AMS 2026 Meeting showcases atmospheric science and the “human factor”
Meeting Announcement
This May brings a rare celestial treat, two full moons in one month! We’re exploring the science of space and how astronomy connects us through curiosity, discovery, and a shared wonder for what lies beyond.
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 9-May-2026 21:16 ET (10-May-2026 01:16 GMT/UTC)
Scientists find that pure mathematical formulae used to calculate the value of pi 100 years ago has connections to fundamental physics of today – showing up in theoretical models of percolation, turbulence, and certain aspects of black holes
- Traces of comets and asteroids in distant solar systems: In young planetary systems, mutual collisions between asteroids or comets generate large amounts of dust, forming a "debris disk". The disk contains information about the system’s smaller bodies.
- Observational challenge accepted: Producing debris disk images is difficult, in particular because of the glare of the bright star in the center. The SPHERE instrument was optimised for that kind of observation.
- Familiar structures: Some of the disks imaged with SPHERE show structures reminiscent of the solar system, with asteroids concentrated in an asteroid belt inside the giant planet orbits, comets in a “Kuiper belt” outside.