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One of history’s most famous space photographs transformed a lunar crater, and now it has shown researchers how to look for alien life. This view, made possible by the European Space Agency’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) launched in April 2023 and on its way to Jupiter, shows a test of JUICE’s radar system conducted during a recent flyby near the moon, scanning Earthrise crater on the rim of a fresh young impact basin in order to acquire subsurface information. Situated near the lunar far side, site 3 is a scenic spot that has been quiet for billions of years – exactly what planetary scientists were looking for to test some of JUICE’s instruments before studying Jupiter and its icy moons in more detail.

JUICE Validates Radar System at Earthrise Crater, Readies for Deep Space Life Search Around Jupiter

According to an ESA report, the test focused on the Radar for Icy Moon Exploration (RIME) instrument, designed to peer beneath Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto’s frozen shells. During the moon flyby, JUICE instruments were shut down to avoid interfering with RIME radar profiling. They needed their engineers to design an algorithm to “fix” the readings.

And the maps from RIME look almost like they were drawn on top of those created using NASA’s LOLA elevation model and JUICE, which is good news for anyone hoping to find hidden subsurface geology beneath frozen surfaces out in space.

That means 60 years of exploration for the Earthrise crater, which is officially named in honour of Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders and was renamed as such only last year, all thanks to the observations that inspired a generation of environmental thought and our first proper glimpse back at home sweet Earth.

JUICE is now en route to Venus for a gravity-assist manoeuvre before continuing toward Jupiter. Over the next decade, the spacecraft will perform 35 flybys of the gas giant’s largest moons, ultimately orbiting Ganymede between 2034 and 2035 in search of possible signs of life beneath its ice-covered oceans.

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Physicists Push Superconducting Diodes to Higher Temperatures

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Researchers in China have demonstrated the first high-temperature superconducting diode, operating above liquid nitrogen temperatures without magnetic fields. Using cuprate materials, the device enables clean supercurrent flow and could reduce noise in quantum computers. The breakthrough marks an important step toward practical superconducting electronics and more sta…

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NASA’s Perseverance Rover Poised for Years of Exploration Across Jezero Crater

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NASA’s Perseverance rover, in excellent condition, is ready for long-term Mars exploration. Using autonomous driving, it has travelled nearly 25 miles, studied olivine-rich rocks, and collected samples revealing potential signs of past microbial life. The rover now heads to Lac de Charmes for further scientific investigation, promising years of discoveries about Mar…

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James Webb Confirms First Runaway Supermassive Black Hole Rocking Through Space

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The James Webb Space Telescope has confirmed the first runaway supermassive black hole, moving at 2.2 million mph through the Cosmic Owl galaxies. Pushing a galaxy-sized shockwave and leaving a long trail of star-forming gas, this discovery confirms long-standing theories about black hole ejections and opens the door to finding more cosmic speedsters.

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