Topic: Pamela Gay
Astronauts dive into Mk-2 Training

Astronauts dive into Mk-2 Training

Recent aerospace news hasn’t been the happiest, but there was one moment of watery goodness I’d like to share.  On June 10, Blue Origin shared a video taken at the Johnson Space Center’s Neutral Buoyancy Tank that shows astronauts climbing around in and on a simple mockup of their Mark 2 lander, which should be transporting astronauts to and from the Moon’s surface in coming years.  Currently, NASA plans not to use the Mark 2 until Artemis V, but it is possible its use could be moved forward if Blue Origin leapfrogs SpaceX in their lander developer. Blue Origin currently plans to launch...

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Closer Look: Satellites versus Science

Closer Look: Satellites versus Science

Bluewalker 3 over Kitt Peak In this week’s closer look, we go where I haven’t really wanted to go before: we are going to look at the impacts of the growing number of satellites, like star links, on our ability to safely live and do astronomy. This closer look is...

Eta Carina gives up 260year Secret to Chandra

Eta Carina gives up 260year Secret to Chandra

Credit: X-ray: NASA/SAO/GSFC/M. Corcoran et al.; Image Processing: L. Frattare, J. Major, N. Wolk (SAO/CXC) Astronomers kind of live to see weird weird objects. While likely always visible to humans, this southern hemisphere star transformed from kind of meh to the...

Pulsar releases highest measured Gamma rays

Pulsar releases highest measured Gamma rays

 Credit: Science Communication Lab for DESY Ultimately, our universe is far more diverse in its reality than humans tend to be in our theorizing. Over and over, we have found remarkable things just by turning a new instrument skyward. From the discovery of cold...

New Luminous Fast Blue Optical Transient

New Luminous Fast Blue Optical Transient

Credit: NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Garlick/M. Zamani To me it feels like our biggest unknowns are often part of the high-energy universe - those processes and objects rise to the highest temperatures and give off the bluest of light.  As an example, back in 2018, researchers...

Extra Light from Dark Matter in Pulsars… maybe?

Extra Light from Dark Matter in Pulsars… maybe?

credit: NASA/CXC/ASU/J. Hester et al., HST/ASU/J. Hester et al. We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: the universe is an improv artist that likes to say “Yes, and”. I really wouldn’t be surprised if the effects we see are due to both a stuff we’ll collectively...