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  1. NASA's Webb Catches Exoplanet Getting Roasted

    June 16, 2026Release ID: 2026-122 Missions: Webb

    Webb follows the path laid by the Spitzer Space Telescope to drill down on details of one of the most extreme exoplanets yet discovered.

    Illustration of a planet and a star, labeled artist’s concept at the bottom left. The planet fills more than a quarter of the image to the upper right, with the bright star to its lower left. The planet is white hot on the star side, fading to yellow that mixes with swirls of bright red across its middle, and eventually fading to black on the side most distant from the star. Distant stars dot the background of space, which is black near the edges of the frame.
  2. NASA Webb, Hubble Reveal History of Relic of Milky Way’s Formation

    June 16, 2026Release ID: 2026-123 Missions: Webb, Hubble

    New research shows that Terzan 5 contains four separate generations of stars, confirming it as the prototype of a “bulge fossil fragment.”

    A dramatically crowded starfield that looks like a just-shaken snow globe. The black background of space, which is clearer at the edges, is covered by thousands of tiny white, orange, and blue points of light, which are stars. The stars are most concentrated in the center, forming a roughly circular orb, and sparser at the edges of the image. Several larger orange stars, particularly those largest near the edges of the frame, have prominent diffraction spikes.
  3. NASA Webb Finds Strongest Evidence Yet for ‘Black Hole Stars’

    June 10, 2026Release ID: 2026-119 Missions: Webb

    Many of the scattered pieces of the little red dot puzzle are coming together. 

    A field of galaxies against the black background of space. In the center is a bright-white elliptical galaxy that is the core of the Abell S1063 galaxy cluster. Around the core are short, curved red lines, which are distant background galaxies magnified and warped by gravitational lensing. A couple of foreground stars appear large and bright with Webb’s signature eight-point diffraction spike pattern. Toward the very bottom, slightly off center toward the right, is a small red dot that is highlighted by an orange square outline. A larger orange square in the top right corner shows the object in more detail. The object, labeled “GLIMPSE-17775” looks like a fuzzy red dot with a yellow core.
  4. STScI Scientists Surprised to Find Brightness ‘Gap’ in Ancient Star Cluster

    June 03, 2026Release ID: 2026-405 Missions: STScI

    Tools developed at STScI for the Hubble Space Telescope were critical to this discovery.

    This astronomical image is speckled with thousands of stars against the black background of space. Most stars are visible only as white pinpoints. The great majority of stars are crowding the image’s center, which appears as an irregular round shape. Most stars in the center of this cluster are whiter, and those along periphery edges yellower. The stars across the entire image range in color from blue to white to yellowish red. A few of the stars appear a bit larger and brighter than the rest, with six diffraction spikes.
  5. NASA’s Webb Reveals Black Hole That Formed Before Its Galaxy

    May 27, 2026Release ID: 2026-110 Missions: Webb

    The first direct mass measurement from the early universe weighs in on the debate over the origins of supermassive black holes.

    Space telescope image showing hundreds of bright objects of different size, color, and shape on the black background of space. Colors range from white to deep red. Shapes include elliptical, spiral, dot-like, dash-like, and arcuate. Many of the large objects near the center of the image are fuzzy white, with bright white cores. Many smaller objects scattered throughout the image are pink to red. Three objects in the central part of the image are called out with small white boxes: A box labeled “C” at about 12 o’clock; one labeled “B” at 3 o’clock; and a box labeled “A” at 4 o’clock. Images of the three objects are enlarged in boxes running vertically along the right. From top to bottom these are labeled QSO1A, QSO1B, and QSO1C. At the center of each box is a tiny, circular red dot. QSO1A (top) is notably larger, brighter, and clearer than the other two. QSO1B, in the middle, is smallest and fuzziest, and is somewhat washed out by the light of a larger white object next to it.
  6. Hubble Survey Sets Up Roman’s Future Look Near Milky Way’s Center

    May 11, 2026Release ID: 2026-201 Missions: Roman, Hubble

    This large-scale program provides a springboard to help interpret future Roman data.

    An observation (labeled “VISTA V V V Survey, Near-infrared) of the Milky Way’s center pointing toward its supermassive black hole, which is labeled Sagittarius A* (pronounced “A star”). At 7 o’clock from center is a small region, outlined with 5 fields of view from the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope that are stacked together in a horizontal rectangle. This region is about a third of the image in length and a fifth of the image in width. Within that same region are diagonal lines that alternate between orange and blue. A legend at the bottom left shows two Hubble instruments. One of them, marked with an orange diamond, is labeled “W F C 3 / U V I S.” The other, marked with a blue diamond, is labeled “A C S / W F C.” The background is a field of stars, gas, and dust that appear grey, except the center third that runs from the left to the right of the frame, which is composed of brown filaments of dust and gas. The tiny region surrounding Sagittarius A star appears orange.
  7. NASA's Roman Poised to Transform Hunt for Elusive Neutron Stars

    May 06, 2026Release ID: 2026-202 Missions: Roman

    Tiny shifts in starlight could reveal otherwise hidden objects

    Illustration showing a small circular white object on the black background of space speckled with dim stars. The object is glowing, and rays of soft light emanate in all directions. The words “Artist’s Concept” are at the lower right.
  8. STScI Director Jennifer Lotz Elected AAAS Fellow

    May 04, 2026Release ID: 2026-404 Missions: STScI

    Dr. Lotz is being honored by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) for distinguished leadership and scientific contributions to astronomy.

    A photograph of a woman with shoulder-length dark hair wearing a dark blazer, checkered shirt, and necklace against a colorful background image of a nebula.
  9. Dr. Gagandeep Anand Receives 2026 Maryland Outstanding Young Scientist Award

    April 30, 2026Release ID: 2026-403 Missions: STScI

    Anand was recognized for groundbreaking research that aids in understanding the universe’s structure and evolution.

    Gentleman with black hair, mustache, beard, and glasses, and wearing a dark blue, short-sleeved shirt, against a dark sky field featuring a multicolored sea of galaxies.
  10. NASA's Hubble Dazzles With Young Stars in Trifid Nebula

    April 20, 2026Release ID: 2026-013 Missions: Hubble

    Actively forming stars are threaded throughout thick dust in this star-forming region.

    A tightly cropped Hubble view of a vast star-forming region known as the Trifid Nebula. The top left is bright blue. Brown and amber colors run from top right through the center in irregular, overlapping lines to the bottom-center. At bottom right, the view is almost black. Tiny, amber-colored stars appear throughout.
  11. Roman Space Telescope Science Platform Will Open New Frontiers in Space Science

    April 16, 2026Release ID: 2026-401 Missions: STScI, Roman

    With the release of the cloud-hosted Roman Research Nexus, STScI provides astronomers around the world an environment where they can prepare to work with the massive data stream expected from NASA's Nancy Grace Roman...

    Illustration shows a person whose hand is raised and close to the Roman Space Telescope body floating in space next to small white stars. Words at the top read: Roman Research Nexus.
  12. NASA's Webb Redefines Dividing Line Between Planets, Stars

    April 14, 2026Release ID: 2026-116 Missions: Webb

    Composition and orbit of super-chonky 29 Cygni b point to accretion within a protoplanetary disk.

    A black square labeled “29 Cyg” at upper right. In the middle, a white star symbol is surrounded by a small blue trapezoid that widens from upper left to lower right of the star. The star is labeled with a capital A. The trapezoid indicates where the star’s light has been blocked by a coronagraph. To the star’s left beyond the blue trapezoid at 8 o’clock is a fuzzy white blob labeled with a lower-case b.
  13. NASA's Hubble Detects First-Ever Spin Reversal of Tiny Comet

    March 26, 2026Release ID: 2026-012 Missions: Hubble

    Outgassing jets slowed the comet’s spin and restarted it in the opposite direction

    Illustration, close up of rocky, potato-shaped body of a comet with detailed, cratered surface at the bottom right. A glowing ray emanates from the rocky surface like sunlight through clouds. It extends from the comet’s surface across the image to the left. This represents water ice being vaporized by the heat of the Sun. There are small bright dots within the ray, representing fragments of the comet. The words Artist's Concept appear at the bottom left.
  14. NASA Webb, Hubble Share Most Comprehensive View of Saturn to Date

    March 25, 2026Release ID: 2026-117 Missions: Webb, Hubble

    Infrared and visible observations show layers and storms in the ringed planet’s atmosphere

    Side-by-side comparison of Saturn observed at different wavelengths and times show how differently it appears in infrared, on the left, versus visible light, on the right. Left image is labeled Saturn, Webb Infrared Light, November 29, 2024. Right image is labeled Saturn, Hubble Visible Light, August 22, 2024.

In infrared, Saturn has horizontal bands, with bands at the north and south poles appearing darker orange and lightening to tan as they approach the equator. The north and south poles glow a greenish-grey. The rings appear in an icy neon white. White dots, representing several of Saturn’s moons, are labeled Janus, Dione, and Enceladus.

In visible, Saturn’s horizontal bands appear pale yellow, with some bands towards the north and south pole having a light blue hue. The rings appear bright white, glowing slightly less than Webb’s infrared image. White dots, representing several of Saturn’s moons, are labeled Janus, Mimas, and Epimetheus.
  15. NASA Awards Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowships for 2026

    March 25, 2026Release ID: 2026-011 Missions: Hubble, STScI

    Fellows will work to answer three broad questions about the universe

    Photo montage of the 2026 class of the NASA Hubble Fellowship Program. At top center is a small logo with astronomical images that reads: NHFP. Title, centered below logo, reads: 2026 NHFP Fellows. Beneath, three categories of fellows are listed in groups, left to right. Heading for first is: How Does the Universe Work? Einstein Fellows. Tightly cropped portraits of 10 researchers in hexagons appear below. Heading for second: How Did We Get Here? Hubble Fellows. Portraits of 8 researchers in hexagons appear below. Heading for third group: Are We Alone? Sagan Fellows. Portraits of 6 researchers appear below. At bottom center is the label: NASA Hubble Fellowship Program.

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