Our Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photographer’s Work From Gaza www.nytimes.com/2026/05/04/w...
A nice read from @katrinamillerphd.bsky.social about HETDEX (a program aimed at understanding dark energy) and the beauty and dark skies of west Texas, where the observations are taking place (at @texasscience.bsky.social’s McDonald Observatoy)
"I have made you a book with a bunch of tidbits on the oddities of the universe," @chanda.blacksky.app said. "The universe is stranger and more queer and more wonderful and more full of possibility than whatever limitations you might be experiencing."
www.nytimes.com/2026/05/13/s...
🌔💥 You had questions about the impact flashes the crew of Artemis II saw during their lunar flyby--and @leebillings.bsky.social has answers for you! Follow all our mission coverage here: spklr.io/6001EyN07
There it was: the swirly blue crescent of our planet, with all of us -- you, me, everyone we know -- in tow.
Earth dipped ever lower on the horizon of a lifeless, pockmarked moon, a poignant farewell to the members of the crew as they plunged into radio silence.
www.nytimes.com/2026/04/07/s...
For seven years, the Hobby-Eberly scanned the faintest corners of the cosmos, drinking in light from ancient galaxies while stargazers below took advantage of the darkness to revel in views of our universe that are becoming increasingly rare.
www.nytimes.com/2026/04/22/s...
NASA named four astronauts who will be part of Artemis III, the next mission in the agency’s program to return humans to the surface of the moon for the first time in more than 50 years.
NASA’s Artemis II crew restored contact with Earth after flying around the moon’s far side, which had caused a planned radio blackout.
Follow live updates.
Four astronauts will be part of the next mission in the agency’s program to return humans to the surface of the moon by 2028. The recent explosion of a Blue Origin rocket could complicate matters.
nyti.ms
The four astronauts concluded a historic lunar flyby that included their greatest distance from the planet. “We will always choose Earth,” Christina Koch said in words to humanity.
In a historic moment, I was interviewed by fellow Black woman particle physicist Dr. Katrina Miller. Few people can understand my journey the way she does.
We talked about my new book, why poetry matters, and yes, how the *fact* of non-trinary neutrinos challenges anti-trans rhetoric.
#GiftLink