A Single Seamless Mirror: How Japanese Engineers Are Rethinking X-Ray Telescopes From the Ground Up
Monday, 13 April 2026 06:39
A team of Japanese researchers has built an X-ray space telescope with remarkable precision, and they proved it works by launching it aboard a sounding rocket from Alaska in 2024. The telescope, developed through a collaboration between Nagoya University and Japan’s SPring-8 synchrotron radiation facility, flew aboard the FOXSI-4 sounding rocket in April 2024. It […]
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The reason some people can’t accept compliments has nothing to do with modesty. It’s that praise contradicts the story they built their identity around.
Monday, 13 April 2026 06:09
When a compliment contradicts the internal narrative someone built their identity around, the praise doesn't feel undeserved — it feels threatening. Understanding why requires looking at self-concept inertia, fixed mindsets, and the survival stories we mistake for permanent truth.
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JAXA’s 22-Year Bet on Frozen Comet Samples: What a Multi-Decade Mission Timeline Means for Planetary Science Funding
Monday, 13 April 2026 04:38
In the world of planetary science, a decade-long mission is considered ambitious. JAXA, Japan’s space agency, is now weighing something far more audacious: a sample return mission that wouldn’t deliver its cargo until the late 2040s, more than 22 years from the earliest planning stages. The proposed Next Generation Small-Body Return (NGSR) mission to comet […]
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Why some people stare at the night sky and feel peace while others feel dread, and what that difference reveals about how you process your own insignificance
Monday, 13 April 2026 04:08
New neuroimaging and field research reveal why the same night sky produces peace in some people and existential dread in others, and what that divergence tells us about how the brain processes insignificance, control, and the boundaries of self.
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Sophia and Kepler to marry orbital compute with optical links
Monday, 13 April 2026 03:01
COLORADO SPRINGS – Sophia Space will begin deploying edge compute nodes on Kepler Communications satellites in late 2026, under a strategic pact announced April 13.
JWST May Have Finally Found the Universe’s First Stars — And the Evidence Is Stronger Than Anything Before
Monday, 13 April 2026 01:32
The James Webb Space Telescope has delivered the strongest observational evidence ever obtained for Population III stars — the theorized first generation of stars that lit up a dark universe in the early cosmos. The findings, built on independent confirmations from multiple research teams, center on a tiny companion object near one of the most […]
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The people who always explain themselves before anyone asks aren’t insecure. They grew up in environments where silence was treated as guilt.
Monday, 13 April 2026 01:02
The compulsion to preemptively explain yourself before anyone asks isn't a sign of insecurity — it's a survival strategy learned in childhood environments where silence was treated as evidence of guilt.
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Nigerian Airstrike on Yobe Market Kills Over 100 Civilians in What Amnesty Calls Unlawful Use of Force
Sunday, 12 April 2026 18:05
A Nigerian military airstrike reportedly struck a crowded village market in Jilli, Yobe State, with reports suggesting more than 100 civilians were killed and dozens more wounded, according to Amnesty International and local officials. The strike, which reportedly occurred on Saturday near the border between Yobe and Borno states in Nigeria’s northeast, has drawn sharp […]
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The Islamabad Collapse: What the US-Iran Negotiation Failure Means for Gulf Stability and Global Supply Chains
Sunday, 12 April 2026 16:37
The collapse of US-Iran talks in Islamabad isn’t primarily a story about failed diplomacy. It’s a story about what happens when the world’s most critical energy chokepoint becomes a bargaining chip that neither side can afford to give up—and both sides are willing to destroy. The negotiation failure has locked the Strait of Hormuz into […]
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The people who forgive quickly aren’t naive. They’ve done the math on what resentment actually costs and decided they can’t afford it.
Sunday, 12 April 2026 16:07
Quick forgivers aren't morally superior — they've calculated the psychological, physiological, and relational costs of carrying resentment, and decided they can't afford the ongoing expense. Research on isolation crews and anger regulation shows why this is a skill, not a personality trait.
The post The people who forgive quickly aren’t naive. They’ve done the math on what resentment actually costs and decided they can’t afford it. appeared first on Space Daily.
Competence without warmth creates authority. Warmth without competence creates fondness. Very few people figure out how to hold both.
Sunday, 12 April 2026 14:08
Social psychology's warmth-competence framework reveals why we instinctively trust some people with our safety and others with our secrets — and why holding both authority and tenderness is so rare and so learnable.
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Seven Million Barrels a Day Still Isn’t Enough: Why Saudi Arabia’s Pipeline Fix Won’t Solve the Hormuz Crisis
Sunday, 12 April 2026 13:08
Saudi Arabia announced Saturday that its East-West oil pipeline has been restored to full capacity of approximately seven million barrels per day, a repair job that carries significance far beyond the kingdom’s borders as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed to normal shipping traffic. The Saudi Ministry of Energy confirmed that both the pipeline […]
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Rocket Lab’s iQPS Deal Hits 15 Missions: What Repeat Customers Tell Us About the Small Launch Market
Sunday, 12 April 2026 12:38
Rocket Lab has locked in three more Electron launches for Japanese radar satellite operator iQPS, extending a partnership that now spans 15 total missions. That number alone makes this one of the most significant customer relationships in the small launch industry. But the deal’s real significance is what it reveals about how small launch providers […]
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Boredom is a signal most people medicate instead of investigate
Sunday, 12 April 2026 12:08
Boredom isn't the absence of stimulation — it's a signal pointing toward unmet needs. Isolation research shows that the people who medicate boredom with distraction fare worse than those who investigate what it's actually trying to say.
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A Fragile Ceasefire Built on Contradictions: What Forty Days of Conflict Have Actually Produced
Sunday, 12 April 2026 11:07
Forty days of war between the United States, Israel, and Iran have produced more than 5,000 dead, a $12.7 billion US military expenditure by day six alone, a blockaded shipping channel responsible for roughly 20% of global oil supply, and a ceasefire that both sides claim to have won while disagreeing on what it actually […]
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