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SpaceX Launches New NASA Telescope to Help JWST Study Exoplanets

18 janvier 2026 à 22:29
Last week a University of Arizona astronomy professor "watched anxiously...as an awe-inspiring SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carried NASA's new exoplanet telescope, Pandora, into orbit." In 2018 NASA had approached Daniel Apai to help build the telescope, which he says will "shatter a barrier — to understand and remove a source of noise in the data — that limits our ability to study small exoplanets in detail and search for life on them." Astronomers have a trick to study exoplanet atmospheres. By observing the planets as they orbit in front of their host stars, we can study starlight that filters through their atmospheres... But, starting from 2007, astronomers noted that starspots — cooler, active regions on the stars — may disturb the transit measurements. In 2018 and 2019, then-Ph.D. student Benjamin V. Rackham, astrophysicist Mark Giampapa and I published a series of studies showing how darker starspots and brighter, magnetically active stellar regions can seriously mislead exoplanets measurements. We dubbed this problem "the transit light source effect...." In our papers — published three years before the 2021 launch of the James Webb Space Telescope - we predicted that the Webb cannot reach its full potential. We sounded the alarm bell... Pandora will do what Webb cannot: It will be able to patiently observe stars to understand how their complex atmospheres change. By staring at a star for 24 hours with visible and infrared cameras, it will measure subtle changes in the star's brightness and colors. When active regions in the star rotate in and out of view, and starspots form, evolve and dissipate, Pandora will record them. While Webb very rarely returns to the same planet in the same instrument configuration and almost never monitors their host stars, Pandora will revisit its target stars 10 times over a year, spending over 200 hours on each of them. It's the first space telescope "built specifically for detailed multi-color observations of starlight filtered through the atmospheres of exoplanets," reports the Arizona Daily Star, noting the University of Arizona will serve as mission control: [T]echnicians will operate Pandora in real time and monitor its telemetry and overall health under a contract with NASA... The spacecraft will undergo about a month of commissioning before beginning science operations, which are scheduled to last for a year... Pandora was selected as part of NASA's Astrophysics Pioneers program, which was created in 2020 to foster compelling, relatively low-cost science missions using smaller, cheaper hardware and flight platforms with a price cap of no more than $20 million. By comparison, the Webb telescope — the largest and most powerful astronomical observatory ever sent into space — carries a pricetag of about $10 billion. Pandora is a joint mission NASA and California's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

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En Espagne, un accident de trains en Andalousie fait au moins 21 morts

Les services de secours andalous ont précisé que plusieurs personnes avaient également été blessées. L’accident s’est produit quand un premier train reliant Malaga à Madrid a déraillé près d’Adamuz, entrant alors en collision avec un second train qui circulait sur une voie adjacente, et qui a également déraillé.

© @eleanorinthesky via X / via REUTERS

Les secouristes fouillent les décombres après le déraillement de deux trains à grande vitesse à Adamuz, près de Cordoue (Espagne), le 18 janvier 2026.

Présidentielle au Portugal : le socialiste Antonio José Seguro en tête du premier tour, le candidat d’extrême droite qualifié

Le candidat socialiste a obtenu 31 % des suffrages et retrouvera au second tour le leader de l’extrême droite, André Ventura, crédité de 23,5 % des voix.

© PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP

Des soutiens du candidat socialiste Jose Antonio Seguro réagissent au premiers résultats, à Caldas da Rainha, le 18 janvier 2026.

Lyon-Brest : Sulc omniprésent, Endrick remuant, Brest inoffensif... Les tops et flops

DÉCRYPTAGE - Après le difficile succès de l’OL face à Brest, découvrez les éléments marquants de la rencontre retenus par le Figaro.

© Icon Sport / FEP / Icon Sport / FEP

À gauche, le Lyonnais Pavel Sulc ; à droite, le Brestois Romain del Castillo, qui fait faute sur le défenseur de l’OL Nicolás Tagliafico.
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