Wednesday, Jun 11, 2025

While space telescopes like JWST and Hubble help us peer back into the deep history of the universe, on Earth, fossils tell the stories of our past. This week, we observe a massive galaxy cluster and a strange, gravitationally influenced galaxy. Plus a pyrite-filled fossil, an orbital sunrise, and the Moon next to a ground-based radio telescope dish.

Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, H. Atek, M. Zamani (ESA/Webb); Acknowledgments: R. Endsley

Monday, 2 June 2025

The Distant Past

In this new NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope picture, the eye is first drawn to the central mega-monster, galaxy cluster Abell S1063. This behemoth collection of galaxies, lying 4.5 billion light-years from Earth in the constellation Grus (the Crane), dominates the scene. Looking more closely, this dense collection of heavy galaxies is surrounded by glowing streaks of light, and these warped arcs are the true object of scientists’ interest: faint galaxies from the Universe’s distant past.

This new imagery from Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) showcases an incredible forest of lensing arcs around Abell S1063. These arcs reveal distorted background galaxies at a range of cosmic distances, along with a multitude of faint galaxies and previously unseen features.

Credit: Didier Descouens via Wikimedia Commons

Tuesday, 3 June 2025

Trilobite!

Triarthrus eatoni is a trilobite of the family Olenidae and the order Ptychopariida. This fossil was collected from the Frankfort Shale, Sixmile Creek in Cleveland's Glen, near Rome, Oneida Co., New York, USA, from the Upper Ordovician (Caradoc, 458 to 448 mjo). It shows the biramous appendages and antennae deposited as pyrite.

Credit: Y. Villalon/ESO

Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Peering Over ALMA's Shoulder

Two large, pale discs can be seen in today's PPOD: one of them in the Atacama Desert, the other orbiting the Earth 384,000 km away. The latter is our ever-present Moon, faintly hanging in the clear blue sky. Next to it is the real star of the image: one of the antennas of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA).

ALMA, which ESO operates together with international partners, is made up of 66 such antennas, spread out atop the 5000-m high Chajnantor Plateau in Chile. Unlike optical telescopes, which gather light in wavelengths that we can see, these dishes observe the cool corners of the Universe using longer, invisible wavelengths — somewhere between infrared radiation and radio waves.

These antennas work together, creating a huge virtual telescope with a complex technique called interferometry. By adjusting the separation between the antennas, which can go up to 16 km, astronomers can study cosmic objects in different levels of detail. With all of its individual dishes working together in perfect harmony, ALMA truly becomes more than the sum of its parts.

Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble, HLA; Processing & Copyright: Domingo Pestana

Thursday, 5 June 2025

Wildly Interacting Galaxy

Here you can see the galaxy catalogued as UGC 1810 by itself, but with its collisional partner, it is known as Arp 273. The overall shape of the UGC 1810 -- in particular its blue outer ring -- is likely a result of wild and violent gravitational interactions. This ring's blue color is caused by massive, super-hot stars that formed only in the past few million years. The inner galaxy appears older, redder, and threaded with cool filamentary dust. A few bright stars appear in the foreground, unrelated to UGC 1810, while several galaxies are visible well in the background. Arp 273 lies about 300 million light years away toward the constellation of Andromeda. Quite likely, UGC 1810 will devour its galactic sidekick over the next billion years and settle into a classic spiral form.

Credit: NASA JSC

Friday, 6 June 2025

Orbital Sunrise

Let's end the week with the early morning hues of an orbital sunrise, as seen from the International Space Station on April 28, 2021, as it soared 425 kilometers above the China-Russia border in far eastern Asia near the Sea of Japan.

News

Related News

Featured Image
Jun 3, 2026
Planetary Picture of the Day - Week of May 25, 2026
This week's images journeyed from the shimmering Crystal Ball Nebula to the icy south pole of Mars, highlighting beauty and change across our solar system and beyond. The collection also captured stars being born in a ghostly nebula, the dramatic rays of Mercury’s Hokusai Crater, and a distant galaxy caught in transition—offering a striking look at cosmic evolution across space and time. #PPOD
Featured Image
May 27, 2026
Planetary Picture of the Day - Week of May 18, 2026
Moments both fleeting and immense—from a Moon–Venus conjunction over Washington, D.C. to a meteor streaking through Earth’s atmosphere as seen from the International Space Station. These images also spanned the cosmic scale, featuring a massive hybrid galaxy, a stubborn rock sampled by the Curiosity rover on Mars, and a stunning mid-infrared view of Messier 77 from JWST. #PPOD
Featured Image
May 21, 2026
Planetary Picture of the Day - Week of May 11, 2026
Where the round things are: From spherical boulders and circular radio telescope dishes to the curve of our blue marble, distant Mars, and far-away spiral galaxies, the universe comes back to circles. #PPOD
Featured Image
May 13, 2026
Planetary Picture of the Day - Week of May 04, 2026
From blooming tulip fields in the Netherlands to the glowing shell of the Bubble Nebula, last week’s PPOD images celebrated color and contrast across Earth, the Moon, and deep space. The collection also highlighted exploration and change—from unusual rocks studied by Perseverance rover on Mars to dramatic lunar shadows captured by Artemis II and the soft glow of May’s Flower Moon. #PPOD
Featured Image
May 6, 2026
Planetary Picture of the Day - Week of April 27, 2026
Dark and light play together in this week's photos, as we examine ash spreading across Mars over decades, night and day on the Moon, and the interplay of colors in a distant nebula. #PPOD
Featured Image
Apr 29, 2026
Planetary Picture of the Day - Week of April 20, 2026
This week's planetary images took us from the fractured ice of Europa and the shadowed edge of the Moon to a fiery-looking sunset cloud glowing above Earth, captured from the International Space Station. They also revisited landmark discoveries and changing worlds, from the first images revealing Charon to dark volcanic ash slowly spreading across Mars's surface. #PPOD
Research

Related Projects

Featured Image
SkyMapper • SETI • Citizen Science • Astronomy
SkyMapper: Expanding Access to Real-time Astronomy Through a Global Astronomical Network
SkyMapper and the SETI Institute are connecting educators, students and the public to live astronomical observations through a distributed astronomical network. #SkyMapper #SETI #Citizen Science #Astronomy
Featured Image
VPL
Virtual Planetary Laboratory
How can we best assess whether an exoplanet supports life? #VPL
Featured Image
Discovery and Futures Lab
Discovery and Futures Lab
What happens if life beyond Earth is discovered? The Discovery and Futures Lab at the SETI Institute fosters novel and anticipatory research at the intersection of science, society, our planet, and the search for life beyond Earth.  #Discovery and Futures Lab
Support Us

Support the
SETI Institute

Scientists are getting closer in their search for life beyond earth. But with limited federal funding for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, supporters are the reason cutting-edge scientists can keep their eyes on the sky.