Asteroid Bennu stumps scientists with its odd makeup | The universe is filled with a 'gravitational wave background' | The James Webb telescope has broken cosmology
Created for {EMAIL} | [Web Version]( December 28, 2023
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[] Editor's pick: The top space stories of 2023
Editor's pick: The top space stories of 2023 (NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona)
It's hard to separate the signal from the noise. That's true for astronomers trying to [detect chemical signs of life]( on distant planets, and it's just as true for science enthusiasts on Earth trying to make sense of the endless stream of discoveries being beamed into their newsfeeds. [] [Asteroid Bennu stumps scientists with its odd makeup]( (NASA/Erika Blumenfeld & Joseph Aebersold)
[Asteroid Bennu stumps scientists with its odd makeup]( 2023 was a noisy year for space, especially when it came to the search for extraterrestrial life. High-profile congressional hearings in the U.S. and Mexico had many people convinced that, not only have [aliens crash-landed spaceships on Earth](, but they also left behind some [three-fingered mummies]( for our perusal. Despite a complete lack of scientific evidence, these claims dominated news cycles for weeks, overshadowing some truly remarkable extraterrestrial studies that could guide decades of future space exploration. For example: in the past year, scientists found evidence of organic molecules, the so-called building blocks of life crucial to all species on Earth, everywhere from [gargantuan geysers on Saturn's moon]( Enceladus, to rocks [in a Martian crater](, to the planet-forming disk of [an infant star system]( 1,000 light-years away. In two of my favorite discoveries of the year, researchers also detected tantalizing traces of organics in dust samples collected from the asteroids [Ryugu]( and [Bennu](, bringing to fruition two ambitious, years-long missions to scrape the surfaces of speeding space rocks and return their contents to Earth. As Live Science contributor Sharmila Kuthunur reported on asteroid Bennu, those samples still contain more mysteries than answers, and will likely continue to surprise us into 2024 and beyond. [Read More]( [] [The universe is filled with a 'gravitational wave background']( (NANOGrav)
[The universe is filled with a 'gravitational wave background']( All of this suggests that the seeds of life may be far more prevalent in space than we previously thought. And if there are aliens out there, they can join us in appreciating a new component of the universe that was discovered this year: the gravitational wave background. Gravitational waves are ripples in the fabric of space-time first predicted by Einstein. Now, after a rigorous 15-year search, astronomers think they've detected a slight but ever-present background of waves unleashed by the extreme interactions between supermassive black holes. These invisible waves are moving through Earth, and through you, even now. [Read More]( [] [The James Webb telescope has broken cosmology]( (Alamy)
[The James Webb telescope has broken cosmology]( In a final landmark this year, Dec. 25 marked the two-year anniversary of the powerful James Webb Space Telescope's (JWST) launch. The last two years have been overflowing with [fascinating discoveries]( and [spectacular images]( of the cosmos, but one of JWST's most important findings confirms a problem that has vexed cosmologists for more than a decade: The universe is expanding, but none of our models can agree on how fast. As Live Science staff writer Ben Turner wrote in honor of the telescope's birthday, "something is awry in our expanding cosmos" and JWST's incomparable vision is only making things worse. [Read More]( [] We hope that Live Science has helped you cut through some of the noise this year, and allowed you to discover science stories that fill you with curiosity and wonder for our vast, mysterious universe. Thanks for reading, and we hope to see you again in 2024. Sincerely, Brandon Specktor
Space and Physics Editor
brandon.specktor@futurenet.com
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