Thursday, 1 January 2026

2026 Mars mission will set out to solve the mystery of its moons

 

The MMX probe will visit Mars’s moons. Image courtesy of JAXA

Joel Kontinen

The mystery of how Mars acquired its moons, Phobos and Deimos, may start to be unravelled in 2026 with the launch of a spacecraft that will eventually bring a chunk of Phobos back to Earth.

“We are sure about the origin of the Earth’s moon, but we don’t know how Phobos an Deimos got there,” says Emelia Branagan-Harris at the Natural History Museum in London. “Understanding the origins of Phobos and Deimos, and how they came to be orbiting Mars, can hopefully tell us a bit about the evolution of Mars in general and its history.”

But only evolutionists know how the moon got its present shape, in the book of Genesis,  God had made the lesser  light or the moon so that Adam could look at it.

Evoltionists think that the origins of Phopos and Deimos took place somewhere we do not know.

Source:

Alex Wilkins 2025 2026 Mars mission will set out to solve the mystery of its moons | New Scientist 30 December 


Tuesday, 30 December 2025

A controversial experiment threatened to kill the multiverse in 2025

 

The multiverse was proposed as a way to make sense of bizarre quantum behaviour. Image courtesy of Victor De Schwanberg/Science Photo Library

Joel Kontinen

A photon was apparently detected in two places at once in a twist on the classic double-slit experiment, but many physicists didn't accept the results.

A physics experiment published this year that claimed to measure a single photon in two places at once – and, in the process, discredit the idea of a multiverse – drew pushback from many sceptical physicists, but the scientists behind the demonstration stand by their claim.

In May, Holger Hofmann at Hiroshima University in Japan and his colleagues reported the results of a modified version of the famous double-slit experiment that showed individual photons being “delocalised”, or impossible to tie down in one place.

However, there is only one universe.

Source: 

Alex Wilkins 2025 A controversial experiment threatened to kill the multiverse in 2025 | New Scientist 30 December

Sunday, 28 December 2025

Matt Walsh goes scorched earth on Israel First conservatives

 


From where does Zionism and "America first" come from? Some says that it comes from American sources, but others say that it doesn't

Thursday, 25 December 2025

Tiny orange frog around the size of a pencil tip is brand-new species

 

Imaage courtesy of Luiz F. Ribeiro/SWNS

Joel Kontinen

Some frogs can be really small, but they are still frogs. 

This miniature frog, less than 14 millimeters in length, is barely bigger than a pencil tip. Found in the forests of Serra do Quiriri, Brazil, this new-to-science species of pumpkin toadlet frog has been named Brachycephalus lulai, after the country’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva.

Researchers spotted the frog thanks to its unique mating call, and later confirmed it was a new species using DNA analysis.

 Source:

New Scientist 2025 Tiny orange frog around the size of a pencil tip is brand-new species | New Scientist 23 December 

Tuesday, 23 December 2025

Black hole stars really do exist in the early universe

 

Balls of gas with a black hole at their centre could glow like a star. Imagae courtesy of Shutterstock / Nazarii_Neshcherenskyi

Joel Kontinen

Mysterious ‘little red dots’ seen by the James Webb Space Telescope can be explained by a new kind of black hole enshrouded in an enormous ball of glowing gas.

Could black hole stars really exist in the early universe. According to the  big bang  view of the universe, the early universe  was thought to be inhabited with star like balls of gas but with red very light galaxies?

It seems that the millions of years scenario does not  correspond to real life.  

The early universe appears to be littered with enormous star-like balls of gas powered by a black hole at their core, a finding that has taken astronomers by surprise and might solve one of the biggest mysteries thrown up by the discoveries of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

When JWST first started looking back to the universe’s first billion years, astronomers found a group of what looked like extremely compact, red and very bright galaxies that are unlike any we can see in our local universe. The most popular explanations for these so-called little red dots (LRDs) proposed they were either supermassive black holes with dust swirling around them, or galaxies very densely packed full of stars – but neither explanation fully made sense of the light that JWST was detecting.

Source: 

Alex Wilkins 2025 Black hole stars really do exist in the early universe | New Scientist 22 December 

 


Sunday, 21 December 2025

What does Intifada mean?

 


What does the globalized Intifada mean? It means killing Jews all over the world just as it happened in Australia.

Saturday, 20 December 2025

Spiders on Jupiter? Scientists uncover secret origins of arachnid-like 'demon' lurking on gas giant's moon.

 


NASA's Galileo spacecraft first photographed a bizarre spider-like structure lurking within a large crater on Europa during a close flyby of the moon on March 29, 1998. Image courtesy of ASA/JPL/University of Arizona

Joel Kontinen

A new study reveals the likely origin of a mysterious spider-like pattern first spotted on Jupiter's moon Europa in 1998. The finding could have implications for a NASA spacecraft en route to the frozen world.

In March 1998, NASA's Galileo spacecraft — which studied Jupiter and its major moons between 1995 and 2003 — made a close flyby of Europa, a frozen ocean moon often considered one of the most likely places for extraterrestrial life to exist in the solar system. During this flyby, the probe mapped out a roughly 13.7-mile-wide (22 kilometers) impact structure, dubbed Manannán Crater, on the moon's icsy surface, and found something strange lurking within it.

Some other experts say that it was created by eruptions from hydrothermal vents on the floor of Europa's subsurface ocean.

According to new study, in The Planetary Science Journal, researchers proposed an alternative explanation: that the Jovian spider formed in a similar way to how dark dendritic patterns on Earth, known as "lake stars," typically do.

With this in mind, the researchers used a similar technique to partially recreate the Manannán Crater's mysterious shape in the lab.

"Lake stars are really beautiful, and they are pretty common on snow or slush-covered frozen lakes and ponds," study lead-author Laura Mc Keown, a planetary scientist at the University of Central Florida, said in a statement. "It is wonderful to think that they may give us a glimpse into processes occurring on Europa and maybe even other icy ocean worlds in our solar system."

However, rather than water rising through tiny holes, as happens when lake stars form on Earth, Damhán Alla was likely birthed by an asteroid impact — which created a small crack in Europa's icy shell that enabled salty water to seep upward and paint the spider-like pattern on the surface. (This asteroid impact likely happened after the Manannán Crater was already formed.)

The researchers also noted similarities between Damhán Alla and the infamous "spiders on Mars," which are dusty deposits on the Martian surface that look like swarming spiders when viewed from above. These fake arachnids, known as araneiform terrain, form when submerged carbon dioxide ice sublimates, or turns directly into a gas. Mc Keown's team has previously recreated these features on Earth too.

The similarities in shape between Damhán Alla and the spiders on Mars are due to how "fluid flows through porous surfaces," Mc Keown said. In theory, similar spider features could also form on other frozen ocean worlds, such as Saturn's moon Enceladus, Jupiter's other moon Ganymede and the dwarf planet Ceres, which resides in the asteroid belt beyond Mars.

So, this means that some extraterrestrial life may abound on the moon, but life only comes when a creator give life to them.

Source: 

Harry Baker 2025 Spiders on Jupiter? Scientists uncover secret origins of arachnid-like 'demon' lurking on gas giant's moon. | Live Science 17 December