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Home»Science»Today’s biggest science news: CDC in turmoil | Moss survives space | Comet 3I/ATLAS images
Science

Today’s biggest science news: CDC in turmoil | Moss survives space | Comet 3I/ATLAS images

November 21, 2025No Comments
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2025-11-21T16:32:03.410Z

Cause of Santorini’s earthquake swarm revealed

View over Santorini at sunset with the caldera in the background.

(Image credit: Dimitris Meletis via Getty Images)

Sun, sand, sea, and a swarm of tiny earthquakes. Back in January, Live Science reported on tens of thousands of small earthquakes that shook the Greek island of Santorini to herald a possible future volcanic eruption.

Now, physics and artificial intelligence has enabled scientists to find the earthquakes’ cause, and it’s surprisingly good news: molten rock pumping through an underground channel and quickly cooled.

The results suggest that the holiday hotspot is safe from any disastrous eruptions for the time being. And in case they return, the scientists behind the study suggest their tool could be developed to better forecast them.

2025-11-21T15:42:50.431Z

An insect apocalypse looms. Can we stop it?

An illustration of a person pulling back a curtain full of colorful insects to reveal a deserted landscape

Insect populations are plummeting almost everywhere they’ve been studied. That portends a bleak future for the world’s food supplies. But there are ways to reverse the decline. (Image credit: Myriam Wares)

Gone are the days when a summertime highway drive will leave your windshield peppered with bug splats. In their place, the insect apocalypse is here.

A combination of climate change, habitat loss and pesticides are causing Earth’s insect populations to plummet, and that could have serious downstream impacts on our food supplies, Live Science contributor Joanna Thompson writes.

But can anything be done to bring the bugs back? And does a case for hope still remain?

Check out Joanna’s fascinating Science Spotlight story here.

2025-11-21T15:08:15.686Z

Impossible void-trapped galaxy is still churning out stars

a noisy image of a distant galaxy

(Image credit: Sloan Digital Sky Survey)

In a spectacular cosmic example of making proverbial lemonade, scientists have observed a void trapped galaxy that still seems to be readily churning out stars, Live Science contributor Joanna Thompson writes.

The dwarf galaxy NGC 6789 is located approximately 12 million light-years from Earth in an empty region known as the Local Void, and yet despite a dearth of surrounding material, it still seems able to readily produce stars.

Scientists expect future observations to reveal why. But until then, the galaxy’s star making ability remains a major mystery.

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-21T13:54:01.964Z

Slaying zombie cells could treat diabetes

an illustration of cells

(Image credit: OsakaWayne Studios via Getty Images)

Slaying zombies isn’t just for horror movie and video game protagonists, it could offer scientists a key method for treating diabetes, Live Science contributor Elise Ceyral writes.

A new study has revealed that killing senescent, or “zombified”, cells inside the blood vessels of mice reduced their fat mass, improved their blood sugar levels, and decreased their metabolic dysfunction. And the research could pave the way for new treatments that improve cardiovascular health more generally, scientists say.

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-21T12:41:53.243Z

Live Science roundup

Here’s a roundup of some of the stories Live Science published today and last night:

2025-11-21T12:13:00.157Z

It’s official: Elon Musk is the world’s greatest human, his chatbot Grok says.

SpaceX founder Elon Musk celebrates after the successful launch of the Crew Dragon Demo-2 mission at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, on May 30, 2020.

Elon Musk celebrating the launch of the Crew Dragon Demo-2 mission at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, on May 30, 2020. (Image credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Who can outthink da Vinci and Newton? Outfight Mike Tyson? Outball LeBron? Who can create the universe with more speed and efficiency than God?

That’s right, it’s the handsomest, funniest, coolest, richest man on the planet Elon Musk. At least that’s according to his artificial intelligence chatbot, Grok.

The soon-to-be trillionaire’s Large Language Model has been posting up a storm on X over the past week, responding to user queries with a raft of claims touting Musk’s enviable infallibility, genius and athletic prowess.

The bot’s fawning responses were quickly deleted from X as Musk posted Thursday (Nov. 20) afternoon that Grok had been manipulated “by adversarial prompting into saying absurdly positive things about me.” He then referred to himself with a slur and a smiley-face emoji, the Washington Post reported.

While Grok’s absurd sycophancy has caused a lot of amusement online, it also serves as a healthy reminder that there is no such thing as an unbiased AI tool, an expert told the Post.

And if you want a deeper read on the dangers of using chatbots as your sole sources of information, you’re in luck, Live Science has you covered.

2025-11-21T12:11:30.509Z

The moss goss

a photo of the ISS with an inset box showing a close-up of moss

(Image credit: NASA / Tomomichi Fujita)

Good morning, science fans. We’re back to wrap up an incredibly busy week in science: We’ve had NASA’s release of its comet 3I/ATLAS images, the U.S. being months away from losing its measles elimination status, chaos at the CDC, three more stranded astronauts, domesticated raccoons, and Starlink satellites shooting mysterious signals out into space. And that’s to name just a handful.

So what more could I possibly offer you? How about this moss-read study about the hardy plant not only surviving but thriving in the cold vacuum of space for nine entire months?

Fastened inside a special exposure capsule on the International Space Station, the moss species Physcomitrium patens showed limited negative effects from space’s cold vacuum, its microgravity and temperature fluctuations, Live Science contributor Mason Wakley writes.

All of these traits could offer biological stepping stones for building ecosystems beyond our planet, the researchers said.

Check out the full story here.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2025-11-20T23:26:21.075Z

JWST finds a surprise in the heart of chaos

image of space with green and orange glowing circles on a blue background

James Webb captured a photo in infrared of coiled shells of dust around a pair of Wolf-Rayet stars known as Apep. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI; Science: Yinuo Han (Caltech), Ryan White (Macquarie University); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI))

Did someone leave their cosmic stand mixer running? No — it’s just the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) uncovering another wonder of the universe. In this new image, the world’s premier infrared observatory reveals more than 700 years of violent stellar history playing out before our eyes. At the center, a bright dot contains a pair of stars that are collectively known as Apep (a name for the Egyptian god of chaos, also called Apophis). Every 190 years, the two stars whip past each other, spilling twin arms of dust into space at thousands of miles per second.

JWST’s observations show this has happened at least four times in the recent past, with four pairs of increasingly large spiral arms appearing in the new image (the outermost arms are barely visible at the edge of the frame).

Now, here’s the twist: Webb’s observations, combined with data from the Very Large Telescope in Chile, confirmed that there is a third star in Apep, and it’s punching holes through the intricate dust patterns drawn by its siblings. The cavities left by that third star can be spotted by tracing a giant V, starting at the center of the image and spreading upward at about 10 and 2 o’clock.

For more about this beautifully violent star system, including a new 3D visualization, stop by NASA.

And with that, the North American contingent is signing out for the night. Check back early tomorrow for the biggest stories in science.

Brandon Specktor profile pic

Brandon Specktor

Space and Physics Editor
2025-11-20T20:38:33.980Z

Former CDC officials report turmoil at leading health agency

a photograph of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has overseen major changes at the HHS and its divisions, including the CDC. (Image credit: Heather Diehl via Getty Images)

Health editor Nicoletta here with more news on the declining state of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

During a webinar held Wednesday (Nov. 19), three former CDC leaders described the chaos that was unfolding at the agency after President Trump took office. The trio — Dr. Debra Houry, Dr. Demetre Daskalakis and Dr. Daniel Jernigan — jointly decided to resign in August after CDC director Susan Monarez was fired by the White House. Each said that they’d seen disturbing changes at the agency following the appointment of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health secretary. Taken together, these changes signal a rejection of the scientific process and an embrace of ideology as the basis for health-policy decisions, the trio said.

“I don’t know if CDC will survive, to be quite frank, with what they’re doing,” Houry said.

These testimonials weren’t surprising to me. Nonetheless, it is disturbing and saddening to hear about how these public health leaders have been undermined — these are individuals who have dedicated their lives to serving others, and to protecting the public’s wellbeing using the best information they can gather. The rejection of their expertise not only hurts them as individuals; it could hobble public health on a national and international scale.

You can read my full story here.

headshot of nicoletta lanese

Nicoletta Lanese

Health Channel Editor
2025-11-20T20:35:56.038Z

CDC website adopts anti-vaccine views

CDC facility from the outside

Recent changes to the CDC website appear to align with anti-vaccine rhetoric. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

From Ben: The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has adopted Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s anti-vaccine views on its website, according to news reports.

The health agency’s website was altered on Wednesday (Nov. 19) evening to state that: “The claim ‘vaccines do not cause autism’ is not an evidence-based claim because studies have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism.”

Suffice to say there are no scientifically proven links between autism and vaccines, but that hasn’t stopped the Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary from pushing these debunked claims. Now it appears CDC communications are following suit.

2025-11-20T19:37:55.777Z

mRNA flu shot delivers the goods

Exciting news dropped yesterday that the Pfizer mRNA flu vaccine is more effective than traditional flu vaccines, which are grown in hen’s eggs.

Egg-based flu vaccines have many shortcomings. Producing the vaccine in eggs is slow and takes a lot of eggs, making it challenging to scale up production in the context of a pandemic flu. That’s why vaccine manufacturers now try to match the flu strain in their shots to those circulating in the Southern Hemisphere months ahead of time.

But as we saw with the COVID-19 pandemic, mRNA vaccine production can be ramped up very, very quickly.

“An issue with eggs in vaccine production is that the virus can adapt to the eggs, and the mutations involved in that reduce the match to the target strain and reduce the efficacy,” Bill Hanage, an epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, told CIDRAP News.

In the more than 18,000 healthy participants of the trial, the Pfizer shot prevented 60% to 67% of infections — higher than the 44% to 54% prevented by the traditional flu shot. On the flipside, the mRNA vaccines also had more side effects, such as flulike symptoms and arm swelling.

Whether this vaccine will ever see the light of day in the U.S. is a big open question. Health secretary RFK Jr. is notoriously hostile to vaccines. And the Trump administration pulled the plug on government-funded mRNA vaccine research in August.

So will the current administration’s Food and Drug Administration approve an mRNA vaccine based on safety and efficacy data that would have been more than convincing in the past?

2025-11-20T19:13:04.864Z

Cities reducing our evolutionary fitness?

drone view of pollution hanging over skyscrapers of Fuyang, China

Pollution hangs in the air over Fuyang, China. A new review argues that the pollution and overcrowding of city living is harming our evolutionary fitness. (Image credit: SOPA Images/Getty Images)

Polluted, overcrowded cities are hurting humanity’s evolutionary fitness, or our ability to survive and reproduce, a new review argues.

The new report presents a hypothesis that argues humans evolved over millions of years to live in nature, but have rapidly moved into cities since industrialization in the 1800s. The authors claim that this current “environmental mismatch” of city living leads to higher infertility rates and lower sperm counts, fuels autoimmune diseases and allergies, reduces our strength and endurance, and leads to slower cognitive development and faster cognitive decline. (For what it’s worth, you can find data to support or refute their hypothesis, depending on where and how you look.)

The authors use their findings to argue we all need to foster connections to nature. I don’t disagree, exactly, but it also seems like a classic case of natural selection at work. Living in cities has numerous benefits, which is why over time, more and more of the world’s population is migrating into them.

So even if we’re maladapted to city living now, it’s possible that eventually, we’ll gain adaptations that help us thrive in urban environments.

2025-11-20T17:42:54.357Z

Needle-free insulin?

pink minipig in side profile

Scientists in China came up with an insulin-cream that can be absorbed through the skin to lower blood sugar. They tested it on (presumably adorable) minipigs. (Image credit: Design Pics Editorial/Getty Images)

Tia here with an update about a new insulin delivery system.

Anyone with diabetes knows that taking insulin is a real pain in the subcutaneous tissue. Getting insulin into the body requires injecting it into the fatty layer beneath the skin,either via a needle or an infusion site that stays in your body for a few days. And maintaining “tight” blood sugar control requires many shots a day.

But a team of researchers in China has demonstrated a skin cream that can get insulin into the body without puncturing skin. The trick is attaching insulin to a positively-charged polymer, so that it can diffuse through the layers of skin. It’s still early days, and the team has so far tested it only in diabetic minipigs and mice. But the skin cream rapidly lowered blood sugar levels to nondiabetic levels in those animals.

The skin cream accumulated in fat and liver tissue for hours, keeping blood sugar levels in the normal range for a while. Subcutaneous injections of insulin, meanwhile, were rapidly cleared from the blood stream.

That could be an issue in type 1 diabetes, where hypoglycemia, or dangerously low blood sugar, is always a concern, as the amount of insulin the body needs is always changing. A skin cream that takes hours to clear from the body could mean a person has to eat constantly for hours after, say, going on a jog and starting to run low.

It’s also not clear how much skin cream would constitute a “therapeutic dose.” Minipigs are, as their name suggests, relatively petite. For their porcine subjects, the researchers applied the insulin cream on a patch of belly about 62 square inches (400 square centimeters) in area. So how much cream would be needed to lower the blood sugar of a 200-pound (90 kilogram) man?

I also wonder how this could affect the skin, or the fatty tissue beneath, over the long-term. Insulin fuels fat growth, so injecting the drug over time can cause lipohypertrophy, in which fatty lumps that reduce insulin absorption accumulate under the skin. But these lumps and bumps are tiny and focused around the injection sites, so the issue can be headed off by “rotating” the injection sites to different places on the body. Would the skin cream also cause unusual fat growth that would be harder to work around?

Tia Ghose, LiveScience Staff Writer

Tia Ghose

Editor-in-Chief (Premium)
2025-11-20T17:37:18.835Z

Signing off

Okay that’s it for me today in sunny England (it’s dark and below freezing). Keep checking back for more coverage from my U.S. colleagues.

I’d sign off with another comet joke, but it would probably go over your head.

2025-11-20T17:26:36.643Z

Comet 3I/ATLAS images

A collection of comet 3I/ATLAS images released by NASA.

A collection of comet 3I/ATLAS images released by NASA. (Image credit: NASA/Goddard/LASP/CU Boulder/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Southwest Research Institute/Lowell Observatory/Qicheng Zhang/ASU/MSSS)

I’m sorry for the uninspired headline, but I really am running on empty with comet puns by now.

It’s the opposite situation for Patrick and comet news, however, as he’s written up a new gallery of NASA’s released 3I/ATLAS images with all the context and analysis you could care for.

Check it out here.

2025-11-20T16:15:54.033Z

Live Science roundup

Here’s a roundup of some of the stories Live Science published today and last night (that we haven’t already mentioned):

2025-11-20T15:35:32.832Z

Science and the AI bubble

A large black screen showing numbers and stock trends.

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Live Science is hardly the first site you visit for stock market tips, but it’s difficult to go anywhere these days without hearing loose talk about a potential AI bubble.

For the time being, market jitters over an imminent pop appear to have been shrugged off by Nvidia’s strong quarterly results, the Financial Times reports.

But what happens to science if ballooning investment into Large Language Models goes bust? The knock-on effects for funding and jobs could be bad, but not without their silver linings, this Nature article outlines.

2025-11-20T15:15:56.280Z

Baffling Viking burial

a human skeleton still in the ground with two large scallop shells on its mouth

The Viking Age woman was discovered with two large scallop shells on her mouth.  (Image credit: Ellen Grav/NTNU University Museum; CC BY-SA 4.0)

Kristina here from the archaeology channel.

It seems like ancient people are always “baffling” archaeologists — but this Viking burial is truly unique. After a metal detectorist found a ninth-century brooch on a Norwegian farm, archaeologists dug up the skeleton of a woman whose face was covered with two giant scallop shells.

Check out our story to find out what the shells could mean.

author bio image

Kristina Killgrove

Staff Writer
2025-11-20T15:07:18.957Z

Houston, do we have a junk problem?

An illustration of space junk

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

As China’s stranded astronauts continue to trend big this week, we’re left wondering if now might be the time to take stock of humanity’s growing space litter.

Earth orbits are becoming increasingly cluttered with junk, to the point where they could soon become unusable. So just how bad is the problem? And what can be done to fix it? Live Science contributor and former NASA engineer Damien Pine dug into the issue off the back of a European Space Agency report back in April.

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-20T15:05:44.184Z

Cloudflare crash revealed

Cloudflare has finally discovered what caused the massive crash in its services that took out large chunks of the web on Tuesday (Nov. 18).

And it turns out the answer lies within, Ars Technica reports. Within the company’s database, an error output into a feature file caused said file to double in size, the effects of which propagated through the network to cause a widespread crash.

The rest is internet history. And while Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince can’t guarantee that there won’t be another crash, he says that the outage will push the company to build more resilient systems.

2025-11-20T14:49:38.685Z

The plant that shuffles around its insides to survive the desert heat

T. oblongifolia growing in Death Valley, California.

T. oblongifolia growing in Death Valley, California. (Image credit: Karine Prado)

Scientists have finally discovered how a strange desert plant can thrive in the harsh temperatures of California’s Death Valley — by rearranging its cells to better photosynthesize in the heat, Live Science contributor Sarah Wild reports.

The plant is called Tidestromia oblongifolia, and the secrets of how it shuffles around its photosynthetic mechanisms could help scientists to make crops more heat-tolerant in our warming world.

You can check out the full story here.

2025-11-20T14:22:54.126Z

Care to comet?

A GIF of comet 3I/ATLAS images taken by the PUNCH mission between Sept. 28 and Oct. 10.

A GIF of comet 3I/ATLAS images taken by the PUNCH mission between Sept. 28 and Oct. 10. (Image credit: NASA/Southwest Research Institute)

As I promised earlier, here’s Patrick’s writeup of NASA’s news conference on comet 3I/ATLAS yesterday.

It was a dramatic stream, with NASA scientists coming down hard on the claims swirling around the web about the comet’s alleged connection to aliens. But it wasn’t just about extraterrestrial rumors, lifted from the torrent of speculation were some genuinely spine-tingling observations about the 7 billion-year-old cosmic interloper.

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-20T13:52:00.064Z

Science history: The day bacterial evolution was shown to be random

an illustration of bacteriophages attacking a bacterium

(Image credit: TUMEGGY/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images)

On this day in 1943, two bacteriologists published a paper that confirmed a key tenet of Darwin’s theory of evolution, as Tia writes.

Their observations, which showed that bacterial mutations occurred spontaneously rather than emerging from selective pressures (as opposed to Jean-Baptiste Lamarck’s rival theory of evolution proposed) cemented Darwin’s hypothesis and would later win the pair a Nobel Prize.

But more recent observations show that the ways some bacterial mutations occur are far from completely random, complicating the initial picture presented by the duo.

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-20T13:21:10.742Z

One man’s trash panda is another’s little treasure

a raccoon on a fence in Central Park with a view of the NYC skyline in the background

(Image credit: JOHANNES EISELE via Getty Images)

Time for the best kind of trash talk now, as a new study reveals that city raccoons are well on their way to domestication, Live Science contributor Skyler Ware writes.

Using photos uploaded to the citizen science platform iNaturalist, researchers found that raccoons in urban environments had shorter snouts than their rural counterparts, a key indicator of their growing adaptation to coexistence with humanity — think of them as nature’s garbage collectors.

So would you adopt a trash panda and raise it as your furry child? I think you’d need at least five, to keep each other in check.

Oh and please don’t read this and start feeding wild raccoons, some of them do carry rabies.

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-20T12:36:00.849Z

‘Hippie apes’ go ape

Wild bonobos grooming on a fallen tree

(Image credit: Christian Ziegler/LuiKotale Bonobo Project)

Sophie here, fresh from reporting my most gruesome story to date. My past life as a chimp researcher means I have a pretty strong stomach for the realities of life in wild great ape populations. But I admit that this story detailing how five female bonobos brutally maimed a male to the point that researchers initially struggled to identify him made me feel queasy.

Sonya Pashchevskaya, who observed the attack, recounted the event in so much detail to me that I felt transported to the scene. She described how around 60 bonobos sat dumbfounded, silently bearing witness to the most severe attack ever reported from wild bonobos, with the overwhelming stench of blood in the air. “They’re supposed to be walking around foraging and they’re all sitting there. Babies aren’t playing, no one is eating. Everybody’s just silent for two hours,” she recalled.

The obvious question, then, is “what did the male do to deserve this level of violence?” No members of the research team saw the beginning of the attack, but Pashchevskaya said the most likely explanation is that the male tried to harm one of the females’ infants.

Infanticide, where males kill unrelated babies to up their chances of fathering offspring of their own, is common in primate societies but is absent in bonobo populations. When you know this is the risk male bonobos take when trying to harm a female infant, no wonder.

a headshot of Sophie Berdugo

Sophie Berdugo

Staff Writer
2025-11-20T11:31:47.836Z

Easy comet, easy go

A photo of 3I/ATLAS with a green coma and a long tail, as well as a second shorter tail. A spiral galaxy is also visible in the top left of the image.

Comet 3I/ATLAS as snapped by astrophotographer Satoru Murata. (Image credit: Satoru Murata)

Good morning, science fans, and what a day for comet 3I/ATLAS news it was yesterday. I won’t run back over the torrent information our space and physics editor Brandon provided from the briefing last night, especially when you can simply scroll down to see it and Patrick has a story on the way.

What I can do is point you in the direction of the treasure trove of images released on NASA’s website. Yes, they’re all blurry blobs, but as the comet approaches its closest point to Earth on Dec.19, we can expect much more impressive images from Earth telescopes, like this one here.

And you can be sure the new images won’t stop coming until a while after the comet’s perigee — the comet is set to zip out into deep space and never return to our solar system after its visit, meaning astronomers are racing to make every observation they can of it until then.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2025-11-19T23:44:23.445Z

That’s all for tonight

The Canada crew is signing off for the night, but we’ll be back tomorrow, likely with more stunning comet 3I/ATLAS images.

Brandon Specktor profile pic

Brandon Specktor

Space and physics editor
2025-11-19T21:35:16.416Z

A treasure trove of images

The press conference has ended, but the work of deciphering and analyzing NASA’s long-awaited images of 3I/ATLAS has just begun.

We were expecting a few images from Mars; we received more than a dozen observations, taken by eight different missions over the course of three months.

It’s a treasure trove of data.

3I/ATLAS spotted by the Psyche spacecraft

3I/ATLAS spotted by the Psyche spacecraft from about 33 million miles away (Image credit: NASA / Psyche)

The NASA panelists likened the new observations to fans at a baseball game, each holding a camera and photographing the action from a different angle. Only by comparing and contrasting all these views will our most complete understanding of 3I/ATLAS emerge.

And the game’s not done yet. As the comet approaches its closest point to Earth (on Dec. 19), many more telescopes will take a bite at the cosmic apple. It won’t just be NASA and the world’s biggest observatories watching, but amateur astronomers, too.

Stay tuned to Live Science for more 3I/ATLAS news over the coming month — and keep your eyes on the skies.

— Brandon Specktor

2025-11-19T21:08:32.406Z

A comet “three times faster” than the sun?

The question and answer portion of the event ended with a question from… Live Science!

I asked the panel about the “circumstancial evidence” that 3I/ATLAS is much older than our solar system. Tom Statler answered:

“It takes the sun 240 million years to orbit around the center of the galaxy, and we’re doing that with a neighborhood of stars,” Statler said. “The relative motions between stars in our solar neighborhood is… about 25,000 miles an hour.”

3I/ATLAS, meanwhile, is coming through the solar system three times faster than the stars in our neighborhood move on average.

“This tells us it’s coming from a different population than what we have around us,” Statler added, which hints that 3I/ATLAS likely had to travel a long, long way to get here.

Unfortuantely, it will be very hard to constrain the exact age of the comet until we find more like it.

2025-11-19T20:52:36.145Z

A comet we’ll “be digging into for years”

Some highlights from the question and answer portion of the NASA conference:

  • Hubble observations suggest the comet measures between 1,400 feet to 3.5 miles in diameter
  • JWST observations revealed a high CO2 content, which could indicate 3I/ATLAS formed from a region of carbon dioxide ice that’s very different from our solar system
  • There’s “circumstantial evidence,” based on its velocity, that 3I/ATLAS is very old, and may be significantly older than our sun
  • These images have barely been processed, and are observations that “the science community will be digging into for years,” said Tom Statler, lead scientist for solar system small bodies at NASA
  • Jets of gas erupting from the comet show that it was very active near perihelion — but doesn’t necessarily mean it exploded, as some researchers have speculated. But “we can’t tell for sure,” Statler noted.
  • The non-gravitational acceleration of the comet is “very on par” with other comets we’ve seen, and is caused by jets of gas erupting from within

Here’s another one of the new images, taken from Mars with the HiRISE camera:

3I/ATLAS seen by HiRISE

3I/ATLAS seen by HiRISE in orbit around Mars (Image credit: NASE / HiRISE)
2025-11-19T20:26:10.319Z

The images are in!

The conference is ongoing, but NASA has already updated its 3I/ATLAS image page with more than a DOZEN new observations from its fleet of machines.

These include images from the SOHO and PUNCH spacecraft watching the sun, the Perseverance Mars rover, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and MAVEN orbiters at Mars, and the Lucy, Psyche, and STEREO missions.

Here is one of the new images, captured by PUNCH:

3I/ATLAS seen by PUNCH

(Image credit: NASA / PUNCH)
2025-11-19T20:10:49.775Z

NASA: “3I/ATLAS is a comet.”

To start the conference, NASA Associate Administrator Amit Kshatriya tackled rumors about 3I/ATLAS’ origins right away, noting that all evidence points to the object being a natural comet from another star system.

He said he welcomes the international attention that’s been given to the comet, and hopes everyone remains interested in what it has to teach us.

2025-11-19T20:00:21.135Z

Watch now: 3I/ATLAS image reveal

NASA Shares Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Images – YouTube
NASA Shares Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Images - YouTube


Watch On

NASA’s live stream, sharing the first new images of comet 3I/ATLAS since August, is about to begin. Watch it live along with us here.

2025-11-19T19:36:38.002Z

Where to find the new NASA images

We’re now less than 30 minutes away from NASA’s 3I/ATLAS image reveal conference.

If you aren’t able to watch the event live (right here), you can still view the images after. NASA will post them all to this page, which catalogs every 3I/ATLAS image the agency has shared since the comet’s discovery in July.

The last image NASA shared before the shutdown was this view from the SPHEREx infrared telescope, taken between Aug. 7 to Aug. 15. You can see 3I/ATLAS brightening in the center of the frame.

3I/ATLAS seen by NASA's SPHEREx telescope

3I/ATLAS seen by NASA’s SPHEREx telescope from Aug. 7 to Aug. 15 (Image credit: NASA)
2025-11-19T18:59:57.819Z

Countdown to NASA’s 3I/ATLAS image reveal

an image of a comet streaking through space with the stars around it reflecting rainbows

A view of comet 3I/ATLAS taken by the National Science Foundation’s Gemini Observatory (Image credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/Shadow the Scientist)

Greetings, science fans. Live Science space and physics editor Brandon Specktor here to take you through NASA’s impending news conference, where agency officials will share the latest images of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS.

The event is scheduled to start at 3 p.m. EST, and you can watch it live right here, as well as on NASA’s official website and YouTube page. This will be the first official NASA communication about the much-publicized comet since the U.S. government shutdown temporarily muted the agency more than a month ago.

What are we hoping to see? For starters, NASA’s closest-ever observations of the interstellar interloper. Snapped by the agency’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) during the comet’s closest flyby of the Red Planet in early October, the images will show 3I/ATLAS from just 19 million miles away — close to ten times closer than the comet will ever get to Earth.

(We’ve already gotten a sneak peek of this view from the European Space Agency’s ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter, which clearly shows the comet’s cloudy coma glowing around its bright nucleus.)

A GIF of the comet 3I/ATLAS moving across the night sky as it zoomed past Mars

A GIF of the comet 3I/ATLAS moving across the night sky as it zoomed past Mars, taken by ESA’s Trace Gas Orbiter. (Image credit: ESA/TGO/CaSSIS)

NASA also plans to share observations of the comet from other ongoing missions, though the agency has not yet specified which ones. We do know from previous reporting that two NASA sun-watching missions — the Polarimeter to Unify the Corona Heliosphere (PUNCH) as well as the NASA/ESA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) — had eyes on the comet during its close approach to the sun in late October, so those are both possibilities.

Stay tuned for more.

Brandon Specktor profile pic

Brandon Specktor

Space and Physics Editor
2025-11-19T17:12:00.412Z

Signing off from the U.K.

We’re signing off from the U.K. side now, but stay tuned for some very exciting comet updates when the NASA images drop later today.

And before I go, why not a comet joke:

Why does a shooting star taste better than a comet?

It’s a little meteor.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Trending News Editor
2025-11-19T17:08:14.395Z

America is on the brink of losing its measles elimination status

An illustration of particles of the measles virus in red and white against a dark background.

An artist’s illustration of the measles virus. (Image credit: koto_feja via Getty Images)

Editors Nicoletta and Hannah here with a duo of stories to catch you up on the state of measles in the United States. (Spoiler: The situation is growing increasingly dire.)

In a news analysis from Live Science contributor Stephanie Pappas, experts explain why America could lose its “measles elimination status” within months. The country eliminated measles back in 2000, meaning the disease was no longer circulating at a sustained level as it does in endemic countries. But to keep that status, a region must not have any ongoing measles transmission lasting over a year. West Texas experienced a major measles outbreak this year that began in January and seeded additional outbreaks in other states, where transmission is still ongoing. If we hit January 2026 and those outbreaks haven’t been subdued, measles will once again be considered endemic to the U.S.

In an opinion piece, epidemiologist Elizabeth Jacobs and virologist James Alwine argue that the measles outbreaks in Canada and the U.S. are a bellwether of the erosion of public health, and that these countries are failing their citizens. “Kennedy must be removed from office,” they write, referencing the U.S. health secretary RFK Jr. “There can be no improvements in public health or vaccination rates as long as he continues his destructive reign.”

To learn more, read Stephanie’s story here and the op-ed here.

headshot of nicoletta lanese

Nicoletta Lanese

Health Editor
hannah osborne headshot

Hannah Osborne

Planet Earth and Animals Editor
2025-11-19T16:11:03.796Z

Comet 3I/ATLAS sneak-peek

Comet 3I/ATLAS photographed from Manciano, Italy on Nov. 19.

Comet 3I/ATLAS photographed from Manciano, Italy on Nov. 19. (Image credit: Gianluca Masi/Virtual Telescope Project)

Want a fresh peak at the most famous comet in the world right now, but can’t wait for NASA’s 3 p.m. EST stream? We’ve got you covered.

Here’s a new image taken by astronomer Gianluca Masi, an astronomer and founder of The Virtual Telescope Project. The image was captured by Masi in Manciano, Italy, and shows the comet’s coma, its tail and anti-tail.

2025-11-19T14:39:56.995Z

‘Godfather of AI’ breaks citation record

Yoshua Bengio at the All In event in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023.

Yoshua Bengio at the All In event in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023. (Image credit: Graham Hughes/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Scientists like to be cited — being referenced in future research articles is a key indicator of their work’s impact on future discoveries.

So machine-learning trailblazer Yoshua Bengio could be pleased to have made a major record this week, becoming the first person to be cited more than a million times on Google Scholar for his contributions to artificial intelligence research, Scientific American reports.

But Bengio has far more on his mind than academic achievement. What keeps him up at night is curtailing the dangerous uses of AI made possible by his own research.

You can read the interview I had with him last year for more.

2025-11-19T13:32:19.861Z

Relativity at its breaking point

An illustration of a black hole merger

An illustration of two black holes merging into one. New research explains how a “forbidden” black hole was created through one of the most peculiar mergers yet detected. (Image credit: Pitris via Getty Images)

In 2023, scientists detected a gravitational wave signal they thought was impossible — a sequence of space-time ripple coming from two black holes deemed too massive to form by the direct collapse of stars.

And yet form, and later merge, these black holes did. Now, by teasing apart the signals and simulating how the space-time singularities came to be, physicists may finally have an answer for how the black holes managed it. The solution just happens to test Einstein’s theory of general relativity at its most extreme limits.

Read the full story by Live Science contributor Andrey Feldman here.

2025-11-19T12:49:23.350Z

Live Science roundup

Here’s a roundup of some of the stories Live Science published today and last night:

2025-11-19T12:43:47.066Z

I’d like to kiss you monkey man

a photo of an ape pressing its lips to another ape's cheek in a kiss-like behavior

(Image credit: Andreas Last via Getty Images)

If comet 3I/ATLAS really is revealed to be an alien probe, I may be kissing my credibility as a comet journalist goodbye. But did you know that the practice of kissing far predates humans?

By pairing a Bayesian model with observations of various modern-day primates pressing lips, scientists have estimated that kissing first evolved in the common ancestor of large apes sometime between 21.5 million and 16.9 million years ago.

With all that said, it’s far from clear how much our human ancestors smooched across the centuries — even in modern humans only about half of cultures engage in it.

Check out the full story by Live Science contributor Clarissa Brincat here.

2025-11-19T12:32:44.333Z

NASA comet 3I/ATLAS announcement today

Good morning, science boys and girls. We’re back with yet another day of science news as NASA prepares to release some of the best-quality images yet of comet 3I/ATLAS.

The comet has been capturing an enormous amount of attention recently. Some of it is likely unearned (you know it’s almost definitely not aliens, right?) and some definitely a big deal (the more than 7 billion-year-old space snowball is a fascinating window across cosmic time and space).

We’ll be covering the event live as it happens, so if we’re wrong and little green men really are hopping around on it, we’ll be the first to tell you.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2025-11-18T23:43:57.429Z

See you later

The U.S. team is off for the night. Check in early U.K. time for the latest science news.

2025-11-18T22:55:15.395Z

3.3 billion-year-old traces of life

Geologists using an AI model say they have found chemical traces of life in 3.3-billion-year-old rocks from around the world.

That isn’t quite the oldest evidence of life. There are stromatolites, or microbial mats, found in Australia that date to 3.48 billion years ago. Other traces of ancient life have been more controversial: In 2017, scientists argued that chemical traces in 3.95-billion-year-old rocks from Labrador, Canada may constitute Earth’s earliest evidence of life.

But many very ancient samples are hotly contested, in part because what’s left behind is not the organism itself, but the chemical equivalent of a “life was here” sign. But because the biological molecules themselves break down over billions of years, these signatures of life are open to interpretation.

In the new study, the AI model looked at more than 400 samples of ancient rocks and sediments, modern-day plants and animals and ancient meteorites to pinpoint a “signature of life” that is left behind in rocks even after the most obvious biomolecules break down.

The team says they can distinguish rocks that once harbored life from those that did not with greater than 90% accuracy.

2025-11-18T21:48:04.921Z

NIH terminates funding for hundreds of trials

Medical illustration of two strands of messenger RNA (mRNA) in light blue against a gradient blue background

The Trump administration has cut funding for hundreds of clinical trials. A big chunk of that funding had been for mRNA vaccine research. (Image credit: libre de droit via Getty Images)

Tia here with an update on the state of clinical trials in the U.S.: Funding cuts by the Trump administration have halted 383 clinical trials, or about 1 in 30 funded by the National Institutes of Health, a new study in JAMA Internal Medicine has found.

Most of the terminated trials were in early phases, according to a summary of the new study in American Journal of Managed Care. But that still resulted in 74,000 enrolled patients being removed from trials.

The biggest funding cuts came from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), due in large part to $500 million in mRNA vaccine research being halted in August.

That won’t be a surprise to those who have followed public health news. Vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. now heads the Department of Health and Human Services, and has taken several steps to discredit and hamper vaccine uptake and development.

While the administration has said only mRNA vaccines are in the crosshairs and that other uses of mRNA technology are unaffected by the funding cuts, “the industry doesn’t trust that,” Jeff Coller, the Bloomberg distinguished professor of RNA biology and therapeutics at Johns Hopkins University, told health editor Nicoletta Lanese in an interview in August.

That’s a real pity, because mRNA technology has enormous potential, from attacking hard-to-treat, deadly cancers to curing genetic diseases, Nicoletta reported in October.

Tia Ghose, LiveScience Staff Writer

Tia Ghose

Editor-in-Chief (Premium)
2025-11-18T18:11:22.682Z

Goodnight from across the pond

It’s goodbye from the Live Science staff on the U.K. side. We’ll leave you in the ever-capable hands of our U.S. colleagues for more posts, commentary and breaking news updates.

2025-11-18T17:11:06.721Z

The Crying of Launch Complex 39

an image of a series of Starlink satellites in orbit

A batch of Starlink satellites just before they were released into low Earth orbit in 2023. (Image credit: SpaceX)

For many amateur astronomers, just taking a picture of a comet or a planet is a great find. But when Scott Tilley clocked off from his day job this year, he uncovered a vast network of puzzling radio signals being shot into space by U.S. government-run Starlink satellites.

It sounds like the setup for a Pynchon novel, but as Harry outlines, it’s all very much true.

Here’s what he had to say about the strange signals:

“Amateur astronomer Scott Tilley discovered the new signals while accidentally monitoring the wrong radio wavelengths. What’s really weird is that the signals seem to be deliberately using frequencies normally reserved for “uplinking” by satellite operators. But they are actually being used for “downlinking,” or sending messages back down to Earth, which not only goes against international regulations but could also potentially disrupt other spacecraft around them.

Not much is known about why they might be doing this or how widespread it is, and we may never know the full story due to the secretive nature of these satellites. Earlier in the year, I also wrote an in-depth report on how private satellites, like Starlink, are emitting radio pollution that overlaps with frequencies used by radio astronomers. If this problem gets worse, it could majorly impact our ability to study the cosmos, experts say.”

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-18T16:12:17.566Z

Comet 3I/ATLAS’s tail as old as time

A photo of 3I/ATLAS with a green coma and a long tail, as well as a second shorter tail. A spiral galaxy is also visible in the top left of the image.

The new photo shows the long tail and secondary anti-tail of 3I/ATLAS, as well as several other smaller jets emerging from its coma. The distant galaxy NGC4691 can also be seen in the top left of the image. (Image credit: Satoru Murata)

We can’t let even half a day go by without a fresh update on 3I/ATLAS at the moment. Senior staff writer Harry has published a write-up on this breathtaking shot of the comet, which was captured over the weekend by astrophotographer Satoru Murata as it photobombed a distant galaxy.

Some of the comet’s now iconic features, such as its green glow and its tail and anti-tail, are clearly visible in the photo, and it should be more than enough to whet our appetites ahead of NASA’s big reveal of its 3I/ATLAS images tomorrow.

You can read the full story here.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2025-11-18T16:02:36.342Z

A thousand years of solartude

Firefighters in a fire protection suit wearing firefighter helmet with breathing device and holding fire hose is extinguishing a burning house fire that is putting off excessive heat and smoke.

(Image credit: stevecoleimages via Getty Images)

New climate modelling suggests that global warming-fueled heatwaves will continue for 1,000 years after we hit net zero (if we hit net zero), the Guardian reports.

Researchers in Australia simulated heatwaves in a hypothetical net zero world, in which the amount of greenhouse gases humans emit are offset by the amount absorbed from the atmosphere — something many scientists hope for and many countries, in theory, support.

The team found that heatwaves will be more severe and more frequent the longer it takes us to reach net zero. This isn’t really a surprise, given that we know greenhouse gas emissions trap heat in the atmosphere and warm up the planet.

However, the fact that it could take at least 1,000 years for heatwaves to return to preindustrial levels, even after we get our emissions in check, is a tad ominous for future generations.

“The thing with net zero and heat waves is: we’re damned if we do, but we’re completely stuffed if we don’t,” study lead author Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick, a climate science professor at the Australian National University, told the Guardian. “We’re already locked into a certain amount of warming.”

2025-11-18T15:35:22.027Z

It’s quantum o’clock

Abstract clock.

(Image credit: agsandrew | Shutterstock.com)

Researchers have built a teeny tiny quantum clock that requires more energy to read than run.

A team led by scientists at the University of Oxford recently explored timekeeping at the quantum level and its thermodynamic cost. In their findings, published last week and announced yesterday, the scientists describe creating the clock from single electrons that jump between two regions in the nanoscale realm — with each leap acting as the ‘tick’ of a traditional clock.

In a classic quantum quirk, the researchers found that the energy needed to read the clock far exceeded the energy required to run the thing, suggesting measurement costs in quantum physics are more significant than previously thought.

Headshot of Patrick Pester

Patrick Pester

Trending News Writer
2025-11-18T14:47:52.429Z

Ignore your deadlines. Do this crossword instead

Got some important work to do that’s being hamstrung by the Cloudflare outage?

Maybe it’s more important you test your knowledge with this crossword instead. It’s all important science trivia, so you can tell your boss you’re upskilling.

2025-11-18T14:10:40.206Z

Cloud down

An iPhone displaying a Cloudflare Error in Lafayette, California.

An iPhone displaying a Cloudflare Error in Lafayette, California. (Image credit: Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)

An ongoing outage to Cloudflare, a US company which defends millions of websites against hacking attacks, has brought down vast swathes of the web, including X and OpenAI, today.

Company staff are still investigating what caused the crash.

“We saw a spike in unusual traffic to one of Cloudflare’s services beginning at 11:20 UTC. That caused some traffic passing through Cloudflare’s network to experience errors,” the company wrote in an emailed statement. “We do not yet know the cause of the spike in unusual traffic. We are all hands on deck to make sure all traffic is served without errors.”

Once they’ve addressed the errors, Cloudflare staff will turn to investigating the cause of the “unusual spike in traffic.” Could it be yet another AI-driven cyberattack? Cloudflare writes that it will post updates to cloudflarestatus.com and more in-depth analysis to blog.cloudflare.com.

Until then, Live Science is still online, so where else do you need to go?

2025-11-18T13:09:59.069Z

Live Science roundup

Here’s a roundup of some of the stories Live Science published today and last night:

2025-11-18T12:47:52.204Z

And you think you have family drama?

In this photo, the parasitic ant queen Lasius orientalis (left) infiltrates the nest of Lasius flavus and apporaches their queen (right).

The parasitic ant queen Lasius orientalis (left) infiltrates the nest of Lasius flavus and apporaches their queen (right) to deploy her chemical spray. (Image credit: Keizo Takasuka/Kyushu University)

With Thanksgiving and the holiday season both around the corner, many of us are already preparing for some raucous family get-togethers.

But no matter how riotous we humans can be, nothing compares to the activities of the worker ants highlighted by this recent study. After being tricked by the pheromone spray of a parasitic queen, some ant species band together to dismember their mother and enable the imposter to usurp the throne for herself.

You can read all the gory details in the full story here.

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2025-11-18T12:33:37.678Z

Countdown to NASA’s new 3I/ATLAS images

an image of a comet streaking through space with the stars around it reflecting rainbows

Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS caught streaking through the solar system on Aug. 27 by the Gemini South telescope in Chile. (Image credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/Shadow the ScientistImage Processing: J. Miller & M. Rodriguez (International Gemini Observatory/NSF NOIRLab), T.A. Rector (University of Alaska Anchorage/NSF NOIRLab), M. Zamani (NSF NOIRLab))

Yesterday, we wrote (at length) about the potential release of NASA’s long-awaited comet 3I/ATLAS images. Well, just a reminder that these are coming tomorrow.

NASA will host a live news teleconference on Wednesday (Nov. 19) at 3 p.m. EST. The images are expected to be the clearest yet of comet 3I/ATLAS, and should help scientists learn more about the interstellar visitor.

2025-11-18T12:25:56.126Z

Nosy Neanderthals

a neandertal skull in a cave

(Image credit: Constantino Buzi/IPHES-CERCA)

Good morning, science fans! Patrick here to kick off another day of our science news blog coverage. I want to start with a story about Neanderthal noses, which Live Science’s Kristina Killgrove reported on yesterday evening. Researchers re-examined perfectly preserved Neanderthal nose bones, and discovered their sizeable schnozzes weren’t evolved for the cold.

The new study involved taking a fresh look at the “Altamura Man,” which is an exceptionally well-preserved Neanderthal skeleton covered in a thick layer of calcite, sometimes called “cave popcorn.” The researchers’ findings suggest that the size of Neanderthal noses might not have had anything to do with living in cold temperatures.

You can read the full story here.

Headshot of Patrick Pester

Patrick Pester

Trending News Writer
2025-11-17T23:16:25.549Z

That’s all, folks!

The U.S. West Coast is out for the evening but check back in tomorrow for all the latest science news from the U.K. team.

2025-11-17T22:44:37.086Z

NASA sets date to share 3I/ATLAS images

An artist's illustration of the Trace Gas Orbiter over Mars

NASA will share images of comet 3I/ATLAS taken during its close approach to Mars in a news conference Wednesday (Nov. 19) (Image credit: ESA–D. Ducros)

Earthlings eager to see NASA’s newest images of the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS will have to wait a few more days. The space agency just announced a live image viewing event scheduled for Wednesday (Nov. 19) at 3 p.m. EST.

During the event, NASA will share never-before-seen images of the interstellar comet taken during its close approach to Mars in early October. The U.S. government shutdown, which lasted from Oct. 1 to Nov. 12, prevented the agency from releasing these images until now.

Space and physics editor Brandon Specktor shared the details on how to watch, and why it matters, in his full story here.

2025-11-17T22:17:34.288Z

Woman versus goose

a lump of carved clay next to an illustration of a goose behind a woman

An image of the carved clay figurine (left) along with an illustration (right) of what archaeologists think the carving depicts. (Image credit: Laurent Davin; CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

A 12,000-year-old clay figurine unearthed in Israel may depict a goose attempting to mate with a squatting woman, archaeologists say.

Staff writer Kristina Killgrove reported on the unusual figurine, which may be the oldest representation of an animal and a human interacting.

But why did the sculptor depict this event, and what does it say about the Natufians, the ancient culture that crafted the object? You can read the full story here.

2025-11-17T21:37:41.102Z

Dementia more deadly than heart disease?

gloved hand pointing at brain scans on a screen

In Australia, dementia is now a bigger cause of death than heart disease. (Image credit: Andrew Brookes/Getty Images)

Dementia is now more deadly than heart disease — at least in Australia. The new trend reflects dramatic improvements in health care which mean people live longer in general, Lauren Moran, the head of mortality statistics at the Australian Bureau of Statistics, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

“People are now more likely to live to an age where they have a higher risk of developing dementia,” Moran said.

Whether Australia is a harbinger for the rest of the world remains to be seen. In the U.S., for instance, heart disease remains the top killer, closely followed by cancer. Alzheimer’s disease is the sixth-leading cause of death, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

2025-11-17T21:00:10.146Z

Dueling climate change impacts

An illustration of the Earth with blue and red lines swirling through the Atlantic

A schematic of the AMOC (Image credit: NOAA)

Tia here with news of dueling climate change impacts. A key Atlantic Ocean current system, the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), could be collapsing, due in large part to climate change.

Meanwhile, climate change is also fueling the rapid melt of Antarctic ice.

Yet the melting of the West Antarctic ice sheet, which some climate scientists say is “all but inevitable” could have a surprising side effect — staving off the AMOC collapse, New Scientist reports.

Still, the ice sheet melting would be catastrophic for sea levels, and the AMOC would still decline by 60% and take 3,000 years to bounce back to its previous strength, according to new research.

Tia Ghose, LiveScience Staff Writer

Tia Ghose

Editor-in-Chief (Premium)
2025-11-17T19:38:49.823Z

Three more Chinese astronauts stranded

Photo of three Chinese astronauts before a launch

The Shenzou-21 crew are now stranded after replacing the stranded Shenzou-20 crew. (Image credit: HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP via Getty Images)

Three more astronauts are stranded in China’s Tiangong station following the return of their previously stuck colleagues, Senior Staff Writer Harry reports.

The latest trio — Zhang Lu, Wu Fei and Zhang Hongzhang — are the crew of the Shenzhou-21 mission, whose return capsule was taken home by the Shenzhou-20 crew following a potential space debris collision that rendered their original capsule inoperable.

The development could highlight a potential flaw in China’s space protocols that could put astronauts needlessly at risk.

You can read the full story here.

2025-11-17T18:42:26.134Z

That’s all for today folks

We’re signing off from the U.K. side now. We’ll hand you over to our U.S. colleagues now for updates from Live Science, science across the web, and maybe even NASA if they choose to drop comet images while we’re off the clock. See you all tomorrow!

2025-11-17T18:14:22.350Z

3I/ATLAS’s trajectory narrowed down ten-fold

A GIF of the comet 3I/ATLAS moving across the night sky as it zoomed past Mars

These blurry images, taken by ESA’s ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter on Oct. 3, show the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS shooting past Mars. This data has now been used to refine the comet’s upcoming trajectory. (Image credit: ESA/TGO/CaSSIS)

Since its initial discovery in July, astronomers have answered many questions about what 3I/ATLAS is made of and where it could have come from in our galaxy. Yet, due to insufficient observations, where it’s heading hasn’t been entirely clear.

Now, thanks to data collected by the European Space Agency’s (ESA) ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter during the comet’s flyby of the Red Planet, scientists have improved their estimates of 3I/ATLAS’s trajectory ten-fold.

The ESA is hoping to repeat the trick with its Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE), which will get a good look at 3I/ATLAS later this month.

You can read Harry’s full story here.

2025-11-17T17:47:21.223Z

Why are astronomers interested in 3I/ATLAS?

Looped video footage showing the location of the comet in a moving starscape

Looped video footage of 3I/ATLAS taken by Las Cumbres Observatory on 2 July 2025, just a day after its initial discovery. (Image credit: ESA/Las Cumbres Observatory)

While it is indeed an interstellar visitor from beyond our solar system, most astronomers are confident that 3I/ATLAS is just a normal comet.

Well, normal in the sense that it’s natural. 3I/ATLAS is actually pretty amazing as comets go, being the oldest ever seen and the most massive of its kind, not to mention only the third interstellar object ever recorded.

This means that researchers will carefully study new images of the comet for clues to its makeup, origins, and a better understanding of the journey it took to arrive at our cosmic backyard.

Comets heat up as they fly closer to stars, causing ice on their surface to sublimate into gas, which researchers can then detect and study. Previous observations have already revealed that comet 3I/ATLAS appears to be unusually rich in carbon dioxide, with potentially a thick irradiated crust from billions of years of exposure to cosmic rays.

The comet’s irradiated nature could make it more difficult to decipher the properties of its material that would otherwise reveal more about the conditions of its home star system. Still, researchers still have a lot to learn about interstellar comets, and just having more data on this one is as good a start as any.

2025-11-17T16:00:18.310Z

Other images taken by HiRISE

A collage of five images taken by the HiRISE camera aboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

A collage of five images taken by the HiRISE camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona)

HiRise has imaged vast areas of the Martian landscape in unprecedented detail, according to NASA. Check out the HiRise website, hosted by The University of Arizona, to scroll through hundreds of previous HiRise images.

2025-11-17T14:58:19.600Z

Live Science roundup

Here’s a roundup of some of the stories Live Science published today and over the weekend:

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor
2025-11-17T14:51:58.159Z

What is HiRISE?

An artist's illustration of Nasa's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

An artist’s illustration of Nasa’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. (Image credit: Getty Images)

The as-of-yet unreleased comet 3I/ATLAS images were taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The orbiter has been flying around Mars since 2006, searching for signs of water on the Red Planet. The HiRISE camera managed to get images of comet 3I/ATLAS as it zoomed past Mars in early October.

The images are expected to be the highest-resolution images of comet 3I/ATLAS yet, and even clearer than the Hubble Space Telescope’s comet snaps taken in July, the New York Post has reported.

2025-11-17T14:30:05.740Z

When will NASA release images?

We don’t know when NASA will release new images of comet 3I/ATLAS, but we’re seeing reports that it could be early this week.

The U.S. government shutdown delayed the release of the images, but that’s now over, so they should be on their way. These images are expected to be some of the best yet, and will help researchers further understand the comets makeup and origins.

2025-11-17T14:13:28.528Z

Here’s a selection of some of our 3I/ATLAS stories so far

Headshot of Patrick Pester

Patrick Pester

Trending News Writer
2025-11-17T13:55:00.117Z

Everything you need to know about 3I/ATLAS

Hubble image of 3I/ATLAS. White dashes on a black background.

A snapshot of comet 3I/ATLAS taken by the Hubble Space Telescope in August. The image was captured using a colored filter and does not represent the comet’s current appearance. (Image credit: NASA/ESA)

So what is 3I/ATLAS? And why do people care?

3I/ATLAS, which was first discovered in early July, is the third interstellar object ever found in our solar system. That means it doesn’t come from our cosmic neighbourhood, but from somewhere else in our Milky Way galaxy.

Where exactly in our galaxy the comet came from is unclear — scientists aren’t sure whether it came from the Milky Way’s ‘thin’ disk or its ‘thick’ disk — but depending on its origins it could be more than 7 billion years old, making it more than 3 billion years older than our sun. Tracing 3I/ATLAS’s origins is made even more challenging by its material, which has been transformed by billions of years of exposure to cosmic rays.

Telescope observations suggest the comet is roughly 7-mile-wide (11 kilometers) and zooming at more than 130,000 mph (210,000 km/h). Having passed perihelion, or the closest point to our sun, roughly two weeks ago, 3I/ATLAS is now zipping toward its closest point to Earth on Dec. 19.

The exotic comet has many peculiar properties, from its chemical composition to its large size. This, alongside radio signals coming from it that are typical of all comets, has fuelled a frenzy of speculation that the 3I/ATLAS is an alien probe.

That’s almost certainly not the case, but it doesn’t mean that astronomers aren’t excited to study it. Investigating the comet could yield fresh insights into the conditions around other stars, our early galaxy, and the vast frontier of interstellar space.

2025-11-17T13:51:07.632Z

NASA set to share best images of comet 3I/ATLAS yet

Good morning, science fans. We’re back with more updates on the comet 3I/ATLAS. Following the end of the U.S. government shutdown, we’re seeing reports that NASA is set to release some of the best-quality images yet of the comet.

The images were taken by the HiRISE camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and could have significantly better resolution than those by the Hubble Space Telescope on July 21, 2025.

We’re getting to work on what all of this could mean for the rapidly-brightened comet, which is roughly 7-miles (11 kilometers) wide, more than 7 billion years old, and traveling at 130,000 mph (210,000 km/h) as it sheds its highly-irradiated coma across our solar system.

In the meantime, check out this breathtaking shot of the 3I/ATLAS snapped by astrophotographer Satoru Murata over the weekend.

That’s more like it! Marvelous new image of interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS, taken by photographer Satoru Murata before dawn this morning, captures intricate structure in its tail(s). On the right you can also see galaxy NGC 4691. https://t.co/7rP3S4ysa5 pic.twitter.com/KrjhOSCgLcNovember 16, 2025

Ben Turner

Ben Turner

Acting Trending News Editor

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