2025

The Soyuz MS-27 spacecraft docks with the International Space Station (Image NASA)

A few hours ago, the Soyuz MS-27 spacecraft was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and, after a little more than three hours, reached the International Space Station with three new crew members on board. It docked with the Station’s Prichal module. The ultra-fast track was used, which halves the journey duration and is used whenever the Station’s position makes it possible.

The Crew Dragon Resilience spacecraft loaded on the "MV Shannon" ship at the end of its Fram2 mission (Image courtesy SpaceX)

A few hours ago, SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Resilience spacecraft completed its Fram2 mission with a safe splashdown. Chun Wang, Rabea Rogge, Jannicke Mikkelsen, and Eric Philip were on board and completed this completely private space mission in the Pacific Ocean after spending just over three and a half days in orbit. Shortly after splashdown, SpaceX’s “MV Shannon” ship picked up the Resilience and its crew and transported them to the coast.

The SpaceX Crew Dragon Resilience spacecraft lifts off atop a Falcon 9 rocket on the Fram2 mission (Photo courtesy SpaceX)

A few hours ago, the SpaceX Crew Dragon Resilience spacecraft blasted off atop a Falcon 9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Center on the Fram2 mission. After about twelve minutes, it successfully separated from the rocket’s last stage. It will spend between 3 and 5 days in orbit. Unlike the previous private space missions conducted by SpaceX in recent years, in the Fram2, the Crew Dragon entered a polar orbit, the first time for a crewed space flight, at an altitude that will range between 425 and 450 kilometers.

The galaxy JADES-GS-z13-1 (the red circle in the center) as seen by the James Webb Space Telescope (Image ESA/Webb, NASA, STScI, CSA, JADES Collaboration, Brant Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), Ben Johnson (CfA), Sandro Tacchella (Cambridge), Phill Cargile (CfA), J. Witstok, P. Jakobsen, A. Pagan (STScI), M. Zamani (ESA/Webb))

An article published in the journal “Nature” reports the results of observations of the primordial galaxy cataloged as JADES-GS-z13-1. A team of researchers used the James Webb Space Telescope to examine this galaxy, estimating that it dates back to about 330 million years after the Big Bang. The surprise came from spectroscopic analyses with so-called Lyman-alpha radiation, emitted in the ultraviolet by hydrogen in specific circumstances, because it was much stronger than would be expected from a galaxy of that era.

Herbig-Haro 49/50 (NIRCam and MIRI Image, annotated)

An image captured by the James Webb Space Telescope shows Herbig-Haro 49/50, or simply HH 49/50, a type of nebula associated with star formation. The Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) instruments were used in combination to observe infrared details of the outflows whose shape led to the object being nicknamed the Cosmic Tornado. For years, astronomers have wondered what the object they could barely see in images obtained with other instruments at the “tip of the tornado” was, and Webb helped them realize that it’s a spiral galaxy that is far more distant.