Mars Images: April 2-3, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
Friends of NASA (FoN) is an independent non-governmental organization (NGO) dedicated to building international support for peaceful space exploration, commerce, scientific discovery, and STEM education.
Thursday, April 03, 2025
Mars Images: April 2-3, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
Timelapse: Antarctica to the Arctic | Fram2 Mission to The Earth's Poles | SpaceX
Timelapse: Antarctica to the Arctic | Fram2 Mission to The Earth's Poles | SpaceX
The Fram2 Mission's crew are the first humans to view the Earth’s polar regions from space.
Mission Objectives
This is the first human spaceflight for Mission Commander Chun Wang (Malta), Vehicle Commander Jannicke Mikkelsen (Norway), Vehicle Pilot Rabea Rogge (Germany), plus Mission Specialist and Medical Officer Eric Philips (Australia).
Portrait of NASA Astronaut & Crew-11 Commander Zena Cardman
Portrait of NASA Astronaut & Crew-11 Commander Zena Cardman
NASA astronauts Commander Zena Cardman and Pilot Mike Fincke, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Mission Specialist Kimiya Yui, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Mission Specialist Oleg Platonov of Russia will join crew members aboard the International Space Station no earlier than July 2025.
Image Date: March 22, 2024
Flight Day 2 Impressions | Fram2 Mission to Earth's Polar Regions | SpaceX
Flight Day 2 Impressions | Fram2 Mission to Earth's Polar Regions | SpaceX
The Fram2 Mission's crew are the first humans to view the Earth’s polar regions from space.
Mission Objectives
This is the first human spaceflight for Mission Commander Chun Wang (Malta), Vehicle Commander Jannicke Mikkelsen (Norway), Vehicle Pilot Rabea Rogge (Germany), plus Mission Specialist and Medical Officer Eric Philips (Australia).
Wednesday, April 02, 2025
Orbital Views of Antarctica | Fram2 Mission to Earth's Polar Regions | SpaceX
Orbital Views of Antarctica | Fram2 Mission to Earth's Polar Regions | SpaceX
Fram2 Mission Commander Chun Wang: "Hello, Antarctica. Unlike previously anticipated, from 460 km above, it is only pure white, no human activity is visible."
The Fram2 Mission's crew are the first humans to view the Earth’s polar regions from space.
Antarctica is Earth's southernmost and least-populated continent. Situated almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle and surrounded by the Southern Ocean (also known as the Antarctic Ocean), it contains the geographic South Pole. Antarctica is the fifth-largest continent, being about 40% larger than Europe, and has an area of 14,200,000 km2 (5,500,000 sq mi). Most of Antarctica is covered by the Antarctic ice sheet, with an average thickness of 1.9 km (1.2 mi). Antarctica is, on average, the coldest, driest, and windiest of the continents, and it has the highest average elevation. It is mainly a polar desert. About 70% of the world's freshwater reserves are frozen in Antarctica.
This is the first human spaceflight for Mission Commander Chun Wang (Malta), Vehicle Commander Jannicke Mikkelsen (Norway), Vehicle Pilot Rabea Rogge (Germany), plus Mission Specialist and Medical Officer Eric Philips (Australia).
China National Space Administration Unveils Lunar Samples in Beijing
China National Space Administration Unveils Lunar Samples in Beijing
For the first time, lunar samples collected from the Moon's near and far sides are on display at an exhibition that opened Tuesday, April 1, 2025, in Beijing. The exhibition at the National Museum of China is themed around China's lunar exploration program over two decades and jointly hosted by the museum and the China National Space Administration (CNSA).
The samples were collected by China's Chang'e-5 and Chang'e-6 missions. The exhibition also presents hundreds of valuable artifacts as well as pictures and documents related to China's lunar exploration program that was officially approved in 2004.
According to the organizers, the exhibition provides a comprehensive overview of the country's lunar exploration efforts, highlighting its historical background, development, major achievements and future goals.
"The exhibition can help us learn more about the Moon and the solar system," said a visitor.
China's lunar exploration program has made systematic advancements across scientific research, technological innovation, engineering development and international collaboration over the past two decades, said Wu Weiren, the chief designer of China's lunar exploration program, at the opening of the exhibition.
He noted that the program has produced a wealth of geological and environmental data, uncovering new elements, minerals and phenomena—greatly enriching humanity's knowledge of the Moon.
Looking ahead, Wu said, China plans to launch the Chang'e-7 mission around 2026 to explore the environment and resources of the south pole of the Moon. The Chang'e-8 mission, set for around 2028, will conduct experiments for the in-situ utilization of lunar resources.
"The Chang'e-7 lunar probe will target the Moon's south pole to search for water. Chang'e-8 is aimed to build communication and energy systems at the south pole and produce the first 'lunar brick' using materials from the Moon. The missions will provide important support for China's construction of a lunar space station in the future," he said.
The exhibition will run for two months.
https://en.chnmuseum.cn/
Duration: 1 minute
Release Date: April 2, 2025
Expedition 72 Crew Members: New Images | International Space Station
Expedition 72 Crew Members: New Images | International Space Station
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Ivan Vagner, Kirill Peskov
NASA Flight Engineers: Don Pettit, Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers
An international partnership of space agencies provides and operates the elements of the International Space Station (ISS). The principals are the space agencies of the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada.
https://www.nasa.gov/iss-science
For more information about STEM on Station:
https://www.nasa.gov/stemonstation
Image Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center (JSC)
Image Dates: March 15-March 28, 2025
What are the Dangers of Going to Space? We Asked a NASA Expert
What are the Dangers of Going to Space? We Asked a NASA Expert
What are the dangers of going to space? Space might look peaceful from afar, but it is a harsh environment, especially for humans. From DNA damage to bone loss to making sure there is enough food for long missions—space is challenging. However, NASA is working hard to keep astronauts safe.
A NASA scientist explains what it takes.
Explore more on the hazards of human spaceflight: https://www.nasa.gov/hrp/hazards/
Editor: James Lucas
Duration: 1 minute, 28 seconds
Release Date: April 2, 2025
The Milky Way: Effects of Strong Magnetic Fields on Star Formation | Webb Telescope
The Milky Way: Effects of Strong Magnetic Fields on Star Formation | Webb Telescope
Labeling, compass arrows, and scale bars provide context for these MeerKAT and James Webb Space Telescope images. The star-forming region Sagittarius C, captured by the James Webb Space Telescope, is about 200 light-years from the Milky Way’s central supermassive black hole, Sagittarius A*. Huge vertical filamentary structures in the MeerKAT radio data echo those Webb captured on a smaller scale, in infrared, in a blue-green hydrogen cloud. Astronomers think the strong magnetic fields in the heart of the galaxy are shaping the filaments. The spectral index at the lower left shows how color was assigned to the radio data to create the image. On the negative end, there is non-thermal emission, stimulated by electrons spiraling around magnetic field lines. On the positive side, thermal emission is coming from hot, ionized plasma. For Webb, color is assigned by shifting the infrared spectrum to visible light colors. The shortest infrared wavelengths are bluer, and the longer wavelengths appear more red.
Two new research studies explore how a stellar nursery in the heart of the Milky Way is affected by the region’s strong magnetic fields.
Despite decades of study, the process of star formation still holds many mysteries. Stars are the source of nearly all the universe’s chemical elements, including carbon and oxygen, so understanding why and how they form—or not—is a crucial initial step in understanding how the universe works and the origins of just about everything, including life on Earth.
At the heart of our Milky Way galaxy is the star-forming region Sagittarius C. Despite a wealth of raw material, it does not make as many stars as astronomers would expect. Two new studies have used the NASA/European Space Agency/Canadian Space Agency James Webb Space Telescope to investigate star formation in this extreme environment that is relatively near the supermassive black hole at the core of the Milky Way, at 200 light-years distance.
Processed data collected by the MeerKAT radio telescope shows the plane of the Milky Way galaxy, with a graphic pullout highlighting a much smaller region on the right, captured by the James Webb Space Telescope’s near-infrared light observations. The MeerKAT image is colored in blue, cyan, and yellow, with a very bright white-yellow center that indicates the location of the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole. Painterly bubbles of various sizes, clouds, and vertical brushstroke-like streaks make up the radio image. The Webb inset shows stars and gas clouds in red, with an arching cloud of bright cyan that contains many straight, needle-like features that appear more crystalline than cloudy.
Follow-up research on a 2023 image of the Sagittarius C stellar nursery in the heart of our Milky Way galaxy has revealed ejections from still-forming protostars and insights into the impact of strong magnetic fields on interstellar gas and the life cycle of stars.
“A big question in the Central Molecular Zone of our galaxy has been, if there is so much dense gas and cosmic dust here, and we know that stars form in such clouds, why are so few stars born here?” said astrophysicist John Bally of the University of Colorado Boulder, one of the principal investigators. “Now, for the first time, we are seeing directly that strong magnetic fields may play an important role in suppressing star formation, even at small scales.”
Detailed study of stars in this crowded, dusty region has been limited, but Webb’s advanced near-infrared instruments have allowed astronomers to see through the clouds to study young stars like never before.
“The extreme environment of the galactic center is a fascinating place to put star formation theories to the test, and the infrared capabilities of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope provide the opportunity to build on past important observations from ground-based telescopes like ALMA and MeerKAT,” said Samuel Crowe, another principal investigator on the research, a senior undergraduate at the University of Virginia and a 2025 Rhodes Scholar.
Bally and Crowe each led a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal.
Using Infrared to Reveal Forming Stars
In Sagittarius C’s brightest cluster, the researchers confirmed the tentative finding from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) that two massive stars are forming there. Along with infrared data from NASA’s retired Spitzer Space Telescope and SOFIA (Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy) mission, as well as the Herschel Space Observatory, they used Webb to determine that each of the massive protostars is already more than 20 times the mass of the Sun. Webb also revealed the bright outflows powered by each protostar.
Even more challenging is finding low-mass protostars, still shrouded in cocoons of cosmic dust. Researchers compared Webb’s data with ALMA’s past observations to identify five likely low-mass protostar candidates.
The team also identified 88 features that appear to be shocked hydrogen gas, where material being blasted out in jets from young stars impacts the surrounding gas cloud. Analysis of these features led to the discovery of a new star-forming cloud, distinct from the main Sagittarius C cloud, hosting at least two protostars powering their own jets.
“Outflows from forming stars in Sagittarius C have been hinted at in past observations, but this is the first time we’ve been able to confirm them in infrared light. It’s very exciting to see, because there is still a lot we don’t know about star formation, especially in the Central Molecular Zone, and it’s so important to how the universe works,” said Crowe.
Magnetic Fields and Star Formation
Webb’s 2023 image of Sagittarius C showed dozens of distinctive filaments in a region of hot hydrogen plasma surrounding the main star-forming cloud. New analysis by Bally and his team has led them to hypothesize that the filaments are shaped by magnetic fields that have also been observed in the past by the ground-based observatories ALMA and MeerKAT (formerly the Karoo Array Telescope).
“The motion of gas swirling in the extreme tidal forces of the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole, Sagittarius A*, can stretch and amplify the surrounding magnetic fields. Those fields, in turn, are shaping the plasma in Sagittarius C,” said Bally.
The researchers think that the magnetic forces in the galactic center may be strong enough to keep the plasma from spreading, instead confining it into the concentrated filaments seen in the Webb image. These strong magnetic fields may also resist the gravity that would typically cause dense clouds of gas and dust to collapse and forge stars, explaining Sagittarius C’s lower-than-expected star formation rate.
“This is an exciting area for future research, as the influence of strong magnetic fields, in the center of our galaxy or other galaxies, on stellar ecology has not been fully considered,” said Crowe.
Mars Images: March 31-April 1, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
Mars Images: March 31-April 1, 2025 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers
NASA Astronaut Nichole Ayers Expedition 72 Update | International Space Station
NASA Astronaut Nichole Ayers: Expedition 72 Update | International Space Station
Expedition 72 flight engineer and NASA astronaut Nichole Ayers: "As we flew over the beautiful waters of Southern Florida and the Caribbean, I snapped this photo. It encapsulates the International Space Station, our Crew Dragon, the Canadian Space Agency robotic arm (Canadarm2), and Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus cargo spacecraft."
"What a cool image of the cooperation it takes to make space exploration happen! And who doesn’t love the beautiful colors of the Caribbean??"
"All went smoothly, and now we’ve got some extra space for new science and hardware!"
https://www.nasa.gov/people/nasa-astronaut-nichole-ayers
https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/astronauts/nasa-astronaut-nichole-ayers/
Roscosmos (Russia) Flight Engineers: Ivan Vagner, Kirill Peskov
NASA Flight Engineers: Don Pettit, Anne McClain, Nichole Ayers
An international partnership of space agencies provides and operates the elements of the International Space Station (ISS). The principals are the space agencies of the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada.
Learn more about the important research being operated on Station:
https://www.nasa.gov/iss-science
For more information about STEM on Station:
https://www.nasa.gov/stemonstation
Image Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center (JSC)
Image Dates: March 31-April 1, 2025
Tuesday, April 01, 2025
Sunita's Houston Homecoming | NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 | International Space Station
Sunita's Houston Homecoming | NASA’s SpaceX Crew-9 | International Space Station
NASA astronaut and Expedition 72 flight engineer Sunita Williams declared this moment to be the "Best homecoming ever!"
Capture Date: March 18, 2025
Artemis II Moon Mission Crew: Orion Spacecraft Orbital Training | NASA Johnson
Artemis II Moon Mission Crew: Orion Spacecraft Orbital Training | NASA Johnson
The Artemis II test flight will be sending NASA astronauts Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Reid Wiseman, as well as Canadian Space Agency (CSA) astronaut Jeremy Hansen, on a ten-day journey around the Moon and back.
Artemis II will launch no earlier than April 2026.
Space Debris: Is it a Crisis? | European Space Agency
Space Debris: Is it a Crisis? | European Space Agency
The European Space Agency’s short documentary film ‘Space Debris: Is it a Crisis?’ on the state of space debris premiered at the 9th European Conference on Space Debris on April 1, 2025.
Earth is surrounded by thousands of satellites carrying out important work to provide telecommunications and navigation services, help us understand our climate, and answer fundamental questions about the Universe.
However, as our use of space accelerates like never before, these satellites find themselves navigating increasingly congested orbits in an environment criss-crossed by streams of fast-moving debris fragments resulting from collisions, fragmentations and breakups in space.
Each fragment can damage additional satellites with fears that a cascade of collisions may eventually render some orbits around Earth no longer useable. Additionally, the extent of the harm of the drastic increase in launches and number of objects re-entering our atmosphere and oceans is not yet known.
So, does space debris already represent a crisis?
This short documentary explores the current situation in Earth’s orbits and explains the threat space debris poses to our future in space. It also outlines what might be done about space debris and how we might reach true sustainability in space, because our actions today will have consequences for generations to come.
ESA’s Space Safety Program aims to safeguard the future of spaceflight and to keep us, Earth and our infrastructure on the ground and in space safe from hazards originating in space. From asteroids and solar storms to the human-made problem of space debris, ESA works on missions and projects to understand the dangers and mitigate them. In the longer term, to ensure a safe and sustainable future in space, ESA aims to establish a circular economy in space. To get there, the Agency is working on the technology development necessary to make in-orbit servicing and zero-debris spacecraft a reality.
Duration: 8 minutes
Release Date: April 1, 2025
Seyfert’s Sextet: Four Colliding Galaxies & Two Bystanders in Serpens | Hubble
Seyfert’s Sextet: Four Colliding Galaxies & Two Bystanders in Serpens | Hubble
The name of this grouping, Seyfert's Sextet, implies that six galaxies are participating in the action. However, only four galaxies are on the dance card. The small face-on spiral with the prominent arms [center] of gas and stars is a background galaxy almost five times farther away than the other four. Only a chance alignment makes it appear as if it is part of the group. The sixth member of the sextet is not a galaxy at all but a long "tidal tail" of stars [below, right] torn from one of the galaxies. The group resides 190 million light-years away in the constellation Serpens.
This densely packed grouping spans just 100,000 light-years, occupying less volume than the Milky Way galaxy. Each galaxy is about 35,000 light-years wide. Three of the galaxies [the elliptical galaxy, second from top, and the two spiral galaxies at the bottom] bear the telltale marks of close interactions with each other, or perhaps with an interloper galaxy not pictured here. Their distorted shapes suggest that gravitational forces have reshaped them. The halos around the galaxies indicate that stars have been ripped away. The galaxy at bottom, center, has a 35,000 light-year-long tail of stars flowing from it. The tail may have been pulled from the galaxy about 500 million years ago.
Although part of the group, the nearly edge-on spiral galaxy at top, center, remains relatively undisturbed, except for the slight warp in its disk. Most of its stars have remained within its galactic boundaries.
Unlike most other galaxy interactions observed with the Hubble telescope, this group shows no evidence of the characteristic blue regions of young star clusters that generally arise during galaxy interactions.
The lack of star-forming clusters suggests that there is something unique about Seyfert's Sextet compared with similar systems. One example is Stephan's Quintet, another congregation of interacting galaxies observed with the Hubble telescope. The difference between the two systems could be a simple one: astronomers may be seeing the sextet at the beginning of its interaction, before much has happened. This will not be the case for long, though. The galaxies in Seyfert's Sextet will continue to interact, and eventually, billions of years from now, all four may merge and form a single galaxy. Astronomers have strong evidence that many, if not most, elliptical galaxies are the result of mergers.
Astronomers named the grouping Seyfert's Sextet for astronomer Carl Seyfert. He discovered the assemblage in the late 1940s. Seyfert already suspected that one apparent member of the sextet was not a galaxy but simply a tidal tail stripped off of one of the other members.
The image was taken on June 26, 2000, with Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2.
Image Date: June 26, 2000
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