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Mikko Tuomi boosted
Mikko Tuomi
Mikko Tuomi
@mustapipa@scicomm.xyz  ·  activity timestamp 4 weeks ago

Although #Mercury was geologically active in its early days, today its surface appears almost completely static.

This is why it is often perceived as a dead and dry #planet.

Now scientists have discovered a large number of bright streaks, also known as "lineae", on Mercury, which are presumably caused by the outgassing of volatile material from the planet's interior.

This indicates that Mercury is not a dead planet, as previously assumed, but might in fact be geologically active.

#planets
https://mediarelations.unibe.ch/media_releases/2026/media_releases_2026/streaks_mercury/index_eng.html

Media Relations

Streaks on Mercury show: Mercury is not a "dead planet"

A new study led by the University of Bern has discovered a large number of bright streaks, also known as "lineae", on Mercury, which are presumably caused by the outgassing of volatile material from the planet's interior. This indicates that Mercury is not a dead planet, as previously assumed, but might in fact be geologically active. The results provide important insights into the evolution of Mercury and its volatiles and will be further investigated by future space missions such as BepiColombo.
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Aral Balkan boosted
The Bee Guy
The Bee Guy
@thebeeguy@mastodon.ie  ·  activity timestamp 7 days ago

Okay folks.
I have an ask.
We need your support here at World Bee Sanctuary to keep going. To keep doing what we do for #bees #nature #people and the #planet.

Please take the time to read this thread.
We need you to.
Thanks.

https://gofund.me/e65ad9615

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The Bee Guy
The Bee Guy
@thebeeguy@mastodon.ie  ·  activity timestamp 7 days ago

Okay folks.
I have an ask.
We need your support here at World Bee Sanctuary to keep going. To keep doing what we do for #bees #nature #people and the #planet.

Please take the time to read this thread.
We need you to.
Thanks.

https://gofund.me/e65ad9615

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Ginger-haired Common Carder bumblebee forages in a partially opened yellow dandelion flower.
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Mikko Tuomi
Mikko Tuomi
@mustapipa@scicomm.xyz  ·  activity timestamp 7 days ago

An exoplanetary system about 116 light-years from Earth could flip the script on how #planets form.

Four planets orbit LHS 1903 — a red dwarf #star, the most common type of star in the #universe — and are arranged in a peculiar sequence.

The innermost #planet is rocky, while the next two are gaseous, and then, unexpectedly, the outermost planet is also rocky.

This arrangement contradicts a pattern commonly seen across the galaxy and in our own solar system, where the rocky planets ( #Mercury, #Venus, #Earth and #Mars) orbit closer to the sun and the gaseous ones ( #Jupiter, #Saturn, #Uranus and #Neptune) are farther away.

Astronomers suspect this common pattern arises because planets form within a disk of gas and dust around a young star, where temperatures are much higher close to the celestial body.

In these inner regions, volatile compounds such as water and carbon dioxide are vaporized while only materials that can withstand extreme heat — such as iron and rock-forming minerals — can clump together into solid grains. The planets that form there are therefore primarily rocky.

A discovery of a planet breaking this pattern is telling about anomalies in the common formation process.

#exoplanets #astronomy
https://www.ksl.com/article/51447598/astronomers-detect-a-solar-system-they-say-should-not-be-possible

Astronomers detect a solar system they say should not be possible

An exoplanetary system about 116 light-years from Earth could flip the script on how planets form, according to researchers who discovered it using telescopes from NASA and the ESA.
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