintaining continuous scientific operations in low Earth orbit. Moon Venus Conjunction Tonight Skywatchers have a special treat tonight as the Moon and Venus put on their closest conjunction of this evening apparition. About an hour after sunset, look toward the western horizon to spot the brilliant planet Venus positioned just 2.4 degrees to the lower left of the thin crescent Moon. This celestial pairing creates one of the most striking visual events of the year, easily visible even from urban areas with minimal light pollution. Through binoculars, both objects will fit comfortably in the same field of view, while telescopes will reveal Venus in an 83% illuminated gibbous phase. This conjunction represents the tightest alignment during Venus's current evening appearance, which will continue through early autumn, making tonight the optimal viewing opportunity for this particular orbital configuration. SMILE Mission Launch Tomorrow Tomorrow brings an important international collaboration to the launchpad as the European Space Agency and Chinese Academy of Sciences prepare to launch the SMILE mission aboard a Vega-C rocket from French Guiana. SMILE, which stands for Solar wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer, represents the first time ESA and China have jointly selected, designed, implemented, launched, and operated a space mission. The spacecraft will study how the solar wind interacts with Earth's magnetic environment using innovative X-ray and ultraviolet imaging techniques that previous missions couldn't achieve. Operating from a highly elliptical orbit, SMILE will pass above the North Pole every two days during its three-year mission, providing unprecedented views of our planet's magnetic shield and auroras. This mission is particularly significant as it demonstrates international scientific cooperation in a domain that affects space weather forecasting and satellite protection worldwide. Starship Version 3 Debut Also launching tomorrow is SpaceX's highly anticipated Starship Flight 12, which marks the debut of what's being called Starship Version 3. This mission represents significant advancements over previous iterations, featuring redesigned components throughout both the Starship upper stage and Super Heavy booster that incorporate lessons learned from years of development and testing. The primary goal is demonstrating full and rapid reuse capabilities, with both stages featuring substantial modifications aimed at making the system more efficient and reliable. While SpaceX won't attempt to catch either stage during this flight test, the mission will include deploying 22 Starlink satellites, with the last two designed to scan and transmit imagery of Starship's heat shield. This version is critical for NASA's lunar ambitions, as it will eventually need to demonstrate propellant transfer capabilities required for future Artemis missions to the Moon. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English * Spotify English * RSS English Spanish French - Top news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - Tech news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish Spanish * RSS English Spanish French - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - AI news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube LinkedIn X (Twitter)

    5분
  4. Roman telescope hunts invisible neutron stars & Hubble spots galaxy mid-transformation - Space News (May 17, 2026)

    4일 전

    Roman telescope hunts invisible neutron stars & Hubble spots galaxy mid-transformation - Space News (May 17, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad - Invest Like the Pros with StockMVP - https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: Roman telescope hunts invisible neutron stars - A new study shows NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope could uncover a vast hidden population of isolated neutron stars using gravitational microlensing, offering the first large-scale census of these dark stellar remnants and precise mass measurements. Keywords: Roman Space Telescope, neutron stars, microlensing, stellar remnants, Milky Way. Hubble spots galaxy mid-transformation - Fresh Hubble observations of the galaxy NGC 1266 reveal a rare post-starburst system where a central black hole appears to be shutting down star formation, catching a galaxy in the act of transforming from blue and star-forming to red and quiescent. Keywords: Hubble Space Telescope, NGC 1266, galaxy evolution, black hole feedback, post-starburst. SpaceX Dragon CRS-34 docks with ISS - SpaceX's uncrewed Dragon cargo ship on the CRS-34 mission has arrived at the International Space Station with about 6,500 pounds of supplies and experiments, reinforcing the station's role as an orbiting laboratory for biology, materials science, and space weather research. Keywords: SpaceX Dragon, CRS-34, International Space Station, cargo resupply, microgravity experiments. Episode Transcript Roman telescope hunts invisible neutron stars Our first story stays in our own Milky Way, but focuses on some of the most elusive objects it contains. Neutron stars are the ultra-dense corpses left behind when massive stars explode, but most of them are practically invisible: they don’t beam radio waves toward us like pulsars, and they don’t actively feed on a companion star, so there’s almost no light to give them away. A new study out this weekend looks ahead to NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and concludes that Roman could change that picture by detecting dozens of these otherwise hidden neutron stars through their gravity alone. The key idea is gravitational microlensing, where a massive compact object drifts in front of a background star and briefly bends and magnifies its light. Astronomers already use photometric microlensing, essentially watching for a temporary brightening of a star, to discover planets, black holes, and other dark objects. What Roman brings to the table is a combination of extremely precise brightness measurements and extremely precise position measurements for millions of stars toward the crowded center of the Milky Way. The simulations behind this new work suggest that, as a heavy lens passes in front of a background star, Roman will not only see the star brighten but also watch its apparent position shift ever so slightly on the sky. Because neutron stars are much more massive than things like rogue planets or brown dwarfs, they produce a larger positional wobble, and that allows their mass to be measured rather than just inferred. This matters for a couple of reasons. First, astronomers know from theory and from supernova rates that the galaxy should be littered with hundreds of millions of neutron stars, but only a small fraction have been detected as pulsars or X-ray sources. If Roman can systematically pick up the gravitational fingerprints of isolated neutron stars, it would give us the first real census of these dark remnants and let us ask whether our models of how massive stars live and die are actually right. Second, the masses that Roman measures will test where the boundary lies between the heaviest possible neutron star and the lightest possible black hole. Right now that "mass gap" is surprisingly murky; seeing whether nature fills it in, or leaves it empty, tells us something fundamental about the physics of matter under extreme pressure and about how different kinds of stellar explosions proceed. The same microlensing techniques Roman will use for neutron stars will also apply to other invisible populations, from free-floating planets to dead stellar cores wandering far from where they were born. So this is one of those stories where the telescope hasn’t even launched yet, but careful planning and simulation are already revealing what kinds of discoveries we can expect. If the predictions hold up, within a few years of operations Roman could give us a much sharper, and much stranger, picture of the hidden skeleton of the Milky Way. Hubble spots galaxy mid-transformation From hidden stellar corpses to a galaxy caught in the act of changing its entire identity, our next story zooms out to the wider universe. Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have released new observations of NGC 1266, a lenticular galaxy about 100 million light-years away in the constellation Eridanus. Lenticular galaxies are often described as an intermediate class between spirals and ellipticals: they have a disk like a spiral but lack prominent spiral arms, and they tend to be much poorer in cold gas and young stars. What makes NGC 1266 special is that it appears to be in the middle of a rare and rapid transformation from an active, star-forming galaxy into a much more quiescent system. Earlier work had already suggested that NGC 1266 went through a burst of intense star formation that shut down roughly half a billion years ago, leaving behind unusually dense gas in its center and signs of powerful outflows. The newly highlighted Hubble views, together with data at other wavelengths, sharpen that picture: the galaxy shows clear evidence of a buried active galactic nucleus, a supermassive black hole that is accreting material and driving gas out of the regions where stars would otherwise form. You can think of it as a central engine that is both feeding and dieting at the same time, consuming some gas while flinging the rest back out. The result is that the fuel supply for new stars is being cut off, and the galaxy is quickly moving from the blue, star-forming population to the red, "retired" population. Catching a galaxy in this brief state is scientifically valuable because the transition is thought to happen relatively fast compared to a galaxy’s lifetime. Simulations of galaxy evolution often rely on feedback from black holes to explain why we see so many massive galaxies that are no longer forming stars. But it’s rare to find nearby systems where that feedback can be studied in detail as it operates. NGC 1266 offers exactly that: a close-up laboratory for how a central black hole can reshape a galaxy’s gas, shut down star formation, and nudge the system along the evolutionary path from spiral to lenticular to fully elliptical. It also underscores just how interconnected these scales are. A region only a few light-years across at the very center of a galaxy, where the black hole lives, can influence gas that stretches thousands of light-years through the disk. The new Hubble imagery and supporting observations do not just make for a pretty picture; they provide constraints on the speeds, directions, and compositions of outflowing material. Those can be fed back into models of galaxy growth, helping to answer questions about why the universe today looks the way it does, with its mix of vibrant star-forming galaxies and massive, red-and-dead giants. In short, NGC 1266 is a snapshot of galactic middle age in fast forward, and Hubble is giving us front-row seats. SpaceX Dragon CRS-34 docks with ISS For our final story, we come much closer to home, to a spacecraft arrival in Earth orbit that is very much a today event. NASA and SpaceX’s 34th Commercial Resupply Services mission, known as CRS-34, is in the process of bringing a fresh Dragon cargo ship into port at the International Space Station. The Falcon 9 rocket carrying Dragon lifted off from Cape Canaveral on the evening of May 15th, after a weather delay earlier in the week, sending up roughly 6,500 pounds of science experiments, crew supplies, and station hardware. After a couple of days chasing the orbiting complex, Dragon is scheduled to complete its autonomous rendezvous and docking this morning, latching on to the forward port of the Harmony module. On the surface, another cargo ship to the ISS might sound routine, but the contents of this particular Dragon highlight how the station continues to serve as a unique microgravity laboratory. Among the investigations on board is an experiment using a bone scaffold made from wood, which could open up new approaches to treating conditions like osteoporosis by studying how bone-like structures respond to weightlessness. Another payload is designed to examine how red blood cells and the spleen change in space, work that feeds directly into understanding long-term human health on missions to the Moon and Mars. There is also hardware aimed at evaluating how well Earth-based simulators reproduce true microgravity, which matters for everything from astronaut training to the design of future experiments. Beyond biology, CRS-34 is also carrying new instruments to study the space environment around Earth. One will monitor charged particles that can threaten satellites and power grids, giving researchers better data to improve space weather forecasting and understand how the near-Earth radiation environment evolves. Another instrument is set up to take very precise measurements of sunlight reflected by Earth and the Moon. That kind of radiometric data feeds into climate models, helps refine our knowledge of Earth’s energy balance, and even provides useful calibration for other space telescopes watching the cosmos from low Earth orbit. Once berthed, Dragon will remain attached to the station until mid-June. During that time, crew members will unpack the science, swap in fresh

    10분
  5. Roman weighs invisible neutron stars & SpaceX CRS-34 cargo to ISS - Space News (May 16, 2026)

    5일 전

    Roman weighs invisible neutron stars & SpaceX CRS-34 cargo to ISS - Space News (May 16, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: Roman weighs invisible neutron stars - Simulations suggest NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope could detect and “weigh” dozens of isolated neutron stars via gravitational microlensing and astrometric shifts. The results could reveal a hidden Milky Way population and constrain the neutron star–black hole mass gap. SpaceX CRS-34 cargo to ISS - SpaceX successfully launched NASA’s CRS-34 Cargo Dragon mission on a Falcon 9, continuing routine commercial resupply to the International Space Station. The flight delivers thousands of pounds of crew supplies and microgravity experiments, with an autonomous docking planned within days. Psyche Mars flyby gravity assist - NASA’s Psyche spacecraft executed a close Mars gravity assist, stealing orbital energy to refine its trajectory toward the metal-rich asteroid Psyche. During the flyby, Psyche turned its instruments toward Mars for calibration and an operations rehearsal. Asteroid 2026 JH2 close pass - Near-Earth asteroid 2026 JH2 will pass safely inside the Moon’s orbit on May 18, demonstrating modern rapid discovery and orbit refinement. Despite dramatic headlines, the projected trajectory shows zero impact risk, and the object may be observable with modest telescopes. Rubin and DESI survey breakthroughs - The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s early data have already produced more than 11,000 new asteroid discoveries, previewing a major leap in solar-system census capability. Meanwhile, DESI has completed a massive 3D map with tens of millions of galaxy and quasar redshifts, sharpening the next phase of dark-energy studies. Episode Transcript Roman weighs invisible neutron stars First up: a new study argues NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope could finally reveal a large, hidden population of isolated neutron stars—objects that are incredibly dense but often effectively invisible. The key technique is gravitational microlensing: as a compact object passes in front of a background star, it can slightly brighten that star and also shift its apparent position. Roman’s wide-field, high-precision measurements should let astronomers detect and in many cases measure the masses of dozens of these “silent” neutron stars, improving estimates of how many exist in the Milky Way and helping test whether there’s a true mass gap between the biggest neutron stars and the smallest black holes. SpaceX CRS-34 cargo to ISS In low Earth orbit, SpaceX has successfully launched the CRS-34 cargo mission for NASA, keeping the International Space Station’s supply chain moving on schedule. The Falcon 9 carried a reusable Cargo Dragon loaded with thousands of pounds of equipment, crew supplies, and science payloads—including human-health research like bone and blood studies, along with instruments relevant to space weather and Earth observations. With Dragon now en route, the near-term milestone is its automated docking at the station, after which the crew can begin unloading and activating experiments that often run for weeks to months. Psyche Mars flyby gravity assist Farther out, NASA’s Psyche mission has just completed a tight gravity-assist flyby of Mars, a classic interplanetary maneuver that changes a spacecraft’s speed and direction by trading energy with a moving planet. Psyche is headed for an unusual target: a metal-rich asteroid that may resemble an exposed planetary core, and the Mars flyby helps set up the trajectory to reach it efficiently. NASA also used the encounter as a bonus rehearsal—pointing Psyche’s instruments at Mars to test operations, gather calibration data, and verify performance ahead of the mission’s main science phase at the asteroid. Asteroid 2026 JH2 close pass Next, a quick planetary-defense reality check: near-Earth asteroid 2026 JH2 is scheduled to pass well inside the Moon’s orbit on May 18, but it will still miss Earth by a wide margin—about 90,000 kilometers at closest approach, according to reporting cited in the briefing. Estimates place it in the tens-of-meters size range, meaning it’s not the doomsday object some headlines imply, and current orbit solutions show zero impact risk for this flyby. The real takeaway is how quickly modern surveys can spot a new object, compute its trajectory, and communicate a confident forecast days ahead of the close pass. Rubin and DESI survey breakthroughs Finally, today’s stories sit inside a broader surge in survey-driven astronomy. Early Rubin Observatory results have already produced a striking haul of asteroid detections—over eleven thousand new asteroids reported—foreshadowing how quickly the coming era of wide, fast sky coverage will expand the catalog of solar-system bodies, including near-Earth objects. On the cosmic end of the scale, DESI has completed its planned survey work, assembling an enormous 3D map from tens of millions of galaxy and quasar spectra. Together, these projects underline the same theme: high-cadence, data-rich surveys are rapidly turning “unknown unknowns” into measurable populations—whether that’s small rocks near Earth, or the large-scale structure that constrains dark energy. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English * Spotify English * RSS English Spanish French - Top news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - Tech news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish Spanish * RSS English Spanish French - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - AI news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube LinkedIn X (Twitter)

    4분
  6. Psyche Mars gravity assist maneuver & SpaceX CRS-34 ISS resupply launch - Space News (May 15, 2026)

    6일 전

    Psyche Mars gravity assist maneuver & SpaceX CRS-34 ISS resupply launch - Space News (May 15, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad - Lindy is your ultimate AI assistant that proactively manages your inbox - https://try.lindy.ai/tad - Invest Like the Pros with StockMVP - https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: Psyche Mars gravity assist maneuver - NASA's Psyche spacecraft performs a critical gravity assist flyby of Mars today, passing just 4,500 kilometers above the surface to gain speed toward asteroid 16 Psyche for studying planetary formation. SpaceX CRS-34 ISS resupply launch - SpaceX launches its 34th Dragon cargo mission to the International Space Station today at 6:05 PM EDT with 6,500 pounds of experiments and supplies after a weather delay. Asteroid 2026 JH2 close approach - A basketball court-sized asteroid 2026 JH2 will safely pass Earth on May 18th at 90,000 kilometers away, offering stargazers a rare viewing opportunity through small telescopes. SMILE mission magnetosphere research - The joint European-Chinese SMILE mission launches May 19th to study Earth's magnetosphere and solar wind interactions using X-ray and ultraviolet cameras for unprecedented geomagnetic storm understanding. Starship V3 first test flight - SpaceX's new Starship V3 generation megarocket will debut on Flight 12 May 19th with upgraded Raptor 3 engines and autonomous heat shield inspection capabilities. James Webb primitive galaxy discovery - James Webb Space Telescope discovers ultra-faint primitive galaxy LAP1-B from 13 billion years ago, providing rare evidence of the universe's first stars and Population III stellar explosions. May skywatching events calendar - May 2026 offers skywatching highlights including Venus-Moon conjunction May 18th and a rare Blue Moon micromoon on May 31st visible to the naked eye. Episode Transcript Psyche Mars gravity assist maneuver Our top story involves a celestial dance happening as we speak. NASA's Psyche spacecraft is performing a gravity assist maneuver around Mars this very moment. Picture it as a cosmic slingshot. The spacecraft is streaking past Mars at just 4,500 kilometers above the surface—closer than Mars's own moons—to borrow momentum from the planet's orbit. This elegant trick accelerates Psyche without burning precious fuel. The real prize is ahead: asteroid 16 Psyche, a metallic world that might be the exposed iron core of an ancient protoplanet. Understanding its composition could fundamentally change how we think about planetary birth. Beyond the speed boost, the mission team is calibrating instruments and searching for subtle dust rings around Mars, making this a scientifically productive encounter. SpaceX CRS-34 ISS resupply launch Later this evening at 6:05 PM Eastern Time, expect another milestone moment. SpaceX is launching its 34th Commercial Resupply mission to the International Space Station. Weather forced them to scrub the original attempt two days ago, but today's window looks promising. The uncrewed Dragon spacecraft will carry roughly 6,500 pounds of cargo, and here's what makes it noteworthy: among the experiments is a bone scaffold made from wood. Researchers believe microgravity studies of this material could unlock new treatments for osteoporosis and other bone disorders. There's also fresh instrumentation to track charged particles that can disrupt power grids and satellites during space storms. Plus, scientists are studying dust particle collisions to better understand planetary formation. Dragon will rendezvous with the station Sunday morning. Asteroid 2026 JH2 close approach Turning to Monday, May 18th, space enthusiasts have a viewing opportunity. An asteroid called 2026 JH2, discovered just last week, will make a dramatic but completely safe pass by Earth. We're talking about a school bus-sized rock coming within 90,000 kilometers of our planet—roughly a quarter of the Moon's distance. While that might sound terrifyingly close, objects this small would incinerate completely upon atmospheric entry. The asteroid will reach magnitude 11.5, invisible to naked eyes but clearly visible through modest telescopes under dark skies. Multiple astronomy organizations plan livestreams, so you can watch from home. SMILE mission magnetosphere research That same evening on May 18th, look westward after sunset for a stunning natural display. The crescent Moon and planet Venus will appear just 2.4 degrees apart—the closest Venus-Moon pairing of this evening's viewing season. It's genuinely one of the year's finest sky shows. The delicate Moon and brilliant Venus create a striking contrast. Binoculars will show both comfortably in the same view. Starship V3 first test flight May 19th brings a two-launch day. First, the SMILE mission—Solar wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer—lifts off on a European Vega-C rocket. This joint European and Chinese venture will do something never attempted: provide a global view of how Earth's magnetic bubble responds to solar wind bombardment. Using X-ray and ultraviolet imaging, it'll transform our understanding of geomagnetic storms and space weather. Knowledge that directly impacts infrastructure on Earth. James Webb primitive galaxy discovery Also launching May 19th, SpaceX's long-anticipated Starship Flight 12. This marks the debut of Starship V3, featuring upgraded Raptor 3 engines with record-breaking performance. The suborbital flight will do something innovative: deploy 22 dummy satellites, with the final two acting as autonomous inspectors. They'll photograph Starship's heat shield in space, testing techniques for verifying the vehicle's readiness to land at the launch site. It's a practical approach to enabling full vehicle reusability. May skywatching events calendar Deep space news continues to challenge our cosmic understanding. The James Webb Space Telescope discovered a galaxy called LAP1-B that existed just 800 million years after the Big Bang. What's striking is its simplicity. The oxygen abundance is 240 times lower than our Sun. Chemical evidence points to the universe's first stars burning within it—Population III stars, the cosmos's original generation. Separately, Webb found something equally puzzling: a massive early galaxy with no rotation whatsoever. Young galaxies should spin from their formation. Scientists suspect a head-on collision between two galaxies with opposite spins canceled out all rotational motion. These findings are rewriting textbooks. Story 8 Finally, May closes with another celestial curiosity. May 31st brings a Blue Moon—the second full moon in a single calendar month. It's also the year's most distant full moon, appearing slightly smaller than average. A cosmically minor event, but worth noting as you gaze upward. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English * Spotify English * RSS English Spanish French - Top news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - Tech news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish Spanish * RSS English Spanish French - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - AI news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube LinkedIn X (Twitter)

    6분
  7. Mars rover captures western frontier & Mercury disappears behind sun - Space News (May 14, 2026)

    5월 14일

    Mars rover captures western frontier & Mercury disappears behind sun - Space News (May 14, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: Mars rover captures western frontier - NASA's Perseverance rover on Mars transmitted its sixth selfie from Lac de Charmes, capturing stunning views of the western rim of Jezero Crater during its deepest exploration journey west. Mercury disappears behind sun - Mercury reaches superior conjunction today, passing directly behind the sun and becoming invisible from Earth for several weeks as it transitions between morning and evening sky positions. SpaceX cargo launch delayed weather - SpaceX scrubbed the CRS-34 Dragon cargo mission launch scheduled for May 13 due to unfavorable weather, pushing the next attempt to May 15 with approximately 6,500 pounds of supplies destined for the International Space Station. Solar activity triggers aurora forecasts - Solar activity continues at moderate levels with multiple M-class and C-class flares, with forecasters predicting possible G1 minor geomagnetic storms that could produce northern lights activity over the next few days. Pentagon releases UFO investigation files - The Pentagon released previously classified documents detailing investigations into unidentified aerial phenomena and UFO sightings, allowing the public to examine evidence while clarifying that most sightings are eventually explained as weather balloons or aircraft. Moon visible between Mars Saturn - Early morning skywatchers can observe a thin crescent moon positioned between reddish Mars and yellowish Saturn in the pre-dawn eastern sky, creating a rare planetary alignment visible from Earth. Episode Transcript Mars rover captures western frontier First up, that Mars rover selfie we mentioned. On March 11th, Perseverance took a composite image made from 61 separate photographs using a camera on its robotic arm. The images were just released to the public, and they show the rover at a location the science team calls Lac de Charmes. The striking part is the backdrop: you can see the western rim of Jezero Crater stretching into the distance. The rover was grinding into a rock to study its composition, and it captured itself mid-mission. This is Perseverance's sixth selfie since landing in 2021. What makes these images scientifically valuable is that each one helps NASA's team map new parts of Mars and plan future expeditions. Think of it as Google Maps for the Red Planet. Mercury disappears behind sun Now, if you step outside tonight just before sunrise, look to the pre-dawn eastern sky. You'll see something pretty special. A crescent moon is positioned right between the planet Mars on one side and Saturn on the other. Mars appears as a reddish point, while Saturn gleams in yellowish tones. It's the kind of alignment that happens occasionally but always catches the eye of skywatchers. The moon will be low on the horizon though, so you might need a clear view to spot it. SpaceX cargo launch delayed weather Speaking of planetary movement, Mercury just hit a significant milestone today. The planet is passing behind the sun, an event called superior conjunction. When this happens, Mercury becomes completely hidden in the sun's glare for several weeks. It's actually the transition point where Mercury moves from being a morning object in the sky to becoming an evening object. So if you've been spotting Mercury in the dawn sky recently, enjoy it while you can. Come back in a few weeks and you'll find it in the evening instead. Solar activity triggers aurora forecasts Now let's talk about what's happening with our sun. Solar activity has been ramping up over the past few days. We've seen multiple moderate-class solar flares, with the strongest reaching M5.8 in magnitude. These flares send waves of energy and charged particles toward Earth. The good news for aurora chasers is that forecasters are predicting possible minor geomagnetic storm conditions, which means there's a decent chance of northern lights in the coming days, particularly over high-latitude regions. If you live somewhere like Alaska, Canada, or Scandinavia, keep your eyes on the sky. Pentagon releases UFO investigation files The big spaceflight news of the day involves a postponed launch. SpaceX had planned to launch its Dragon cargo mission to the International Space Station yesterday evening from Cape Canaveral. The spacecraft is loaded with about 6,500 pounds of supplies, experiments, and equipment for the astronauts aboard the station. Unfortunately, weather conditions weren't cooperating. Clouds and rain forced the team to scrub the launch just 30 seconds before liftoff. The next launch window is Friday, May 15th at 6:05 in the evening Eastern time. Once it does launch, Dragon should reach the station on Thursday morning, though that timing will shift if the launch gets postponed again. Moon visible between Mars Saturn One last thing making headlines today. The Pentagon released a batch of documents related to investigations into unidentified aerial phenomena and UFO sightings. The files contain photos and videos showing unusual flying objects. While some sightings remain unexplained, government officials have clarified that the vast majority are eventually attributed to weather balloons, aircraft, mirages, or meteors. The releases have certainly captured public attention though, and officials say more files are coming soon. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English * Spotify English * RSS English Spanish French - Top news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - Tech news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish Spanish * RSS English Spanish French - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - AI news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube LinkedIn X (Twitter)

    5분
  8. CRS-34 Dragon resupply to ISS & Starship V3 integrated tanking milestone - Space News (May 13, 2026)

    5월 13일

    CRS-34 Dragon resupply to ISS & Starship V3 integrated tanking milestone - Space News (May 13, 2026)

    Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily Today's topics: CRS-34 Dragon resupply to ISS - SpaceX and NASA prepare to launch the CRS-34 Cargo Dragon after weather delays, delivering roughly 6,500 pounds of science and supplies to the International Space Station. The mission underscores how commercial resupply has become routine, yet still essential for continuous ISS operations. Starship V3 integrated tanking milestone - SpaceX completes a major integrated tanking test for Starship Version 3, loading a flight-like propellant mass into the fully stacked vehicle. The milestone supports a target for the next test flight and highlights ongoing upgrades such as Raptor 3 engines and new launch infrastructure. SpaceX launch cadence industry momentum - A busy May launch schedule illustrates how high-frequency missions are reshaping expectations for access to orbit. The report frames this tempo as evidence of a broader commercial shift from occasional milestones to continuous, diversified space operations. NASA funding and policy decisions - Congressional appropriations activity for the FY2027 Commerce-Justice-Science bill reflects how budgets and oversight steer NASA and NOAA priorities. Briefings on lunar exploration and Artemis-related planning show the tight coupling between policy decisions and program timelines. Astronomy highlights NGC 188, Webb - NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day spotlights NGC 188, an unusually ancient open cluster near the north celestial pole, while the James Webb Space Telescope advances understanding of how star clusters form in galaxies like M51. Together, these observations emphasize parallel progress in space science alongside launch and vehicle development. Episode Transcript CRS-34 Dragon resupply to ISS SpaceX and NASA are aiming to get the CRS-34 Cargo Dragon mission off the ground after a May 12 scrub caused by weather. The updated plan targets a May 13 evening launch from Space Launch Complex 40 in Florida, sending a Dragon spacecraft packed with about 6,500 pounds of science investigations, station supplies, and hardware toward the International Space Station. After separation roughly nine and a half minutes after liftoff, Dragon begins a carefully timed rendezvous, with docking expected the morning of May 14—another reminder that “routine” logistics flights are still the backbone that keeps the ISS operating day to day. Starship V3 integrated tanking milestone On the heavy-lift front, SpaceX reports a major step forward for Starship Version 3: a full, integrated tanking test of the stacked Starship and Super Heavy system. In a flight-like countdown rehearsal, the company loaded on the order of thousands of tonnes of propellant into the complete vehicle configuration, building on earlier static-fire work done on the ship and booster separately. The successful test supports a stated target for the next flight attempt and draws attention to the V3 upgrade path—especially new Raptor 3 engines and launch infrastructure changes meant to support both launch operations and eventual catch-and-recovery ambitions. SpaceX launch cadence industry momentum The report also places these events in the context of broader commercial momentum. SpaceX’s schedule for mid-May reflects a high-tempo launch culture that would have been nearly unthinkable a decade and a half ago, with frequent Falcon 9 missions forming the bulk of activity and continued demand driven by everything from station logistics to large satellite constellations. The big takeaway is that spaceflight is increasingly operating like continuous infrastructure: overlapping campaigns, rapid turnarounds, and multiple mission types running in parallel. NASA funding and policy decisions In Washington, attention turns to how policy and budgets shape what happens next. The House Appropriations Committee’s work on the FY2027 Commerce-Justice-Science bill—covering agencies such as NASA and NOAA—highlights how annual funding decisions can accelerate, constrain, or redirect major programs. Alongside appropriations, NASA’s ongoing briefings to lawmakers on lunar exploration and Artemis-related planning underscore a persistent reality: technical readiness and launch schedules ultimately depend on stable priorities and sustained resources. Astronomy highlights NGC 188, Webb Finally, space science continues to deliver new perspective. NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day for May 13, 2026 highlights NGC 188, an unusually old open cluster about 6,000 light-years away in Cepheus, notable for its roughly seven-billion-year age and its position near the north celestial pole. Meanwhile, the James Webb Space Telescope is cited for observations in the galaxy M51 that suggest massive clusters can emerge faster than earlier data implied—an incremental but meaningful refinement in our understanding of how stars and clusters assemble across cosmic time. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English * Spotify English * RSS English Spanish French - Top news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - Tech news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish Spanish * RSS English Spanish French - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French - AI news * Apple Podcast English Spanish French * Spotify English Spanish French * RSS English Spanish French Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube LinkedIn X (Twitter)

    4분

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