Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 7:14 a.m. No.24056533   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6688 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

January 1, 2026

 

Auroral Corona

 

Cycle 25 solar maximum made 2025 a great year for aurora borealis (or aurora australis) on planet Earth. And the high level of solar activity should extend into 2026. So, while you're celebrating the arrival of the new year, check out this spectacular auroral display that erupted in starry night skies over Kirkjufell, Iceland. The awesome auroral corona, energetic curtains of light streaming from directly overhead, was witnessed during a strong geomagnetic storm triggered by intense solar activity near the March 2025 equinox. This northland and skyscape captures the evocative display in a 21 frame panoramic mosaic.

 

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 7:31 a.m. No.24056582   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6688 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

Solar Flare Aimed At Earth, First Solar Storm of the Year | S0 News and New Year's frens

Jan.1.2026

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVCSCdgAg8U

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81R9uRw2Is0 (Observers Live #15 - Strangers in a Strange Land)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKjGdiyyZzg (Stefan Burns: A BIG Solar Storm Speeds to Earth as the Planetary Alignment of the Century Begins 💥)

https://www.spaceweather.gov/news/r2-moderate-radio-blackout-observed-8

https://www.spaceweather.gov/news/g1-g2-watches-issued-jan-01-03-2026

https://www.spaceweatherlive.com/en/news/view/598/20251231-happy-new-year-celebrate-with-an-m7-1-solar-flare.html

https://thephoenixnewspaper.com/norway-unveils-midnight-aurora-route-as-world-s-first-moving-observatory-for-northern-lights

https://x.com/SolarHam/status/2006409891947118873

https://x.com/MrMBB333/status/2006452520936419520

https://spaceweather.com/

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 7:52 a.m. No.24056665   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6688 >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

The Symmetric Jet Structure in Hubble Images of 3I/ATLAS

January 1, 2025

 

Seventeen images of the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS, taken by the Hubble Space Telescope on November 30, December 12 and December 27, 2025, are accessible here. They reveal an intriguing configuration of evolving jets.

On large scales out to 100,000 kilometers, the most prominent jet is an anti-tail directed towards the Sun, but on a scale that is 10 times smaller, there are three jets — one pointing roughly away from the Sun and two others pointing sideways in directions that are oriented +/-120 degrees relative to each other.

The equal angular separations of 360 degrees divided by 3 among these three jet axes is puzzling. The orientation of the three axes is changing over time, presumably as a result of the rotation of the nucleus.

 

The natural comet interpretation associates the jets with major pockets of ice on the surface of a rotating nucleus. The one that points at the Sun creates a prominent anti-tail jet that extends out to 100,000 kilometers.

The activity of the other jets could be triggered by heat conduction through the body of the nucleus.

The rotation period of 3I/ATLAS is about 16 hours (as reported here).

 

Varying the extent of the minor jets by 5,000 kilometers over ~8 hours is possible with a jet speed of ~0.2 kilometers per second associated with the thermal speed of volatile molecules from the sublimation of ice by sunlight.

However, having a coherent anti-tail jet on a scale that is an order of magnitude larger, requires stability over longer periods.

This stability is possible if the rotation axis is nearly aligned with the direction of the Sun and the anti-tail jet precesses in a small cone around the rotation axis like the beam of a lighthouse.

 

The anti-tail jet is ~10 times longer than it is wide. This suggests that its misalignment with the rotation axis is smaller than 6 degrees.

The required geometric alignment of the rotation axis with the direction of the Sun has a small chance of 0.2% of occurring at random.

 

Are the symmetric triple-jet inner structure or the unlikely alignment of the rotation axis with the direction of the Sun, technological signatures?

Or can they be a natural outcome of gas dynamics? Time will tell.

 

https://avi-loeb.medium.com/the-symmetric-jet-structure-in-hubble-images-of-3i-atlas-56d0a192ae66

https://usaherald.com/new-year-brings-us-back-to-3i-atlas-and-the-moment-jupiter-takes-center-stage/4/#google_vignette

https://www.msn.com/en-ie/money/other/most-powerful-radio-search-of-3i-atlas-ends-with-a-result-no-one-expected/ar-AA1Tme1E

https://astrobiology.com/2025/12/breakthrough-listen-observations-of-3i-atlas-with-the-green-bank-telescope-at-1-12-ghz.html

https://x.com/craggs_paul/status/2006497716457845067

https://x.com/drew4worldruler/status/2006447755124719909

https://x.com/drew4worldruler/status/2006372947640918446

https://x.com/SpacePoorn/status/2006449849735196959

https://x.com/forallcurious/status/2006449167477186625

https://x.com/dyerobservers/status/2006425235969487173

https://x.com/UNoticias/status/2006566737924280713

https://x.com/PhdBrandenburg/status/2006610616249880719

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zN_LrtjEI3A (Ray's Astrophotography: LIVE Tonight: Comet 3i ATLAS in Motion — Timelapse + Real-Time Imaging)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1ilFVzEtpY (Ray's Astrophotography: APOPHIS — Is EARTH Going on a "Date" with This ASTEROID on April 13, 2029 - I Took a PICTURE)

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 8:03 a.m. No.24056700   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

The Galaxy Next Door

Jan 01, 2026

 

From the International Space Station, astronauts gaze upon a vast sea of stars, the view almost entirely unencumbered by Earth’s atmosphere.

Their perspective on outer space, as it turns out, extends beyond the Milky Way.

 

Located about 160,000 light-years away, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is an irregular dwarf galaxy consisting of billions of stars.

It appears as a bright smudge in this photo, which was taken by an astronaut aboard the station on November 28, 2025.

Arcing across the bottom of the image is Earth’s limb, along with yellow, green, and diffuse red layers of airglow.

 

Skywatchers on Earth can also see this nearby galaxy from the Southern Hemisphere and from low Northern Hemisphere latitudes without optical aid.

It is part of our Local Group, a galactic neighborhood about 10 million light-years across containing the Milky Way, Andromeda, and Triangulum galaxies, plus around 50 dwarf galaxies, including the LMC.

 

Although this parcel of space is visible with little or no technology, sophisticated instruments developed by NASA and others have captured extraordinary views of the LMC.

Images from the Hubble Space Telescope, the Spitzer Space Telescope, and a combination of missions show its stars and nebulae in different wavelengths.

 

The LMC is a hotbed of star formation, giving astronomers excellent opportunities to study the life cycle of stars and space dust.

A supernova in 1987—the nearest observed in hundreds of years—offered a close-up look at the death of a star and its aftermath.

The powerful explosion blazed with the power of 100 million Suns for several months, and scientists observed a bright ring of gas around the exploded star for decades.

 

More recently, astronomers studied how vast quantities of dust were being forged in the supernova’s glowing remains.

A portion of the material may be the source of astronomical new beginnings as building blocks for stars and planets.

 

https://science.nasa.gov/earth/earth-observatory/the-galaxy-next-door/

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 8:12 a.m. No.24056736   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6775 >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

NASA Policy on the Release of Information to News and Information Media

Updated Dec 31, 2025

 

Purpose

NASA’s formal policy that standardizes the criteria and process for media accreditation agencywide.

 

General Policy

As called for in National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958, NASA is charged to “…provide for the widest practicable and appropriate dissemination of information concerning its activities and the results thereof.”

As a publicly-funded U.S. government agency, NASA is committed to making access to its facilities and personnel as open as possible. Therefore, it is the policy of NASA’s Office of Communications and the communications organizations at all NASA centers and locations to provide accreditation to representatives of the media, along with necessary virtual and on-site access to agency facilities and officials within available resources.

 

Criteria

Professional News Media

Applicant must be employed or performing work on behalf of such news-gathering and distribution organizations as: newspapers, magazines, trade newsletters, television and radio stations, independent production companies with approved projects, and internet news sites.

To be given NASA media credentials, individuals from these organizations must be full or part-time professional media (i.e. receive external payment for researching and reporting news/commentary/analysis/informational content).

Media must report for the outlet they are credentialed under. Individuals not employed by such organizations will be considered freelancers.

 

Internet Organizations

Organizations only on the Internet must be able to show:

Enterprise reporting of news/commentary/analysis/informational content – not an aggregator of other media’s content.

Content is accurate and updated regularly.

Content is not solely available and distributed on social media platforms, including, but not limited to blogs.

The individual/organization responsible for the content on the site can be identified and the site provides contact information for the individual/organization.

The website exercises editorial oversight (i.e. runs corrections, updates).

Content is intended to provide information, not solely to sell a product or service separate from the news/commentary/analysis/information.

NASA reserves the right to review applications on a case-by-case basis and allow for flexibility to consider the nature of each unique event.

 

Freelancers

Freelancers on assignment from a media organization will be considered “professional news media,” as defined above.

In cases where freelancers are not on assignment from a media organization, individuals must provide examples of work from the past three years.

If examples of previous work cannot be shown, freelancers will be granted accreditation under the following conditions:

 

Requests must be made in advance of the event based on the specific NASA location’s deadlines for both U.S. and international media. See specific NASA location for details.

Access will be granted on a case-by-case basis for a period of no more than six months. After that time, the freelancer must demonstrate proof of having materials published or produced or show that materials are being considered for use.

Freelancers will be permitted to attend only announced media briefings, events, or activities and may be excluded from interviews or tours that require extended special access or significant NASA personnel support when other media on assignment will not be attending.

 

NASA reserves the right to limit the number of freelancers attending any event who cannot show examples of previous work.

The news chief at each NASA facility is authorized to set and enforce limits on the number of unpublished freelance journalists based on available accommodations.

NASA reserves the right to review applications on a case-by-case basis and allow for flexibility to consider the nature of each unique event.

 

cont.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/reference/nasa-agencywide-media-accreditation-policy/

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 8:16 a.m. No.24056753   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

Our Alien Earth: The Lava Tubes of Mauna Loa, Hawai’i

December 15, 2025

 

Delve deep beneath the volcanoes of Hawai’i with four teams of NASA astrobiologists as they investigate how life might survive in the subsurface of other worlds.

 

Inside cavernous lava tubes, these scientists search for microbial life in volcanic rock, analyze subsurface gases, and build an augmented reality model of the field site – all to help advance NASA’s future exploration of Mars and beyond.

 

https://plus.nasa.gov/video/our-alien-earth-the-lava-tubes-of-mauna-loa-hawaii/

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLSqpxDmgLp4FOp87om42udGJF4_fX246o

https://x.com/AstronomyVibes/status/2006376211254214879

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 8:22 a.m. No.24056776   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

NASA's Largest Library To Permanently Close On Jan 2

January 1, 2026

 

NASA's largest library at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, which has been a central research hub for the global space agency since 1959, will be permanently closing on Friday (Jan 2).

The closure of the 100,000-volume library is part of the Donald Trump administration's reorganisation drive, under which 13 buildings and over 100 science and engineering laboratories will be shut down on the 1.270-acre campus by March 2026

 

The NASA Goddard Information and Collaboration Center supported the development of major missions, including the Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope.

Jacob Richmond, a NASA spokesman, informed that the agency will review the library holdings over the next two months, and some of the material will be stored in a government warehouse, while the remaining items will be 'tossed away', according to a report in the New York Times.

 

According to a statement posted on the website of the Goddard Engineers, Scientists and Technicians Association, specialised equipment and electronics designed to test spacecraft have already been removed and thrown out.

“This process is an established method that is used by federal agencies to properly dispose of federally owned property,” said Richmond.

 

The closure of the library follows the shutdown of seven other NASA libraries in the US since 2022, with three of them shutting down in 2025.

NASA's Largest Library To Permanently Close On Jan 2, Books Will Be 'Tossed Away'NASA's largest library at the Goddard Space Flight Center will close permanently on Jan 2 under the Trump administration's reorganisation plans.

The closure of the library follows the shutdown of seven other NASA libraries in the US since 2022, with three of them shutting down in 2025.

 

'Deeply Concerning'

Senator Chris Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland, said he will continue to raise his voice against the Trump administration's haphazard closure of the library.

“The Trump Administration has spent the last year attacking NASA Goddard and its work force and threatening our efforts to explore space, deepen our understanding of Earth, and spur technological advancements that make our economy stronger and nation safer,” said Van Hollen.

 

“These reports of closures at Goddard are deeply concerning. I will continue to push back on any actions that impact Goddard's critical mission," he added.

After the library is closed on Friday, those needing research help can use the digital "Ask a Librarian" service or use the inter-library loan service to check out books from the federal-agency libraries.

Named after American rocketry pioneer Robert H. Goddard, the center was established in 1959 as NASA's first space flight complex.

 

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/nasas-largest-library-to-permanently-close-on-jan-2-books-will-be-tossed-away-10170584

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/31/climate/nasa-goddard-library-closing.html

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 8:30 a.m. No.24056806   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6811 >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

Caveman aliens could be hiding on Mars, scientists say

Updated December 31, 2025 4:28pm

 

An ancient Martian system of canyons and valleys could be home to archaic life forms, a ground-breaking scientific paper has found.

Scientists investigating the Red Planet’s mind-boggling cave system believe they’ve discovered something new – eight karst caves sculpted by extinct watercourses.

 

The paper, published in the highly-respected Astrophysical Journal Letters, suggests these caves could be alien-hunters’ best bet.

Until now, scientists believed that Mars’ skylights – pits in the surface of mars – were formed by volcanic activity.

 

But data from Nasa’s orbiters suggests there are karst caves – underground bunkers created when a river diverts down through a planet’s surface.

The discovery has got scientists’ chins wagging.

 

Why do these caves matter?

Karst caves provide two vital things for sustaining life – shelter from Mars’ intense radioactive rays, and water.

If life on Mars ever existed, it may have needed protection from hostile surface conditions like solar radiation, dust storms, and wild temperature fluctuations.

And we already know that water provides the building blocks for life.

 

Karst caves may well have provided water and shelter a the same time – roughly 3.5 billion years ago.

The paper’s authors are now urging future Martian ventures to ensure robots head down into these caves.

 

They hope they will be able to find ‘preserved biosignatures’ – scientific evidence of past or present life in geological materials like rocks, ice, or minerals.

Scientists believe these are water-formed caves for numerous reasons – especially the composition of its surrounding rock.

Data from Nasa’s Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES) suggests the presence of carbonates and sulfates – probably caused by water flow dissolving soluble bedrock.

 

What sort of aliens are we looking for?

There is scientific consensus that Mars has had, at a point in its history, the conditions to host organic life.

But what this life looked like, or how complex it may have been, remains hotly discussed,

 

Some 19th and 20th century astronomers believed modern Mars was teeming with intelligent aliens with nefarious plans to invade Earth.

They mistakenly thought dark linear features on Mars were ‘canals’ and that seasonal colour changes were vegetation.

Better telescopes and the development of probes proved them wrong – but scientific discussion of historic life continued.

 

It led to eminent astronomers like Carl Sagan speculating that, billions of years ago, Martians would have looked like ‘a man dressed up in a turtle suit’ with tentacles protruding out.

Sagan reasoned that ‘the creature’s spindly limbs suit Mars’s low gravity; its glass-like shield blocks ultraviolet radiation’.

 

Nowadays, scientists have lowered their expectations – and are looking for signs of life, either historic or present, of small microbial life.

One of the ‘clearest signs yet’ came in September when Nasa found ‘leopard spots on Mars’ surface’.

 

Microbes, as they wriggle around on rocks, can create minerals as they gobble up chemicals, leaving behind these mysterious patches.

The findings are noteworthy enough to meet Nasa’s criteria for a sign of ancient life.

 

And in March, a scientific paper said Nasa’s Curiosity rover had found the largest organic compounds ever seen on the planet.

The material was found inside a 3.7 billion-year-old rock in Yellowknife Bay, which may have once been a habitable freshwater lake.

 

Onboard tests detected molecules suspected to be remnants of fatty acids, which are produced by living creatures to form cell membranes.

Researchers did however stress that these molecules, though described as organic, could have also formed in chemical reactions that did not involve life.

 

https://metro.co.uk/2025/12/31/ancient-aliens-lurking-inside-eight-caves-mars-scientists-say-25958153/

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 8:55 a.m. No.24056884   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

January 'Wolf Supermoon': How to see the full moon rise with Jupiter this weekend

January 1, 2026

 

Saturday, Jan. 3 will mark the first full moon of 2026. Known as the Wolf Moon, it will be at its fullest at 5:02 a.m. EST and best seen rising in the east at dusk later that day.

It will also be a "supermoon," meaning it will appear brighter and larger than usual.

 

According to the Old Farmer's Almanac, January's full moon gets its name because wolves were more likely to be heard howling at this time of year.

Other Native American names for this full moon include the Cold Moon, the Frost Exploding Moon, the Freeze-Up Moon, the Severe Moon, the Hard Moon, the Center Moon, and the Canada Goose Moon.

In Europe, it's often called the Moon After Yule, after the ancient festival that stretches from the winter solstice on Dec. 21 through Jan. 1.

 

The best time to see the Wolf Moon will be at moonrise on Jan. 3, when it will appear at dusk between a star and a very bright planet. On its left will be Pollux, a bright star in the constellation Gemini, and Jupiter will be on its right.

The "king of planets" will be just a week away from its bright opposition — the most luminous it will get from our perspective in 2026.

 

Because it's the full moon closest to the winter solstice on Dec. 21, the Wolf Moon will also make the highest arc through the night sky of any full moon, as seen from the Northern Hemisphere.

That happens because a full moon is always opposite the sun, so the winter sun mimics the summer sun.

 

The Wolf Moon is also the fourth consecutive supermoon, though it will not be particularly large. It is also the last one until November.

It's called a supermoon because it turns full close to perigee, the closest the moon gets to Earth. As it turns full on Jan. 3, the full moon will be 225,130 miles (362,312 kilometers) from our planet.

 

By chance, that will happen as Earth reaches perihelion — its closest point to the sun — when it will be 91.4 million miles (147.1 million km) from our star, compared with the average distance of 93 million miles (150 million km).

After the Wolf Moon, the next full moon will be the Snow Moon, on Feb. 1.

 

https://www.livescience.com/space/january-wolf-supermoon-how-to-see-the-full-moon-rise-with-jupiter-this-weekend

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3la4-WWCcE

Anonymous ID: 0086b5 Jan. 1, 2026, 8:59 a.m. No.24056898   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6911 >>6995 >>7050 >>7255 >>7305

China Closes 2025 With Surprise Dual Satellite Launch for Space Surveillance

January 1, 2026 at 10:45

 

China launched two new-generation satellites, Shijian-29A and Shijian-29B, on December 31, 2025, using a modified Long March-7 rocket from the Wenchang Space Launch Site, as reported by CGTN.

This mission continues China’s rapid expansion in orbital capability and technological experimentation, especially in the realm of space target detection.

 

A Strategic Launch To Close 2025

The final days of 2025 saw China’s space program adding another milestone to its growing legacy.

At exactly 6:40 a.m. local time, a modified Long March-7 lifted off from the southern island province of Hainan, carrying a dual payload: the Shijian-29A and Shijian-29B satellites.

These satellites have been inserted successfully into their preset orbits, and according to official sources, they are primarily designated for space technology verification tasks.

 

This launch adds to an increasingly sophisticated series of missions targeting orbital innovation and sensor performance trials.

Designed for high-altitude deployment, the Long March-7 variant used in this launch has proven itself as a versatile medium-class launch vehicle, capable of delivering both single and dual payloads depending on mission requirements.

The final launch of the year reflects how China’s spaceflight cadence has accelerated, completing 73 missions in 2025, compared to 51 in 2024.

 

Shijian-29: A Platform For Orbital Experimentation

The Shijian satellite series is often used by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC) to test new materials, subsystems, and orbital maneuvers.

With the addition of Shijian-29A and 29B, the latest mission contributes to a broader program focused on advanced surveillance, detection systems, and responsive space operations.

According to CGTN, these satellites are explicitly intended for technology verification related to space target detection, a domain critical for both civil and strategic applications.

 

While details about the onboard payloads remain limited, consistent with the traditionally discreet nature of Shijian missions, analysts suggest that they may include new sensors, radar prototypes, or AI-driven tracking systems capable of monitoring fast-moving objects or satellite constellations in orbit.

This could be part of a longer-term effort to establish autonomous orbital situational awareness, a vital capability in an increasingly crowded and competitive low Earth orbit (LEO) environment.

 

Long March-7: Evolving China’s Orbital Logistics

The Long March-7 rocket has emerged as a backbone of China’s medium-lift capabilities, particularly suited for high-inclination or geosynchronous transfer orbits.

Developed by the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT) under CASC, this platform is also a testbed for next-generation propulsion systems and modular launch infrastructure.

 

The rocket used in this mission was a modified version, signaling that continuous improvements are being made to address a variety of orbital mission profiles.

This flexibility reflects China’s broader goal of streamlining launch operations while adapting quickly to diverse payload requirements.

The success of the 623rd flight of the Long March rocket series confirms both the reliability and evolution of China’s space launch architecture.

 

https://dailygalaxy.com/2026/01/china-dual-satellite-launch-surveillance/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4CPYXzEM9Y

 

extra China

 

https://news.cgtn.com/news/2026-01-01/China-s-Shenzhou-21-astronauts-send-New-Year-wishes-from-space-station-1JzJKL0MKvC/p.html

https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202601/1351999.shtml