Sparkling Icicles, Fiery Red 'Christmas Trees'—The Celestial Spectacle of the Christmas Tree Star ClusterSparkling Icicles, Fiery Red 'Christmas Trees'—The Celestial Spectacle of the Christmas Tree Star Cluster
Revealing the Cone Nebula: The 'Dark Knight' Within the Christmas Tree ClusterRevealing the Cone Nebula: The 'Dark Knight' Within the Christmas Tree Cluster
JWST Captures Stunning Portrait of Dying Wolf-Rayet Star WR-124 in Cosmic FarewellJWST Captures Stunning Portrait of Dying Wolf-Rayet Star WR-124 in Cosmic Farewell
JWST Unveils Breathtaking New Images of Southern Ring Nebula (NGC 3132)JWST Unveils Breathtaking New Images of Southern Ring Nebula (NGC 3132)
Chinese-led Team Uncovers 'Super-Earth' in Habitable Zone of Sun-like Star Using Novel TTV TechniqueChinese-led Team Uncovers 'Super-Earth' in Habitable Zone of Sun-like Star Using Novel TTV TechniqueA Sino-German research team led by the Yunnan Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has discovered a "super-Earth" orbiting a Sun-like star, marking a breakthrough in exoplanet detection. Named Kepler-725c, the planet has a mass 10 times that of Earth and resides in the habitable zone of its host star, where liquid water—and potentially life—could exist. The findings, published June 3 in Nature Astronomy, represent the first use of transit timing variation (TTV) inversion to identify such a planet in a Sun-like star’s habitable zone .
TRAPPIST-1e: High-Hope Exoplanet with 0.95 ESI Faces Tidal Lock ChallengeTRAPPIST-1e: High-Hope Exoplanet with 0.95 ESI Faces Tidal Lock ChallengeTRAPPIST-1e, boasting a 0.95 Earth Similarity Index (ESI), leads seven rocky planets in its system as the most likely to harbor life. But its closeness to the host star has tidally locked all planets, trapping one side in perpetual light and the other in darkness—leaving only a narrow twilight zone as a potential life haven.
Ice Giants and Mini-Neptunes: The Solar System’s Elusive Planetary EnigmasIce Giants and Mini-Neptunes: The Solar System’s Elusive Planetary EnigmasIce giants like Uranus and Neptune, and smaller "mini-Neptunes" (larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune), represent a puzzling gap in our solar system knowledge. These worlds, with hydrogen-helium atmospheres and rocky cores, remain the least explored planetary class—despite comprising a dominant type in exoplanetary systems.
Stellar Nurseries and Cosmic Collisions: Webb and Rubin Telescopes Unveil Galactic SecretsStellar Nurseries and Cosmic Collisions: Webb and Rubin Telescopes Unveil Galactic SecretsAstronomers have unveiled two groundbreaking images capturing the dynamic interplay of star formation and galaxy evolution. The first, a composite of the Trifid and Lagoon Nebulae, combines 678 individual exposures taken over just seven hours by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s 3.2-billion-pixel camera. This unprecedented resolution reveals intricate gas and dust structures in these stellar nurseries, where new stars are born from collapsing molecular clouds.
Stevenson 2-18: The Cosmic 'Puffball' Star That Could Swallow SaturnStevenson 2-18: The Cosmic 'Puffball' Star That Could Swallow SaturnMeet Stevenson 2-18, a star so colossal it’s earned the title of the universe’s "flabby giant." With a radius of 1.5 billion kilometers, this red supergiant would engulf Saturn if placed at the Sun’s position. Despite its eye-popping size, it packs only 15–20 times the Sun’s mass—making it a celestial "balloon" on the brink of a spectacular supernova explosion.
Segue 2: The 'Pitiful' Dwarf Galaxy Trapped in the Milky Way's Gravitational GripSegue 2: The 'Pitiful' Dwarf Galaxy Trapped in the Milky Way's Gravitational GripSegue 2, a diminutive galaxy spanning just 220 light-years and hosting fewer than 1,000 stars, stands in stark contrast to giants like IC 1101—making it appear as cosmic "stardust." Scientists suspect this tiny entity is an early-universe "relic," gravitationally bound to the Milky Way, forever stunted in its growth.
Vera C. Rubin Observatory Reveals Breathtaking Sagittarius Starfield Near Galactic CoreVera C. Rubin Observatory Reveals Breathtaking Sagittarius Starfield Near Galactic CoreThe Vera C. Rubin Observatory, a joint project of the NSF and DOE, has released one of its first images: a 4-degree-wide starfield spanning Sagittarius, showcasing the crowded stellar backdrop toward the Milky Way’s core. The snapshot captures iconic nebulae and clusters, including Messier 8 (the Lagoon Nebula) and Messier 20 (the Trifid Nebula), in stunning detail.
Does a Spiral Galaxy Hide a Mini-Spiral in Its Core? M61 Reveals Cosmic Nesting DollsDoes a Spiral Galaxy Hide a Mini-Spiral in Its Core? M61 Reveals Cosmic Nesting DollsThe spiral galaxy Messier 61 (M61) defies expectations with a surprising feature: a swirling "mini-spiral" structure at its core. This composite image—combining data from the Hubble Space Telescope, ESO’s Very Large Telescope, and ground-based observatories—shows M61’s grand spiral arms and a vibrant core that resembles a standalone spiral galaxy. Located 55 million light-years away in the Virgo Cluster, this barred spiral (NGC 4303) exemplifies how galactic cores can host intricate substructures mirroring their larger forms.
The Cosmic Crucible: How Stars Are Born—Insights from W5's Infrared PortraitThe Cosmic Crucible: How Stars Are Born—Insights from W5's Infrared PortraitThe Core Processes of Star Formation: Gravity and Gas in Cosmic Ballet Stars emerge from dense molecular clouds (composed mainly of hydrogen molecules and dust), with their formation unfolding in critical stages:
Overlooked Cosmic Jewel: The Stunning Spiral Galaxy NGC 3521Overlooked Cosmic Jewel: The Stunning Spiral Galaxy NGC 3521Just 35 million light-years from Earth in Leo, the springtime northern constellation, lies NGC 3521—a bright spiral galaxy visible through small telescopes yet often overshadowed by amateur astronomers’ focus on Leo’s more famous spirals, M66 and M65. This cosmic portrait reveals its overlooked splendor, hiding a trove of galactic secrets in its swirling arms.
The Real Rosette Nebula: Unveiling Cosmic Petals in MonocerosThe Real Rosette Nebula: Unveiling Cosmic Petals in MonocerosIs that red petal-like cloud the Rosette Nebula? The famous Rosette Nebula actually lies in the lower-right of this image, appearing blue-white and connected by golden filaments to other nebulae. The central upper "petals" are a visual mimic—true cosmic blooms reveal themselves in this deep-sky close-up, where infrared red exposures unlock hidden floral structures around NGC 2237.
UGC 2885: The Colossal Galaxy 800,000 Light-Years AcrossUGC 2885: The Colossal Galaxy 800,000 Light-Years AcrossIn this Hubble Space Telescope image, foreground stars with bright stellar spikes in Perseus lie within the Milky Way, while the focus reveals UGC 2885—a giant spiral galaxy 232 million light-years from Earth. Stretching 800,000 light-years (eight times the Milky Way’s diameter), it hosts nearly 100 trillion stars—10 times our galaxy’s population—making it a pivotal case study for how galaxies achieve colossal sizes.
Rare Hybrid Solar Eclipse Captures Breathtaking Corona in 2023Rare Hybrid Solar Eclipse Captures Breathtaking Corona in 2023On April 20, 2023, a new moon's shadow swept across Earth's Southern Hemisphere, creating a rare hybrid solar eclipse. Observers along its narrow path—largely over water—witnessed either a total or annular eclipse ("ring of fire"), depending on their location. The event combined the rarity of both eclipse types in a single path.
The Brightest Stars in the Night Sky: IAU-Named Icons and Their Ancient TalesThe Brightest Stars in the Night Sky: IAU-Named Icons and Their Ancient TalesFor millennia, humanity has named the brightest stars, weaving their light into myths and calendars. Today, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) standardizes these names to unite global science, but each moniker still holds cultural treasures. Here’s a journey through the 25 brightest stars—by apparent magnitude—with their IAU-designated names and the stories behind them.
Saturn’s Enceladus: Does an Ocean beneath Ice Harbor Life?Saturn’s Enceladus: Does an Ocean beneath Ice Harbor Life?Enceladus, Saturn’s icy moon, harbors a subsurface ocean beneath tiger-stripe fractures that erupt icy particles into space. These geysers form a dense ice cloud over the south pole, feeding Saturn’s faint E ring. The Cassini spacecraft (2004–2017) provided definitive evidence, capturing this true-color, high-resolution image during a close flyby, revealing shadowed ice chasms and active vents.
First-Ever Capture of Supernova Remnant G115.5+9.1: A Cosmic Duo Named After Mythological MonstersFirst-Ever Capture of Supernova Remnant G115.5+9.1: A Cosmic Duo Named After Mythological MonstersA team of amateur astrophotographers has uncovered the faint remains of a long-dead massive star, capturing the first image of supernova remnant G115.5+9.1—dubbed "Scylla"—in the constellation Cepheus (the Ethiopian king of myth). The discovery, hidden in sky survey data, reveals a glowing patch where hydrogen atoms emit red light and oxygen atoms shine in faint blue, marking the aftermath of a stellar explosion that likely occurred thousands of years ago.