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The Secrets Inside the Ancient Crystals of Long-Dead Stars

Presolar grains are solid minerals, on the scale of nanometers to micrometers, that crystallized in the gassy outflows and ejecta of stars that existed before the Sun was born. These ancient crystals are the oldest material ever handled by humans.


December 3, 2024
article

Remembering the World Timecapsule Project

There have also been other attempts over the years — some little known — to duplicate the Voyager record’s noble goals. One of those projects was called the World Timecapsule. I worked on this project from 1989-1994 with a small group of people from the Minneapolis, MN area.


November 27, 2024
article

The Arecibo Message: Humanity's Call to an Interstellar Neighbor

Inherent within the Arecibo message project is the underlying hope that humanity will still be around in 45,000 years time to receive a reply. It’s a positively optimistic message to ourselves and a rare step into long-term thinking, essential if we are to cultivate a better world and a more positive future.


November 20, 2024
article

Author Peter F. Hamilton on Building a Universe for Future Humans

“Science fiction is an extrapolation of trends to the extreme, and seeing what problems and wonders those trends can deliver to us as a species,” Hamilton tells Supercluster. “That’s what the fundamental of science fiction is to me. Given time and an increase in our knowledge base, I can explore the ways we will evolve both culturally and, in the far future, biologically.”


November 13, 2024
article

Forty-Year-Old Loophole Exempts Satellite Pollution from Regulations

A forty-year-old legal loophole means that air pollution produced when old satellites burn up in Earth’s atmosphere is exempt from environmental oversight. Is the exemption justified in the age of mega-constellations?


November 5, 2024
article

Op-Ed: What the U.S. Election Means for Space Exploration

Neither candidate for president has anything resembling a space policy, and neither seems to care about NASA overall. Regardless, the key human spaceflight issues America must face in the next four years include the end of the International Space Station, and prospect of China landing taikonauts on the moon. 


October 30, 2024
article

The Robots That Could Breach Europa's Ice Shell

NASA's Clipper mission will determine the habitability of Jupiter's moon Europa, a mysterious water world. And what if a life-harboring oasis is revealed beneath its thick ice shell? What comes next? Scientists and researchers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory are experimenting with near-science-fiction concepts that can help investigate Europa's massive saltwater ocean and maybe even reveal its inhabitants.


October 23, 2024
article

In Photos: SpaceX Dazzles the World With Unreal Booster Catch

We dispatched photographers Pauline Acalin and Tom Cross to shoot Starship's liftoff and attempt to catch the massive Super Heavy booster with Mechazilla, the launch tower's chopsticks arms. An idea that seemed outlandish up until the livestream said they were going for it, minutes after a surprisingly routine liftoff. So routine that the launch of Starship itself became an afterthought.


October 16, 2024
article

Burning Questions for the Lead Scientist Behind Europa Clipper

We want to understand if there is liquid water, where that liquid water exists, and whether the chemistry seem conducive to life. Do we expect redox potential in the ocean—oxidants and reductants—and where might we go to search? How might we do that search in the future, with what techniques?


October 12, 2024
article

NASA Deflected an Asteroid — ESA Launched a Mission to Study the Impact

DART was the first-ever planetary defense test, one that illustrated that scientists and engineers could rearrange the cosmos to make it more habitable for humans. And this October, the European Space Agency is going to check NASA’s homework: it’s launching its own mission to Dimorphos.


October 5, 2024
article

Inside the Wargame Where Earth Faces a Killer Asteroid

While DART was on its way to Dimorphos, experts had gathered at its birthplace, the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, for a role-­playing game. Everyone assumed the same character roles they had in real life. Their realm was not mythical, but terrestrial; their nemesis was not a dragon, but an Earthbound asteroid.


October 2, 2024
article

Polaris Dawn is Home After Mission to Advance Human Spaceflight

The Polaris Dawn mission has returned to Earth safely after achieving a few unprecedented feats in orbit.


September 18, 2024
article

We Visited NASA's Mars-Bound ESCAPADE Probes

NASA says that over billions of years, a relentless flow of particles from the Sun - solar wind - has stripped away the Martian atmosphere, causing surface water to evaporate. The agency wants to find out how this happened and utilize ESCAPADE to further interrogate if Mars was once habitable.


September 11, 2024
article

NASA Canceled VIPER—That’s a Good Thing

VIPER’s cancellation is bad for lunar science, but good for NASA. Especially in a constrained budget environment, NASA should be willing to cancel more missions, sooner. 


September 4, 2024
article

Astronauts Will Return Home on Dragon After Starliner Mission Fails

Citing the Shuttle Challenger and Shuttle Columbia disasters that resulted in the tragic deaths of 14 astronauts, NASA decided that Boeing's troubled Starliner capsule was not safe enough to bring home Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore from the International Space Station. Starliner's crew will now hitch a ride home with SpaceX.


August 28, 2024
article

The Great Star Heist and the Race to Outrun Dark Energy

Nothing lasts forever. Eventually, in a 100 trillion or so years’ time, the Universe will have exhausted all of its star-forming material. The last star will be born, and from thereon the Universe will face a slow death as gradually each and every star burns out.


August 21, 2024
article

Who Picks Up the Phone When ET Calls Earth? It's Complicated

It’s possible that, one day, a radio observatory pointed toward a constellation of diamantine specks glinting in that deep, dark ocean above will pick up something that will change everything.


August 14, 2024
longform

Dutch Union Accuses ESA of Labor Law Breach

Contractors employed in permanent roles that are identical to jobs performed by staff members are entitled to equal treatment including salary and benefits, according to the Dutch labor regulations. That, however, is not the case at ESA, the union said.


August 7, 2024
article

Microlensing is Revealing a Hidden Universe

When stars align, magical outcomes become possible. Microlensing, an astronomical technique based on trippy relativistic effects, is taking this lyrical sentiment to new and brilliant extremes by exposing chance alignments in the universe—and the unexplored frontiers that they reveal. 


July 31, 2024
article

Return To Pine Bush

After the 2017 bombshell New York Times UFO report, the US Government responded with senate hearings on UAP — Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena. Has disclosure fostered greater understanding toward the UFO community? We travel to Pine Bush, New York, "UFO Capital of the World," to find out.


July 24, 2024
video

Will Religion Survive Alien Contact?

Contact with alien intelligence would be a breathtaking event. Depending upon what guise this contact took, the consequences for society and faith could be profound.


July 17, 2024
article

Falcon 9 Competitor Ariane 6 Finally Launched. But is the Race Already Over?

Ariane 6 was designed to compete with early Falcon 9, now it has the Starship to contend with.


July 10, 2024
article

A Chinese Rocket Accidentally Launched and Exploded

Space Pioneer’s hold-down test firing of its rocket suddenly became a real launch and ended in a non-fatal explosion.


July 3, 2024
article

NASA's Space Trash Hit a Florida Home. The Family is Suing.

19-year-old Daniel Otero was relaxing at home in Naples, Florida when an object discarded from the International Space Station came crashing through the roof of his home. His family is now suing NASA and the incident raises concern about future debris and relevant space laws.


June 26, 2024
article

In Photos: The Alien World of Pine Bush, NY

The Supercluster team returned to the UFO capitol of the world, Pine Bush, NY. This time, we were in the trenches with the true believers.


June 19, 2024
article

Starship Super Heavy Achieved Ocean Landings. Mechazilla is Next.

Flight 4 provided SpaceX teams with ample data, which they called the "payload" of the test, to drive improvements needed to achieve Starship's lofty goals, set by SpaceX, NASA, and the United States, to land astronauts on the Moon under the Artemis Program.


June 12, 2024
article

A Moving Frequency: Cosmic Art Exhibit Comes to New York

Cyrielle Gulacsy, born in Paris in 1994, is an artist whose work is currently rooted in the realm of astronomy and astrophysics, subjects of great interest to her. Gulacsy explores and interprets complex scientific concepts like spacetime, electromagnetism, and the diffraction of light, in an effort to help others appreciate the astonishing mechanisms behind reality.


May 29, 2024
article

Starliner Remains Parked as Boeing Faces Further Engineering Challenges

Boeing and its customer, NASA, are now dealing with a helium leak from one of Starliner's reaction control system thrusters in the spacecraft’s service module. Starliner was scheduled for its first crewed flight on May 6th, but was called off due to an issue with a pressure valve on the Atlas rocket's upper stage. It's not clear when this vehicle will launch astronauts.


May 22, 2024
article

India is Rapidly Advancing Toward Achieving Human Spaceflight

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has unveiled the country’s first astronauts with a plan to launch them in 2025, and with the ultimate hope of future Indian crews reaching the moon by 2040.


May 15, 2024
article

The Battle to Reverse the European Space Agency's Diplomatic Immunity

A recent court decision could create a crack in ESA’s seemingly impenetrable legal shell, which has for decades protected this European counterpart to NASA from external scrutiny. The battle, however, is not yet won as the taxpayer-funded agency, with an annual budget of more than 7 billion euro, has appealed against the decision in the Paris Supreme Court.


May 1, 2024
article

Choctaw Students Study Indigenous Heirloom Seeds in Space

The Choctaw community has been collecting wild plants for over 12,000 years and has been growing agricultural plants for around 2,500 years. They developed tribal varieties of squash, corn, beans and other crops. Some of these heirloom seeds were sent to the International Space Station so they can experience space radiation and microgravity. Will the seeds survive?


April 24, 2024
article

We Visited the Europa Clipper Spacecraft at JPL

Supercluster Chief Robin Seemangal visits the legendary Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California for the first time to see the Europa Clipper spacecraft, the largest interplanetary spacecraft ever built by NASA.


April 17, 2024
article

In Photos: The Great American Total Solar Eclipse

In the days that lead up to the total solar eclipse, the threat of clouds loomed for excited onlookers along the path of sold out hotel rooms and Airbnbs through the heart of America. After much consideration, Erik Kuna’s ultimate choice of location proved fruitful for capturing the rare celestial event.


April 10, 2024
article

Space Experiment Provides Insights for Developing Cancer Drugs

The quest for a cure for pancreatic, lung, and colon cancer has led to space. In December 2018 researchers sent several cancer-causing proteins to the International Space Station. Their research made progress in developing a drug to prevent cancer growth.


April 2, 2024
article

Local Astronomy Club Keeps History Alive in French Guiana

On Monday mornings, the voices of Guyane Astronomie can be heard by anyone tuned to Radio Péyi, a local station in French Guiana. Every week, the devoted group of astronomers and star lovers broadcast a fictional transmission from an imagined future in which “Guyanautes” recount stories of their home country.


March 27, 2024
article

Third Flight Test Sets the Stage for Starship's Ambitious Future

The flight marked a few new milestones in Starship's development. Its Raptor engines demonstrated full-duration engine burn to orbit, the Super Heavy booster performed a boost-back burn and demonstrated re-ignition of Raptor engines in-flight, SpaceX operated Starship's payload bay, and for NASA's Artemis missions, Starship demonstrated the transfer of propellant in orbit.


March 20, 2024
Article

The Oxygen Bottleneck: Technological Alien Worlds Need Fire

Without the ability to forge metal to build radio antennas, to provide the combustion necessary to launch rockets, or the means of generating energy from burning fossil fuels and developing technology to fire lasers into the sky, any aliens on an oxygen-poor planet would be largely undetectable. There could be countless planets out there with life, even intelligent life, but lacking the oxygen to start fires.


March 6, 2024
longform

Is the FAA Helping or Hindering SpaceX's Ambitions?

From overseeing tens of thousands of aircraft navigating the vast US airspace to regulating space launches, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) stands as the central government agency tasked with ensuring public safety both in the skies and on the ground.


February 21, 2024
article

Could Europa Support Life? Clipper Was Built to Find Out

One of the most anticipated missions scheduled for launch this year is Europa Clipper, a spacecraft filled with a suite of sensitive instruments that will help unlock the secrets of Jupiter's enticing, distant ocean moon.


February 13, 2024
article

Japanese Moon Startup Faces Discrimination Lawsuits

A pair of lawsuits filed by former ispace employees claim the startup suffers from a toxic culture rife with discrimination and harassment against non-Japanese workers. 


February 7, 2024
article

Daily Survival on the International Space Station

The International Space Station provides astronauts with their survival needs in terms of clean air at the right pressure and temperature, drinkable water, personal hygiene, physical fitness, and food. But how?


January 31, 2024
article

NASA Awards Money to Far-Out Mission Concepts

If you’re interested in out-of-the-box ideas for future space technology, look no further than the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts program. Some of the concepts are new ideas for missions, such as a winged vertical takeoff and landing craft for Mars or a daring sample return mission to Venus.


January 24, 2024
article

Vulcan Flew Flawlessly. Its Lunar Payload? Not So Much.

ULA successfully launched the first flight of its Vulcan rocket without any issues. Its payload, Astrobotic's NASA-funded Peregrine Lunar Lander, did not share the same fate.


January 10, 2024
article

ULA to Debut Vulcan Rocket for Lunar Lander Mission

Partly due to the dominance of SpaceX and a changing market, ULA has focused its efforts on a new rocket — Vulcan Centaur — these past few years. The company is phasing out both its Atlas V and Delta IV rockets, the last of those two fleets, with the inaugural launch of Vulcan set for next week.


January 3, 2024
Article

A Golden Record for the Next Generation

The Voyager Golden Record project is now approaching its 50th anniversary and a new interstellar messaging effort called Message In A Bottle (MIAB) is taking shape with input from JPL, SETI Institute, Blue Marble Institute, and Interstellar Foundation. The goal? To propose a message for extraterrestrial or future Earth beings, and to unite humanity under a common goal.


December 20, 2023
article

NASA-Funded Private Moon Race Begins With Dueling Landers

We’re going back to the Moon, and sooner than you think. Next year, four astronauts will fly around the Moon, before our triumphant return to the lunar surface. To pave the way for these missions, NASA-funded private companies will attempt to deploy lunar landers to test out various technologies for those upcoming human missions and scout out potential landing sites at the Moon’s south pole.


December 13, 2023
article

Reading Between the Lines of International Space Cooperation

The Artemis Accords have been hailed as a roadmap to the future of human space expansion, with statements often emphasizing the common national interests and ambitions of the participants. Signatories like the US, Japan, and the EU share interests in expansion beyond low-Earth orbit, but often missed in the signing ceremonies is the fact that national motivations related to space exploration are often not, in reality, the same — or even all that well aligned.


December 6, 2023
article

Spending the SETI Institute's $200 Million Gift

Franklin Antonio, a founder of the electronic chip maker Qualcomm, died at the age of 69 in May 2022, but in his passing, he bequeathed $200 million from his estate to the SETI Institute. The gift is the gift of life, in a way: it means that SETI research at the SETI Institute is now assured a healthy existence long into the future.


November 29, 2023
longform

SpaceX Achieves New Milestones With Second Starship Flight

Starship achieved a maximum altitude of 150 kilometers, its highest ever. The second integrated test flight successfully demonstrated the highly dynamic stage separation system, booster boost-back burn, and all the mitigations that were in place after the first flight. 


November 22, 2023
article

NASA: 2023 Data Points to a Scorching Earth

A heating globe can create catastrophic events like torrential rain, tropical storms, intense wildfires, and droughts. In 2023, Storm Daniel caused the death of over 10,000 people in Libya, according to NOAA. In August, Hurricane Dora exacerbated a wildfire on the island of Maui in Hawaii, which then became the deadliest wildfire in U.S. history.


November 22, 2023
article

The Case for Mining Resources in Space

Today, demand for strategic minerals outpaces supply as humanity plunges deeper into a human-made climate crisis. We urgently need new sources of critical metals that we can access without leaving scars of environmental degradation on our planet. Lunar and asteroid mining offer new targets for resource extraction and responsible stewardship.


November 8, 2023
article

After ISS, Will a New Home Materialize for NASA?

Northrop Grumman announced it would end its solo bid for a commercial space station and join a competing effort. In September, Blue Origin’s proposal for a space station was said to be in limbo as other programs, such as Blue Origin’s lunar lander for NASA’s Artemis program, took precedence.


November 1, 2023
article

Family of Deceased Engineer Fights ESA Diplomatic Immunity

Twelve years after his suicide, an ESA engineer's family is still fighting for justice, and looking for answers about the alleged bullying and harassment that led to this tragedy.


October 24, 2023
article

A New and Improved Starship Super Heavy is Ready for Flight

SpaceX's goals for the second flight test of Starship Super Heavy remain more or less the same — to test out the current technologies aboard the vehicle and on the launch pad, gauge how the improvements over the previous flight pan out, and ultimately get the entire launch system — the largest ever developed — to orbit.


October 18, 2023
article

NASA Commits to the Search for Life on Habitable Worlds

NASA's proposed Habitable Worlds Observatory represents a dual commitment from the agency: engaging in a profound search for Earth-like worlds that may harbor life and optimizing the way flagship missions like Webb and Hubble are designed and launched.


October 11, 2023
article

SpaceX Set to Launch NASA Mission to Heavy Metal Asteroid

Inside our planet is a core made of metal that spins to give Earth its protective magnetic field. However, we can’t see it for ourselves. But an asteroid called 16 Psyche might be the next best thing — the suspected remnant core of a planet floating freely in space.


October 4, 2023
Article

An Increasingly Noisy Earth Is Drowning Out the Aliens

Any potential signal from ET is assumed false, until proven otherwise. Scientifically, taking this skeptical approach is the right thing to do, but emotionally, there’s always a tingle of excitement for researchers when a candidate signal is found.


September 27, 2023
Article

Pristine Asteroid Sample Returns with 'Daredevil' OSIRIS-REx

On September 24, in a highly choreographed operation, OSIRIS-REx will return to Earth and drop off regolith material for scientists to study. The samples will land in the Utah desert, while the spacecraft itself speeds off to another destination in space. 


September 20, 2023
article

Webb and the Great Cosmic Question Mark

JWST data has provided new and intricate details of so many different objects in the universe: stars, galaxies, black holes, and even distant extrasolar planets, those outside our solar system. With the telescope's crisp infrared spectra, more detailed information can be garnered than ever before.


September 6, 2023
article

India Takes the Lead in Global Race to the Moon

India's Chandrayaan-3 mission achieved the near-impossible, successfully landing near the lunar south pole and becoming the first spacecraft to do so. India now stands alongside Moon exploration veterans: the United States, Soviet-era Russia, and China.


August 30, 2023
longform
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