« What Iran achieved during the conflict with Israel | David DuByne elaborates on the escalating global supply chain crisis » |
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile released its first cosmic images, revealing nebulas, galaxies, and thousands of new asteroids using the world’s largest digital camera. The observatory will begin a 10-year survey in July, mapping 20 billion galaxies and studying dark matter, dark energy, and cosmic changes in real time. Initial test images detected 2,104 previously unknown asteroids, far exceeding typical annual discoveries, with millions more expected in the first two years. The project’s open-access data will allow global researchers and citizen scientists to explore the universe without bureaucratic restrictions.