Recent astronomy Articles

Recent astronomy articles can be found both online and in print magazines.  New photos of space objects result in articles.  People right when nations announce new missions into space.  Every new discovery and piece of information generates a tremendous amount of discussion.  Here’s just some of the most recent astronomy articles.

There were many recent astronomy articles on space dust that was bumpy.  Why is that?  Scientists have long known that hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe.  However, larger molecules require that hydrogen bonds.  In the cold of space it takes the right medium to complete the bond.  It could be the bumpy surface of dust that helps in that process.  Imagine that.

The Death Star is one of the moons of Saturn.  With its huge crater, it resembles the famous movie prop.  Recent astronomy articles focused on Cassini’s mission to this moon, called Mimas.  Some stunning images and a lot of new data resulted.  It was a popular story.  Scientists believe the mission will create new understanding as to the number of crater creating objects that pass near to Saturn.  This can give new insight into how busy our solar system is as far as impact capable objects, as well as reveal the true extent of how other planets, like Saturn, serve as object scrubbers in our solar system.

Dark matter is something scientists have known about for years.  It contributes to the expansion of the universe, but scientists don’t really know how.  Dark matter was a popular headline in recent astronomy articles.  SNAP, the SuperNova/Acceleration Probe, was planned to help solve dark matter by examining many distant supernovae.  70% of the universe’s matter is dark matter so this is important work.

Before becoming a sun, our little yellow sun was just a proto-sun.  Many researchers, however wondered whether this proto-sun may have emitted useful heat or light or particles.  The answer is yes according to recent astronomy articles.  Scientists have used new techniques to discover that the protosun did indeed emit ultraviolet and other particles in an early form of the solar wind.  These emissions helped form life on Earth even before the sun was a sun.

For any astronomy enthusiast it’s important to keep up on recent astronomy articles.

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