The end of 2024 is approaching, marking another full loop around the sun for our planet. So Scientific American is here to celebrate with nine of our favorite space-related images from the year. In case you’ve lost track, 2024 was filled with a host of exploration milestones, groundbreaking science and stunning sky displays that are worth revisiting. Here are some of our highlights from the year in space.
Chasing Totality
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North Americans were treated to an incredible spectacle this April when a total solar eclipse crossed parts of Mexico, the U.S. and Canada. Most of the rest of North America also enjoyed a partial solar eclipse. Scientific American staffers, of course, were among the excited viewers who headed to the path of totality, and they reported incredible experiences—even where uncooperative clouds blocked their view of the phenomenon.
For all of us, the excitement was a reminder that we live in a solar system, one governed by geometry that produces a total solar eclipse every 18 months or so somewhere on the planet. And for scientists, it was a prime opportunity to catch a glimpse of our sun in a way we can only manage with help from the moon.
But sky watchers in the lower 48 states will have to wait two decades for a similar opportunity: the next total solar eclipse that will be visible to millions of people across the contiguous U.S. won’t occur until 2045.
Hubble Views a Messy Star
NASA’s beloved Hubble Space Telescope captured this stunning image of a binary star called R Aquarii, about 700 light-years away from Earth, that regularly spews gas out into its neighborhood in a stunning spectacle of light. The main star in the binary is a red giant that is more than 400 times the size of our sun and has a brightness that rises and falls every 390 days or so. Its companion is a small, dense white dwarf that snatches gas from the star, leading to regular explosions that spit delicate filaments of glowing gas into space.
Farewell, Ingenuity!
When NASA launched the Perseverance rover to Mars in 2020, it carried a small passenger—a four-pound helicopter called Ingenuity. The little chopper was a technology demonstration project, meant merely to test whether engineers had developed an aircraft that could take flight in the Red Planet’s thin atmosphere. But Ingenuity did far more than its hoped-for five sorties: the helicopter successfully executed 72 flights, lasting a total of more than two hours and covering more than 10 miles on the Red Planet.
This year Ingenuity was finally grounded when its navigation system was unable to track the terrain well enough to properly gauge the chopper’s landing, resulting in the vehicle falling onto its rotor tips and snapping one of them.
A New Kind of Spacewalk
In September a crew of four private astronauts made history when they suited up and opened their SpaceX Dragon vehicle to all the hazards of space—far above the altitude of the International Space Station, no less—and two of them exited the craft. The resulting space walk marked a key milestone for private spaceflight missions, which, until now, had stayed firmly within the safety of a closed hatch.
The mission, called Polaris Dawn, saw billionaire entrepreneur—and now President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for NASA administrator—Jared Isaacman and SpaceX engineer Sarah Gillis venture out for a daring view of Earth. “Back at home, we all have a lot of work to do,” Isaacman said during his outing. “But from here, Earth sure looks like a perfect world.”
Off to Sniff for Signs of Life
Among the NASA science missions that blasted off this year was Europa Clipper, bound for an icy moon of Jupiter. Scientists believe that this moon, called Europa, may host a habitable environment in the global ocean hiding below its shell—making it one of the most enticing destinations in our solar system.
The spacecraft faces a six-year-long journey, after which it will set to work making nearly 50 close passes of the moon, braving Jupiter’s brutal radiation belts to examine the icy little world and the question of whether it may be truly suitable for life. “It’s a movement toward exploration of a whole new class of objects, ocean worlds, that we didn’t realize were a thing a couple of decades ago,” said Robert Pappalardo, Europa Clipper’s project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in an interview with Scientific American. “And we’re going to be exploring, in-depth, what this type of world is like, a type of world that might be the most common habitat for life that exists, not just in our solar system but in the galaxy.”
Stars Shine in Dark Matter Telescope Image
Last year the European Space Agency launched a new space telescope, Euclid, which is designed to study dark matter and dark energy. This summer Euclid published its first fully calibrated science images, a stunning look at the universe around us.
This particular image shows a star-forming region known as Messier 78, or M78. Located about 1,300 light-years away from Earth, M78 is full of warm hydrogen (pinkish-purple in this image) and dust (reddish-brown). Images like this one could help scientists decipher how stars grow and influence space around them—and Euclid is expected to be gathering observations for at least another five years.
Auroras Paint the Skies
Typically, the northern lights are confined to latitudes near the North Pole, as their name suggests. (Similarly, the southern lights usually occur near the South Pole.) But this year the sun has been particularly rowdy as the maximum period of its 11-year activity cycle has arrived. Our star has sent countless bursts of radiation and charged plasma hurtling out into space. Some of those outbursts have reached Earth, with stunning results—auroras as far south as Florida and India.
The best displays of the year came in May, after the sun produced some 82 “notable” solar flares of radiation and more than half a dozen plasma outbursts, or coronal mass ejections, in the days preceding the auroras. Scientists expect the sun’s heightened level of activity to continue into the new year, so 2025 may be graced by similarly stunning displays.
The Most Exciting Rock on Mars
NASA’s Perseverance rover has spent another busy year exploring the Red Planet. This year one of its most intriguing discoveries was an unusual rock that mission scientists have dubbed “Cheyava Falls,” which is located in a long-dry river valley in Mars’s Jezero Crater, the area that Perseverance has been investigating since its landing.
Cheyava Falls is a stripey rock about the size of a coffee table, and its reddish stripes are adorned with dark-rimmed, light-colored “leopard spot” patches. NASA scientists believe that the dark rims may contain iron phosphate, a mineral that microbes could use as food, and that the rock overall contains organic, or carbon-based, molecules. All told, it’s intriguing evidence for possible ancient microscopic life. “Cheyava Falls is the most puzzling, complex, and potentially important rock yet investigated by Perseverance,” said Ken Farley, Perseverance project scientist at the California Institute of Technology, in a July 25 NASA statement announcing the find.
Perseverance has collected a sample of the rock that scientists hope a future mission will be able to bring back to Earth for more detailed analysis.
James Webb Space Telescope Spotlights Young Stars
NASA’s powerful James Webb Space Telescope has also been hard at work throughout 2024. One stunning result is the image above, which comes from the spacecraft’s Near-Infrared Camera. It shows a star-forming region known as NGC 604, which is part of the Triangulum galaxy about 2.73 million light-years away from Earth. In the image, carbon-rich polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons appear in bright orange. Cooler molecular hydrogen, which feeds star formation, appears in deeper red, while ionized hydrogen appears in white and blue.