Monday, March 31, 2025

NPR News: 4 astronauts to be the first to orbit the poles on a privately funded SpaceX mission

4 astronauts to be the first to orbit the poles on a privately funded SpaceX mission
SpaceX is planning a launch as early as Monday evening. If successful, it will mark the first crewed mission to polar orbit and the first mission to cultivate mushrooms as a crop

Read more on NPR

Artemis II Core Stage Integration – Complete!

Technicians from NASA and primary contractor Amentum join the SLS (Space Launch System) rocket with the stacked solid rocket boosters for the Artemis II mission at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on March 23, 2025. The core stage is the largest component of the rocket, standing 212 feet tall and weighing about 219,000 pounds […]

March 31, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/pqx5Tul
via IFTTT

Career Spotlight: Technologist (Ages 14-18)

What does a technologist do? Technologists are professionals who research, develop, and test emerging technologies. They also find useful ways to put new technologies to work. A technologist is an expert in a specific type of technology, often within a specific field. Many industries rely on innovations developed by technologists. Some of these include aerospace, […]

March 31, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/w8rhVcY
via IFTTT

Career Spotlight: Scientist (Ages 14-18)

What does a scientist do? Science is about exploring answers to questions. A scientist uses research and evidence to form hypotheses, test variables, and then share their findings. NASA scientists conduct groundbreaking research to answer some of humanity’s most profound questions. Most scientists start as project scientists in their early careers. They spend a lot […]

March 31, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/vXsgwmd
via IFTTT

20-Year Hubble Study of Uranus Yields New Atmospheric Insights

The ice-giant planet Uranus, which travels around the Sun tipped on its side, is a weird and mysterious world. Now, in an unprecedented study spanning two decades, researchers using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope have uncovered new insights into the planet’s atmospheric composition and dynamics. This was possible only because of Hubble’s sharp resolution, spectral capabilities, […]

March 31, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/hOmdERT
via IFTTT

University High Triumphs at JPL-Hosted Ocean Sciences Bowl

The annual regional event puts students’ knowledge of ocean-related science to the test in a fast-paced academic competition. A team of students from University High School in Irvine earned first place at a fast-paced regional academic competition focused on ocean science disciplines and hosted by NASA’S Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. Eight teams from […]

March 31, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/FUQtwD2
via IFTTT

El X-59 de la NASA completa la prueba de ‘control de crucero’ mantenimiento automático de velocidad del motor

Read this story in English here. El equipo detrás del X-59 de la NASA completó en marzo otra prueba crítica en tierra, garantizando que el silencioso avión supersónico será capaz de mantener una velocidad específica durante su funcionamiento. Esta prueba, conocida como mantenimiento automático de velocidad del motor, es el más reciente marcador de progreso a […]

March 31, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/3bhc4SD
via IFTTT

She Speaks for the Samples: Meet Dr. Juliane Gross, Artemis Campaign Sample Curation Lead 

Based at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, the Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Division, or ARES, curates the most extensive collection of extraterrestrial materials on Earth, ranging from microscopic cosmic dust particles to Apollo-era Moon rocks. Soon, ARES’ team of world-leading sample scientists hopes to add something new to its collection – lunar samples […]

March 31, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/asI5fRE
via IFTTT

NPR News: AI is great at predicting text. How well can it guide robots?

AI is great at predicting text. How well can it guide robots?
It seems like artificial intelligence is everywhere in our virtual lives. It's in our search results and our phones. But what happens when AI moves out of the chat and into the real world? NPR science editor and correspondent Geoff Brumfiel took a trip to the Intelligence through Robotic Interaction at Scale Lab at Stanford University to see how scientists are using AI to power robots and the large hurdles that exist for them to perform even simple tasks. Read Geoff's full story. Interested in more AI stories? Email us your ideas at shortwave@npr.org.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: AI is great at predicting text. How well can it guide robots?

AI is great at predicting text. How well can it guide robots?
It seems like artificial intelligence is everywhere in our virtual lives. It's in our search results and our phones. But what happens when AI moves out of the chat and into the real world? NPR science editor and correspondent Geoff Brumfiel took a trip to the Intelligence through Robotic Interaction at Scale Lab at Stanford University to see how scientists are using AI to power robots and the large hurdles that exist for them to perform even simple tasks. Read Geoff's full story. Interested in more AI stories? Email us your ideas at shortwave@npr.org.

Read more on NPR

Sunday, March 30, 2025

NPR News: Taking in the first signs of spring on a picnic in New York's Adirondack Mountains

Taking in the first signs of spring on a picnic in New York's Adirondack Mountains
NPR's Brian Mann and North Country Public Radio's David Sommerstein head into the high country for a spring picnic surrounded by sun — and snow.

Read more on NPR

Saturday, March 29, 2025

NPR News: Countries boost recruitment of American scientists amid cuts to scientific funding

Countries boost recruitment of American scientists amid cuts to scientific funding
American scientists have long worked abroad, but recruitment efforts are increasing due to cuts by the Trump administration.

Read more on NPR

Friday, March 28, 2025

NASA Boosts Efficiency with Custom X-66 Flooring

NASA designed temporary floorboards for the MD-90 aircraft to use while it is transformed into the X-66 experimental demonstrator aircraft. These floorboards will protect the original flooring and streamline the modification process. Supporting the agency’s Sustainable Flight Demonstrator project, a small team in the Experimental Fabrication Shop at NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, […]

March 28, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/gBcZ8m7
via IFTTT

NPR News: NASA's Curiosity Rover finds intriguing molecules in ancient Mars mud

NASA's Curiosity Rover finds intriguing molecules in ancient Mars mud
A science experiment aboard NASA's Curiosity rover has found tantalizing traces of possible past life on Mars. But there could be other explanations for where these compounds came from.

Read more on NPR

Visiting Mars on the Way to the Outer Solar System

Written by Roger Wiens, Principal Investigator, SuperCam instrument / Co-Investigator, SHERLOC instrument at Purdue University Recently Mars has had a few Earthly visitors. On March 1, NASA’s Europa Clipper flew within 550 miles (884 kilometers) of the Red Planet’s surface on its way out to Jupiter. On March 12, the European Space Agency’s Hera spacecraft […]

March 28, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/pCxBN8t
via IFTTT

Turning Vanes inside the Altitude Wind Tunnel

Men stand in front of turning vanes inside the Altitude Wind Tunnel (AWT) at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics Aircraft Engine Research Laboratory in this February 1944 publicity photo. The photo was taken just weeks after the tunnel became operational. The AWT was the only wind tunnel capable of testing full-size aircraft engines in […]

March 28, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/aK7w0H1
via IFTTT

Sols 4493-4494: Just Looking Around

Written by Alex Innanen, atmospheric scientist at York University Earth planning date: Wednesday, March 26, 2025 It’s my second shift of the week as the Environmental theme lead and keeper of the plan (a bit of a mouthful we shorten to ESTLK) and today started out feeling eerily similar to Monday. Once again, Curiosity is […]

March 28, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/Y5Bd2Os
via IFTTT

Thursday, March 27, 2025

NPR News: A new study reveals the genetic change that made horses so athletic

A new study reveals the genetic change that made horses so athletic
A genetic change that boosts a cell's aerobic capacity while also protecting it from excess stress could explain how horses became such powerful athletes, according to a new study in Science.

Read more on NPR

Meet the Space Ops Team: Anum Ashraf

For Anum Ashraf, Ph.D., the interconnectedness of NASA’s workforce presents the exciting opportunity to collaborate with a multitude of people and teams. With more than 11 years at the agency, Ashraf has played a fundamental role in leading efforts that actively bridge these connections and support NASA’s mission.  Ashraf serves as the mission commitment lead […]

March 27, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/aOzKX28
via IFTTT

NEO Surveyor Instrument Enclosure Inside Historic Chamber A 

The instrument enclosure of NASA’s Near-Earth Object Surveyor is prepared for critical environmental tests inside the historic Chamber A at the Space Environment Simulation Laboratory at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston in December 2024. Wrapped in silver thermal blanketing, the 12-foot-long (3.7-meter-long) angular structure was subjected to the frigid, airless conditions that the spacecraft […]

March 27, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/9QjAv4d
via IFTTT

Understanding Cosmic Explosions: StarBurst Arrives at NASA for Testing

StarBurst, a wide-field gamma ray observatory, arrived at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, March 4 for environmental testing and final instrument integration. The instrument is designed to detect the initial emission of short gamma-ray bursts, a key electromagnetic indicator of neutron star mergers. “Gamma-ray bursts are among the most powerful explosions in […]

March 27, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/fYDTgM2
via IFTTT

NASA’s Dust Shield Successfully Repels Lunar Regolith on Moon

NASA’s Electrodynamic Dust Shield (EDS) successfully demonstrated its ability to remove regolith, or lunar dust and dirt, from its various surfaces on the Moon during Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Mission 1, which concluded on March 16. Lunar dust is extremely abrasive and electrostatic, which means it clings to anything that carries a charge. It can […]

March 27, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/pciWP9r
via IFTTT

NASA, NSIDC Scientists Say Arctic Winter Sea Ice at Record Low

Winter sea ice cover in the Arctic was the lowest it’s ever been at its annual peak on March 22, 2025, according to NASA and the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) at the University of Colorado, Boulder. At 5.53 million square miles (14.33 million square kilometers), the maximum extent fell below the prior […]

March 27, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/nBK64M8
via IFTTT

Finding Clues in Ruins of Ancient Dead Star With NASA’s Chandra

People often think about archaeology happening deep in jungles or inside ancient pyramids. However, a team of astronomers has shown that they can use stars and the remains they leave behind to conduct a special kind of archaeology in space. Mining data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, the team of astronomers studied the relics that […]

March 27, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/EBtYW7H
via IFTTT

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

How Can I See the Northern Lights? We Asked a NASA Expert: Episode 54

How can I see the northern lights? To see the northern lights, you need to be in the right place at the right time. Auroras are the result of charged particles and magnetism from the Sun called space weather dancing with the Earth’s magnetic field. And they happen far above the clouds. So you need […]

March 26, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/hkrIZuQ
via IFTTT

Norman Rockwell Commemorates Gemini Program with Grissom and Young

In his painting called Grissom and Young, American painter and illustrator Norman Rockwell captures technicians helping NASA astronauts John Young and Gus Grissom suit up for the first flight of the Gemini program in March 1965. NASA loaned Norman Rockwell a Gemini spacesuit to make this painting as accurate as possible. Since its beginning, NASA […]

March 26, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/IEbwjml
via IFTTT

NSTA Hyperwall Schedule

NASA Science at Commodity Classic Hyperwall Schedule, March 26-29, 2025 Join NASA in the Exhibit Hall (Booth #779) for Hyperwall Storytelling by NASA experts. Full Hyperwall Agenda below. THURSDAY, MARCH 27 FRIDAY, MARCH 28 SATURDAY, MARCH 29

March 26, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/1jeKxHk
via IFTTT

NPR News: What's soil blocking? This seeding method helps gardeners use less plastic and peat

What's soil blocking? This seeding method helps gardeners use less plastic and peat
Soil blocking is an environmentally friendly method to prep seedlings. The technique has captured the attention of serious gardeners who'd like to make their growing more sustainable.

Read more on NPR

How NASA’s Perseverance Is Helping Prepare Astronauts for Mars

The rover carries several swatches of spacesuit materials, and scientists are assessing how they’ve held up after four years on the Red Planet. NASA’s Perseverance rover landed on Mars in 2021 to search for signs of ancient microbial life and to help scientists understand the planet’s climate and geography. But another key objective is to […]

March 26, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/eUhL8sF
via IFTTT

NPR News: Trump cuts threaten measurement lab critical for advanced chips and medical devices

Trump cuts threaten measurement lab critical for advanced chips and medical devices
The Atomic Spectroscopy Group provides standardized measurements used across wide swaths of science and industry. The Trump administration plans to cut it.

Read more on NPR

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

NASA Invites Media to Learn About Artemis Moon Mission Recovery

NASA and the Department of Defense will host a media event on the recovery operations that will bring the Artemis II astronauts and the agency’s Orion spacecraft home at the conclusion of next year’s mission around the Moon. The in-person event will take place at 3 p.m. PDT on Monday, March 31, at Naval Base […]

March 25, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/pwT2dIr
via IFTTT

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Team Wins 2024 Collier Trophy

The innovative team of engineers and scientists from NASA, the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, and more than 40 other partner organizations across the country that created the Parker Solar Probe mission has been awarded the 2024 Robert J. Collier Trophy by the National Aeronautic Association (NAA). This annual award recognizes the […]

March 25, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/89aRCKP
via IFTTT

NPR News: Lavender, citrus and candy: weed's signature aroma changes with the times

Lavender, citrus and candy: weed's signature aroma changes with the times
A tour of a grow facility in Maryland reveals the wide variety of scents from different cannabis strains.

Read more on NPR

NASA Demonstrates New Wildland Fire Airspace Management System

NASA researchers conducted initial validation of a new airspace management system designed to enable crews to use aircraft fight and monitor wildland fires 24 hours a day, even during low-visibility conditions.   From March 17-28, NASA’s Advanced Capabilities for Emergency Response Operations (ACERO) project stationed researchers at multiple strategic locations across the foothills of the Sierra […]

March 25, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/ClAJTYn
via IFTTT

Investigaciones de la NASA en la estación espacial ayudan a impulsar la ciencia lunar

La Estación Espacial Internacional sustenta una amplia gama de actividades científicas, desde la observación de nuestro universo hasta el logro de avances en investigaciones médicas, y es un campo de pruebas activo en la tecnología para futuras misiones de exploración en la Luna y más allá. La misión Blue Ghost 1 de Firefly Aerospace aterrizó en […]

March 25, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/TREc5Yx
via IFTTT

NPR News: NASA website axes a pledge to land a woman and a person of color on the moon

NASA website axes a pledge to land a woman and a person of color on the moon
In deference to President Trump's anti-DEI order, the space agency has removed a promise to send the "the first woman, first person of color" to walk on the moon aboard the Artemis III mission.

Read more on NPR

Monday, March 24, 2025

NPR News: Scientists look to a rat-like creature to better understand the kangaroo's hop

Scientists look to a rat-like creature to better understand the kangaroo's hop
Scientists have been curious about how kangaroos evolved to hop with such efficiency. To investigate that, researchers turned to a sort of evolutionary second-cousin of the kangaroo, the musky rat-kangaroo.

Read more on NPR

Engineering Reality: Lee Bingham Leads Lunar Surface Simulation Support for Artemis Campaign

If you design a new tool for use on Earth, it is easy to test and practice using that tool in its intended environment. But what if that tool is destined for lunar orbit or will be used by astronauts on the surface of the Moon? NASA’s Simulation and Graphics Branch can help with that. […]

March 24, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/bAWZRy3
via IFTTT

NASA’s Curiosity Rover Detects Largest Organic Molecules Found on Mars

Researchers analyzing pulverized rock onboard NASA’s Curiosity rover have found the largest organic compounds on the Red Planet to date. The finding, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests prebiotic chemistry may have advanced further on Mars than previously observed. Scientists probed an existing rock sample inside Curiosity’s Sample Analysis […]

March 24, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/NjQKPip
via IFTTT

NPR News: Speaking into a microphone? Your audio quality can impact the way people view you

Speaking into a microphone? Your audio quality can impact the way people view you
A new study shows that the quality of a person's microphone in a video meeting affects how the speaker is perceived by others.

Read more on NPR

Like Sands Through the Hourglass…

Two actively forming stars are responsible for the shimmering hourglass-shaped ejections of gas and dust that gleam in orange, blue, and purple in this representative color image captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. This star system, called Lynds 483, is named for American astronomer Beverly T. Lynds, who published extensive catalogs of “dark” and […]

March 24, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/8Vxu7Fh
via IFTTT

Career Transition Assistance Plan (CTAP) Services

Overview Welcome to the Career Transition Assistance Plan (CTAP) services page. Provided here are different resources to support informed steps toward a new career opportunity in the public or private sector. Transition Assistance NASA is partnering with OPM to offer a 1-day workshop covering multiple areas associated with career transitions. The workshop will be offered […]

March 24, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/YsZ90tF
via IFTTT

NASA Invites Media to SpaceX’s 32nd Resupply Launch to Space Station

Media accreditation is open for the next launch to deliver NASA science investigations, supplies, and equipment to the International Space Station. NASA and SpaceX are targeting no earlier than Monday, April 21, to launch the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on the company’s Falcon 9 rocket from Launch Complex 39A at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in […]

March 24, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/uzf0MUT
via IFTTT

NASA Takes to the Air to Study Wildflowers

For many plant species, flowering is biologically synced with the seasons. Scientists are clocking blooms to understand our ever-changing planet. NASA research is revealing there’s more to flowers than meets the human eye. A recent analysis of wildflowers in California shows how aircraft- and space-based instruments can use color to track seasonal flower cycles. The […]

March 24, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/PVOeRFt
via IFTTT

NASA’s Webb Telescope Unmasks True Nature of the Cosmic Tornado

Craving an ice cream sundae with a cherry on top? This random alignment of Herbig-Haro 49/50 — a frothy-looking outflow from a nearby protostar — with a multi-hued spiral galaxy may do the trick. This new composite image combining observations from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) and MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) provides a […]

March 24, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/BZltVwJ
via IFTTT

NPR News: What the COVID-19 pandemic tells us about how viruses evolve

What the COVID-19 pandemic tells us about how viruses evolve
Early in the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, scientists predicted the SARS-CoV-2 virus would mutate slowly. They were wrong. Hundreds of thousands of viral mutations and multiple seasonal waves later, we now know why. The answer changes researchers' understanding of viral evolution — and it could help predict the evolution of other viruses in the future. Emily talks about it all with Sarah Zhang, a health writer for The Atlantic. Want to hear more virology or human biology stories? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org.

Read more on NPR

Sunday, March 23, 2025

60 Years Ago: Gemini III, America’s First Two-Person Flight 

On March 23, 1965, the United States launched the Gemini III spacecraft with astronauts Virgil “Gus” Grissom and John Young aboard, America’s first two-person spaceflight. Grissom earned the honor as the first person to enter space twice and Young as the first member of the second group of astronauts to fly in space. During their […]

March 23, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/Wpc9TUY
via IFTTT

Saturday, March 22, 2025

NPR News: Mud dragons, water bears: A new census of ocean life has found over 800 new species

Mud dragons, water bears: A new census of ocean life has found over 800 new species
Over 800 marine species have recently been discovered including a guitar-shaped shark off the coast of Mozambique. NPR's Sarah McCammon speaks to marine biologist, Lucy Woodall.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: A park ranger took action 25 years ago. Now, 85 miles of the Escalante River have been saved

A park ranger took action 25 years ago. Now, 85 miles of the Escalante River have been saved
A retired park ranger "battled" an invasive shrub taking over tributaries of the Colorado River. Now, 85 miles of the Escalante River have been restored.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: A park ranger took action 25 years ago. Now, 85 miles of the Escalante River have been saved

A park ranger took action 25 years ago. Now, 85 miles of the Escalante River have been saved
A retired park ranger "battled" an invasive shrub taking over tributaries of the Colorado River. Now, 85 miles of the Escalante River have been restored.

Read more on NPR

Friday, March 21, 2025

Sols 4486-4487: Ankle-Breaking Kind of Terrain!

Written by Catherine O’Connell-Cooper, Planetary Geologist at University of New Brunswick Earth planning date: Wednesday, March 19, 2025  This terrain is a tricky drive, with rocks angled chaotically all around. One of our geologists remarked that they wouldn’t like to even walk over this without solid boots coming way up over the ankles — this […]

March 22, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/0wivlb1
via IFTTT

Shocking Spherules!

Written by Alex Jones, Ph.D. candidate at Imperial College London Last week the Perseverance Science Team were astonished by a strange rock comprised of hundreds of millimeter-sized spheres… and the team are now working hard to understand their origin.  It has now been two weeks since Perseverance arrived at Broom Point, situated at the lower […]

March 22, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/eBQpcwf
via IFTTT

CAS Discovery and Foresight

Convergent Aeronautics Solutions (CAS) Discovery identifies problems worth solving for the benefit of all. We formulate “convergent” problems—across multiple disciplines and sectors—and build footholds toward potentially transformative opportunities in aeronautics. As aeronautics rapidly advances, it is increasingly intersecting with other sectors like energy, healthcare, emergency response, economic resilience, the space economy, and more. CAS Discovery […]

March 21, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/rLZ7Xg8
via IFTTT

Making Ripples

A dolphin swims through the water in the Launch Complex 39 Area turn basin at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Nov. 6, 2007. The turn basin was carved out of the Banana River when NASA Kennedy was built. Dolphins are a frequent sight in the rivers around Kennedy, which shares a boundary with […]

March 21, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/BlguyrG
via IFTTT

NASA Astronauts to Answer Questions from Students in New York

Students from Richmond Hill, New York,will have the chance to connect with NASA astronauts Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers as they answer prerecorded science, technology, engineering, and mathematics-related questions from aboard the International Space Station. Watch the 20-minute space-to-Earth call at 12 p.m. EDT on Wednesday, March 26, on NASA+ and learn how to watch […]

March 21, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/b9fdxio
via IFTTT

Hubble Captures a Neighbor’s Colorful Clouds

Say hello to one of the Milky Way’s neighbors! This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features a scene from one of the closest galaxies to the Milky Way, the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). The SMC is a dwarf galaxy located about 200,000 light-years away. Most of the galaxy resides in the constellation Tucana, but a […]

March 21, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/65of2di
via IFTTT

NPR News: Future of the newest national monuments looks murky after White House communication

Future of the newest national monuments looks murky after White House communication
White House communication has caused confusion over the fate of the country's newest national monuments in California.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Is planting trees "DEI"? Trump administration cuts nationwide tree-planting effort

Is planting trees "DEI"? Trump administration cuts nationwide tree-planting effort
The Trump administration's efforts to end DEI programs is hitting some unexpected targets, including a nationwide effort planting shade trees in neighborhoods to reduce extreme heat.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Do you have ADHD? That TikTok might not help you decide

Do you have ADHD? That TikTok might not help you decide
Ever diagnosed yourself with a mental health disorder based on a TikTok video? If so, you're not alone. "I personally don't think that there's anything more human than wanting to understand yourself and wanting to understand your own experiences," says Vasileia Karasavva. Vasileia is the lead author of a paper published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One that gets into why this kind of self-diagnosis can be such a double-edged sword. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Thursday, March 20, 2025

Sols 4484-4485: Remote Sensing on a Monday

Written by Conor Hayes, Graduate Student at York University Earth planning date: Monday, March 17, 2025 Last week I was in Houston, Texas, at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. The mid-March weather in Houston is often more like mid-summer weather here in Toronto, so it has been a bit of a shock coming home […]

March 20, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/Y8QEaCK
via IFTTT

NPR News: This week in science: origins of life, birds speech, and how TikTok gets ADHD wrong

This week in science: origins of life, birds speech, and how TikTok gets ADHD wrong
In this week's Short Wave roundup, Berly McCoy and Regina Barber talk about the origins of life on Earth, what bird brains illuminate about human speech and how ADHD is mischaracterized on TikTok.

Read more on NPR

NASA Selects 14 Finalist Teams for the 2025 RASC-AL Competition

Fourteen university teams have been selected as finalists for NASA’s 2025 Revolutionary Aerospace Systems – Academic Linkage (RASC-AL) Competition. This year’s competition invited undergraduate and graduate students from across the nation to develop new, innovative concepts to improve our ability to operate on the Moon, Mars, and beyond. Finalists will present their proposed concepts to […]

March 20, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/jdrqZNe
via IFTTT

How NASA’s “Autonomy Choreography” Will Impact Advanced Technologies

Imagine your car is in conversation with other traffic and road signals as you travel. Those conversations help your car anticipate actions you can’t see: the sudden slowing of a truck as it begins to turn ahead of you, or an obscured traffic signal turning red. Meanwhile, this system has plotted a course that will […]

March 20, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/EGLcew2
via IFTTT

Hubble Sees a Spiral and a Star

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features a sparkling spiral galaxy paired with a prominent star, both in the constellation Virgo. While the galaxy and the star appear to be close to one another, even overlapping, they’re actually a great distance apart. The star, marked with four long diffraction spikes, is in our own galaxy. It’s just […]

March 20, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/TUvFrGA
via IFTTT

Students Explore Technical Careers at NASA

NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland welcomed more than 150 students and educators to showcase technical careers, inspire the next generation, and ignite a passion for learning during a Career Technical Education program March 11. “Here at Glenn Research Center, we love what we do, and we love to share what we do,” said Dawn […]

March 20, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/MCubrzV
via IFTTT

NPR News: Dark energy is weakening and the universe could (eventually) collapse, study says

Dark energy is weakening and the universe could (eventually) collapse, study says
The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) is studying dark energy and the accelerated expansion of the universe.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: This astronaut spent over 100 days in space. Here's how he says that affected him

This astronaut spent over 100 days in space. Here's how he says that affected him
Jack Fischer spent more than 100 days aboard the International Space Station in 2017. He described to NPR what being in space for so long does to the body and what it feels like to return home.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Jury finds Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions for Dakota Access pipeline protest

Jury finds Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions for Dakota Access pipeline protest
A jury in North Dakota has found Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions of dollars to Energy Transfer, the company that built the Dakota Access oil pipeline.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Jury finds Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions for Dakota Access pipeline protest

Jury finds Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions for Dakota Access pipeline protest
A jury in North Dakota has found Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions of dollars to Energy Transfer, the company that built the Dakota Access oil pipeline.

Read more on NPR

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

NPR News: Jury says Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions of dollars for Dakota pipeline protest

Jury says Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions of dollars for Dakota pipeline protest
Experts say the verdict has relevance for free speech issues nationwide.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Jury says Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions of dollars for Dakota pipeline protest

Jury says Greenpeace owes hundreds of millions of dollars for Dakota pipeline protest
Experts say the verdict has relevance for free speech issues nationwide.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Volcano west of Anchorage is 'likely' to erupt in upcoming weeks or months

Volcano west of Anchorage is 'likely' to erupt in upcoming weeks or months
Last week, officials announced that a volcano 80 miles west of Anchorage is "likely" to erupt within the next few weeks or months. That could send ash into the air for hundreds of miles.

Read more on NPR

Next-Generation Water Satellite Maps Seafloor From Space

More accurate maps based on data from the SWOT mission can improve underwater navigation and result in greater knowledge of how heat and life move around the world’s ocean. There are better maps of the Moon’s surface than of the bottom of Earth’s ocean. Researchers have been working for decades to change that. As part […]

March 19, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/CFn8YiE
via IFTTT

NPR News: 2 NASA astronauts return to Earth after unexpectedly long mission in space

2 NASA astronauts return to Earth after unexpectedly long mission in space
NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams returned to Earth after spending nine months on the International Space Station. It was supposed to be an eight-day mission but hit a snag.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: What happens to the human body after being in space for extended periods

What happens to the human body after being in space for extended periods
Two astronauts returned to earth after an eight-day trip to space turned into a 9-month residence aboard the international space station. What happens to humans after being in space for that long?

Read more on NPR

NPR News: These chemicals may lurk in your personal care products

These chemicals may lurk in your personal care products
Ever scan the ingredient list of your favorite personal care products like shampoos or lotions and think, what are these complicated chemicals? And are any of them bad for me? We definitely have. And our colleagues at NPR's Life Kit did one step better: They parlayed their anxiety spiral into a helpful guide on the safety of personal care products. So today, Gina talks to Life Kit's Marielle Segarra about some of the top chemicals of concern, including parabens and phthalates. Click here to hear the full Life Kit guide — including how to audit your go-to products. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Sols 4481-4483: Humber Pie

Written by Michelle Minitti, Planetary Geologist at Framework Earth planning date: Friday, March 14, 2025 The rover successfully arrived at the “Humber Park” outcrop which, on this fine “Pi Day” on Earth, we could convince ourselves looked like a pie with a sandy interior and a rough and rocky crust. We can only hope our […]

March 19, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/nocslCx
via IFTTT

Welcome Home! NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 Back on Earth After Science Mission

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 completed the agency’s ninth commercial crew rotation mission to the International Space Station on Tuesday, splashing down safely in a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft off the coast of Tallahassee, Florida, in the Gulf of America. NASA astronauts Nick Hague, Suni Williams, and Butch Wilmore, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov, returned to Earth at 5:57 p.m. […]

March 18, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/rDb06yh
via IFTTT

NPR News: Two astronauts are finally returning from an unexpectedly long stay at the ISS

Two astronauts are finally returning from an unexpectedly long stay at the ISS
After months in space, astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore are finally scheduled to return home in a SpaceX capsule on Tuesday evening.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Measles is spreading. Are you safe?

Measles is spreading. Are you safe?
Measles continues to spread in West Texas and New Mexico. About 300 cases have been reported, since the outbreak began in January - but the actual number is likely higher. The communities where measles continues to spread people are largely unvaccinated. At the same time some isolated measles cases have been reported in a dozen other states - largely linked to international travel. In most of the U.S., vaccination rates are still high enough to stop a major outbreak. But if they continue to fall, we could see long-term consequences of measles in the future. For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

Read more on NPR

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 Members Pose for Portrait

NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore, Nick Hague, and Suni Williams, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Aleksandr Gorbunov – the members of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 mission – smile at the camera in this Feb. 19, 2025, photo. While aboard the International Space Station, Hague, Williams, and Wilmore completed more than 900 hours of research between more than 150 unique […]

March 18, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/PxGREYj
via IFTTT

NASA Invites Media to View Wildland Fire Technology Flight Test

NASA will conduct a live flight test of aircraft performing simulated wildland fire response operations using a newly developed airspace management system at 9 a.m. PDT on Tuesday, March 25, in Salinas, California. NASA’s new portable airspace management system, part of the agency’s Advanced Capabilities for Emergency Response Operations (ACERO) project, aims to significantly expand […]

March 18, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/sC7TknJ
via IFTTT

NPR News: 2 NASA astronauts head back to Earth after an unexpectedly long mission in space

2 NASA astronauts head back to Earth after an unexpectedly long mission in space
NASA astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore were on the International Space Station more than nine months, despite launching into space in June for what was expected to be an eight-day mission.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: A cell pulls off one of the 'Holy Grails' of biotechnology

A cell pulls off one of the 'Holy Grails' of biotechnology
A new part of an ocean plant cell has been discovered that might revolutionize farming one day. The structure can take nitrogen and convert it into the ingredient that helps all organisms grow.

Read more on NPR

NASA Invites Media to 62nd Annual Goddard Space Science Symposium

Media are invited to meet leaders in the space community during the 62nd annual Goddard Space Science Symposium, taking place from Wednesday, March 19, to Friday, March 21, at Martin’s Crosswinds in Greenbelt, Maryland. The symposium will also be streamed online. Hosted by the American Astronautical Society (AAS) in conjunction with NASA’s Goddard Space Flight […]

March 18, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/IXDMk4c
via IFTTT

Observing Storms from Skylab

Skylab 3 astronauts witnessed many spectacular sights during their 858 orbital trips around the Earth in the summer of 1973. One involved watching powerful Hurricane Ellen take shape off the West African coast. “There’s a nice storm down there. She looks pretty big. She’s got a lot of clouds,” said astronaut Alan L. Bean upon […]

March 18, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/sBAabKl
via IFTTT

Atomic Layer Processing Coating Techniques Enable Missions to See Further into the Ultraviolet

Astrophysics observations at ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths often probe the most dynamic aspects of the universe. However, the high energy of ultraviolet photons means that their interaction with the materials that make up an observing instrument are less efficient, resulting in low overall throughput. New approaches in the development of thin film coatings are addressing this […]

March 18, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/J6rEeRc
via IFTTT

Bringing the Heat: Abigail Howard Leads Thermal Systems for Artemis Rovers, Tools

Depending on where you stand at the lunar South Pole, you may experience temperatures of 130°F (54°C) during sunlit periods, or as low as -334°F (-203°C) in a permanently shadowed region. Keeping crews comfortable and tools and vehicles operational in such extreme temperatures is a key challenge for engineers at Johnson Space Center working on […]

March 18, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/zpu1Pat
via IFTTT

NPR News: How land-loving iguanas from North America may have ended up in Fiji

How land-loving iguanas from North America may have ended up in Fiji
A new study suggests Fiji's iguanas came from North America around 34 million years ago by floating some 5,000 miles. It's the longest-known dispersal of any land animal. So how did they do it?

Read more on NPR

NPR News: The U.S. measles outbreak is growing. Here's what to know

The U.S. measles outbreak is growing. Here's what to know
Measles is one of the most contagious infectious diseases known to science – more contagious than Ebola, smallpox or COVID-19. Declining vaccination rates over the past few years, plus a recent outbreak in West Texas, have public health experts concerned. Here's what to know about the science of this virus — plus how to protect against it. For the latest, host Regina G. Barber talks to NPR health correspondent Maria Godoy. Interested in other stories about public health? Tell us what you want to hear about by emailing shortwave@npr.org! Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Monday, March 17, 2025

Texas High School Aerospace Scholars: A Launchpad for Future Innovators 

NASA’s Office of STEM Engagement at Johnson Space Center offers Texas high school students a unique gateway to the world of space exploration through the High School Aerospace Scholars (HAS) program. This initiative gives juniors hands-on experience, working on projects that range from designing spacecraft to planning Mars missions.  Nearly 30 participants who have been […]

March 17, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/esME5DL
via IFTTT

Students Dive Into Robotics at Competition Supported by NASA JPL

Robots built by high schoolers vied for points in a fast-moving game inspired by complex ocean ecosystems at the FIRST Robotics Los Angeles regional competition. High school students who spent weeks designing, assembling, and testing 125-pound rolling robots put their fast-moving creations into the ring over the weekend, facing off at the annual Los Angeles […]

March 17, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/woYXheH
via IFTTT

NASA’s Webb Images Young, Giant Exoplanets, Detects Carbon Dioxide

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has captured direct images of multiple gas giant planets within an iconic planetary system. HR 8799, a young system 130 light-years away, has long been a key target for planet formation studies. The observations indicate that the well-studied planets of HR 8799 are rich in carbon dioxide gas. This provides […]

March 17, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/XBJrUVd
via IFTTT

Summer 2024

Help learners STEMify their summer through hands-on and engaging activities curated by the NASA eClips team. You’ll find something for everyone – Earth-based and out-of-this-world. This issue includes eClips videos, resources, and design challenges as well as partner activities and other recommended summer activities. We have organized them by the amount of time the activity […]

March 17, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/yIrTHm5
via IFTTT

September 2024

Fall back to school with this edition of the NASA eClips newsletter! Educators are provided with a host of resources to help engineer a great school year! Videos and activities focus on comparing science and engineering practices. Two new Spotlite Design Challenges are launched on climate change and Earth-observing satellites! And a fun activity for […]

March 17, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/j0TtQLW
via IFTTT

NPR News: Heat can age you as much as smoking, a new study finds

Heat can age you as much as smoking, a new study finds
Exposure to heat can alter the way your DNA works, according to a new study. The effects could lead to long-term health outcomes.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Researchers are rushing to build AI-powered robots. But will they work?

Researchers are rushing to build AI-powered robots. But will they work?
Artificial intelligence has revolutionized the virtual world. But reality bytes.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: What do dogs see when they look at a TV screen?

What do dogs see when they look at a TV screen?
What do our canine companions see when they look at screens, and why does it seem to hold their attention?

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Why 'Severance' is 'not that far off' from reality, according to one scientist

Why 'Severance' is 'not that far off' from reality, according to one scientist
What if we had the ultimate work-life balance? This fundamental question underlies the hit Apple TV+ show Severance – now in its second season. Ahead of the season 2 finale this Friday, producer Rachel Carlson sat down with the science consultant for the series, Dr. Vijay Agarwal. Vijay says the concept is "resoundingly" possible – and that scientists closer than we might think. More questions about the intersections of pop culture and science? Email us at shortwave@npr.org. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Sunday, March 16, 2025

NASA to Provide Live Coverage of Crew-9 Return, Splashdown

NASA will provide live coverage of the agency’s SpaceX Crew-9 return to Earth from the International Space Station, beginning with Dragon spacecraft hatch closure preparations at 10:45 p.m. EDT Monday, March 17. NASA and SpaceX met on Sunday to assess weather and splashdown conditions off Florida’s coast for the return of the agency’s Crew-9 mission […]

March 16, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/PzW74VM
via IFTTT

Saturday, March 15, 2025

NPR News: NASA's stuck astronauts welcome their newly arrived replacements to the space station

NASA's stuck astronauts welcome their newly arrived replacements to the space station
Just over a day after blasting off, a SpaceX crew capsule arrived at the International Space Station on Sunday, delivering the replacements for NASA's two stuck astronauts.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: For microplastics in baby seabirds, what doesn't kill you causes organ failure

For microplastics in baby seabirds, what doesn't kill you causes organ failure
New research shows that ingesting plastic can cause organ dysfunction and other health problems in birds.

Read more on NPR

NASA’s EZIE Launches on Mission to Study Earth’s Electrojets

Under the nighttime California sky, NASA’s EZIE (Electrojet Zeeman Imaging Explorer) mission launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket at 11:43 p.m. PDT on March 14. Taking off from Vandenberg Space Force Base near Santa Barbara, the EZIE mission’s trio of small satellites will fly in a pearls-on-a-string configuration approximately 260 to 370 miles above Earth’s surface to […]

March 15, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/HvQCdgF
via IFTTT

NPR News: For microplastics in birds, what doesn't kill you causes organ failure

For microplastics in birds, what doesn't kill you causes organ failure
New research shows that ingesting plastic can cause organ dysfunction and other health problems in birds.

Read more on NPR

Friday, March 14, 2025

Blood Moon Lunar Eclipse

The phases of the lunar eclipse are visible in this time-lapse image of the Moon above the Space Environments Complex at NASA’s Neil Armstrong Test Facility in Sandusky, OH on March 14, 2025. Toward the middle of the Moon’s track through the sky, it appears red – this is the Blood Moon. One meaning of […]

March 14, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/NARhHLj
via IFTTT

NPR News: A U.S. influencer outrages Australians by snatching a baby wombat from its mom

A U.S. influencer outrages Australians by snatching a baby wombat from its mom
Outdoor enthusiast Sam Jones left Australia after posting a video of herself separating a baby wombat from its mom on a dark road. Australians are cheering her departure and worrying about the animal.

Read more on NPR

NASA Data Supports Everglades Restoration

Florida’s coastal wetlands face new threats as sea levels and temperatures climb. NASA’s BlueFlux Campaign is developing a new, satellite-based data product that could shape efforts to protect their future.

March 14, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/8pe0Cl7
via IFTTT

NPR News: Photos: Across the U.S., sky gazers marvel at the blood moon lunar eclipse

Photos: Across the U.S., sky gazers marvel at the blood moon lunar eclipse
As the moon moved through the shadow of the Earth, it was also being illuminated by light from the sun — causing the moon to appear as if dipped in a deep red hue in a stunning celestial sight.

Read more on NPR

Hubble Sees a Spiral and a Star

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features a sparkling spiral galaxy paired with a prominent star, both in the constellation Virgo. While the galaxy and the star appear to be close to one another, even overlapping, they’re actually a great distance apart. The star, marked with four long diffraction spikes, is in our own galaxy. […]

March 14, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/Y9HkG0V
via IFTTT

NPR News: 5 nature-inspired ways to bring joy and wonder into your life this spring

5 nature-inspired ways to bring joy and wonder into your life this spring
Simple activities to help you better appreciate the birds, bees and flowers — and spend more time outside.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Love fruit? Thank dinosaur mass extinction

Love fruit? Thank dinosaur mass extinction
Move over, TikTokers. It's time to shine a spotlight on some of the earliest influencers around: dinosaurs. When these ecosystem engineers were in their heyday, forest canopies were open and seeds were small. But around the time most dinosaurs were wiped out, paleontologists noticed an interesting shift in the fossil record: Seeds got bigger — much bigger. There was a fruit boom. Did the death of these dinosaurs have something to do with it? And who are the modern day equivalent of dinosaur influencers? To find out, host Emily Kwong talks to Chris Doughty, an ecologist at Northern Arizona University. Tell us what other tales of dino past you want us to regale you with by emailing us at shortwave@npr.org! Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Thursday, March 13, 2025

NASA Researchers Study Coastal Wetlands, Champions of Carbon Capture

In the Florida Everglades, NASA’s BlueFlux Campaign investigates the relationship between tropical wetlands and greenhouse gases.

March 13, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/rz9Rkbp
via IFTTT

NPR News: EPA says it will roll back many climate rules. But that could prove complicated

EPA says it will roll back many climate rules. But that could prove complicated
Announcing big changes to environmental rules doesn't undo facts on the ground overnight. Instead, EPA's announcement is the first step in what is likely to be a lengthy process to remake the rules and policies it targeted.

Read more on NPR

NASA Analysis Shows Unexpected Amount of Sea Level Rise in 2024

Last year’s increase was due to an unusual amount of ocean warming, combined with meltwater from land-based ice such as glaciers. Global sea level rose faster than expected in 2024, mostly because of ocean water expanding as it warms, or thermal expansion. According to a NASA-led analysis, last year’s rate of rise was 0.23 inches […]

March 13, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/tLaPJAF
via IFTTT

NASA Cameras on Blue Ghost Capture First-of-its-Kind Moon Landing Footage

A team at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, has captured first-of-its-kind imagery of a lunar lander’s engine plumes interacting with the Moon’s surface, a key piece of data as trips to the Moon increase in the coming years under the agency’s Artemis campaign. The Stereo Cameras for Lunar-Plume Surface Studies (SCALPSS) 1.1 instrument […]

March 13, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/ftd8I0Y
via IFTTT

NPR News: Brilliant young minds honored in prestigious science competition

Brilliant young minds honored in prestigious science competition
We hear from the student winners of the prestigious Regeneron Science Talent Search, America's oldest science and math competition.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: The EPA has announced dozens of environmental regulations it plans to target

The EPA has announced dozens of environmental regulations it plans to target
The Trump administration plans to reconsider about two dozen environmental rules, in what the Environmental Protection Agency calls the "most consequential day of deregulation in U.S. history."

Read more on NPR

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Sun Rises on Crew-10 at Launch Pad

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company’s Dragon spacecraft on top is seen during sunrise on the launch pad at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Tuesday, March 11, 2025, ahead of the agency’s SpaceX Crew-10 launch. NASA astronauts Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers, JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut Takuya Onishi, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Kirill Peskov […]

March 12, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/f4jVmcp
via IFTTT

NPR News: How is sex determined? Scientists say it's complicated

How is sex determined? Scientists say it's complicated
Biological sex is all over the news lately. Whether it's via President Trump's executive order affecting passport policy, moving trans inmates between prisons or shifting the requirements for women in sports — appeals to "the biological reality of sex" are constant. In truth, biological sex, like a lot of scientific categories, is nuanced. It's defined by multiple criteria – including chromosomal, chemical and physical factors – that can, and do, change over a person's lifetime. And it's a reality that's definitely not limited to male and female. Want the episode to cover more nuances of human biology? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org! We're also always open to other story ideas you have. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: NASA's latest space launch: Stranded astronauts and messy politics

NASA's latest space launch: Stranded astronauts and messy politics
President Trump and Elon Musk claim the Biden administration abandoned two astronauts in space. But the publicly available evidence suggests a different story.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: America's clean-energy industry is growing despite Trump's attacks. At least for now.

America's clean-energy industry is growing despite Trump's attacks. At least for now.
Clean energy is crucial to meet rising U.S. electricity demand, according to industry analysts and executives. But the Trump administration's actions could slow development.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: High schoolers honored in prestigious STEM competition

High schoolers honored in prestigious STEM competition
We hear from the student winners of the prestigious Regeneron Science Talent Search, America's oldest science and math competition.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: SpaceX craft to launch to retrieve 2 astronauts who have been swept up in politics

SpaceX craft to launch to retrieve 2 astronauts who have been swept up in politics
A SpaceX Dragon spacecraft will launch Wednesday to the International Space Station. It's expected to bring back two astronauts who've had an unexpectedly long stay that's become mired in politics.

Read more on NPR

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

NASA Launches Missions to Study Sun, Universe’s Beginning

NASA’s newest astrophysics observatory, SPHEREx, is on its way to study the origins of our universe and the history of galaxies, and to search for the ingredients of life in our galaxy. Short for Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer, SPHEREx lifted off at 8:10 p.m. PDT on […]

March 12, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/WgICKol
via IFTTT

How Do We Know the Earth Isn’t Flat? We Asked a NASA Expert: Episode 53

This was a magical revelation for the Greeks and the Egyptians, who were able to see from the motions of the stars and the way the Sun moved. They saw the way the Sun’s shadow worked in different places. And they figured, well, that’s only possible if the Earth is round. And they took that […]

March 11, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/hmEaOzV
via IFTTT

NASA’s Chevron Technology Quiets the Skies

Shortly after dawn on March 27, 2001, NASA pilot Bill Rieke took off from an airfield just outside of Phoenix in NASA’s blue-and-white Learjet 25 and flew low over a series of microphones for the first flight test of a groundbreaking NASA technology. On one of the plane’s engines was an experimental jagged-edged nozzle that […]

March 11, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/IsASaVY
via IFTTT

NPR News: What to know about this week's "blood worm moon" total lunar eclipse

What to know about this week's "blood worm moon" total lunar eclipse
This total lunar eclipse — the first in three years — will feature a "blood worm moon," so named for the reddish hue of its glow and the time of year it's occurring.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Scientists are engineering a sense of touch for people who are paralyzed

Scientists are engineering a sense of touch for people who are paralyzed
A man living with paralysis felt his index finger for the first time in three years, thanks to technology that reconnected his brain and body.

Read more on NPR

NASA Selects Three University Teams to Participate in Flight Research 

NASA has selected three university teams to help solve 21st century aviation challenges that could transform the skies above our communities.  As part of NASA’s University Leadership Initiative (ULI), both graduate and undergraduate students on faculty-led university teams will contribute directly to real-world flight research while gaining hands-on experience working with partners from other universities […]

March 11, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/cBnXg0A
via IFTTT

NPR News: How the Trump administration is halting scientific research

How the Trump administration is halting scientific research
In its first 50 days, the Trump administration made sweeping changes to scientific arms of the government like the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Food and Drug Administration. The president issued executive orders to terminate all work that was related to DEI, environmental justice and gender inclusivity. In response, research was halted and thousands of people were fired — some of which was reversed. It's a lot to keep track of, so we called in reinforcements. Here to recount it all and analyze what these ongoing changes mean for the future of scientific research in the United States are NPR science correspondents Rob Stein, Pien Huang and Jonathan Lambert. Want to hear more about policy changes affecting science? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org! We're also always open to other story ideas you have. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: How the Trump administration is halting scientific research

How the Trump administration is halting scientific research
In its first 50 days, the Trump administration made sweeping changes to scientific arms of the government like the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Food and Drug Administration. The president issued executive orders to terminate all work that was related to DEI, environmental justice and gender inclusivity. In response, research was halted and thousands of people were fired — some of which was reversed. It's a lot to keep track of, so we called in reinforcements. Here to recount it all and analyze what these ongoing changes mean for the future of scientific research in the United States are NPR science correspondents Rob Stein, Pien Huang and Jonathan Lambert. Want to hear more about policy changes affecting science? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org! We're also always open to other story ideas you have. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Monday, March 10, 2025

NPR News: Birds can change their tunes as their populations evolve, researchers find

Birds can change their tunes as their populations evolve, researchers find
New research from the University of Oxford has provided fresh insights into how bird songs evolve over time. The analysis is based on over 100,000 songs.

Read more on NPR

NASA Ames Science Directorate: Stars of the Month – March 2025

The NASA Ames Science Directorate recognizes the outstanding contributions of (pictured left to right) Jessica Kong, Josh Alwood, and Sam Kim. Their commitment to the NASA mission represents the entrepreneurial spirit, technical expertise, and collaborative disposition needed to explore this world and beyond. Space Science and Astrobiology Star: Jessica Kong Jessica Kong is serving as […]

March 10, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/jR4cnaC
via IFTTT

Moon Mascot: NASA Artemis II ZGI Design Challenge

Will you design the zero gravity indicator (ZGI) that accompanies the Artemis II mission around the Moon? If your design is one of the most compelling and resonates with the global community and the Artemis II astronauts, your design might fly into space aboard the Orion spacecraft and you could win US$1225. Zero gravity indicators are […]

March 10, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/2QxnrST
via IFTTT

Station Science Top News: March 7, 2025

Challenges to measuring space-induced brain changes Researchers found that an upward shift in the brain during spaceflight makes it hard to distinguish different types of tissue, causing errors in determining changes in brain volume. Previous studies have interpreted these changes as evidence of adaptation to space. This finding suggests that unique methods are needed to […]

March 10, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/wYg2Wc6
via IFTTT

James Gentile: Shaping the Artemis Generation, One Simulation at a Time 

James Gentile always wanted to fly. As he prepared for an appointment to the U.S. Air Force Academy to become a pilot, life threw him an unexpected curve: a diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes. His appointment was rescinded.  With his dream grounded, Gentile had two choices—give up or chart a new course. He chose the […]

March 10, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/sAH2do5
via IFTTT

NPR News: Here's how tourists are solving a plankton puzzle in Antarctica

Here's how tourists are solving a plankton puzzle in Antarctica
Tourists to Antarctica are fueling research on some of the tiniest, most influential organisms on Earth: phytoplankton. These itty bitty critters make their own food and are the base of the food web in most of the ocean, but tracking how well they're doing is historically tricky. So, researchers with the program FjordPhyto are using samples collected by these tourists to understand how the balance of power in the Antarctic food web could be shifting — could ripple across the food web of the entire ocean. Want to hear more community science at work or about polar ecosystems? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org! We're also always open to other story ideas you have. <3 Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Here's how tourists are solving a plankton puzzle in Antarctica

Here's how tourists are solving a plankton puzzle in Antarctica
Tourists to Antarctica are fueling research on some of the tiniest, most influential organisms on Earth: phytoplankton. These itty bitty critters make their own food and are the base of the food web in most of the ocean, but tracking how well they're doing is historically tricky. So, researchers with the program FjordPhyto are using samples collected by these tourists to understand how the balance of power in the Antarctic food web could be shifting — could ripple across the food web of the entire ocean. Want to hear more community science at work or about polar ecosystems? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org! We're also always open to other story ideas you have. <3 Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Here's how tourists are solving a plankton puzzle in Antarctica

Here's how tourists are solving a plankton puzzle in Antarctica
Tourists to Antarctica are fueling research on some of the tiniest, most influential organisms on Earth: phytoplankton. These itty bitty critters make their own food and are the base of the food web in most of the ocean, but tracking how well they're doing is historically tricky. So, researchers with the program FjordPhyto are using samples collected by these tourists to understand how the balance of power in the Antarctic food web could be shifting — could ripple across the food web of the entire ocean. Want to hear more community science at work or about polar ecosystems? Let us know by emailing shortwave@npr.org! We're also always open to other story ideas you have. <3 Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Sunday, March 9, 2025

NPR News: Planned development threatens view of Paranal Observatory

Planned development threatens view of Paranal Observatory
With its clear, dark skies, northern Chile is home to two fifths of the world's astronomical infrastructure, but could that be under threat with increasing urbanisation and mining development?

Read more on NPR

NPR News: 5 years ago, movie theaters closed. NPR's movie critic looks back at COVID-19

5 years ago, movie theaters closed. NPR's movie critic looks back at COVID-19
The pandemic decimated the box office and the reshaped the moviegoing experience. NPR's movie critic, Bob Mondello, looks back on how his job changed during the early months of COVID-19.

Read more on NPR

Saturday, March 8, 2025

Hubble Unveils a Glittering View of Sh2-284

A tiny fraction of the stellar nursery known as Sh2-284 is visible in this glittering, star-filled NASA Hubble Space Telescope image. This immense region of gas and dust is the birthing place of stars, which shine among the clouds. Bright clusters of newborn stars glow pink in infrared light, and clouds of gas and dust, […]

March 08, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/r6LcUdy
via IFTTT

Hubble Jams With A Cosmic Guitar

Arp 105 is a dazzling ongoing merger between an elliptical galaxy and a spiral galaxy drawn together by gravity, characterized by a long, drawn out tidal tail of stars and gas more than 362,000 light-years long. The immense tail, which extends beyond this image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, was pulled from the two galaxies […]

March 08, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/WFyJcSD
via IFTTT

Hubble Spies a Spectacular Starburst Galaxy

Sweeping spiral arms extend from NGC 4536, littered with bright blue clusters of star formation and red clumps of hydrogen gas shining among dark lanes of dust. The galaxy’s shape may seem a little unusual, and that’s because it’s what’s known as an “intermediate galaxy”: not quite a barred spiral, but not exactly an unbarred […]

March 08, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/e0XrIj4
via IFTTT

Hubble Examines Stars Ensconced in a Cocoon of Gas

An open cluster of stars shines through misty, cocoon-like gas clouds in this Hubble Space Telescope image of NGC 460. NGC 460 is located in a region of the Small Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy that orbits the Milky Way. This particular region contains a number of young star clusters and nebulae of different sizes […]

March 08, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/OGSbrom
via IFTTT

Friday, March 7, 2025

NPR News: New research reveals ancient humans used animal bone tools much earlier than thought

New research reveals ancient humans used animal bone tools much earlier than thought
The handcrafted tools found in Tanzania were made 1.5 million years ago and were fashioned primarily from the bones of elephants and hippopotamuses.

Read more on NPR

NASA Earns Best Place to Work in Government for 13th Consecutive Year 

For the 13th straight year, NASA has earned the title of Best Place to Work in the Federal Government – large agency – from the Partnership for Public Service. The ranking reflects employee satisfaction and workplace elements across the agency while executing NASA’s mission to explore the unknown and discover new knowledge for the benefit […]

March 07, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/MVxhOQe
via IFTTT

Cosmic Mapmaker: NASA’s SPHEREx Space Telescope Ready to Launch

NASA’s latest space observatory is targeting a March 8 liftoff, and the agency’s PUNCH heliophysics mission is sharing a ride. Here’s what to expect during launch and beyond. In a little over a day, NASA’s SPHEREx space telescope is slated to launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. […]

March 07, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/DGbJkxj
via IFTTT

NASA Receives Some Data Before Intuitive Machines Ends Lunar Mission

Shortly after touching down inside a crater on the Moon, carrying NASA technology and science on its IM-2 mission, Intuitive Machines collected some data for the agency before calling an early end of mission at 12:15 a.m. CST Friday. As part of the company’s second Moon delivery for NASA under the agency’s CLPS (Commercial Lunar […]

March 07, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/feL6nzc
via IFTTT

NASA Invites Creators to Design Mascot for Artemis Moon Mission

NASA is seeking design ideas from global creators for a zero gravity indicator that will fly aboard the agency’s Artemis II test flight. Zero gravity indicators are small, plush items carried aboard spacecraft to provide a visual indication of when the spacecraft and its crew reach space. This opportunity, with a submission deadline of May […]

March 07, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/zqDpCJM
via IFTTT

NASA Astronaut to Answer Questions from Students in Oregon

Students from Oregon will have the chance to connect with NASA astronaut Don Pettit as he answers prerecorded science, technology, engineering, and mathematics-related questions from aboard the International Space Station. Watch the 20-minute space-to-Earth call at 2:15 p.m. EDT on Monday, March 10, on NASA+ and learn how to watch NASA content on various platforms, […]

March 07, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/aoX8ql6
via IFTTT

NASA Webb Wows With Incredible Detail in Actively Forming Star System

High-resolution near-infrared light captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope shows extraordinary new detail and structure in Lynds 483 (L483). Two actively forming stars are responsible for the shimmering ejections of gas and dust that gleam in orange, blue, and purple in this representative color image. Over tens of thousands of years, the central protostars […]

March 07, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/g3jFBWl
via IFTTT

NPR News: Early humans made tools from bones 1 million years sooner than scientists thought

Early humans made tools from bones 1 million years sooner than scientists thought
Archeologists know early humans used stone to make tools long before the time of Homo sapiens. But a new discovery out this week in Nature suggests early humans in eastern Africa were also using animal bones – one million years earlier than researchers previously thought. The finding suggests that these early humans were intentionally shaping animal materials – like elephant and hippopotamus bones – to make tools and that it could indicate advancements in early human cognition. Want more on early human history? Email us at shortwave@npr.org. Listen to Short Wave on Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts.

Read more on NPR

Thursday, March 6, 2025

NASA Seeks Commercial Partner for Robots Aboard Space Station

As NASA continues to enable a sustainable, cost-effective commercial space economy, the agency is seeking partnership proposals for the operations, sustaining engineering, and utilization of Astrobee, a free-flying robotic system aboard the International Space Station. The Announcement for Partnership Proposal contains instructions and criteria for transferring responsibility of the Astrobee system to a commercial provider. […]

March 06, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/Tg18Xpx
via IFTTT

NPR News: That galaxy next door? It's home to a monster black hole

That galaxy next door? It's home to a monster black hole
The Large Magellanic Cloud, a close neighbor to the Milky Way, may house a giant black hole. It's the closest supermassive black hole outside of our galaxy.

Read more on NPR

2024 Associate Administrator Awards Honorees

The ARMD 2024 Associate Administrator Awards were presented to NASA employees, contractors, and students or interns who distinguished themselves, either individually or as part of a group, through their overall approach to their work and through results they achieved during the award year. LEGEND: ARMD NASA CENTERS ARC = Ames Research Center AFRC = Armstrong […]

March 06, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/DKrL95s
via IFTTT

NPR News: WATCH LIVE: Intuitive Machines attempts to land probe near lunar south pole

WATCH LIVE: Intuitive Machines attempts to land probe near lunar south pole
Commercial company Intuitive Machines is attempting to land a probe near the lunar south pole. If successful, it will be the second time a private company has landed on the moon in less than a week.

Read more on NPR

2024 AA Awards for Program and Mission Support (Group)

Airspace Operations Safety Program (AOSP) Resource Analyst Group * Denotes Team Lead NASA Ames Research CenterWarcquel D. FriesonMary NguyenSandra E. RamirezTiana (Thuy) D. Vo NASA Glenn Research CenterJulie A. Blackett NASA HeadquartersMichele D. Dodson*Jeffrey S. Farlin* NASA Langley Research CenterYolanda Keiller 2024 AA Award Honorees 2024 AA Award Honorees PDF ARMD Associate Administrator Awards

March 06, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/RK41bDw
via IFTTT

2024 AA Awards for Pushing the Envelope Honoree (Group)

Advanced Power Electronics Team * Denotes Team Lead NASA Glenn Research CenterDavid AvanesianJulie A. BlystoneRebecca A. BuehrleMarc A. CarboneAriel E. DimstonMatthew G. Granger*Susanah R. KowalewskiAlex M. LearyJohn M. MaroliErik J. Stalcup HX5Gregor LiederbachScott L. MetzgerWesley A. Miller Peraton Inc.Nicholas C. Purpera 2024 AA Award Honorees 2024 AA Award Honorees PDF ARMD Associate Administrator Awards

March 06, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/aEIBhVS
via IFTTT

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

NASA Turns Off 2 Voyager Science Instruments to Extend Mission

The farthest-flung human-made objects will be able to take their science-gathering even farther, thanks to these energy-conserving measures. Mission engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California turned off the cosmic ray subsystem experiment aboard Voyager 1 on Feb. 25 and will shut off Voyager 2’s low-energy charged particle instrument on March 24. Three […]

March 05, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/1iGQOPV
via IFTTT

Novel Recuperator Design for Cryogenic Fluid Management System

Cryocoolers are essential systems in many space exploration missions to maintain propellants at cryogenic temperatures. Cryogenic recuperators are a key component of these cryocoolers and dictate the performance of the system. NASA is seeking to reduce the cost and increase the performance of cryogenic recuperators (also called Heat Exchangers) by utilizing Additive Manufacturing (AM) technologies. […]

March 05, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/INqAhSP
via IFTTT

Hubble Captures New View of Colorful Veil

In this NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image, Hubble once again lifts the veil on a famous — and frequently photographed — supernova remnant: the Veil Nebula. The remnant of a star roughly 20 times as massive as the Sun that exploded about 10,000 years ago, the Veil Nebula is situated about 2,400 light-years away in the constellation […]

March 05, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/6IB9w7i
via IFTTT

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 to Explore Deep Space Exercise, Health

During NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 mission to the International Space Station, which is scheduled to launch in March, select members of the four-person crew will participate in exercise and medical research aimed at keeping astronauts fit on future long-duration missions. Crew members living and working aboard the space station have access to a designated training area […]

March 05, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/ltHnCbk
via IFTTT

NPR News: In Key West, testing shows cruise ships stir up as much sediment as a hurricane

In Key West, testing shows cruise ships stir up as much sediment as a hurricane
Tests in Key West show sediment stirred up by cruise ships, which can harm marine life, routinely exceed federal standards. Key West has responded by suspending the tests.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: In Key West, testing shows cruise ships stir up as much sediment as a hurricane

In Key West, testing shows cruise ships stir up as much sediment as a hurricane
Tests in Key West show sediment stirred up by cruise ships, which can harm marine life, routinely exceed federal standards. Key West has responded by suspending the tests.

Read more on NPR

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

NASA’s Hubble Finds Kuiper Belt Duo May Be Trio

The puzzle of predicting how three gravitationally bound bodies move in space has challenged mathematicians for centuries, and has most recently been popularized in the novel and television show “3 Body Problem.” There’s no problem, however, with what a team of researchers say is likely a stable trio of icy space rocks in the solar […]

March 04, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/ulhwtE4
via IFTTT

How NASA Employee Went from Rock Climbing to Rocket Propulsion

Jason Hopper’s journey to NASA started with assessing the risk of stepping into the unknown. One day, while taking a break from his hobby of rock climbing at Mississippi State University, a fellow student noticed Hopper reading a rocket propulsion textbook with a photo of a space shuttle launch on the cover. Rocket propulsion – […]

March 04, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/QFfNUil
via IFTTT

NPR News: Chappy the baby seal has died, weeks after being rescued in a Connecticut city

Chappy the baby seal has died, weeks after being rescued in a Connecticut city
The aquarium helping Chappy — a nod to the New Haven, Conn., neighborhood where he was rescued last month — said he died of gastrointestinal issues and "was surrounded by love until the very end."

Read more on NPR

NPR News: These scientists are trying to revive woolly mammoths ... by modifying mice

These scientists are trying to revive woolly mammoths ... by modifying mice
You've heard of the woolly mammoth. But have you heard of woolly mice? These critters were genetically modified by the Dallas-based biotech company Colossal Biosciences to have the same "woolly" and fat appearance as the ancient mammoths. The mice are a key step in the longer journey to de-extinct the woolly mammoth. NPR's Rob Stein takes us to the lab where it all happened. Interested in more biotech stories? Let us know by dropping a line to shortwave@npr.org. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Hoping to revive mammoths, scientists create 'woolly mice'

Hoping to revive mammoths, scientists create 'woolly mice'
Hoping to bring the giant, ancient animal back from extinction, scientists have created a far smaller woolly creature. Woolly mice have some of the key traits of mammoths, including their thick, hairy coat.

Read more on NPR

Orion Deputy Program Manager Debbie Korth Receives 2025 Engineer of the Year Award

The National Society of Professional Engineers recently named Debbie Korth, Orion deputy program manager at Johnson Space Center, as NASA’s 2025 Engineer of the Year. Korth was recognized during an award ceremony at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 21, alongside honorees from 17 other federal agencies. The annual awards program honors […]

March 04, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/aR9cMGb
via IFTTT

Monday, March 3, 2025

NPR News: NASA's upcoming telescope launch aims to address some existential questions

NASA's upcoming telescope launch aims to address some existential questions
The new 8.5-foot telescope is set to launch this Tuesday by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory with a clear objective: to explore the origins of the universe.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: The latest launch for Elon Musk's Starship rocket has been delayed

The latest launch for Elon Musk's Starship rocket has been delayed
Starship had been expected to launch again Monday. A previous launch ended in an explosion over the Caribbean, and sent commercial airlines scattering to avoid falling rocket debris.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Elon Musk's Starship rocket prepares to fly again

Elon Musk's Starship rocket prepares to fly again
The latest test of Starship comes after an explosion over the Caribbean sent commercial airlines scattering to avoid falling rocket debris

Read more on NPR

35 Years Ago: STS-36 Flies a Dedicated Department of Defense Mission

On Feb. 28, 1990, space shuttle Atlantis took off from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on STS-36, the sixth shuttle mission dedicated to the Department of Defense. As such, many of the details of the flight remain classified. The mission marked the 34th flight of the space shuttle, the sixth for Atlantis, and the […]

March 03, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/sRM4ENX
via IFTTT

Going With the Flow: Visualizing Ocean Currents with ECCO

NASA scientists and collaborators built the ECCO model to be the most realistic, detailed, and continuous depiction of the ocean ever developed

March 03, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/ajXJKcm
via IFTTT

NASA Marks 110 Years Since Founding of Predecessor Organization

To celebrate the 110th anniversary of the organization that ultimately became NASA, the agency released a new collection of videos to highlight the history of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) and the ways it transformed flight over four decades. Not long after the beginning of World War I, the United States Congress, concerned […]

March 03, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/5Cq2Xsu
via IFTTT

NPR News: Blue Ghost Moon Landing

Blue Ghost Moon Landing
For the first time, a private company has successfully landed a probe on the moon. Firefly Aerospace's "Blue Ghost" lander touched down on the lunar surface early Sunday morning.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Two patients navigate the new Alzheimer's drugs

Two patients navigate the new Alzheimer's drugs
There are now two fully approved drugs on the market that can, sometimes, slow down the progression of Alzheimer's disease. Both have been shown to slow down the mental decline of Alzheimer's by more than 25%. But that's in a group of patients—an individual may do much better, or not be helped at all. NPR Science Correspondent Jon Hamilton has been talking to people who've taken these drugs. Today he has the story of two patients to receive them. Interested in more human health stories? Contact us at shortwave@npr.org. Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

Read more on NPR

Sunday, March 2, 2025

NPR News: New research finds mice perform CPR-like behavior on each other when incapacitated

New research finds mice perform CPR-like behavior on each other when incapacitated
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe asks Li Zhang, professor of physiology and neuroscience at USC's Keck School of Medicine, how mice perform first aid on each other.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Private lunar lander Blue Ghost touches down on the moon

Private lunar lander Blue Ghost touches down on the moon
A private lunar lander carrying a drill and other experiments for NASA touched down on the moon Sunday, the latest in a string of companies looking to kickstart business on the celestial neighbor.

Read more on NPR

Touchdown! Carrying NASA Science, Firefly’s Blue Ghost Lands on Moon

Carrying a suite of NASA science and technology, Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Mission 1 successfully landed at 3:34 a.m. EST on Sunday near a volcanic feature called Mons Latreille within Mare Crisium, a more than 300-mile-wide basin located in the northeast quadrant of the Moon’s near side. The Blue Ghost lander is in an upright […]

March 02, 2025
from NASA https://ift.tt/E9uO268
via IFTTT

Saturday, March 1, 2025

NPR News: Can Faith Kipyegon break four minutes in the mile? Scientists say yes.

Can Faith Kipyegon break four minutes in the mile? Scientists say yes.
Faith Kipyegon, the fastest female miler in the world, could dip under 4 minutes with an extra boost from pacers.

Read more on NPR