I have some really cool pix from Mars in the newsletter today: the amazing HiRISE camera's *100,000th* image, and some crepuscular rays and iridescent clouds! It's like someone at mission control took all these shots just for me specifically.
When I woke up this morning one thing I noticed right away is that Earth wasn't violently torn to vaporous shreds by a supermassive black hole. So yeah, that's cool.
Get ready for one of the very best meteor showers of the year! The Geminids are great and this year's show over the weekend should be excellent. Also: a gorgeous star cluster with a dramatic swirl of stars.
My "The Universe" column today in Scientific American is about an extremely weird effect where distant objects actually start to appear *bigger* instead of smaller with distance.
This is a staggering cool JWST image of one of the most terrifying star systems I have ever seen. Apep is a monster… *three* monsters, actually, and blasting out radiation and dust and junk at speeds to freeze the soul. Read all about it!
Have you ever heard of Betty Webster? I hadn't until recently, and she co-discovered the first black hole ever found! Here's her story, to honor her memory and fantastic accomplishment.
In 1885, after traveling for over two million years, the light from an exploding star swept over caused astronomers to think the universe was way smaller than it really is.
Holy moly did we get a close shave from an asteroid last week: it missed Earth by *230 km*! Barely above the atmosphere. OTOH it was only about the size of a beachball, so no worries either way. Meet 2025 UC11.
Welp. I did it. I finally got COVID. I'm fine now, but I do sincerely wish every ivermectin-chugging MAGA ass and every antivax RFK-supporting jerk of whatever political persuasion a very merry up yours.
Look, almost everyone gets acne at some point in their life, but can you imagine being able to see it from 1.4 quadrillion kilometers away?