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  • Common medications impact gut microbiome and promote pathogen growth

    Common medications impact gut microbiome and promote pathogen growth

    The human intestine is home to a dense network of microorganisms, known collectively as the gut microbiome, which actively helps to shape our health. The microorganisms help with digestion, train the immune system – and protect us against dangerous intruders. However, this protection can be disrupted, and not just by antibiotics, which when used for treatment are intended to prevent the growth of pathogenic bacteria. A new study shows that many medications targeting systems in the human body can also change the microbiome so that pathogens can colonize the gut more easily and cause infections. The study, which is directed by Professor Lisa Maier of the Interfaculty Institute of Microbiology and Infection Medicine Tübingen (IMIT) and the Cluster of Excellence ‘Controlling Microbes to Fight Infections’ (CMFI) at the University of Tübingen, has been published in the journal Nature.

    The researchers studied 53 common non-antibiotics, including allergy remedies, antidepressants and hormone drugs. Their effects were tested in the laboratory in synthetic and real human gut microbial communities. The result was that about one-third of these medications promoted the growth of Salmonella, bacteria that can cause severe diarrhea. Lisa Maier, senior author of the study, says, “The scale of it was utterly unexpected. Many of these non-antibiotics inhibit useful gut bacteria, while pathogenic microbes such as Salmonella Typhimurium are impervious. This gives rise to an imbalance in the microbiome, which gives an advantage to the pathogens.”

    Pathogens remain, protective bacteria vanish

    The researchers observed a similar effect in mice, where certain medications led to greater growth of Salmonella. The consequence was severe disease progression of a salmonellosis, marked by rapid onset and severe inflammations. This involved many layers of molecular and ecological interactions, reports the study’s lead authors Anne Grieβhammer and Jacobo de la Cuesta from Lisa Maier’s research group: medications reduced the total biomass of the gut microbiota, harmed biodiversity or specifically eliminated microbes that normally compete for nutrients with the pathogens. This resulted in a change in the microbiome creating a more favorable environment for pathogenic microbes such as Salmonella, which were then able to proliferate unimpeded.

    “Our results show that when taking medications we need to observe not only the desired therapeutic effect but also the influence on the microbiome,” says Grieβhammer. “While the necessity of drugs is unnegotiable, even drugs with supposedly few side-effects can, so to speak, cause the microbial firewall in the intestine to collapse.” Maier adds, “It’s already known that antibiotics can damage the gut microbiota. Now we have strong signs that many other medications can also harm this natural protective barrier unseen. This can be dangerous to frail or elderly people.”

    Call to revise assessments of drug effects

    The researchers recommend that the effect of medications on the microbiome should be systematically included in research during development – especially for drug classes such as antihistamines, antipsychotics or selective estrogen-receptor modulators as well as for combinations of several medications. Lisa Maier’s team has developed a new high-throughput technology, which quickly and reliably allows testing of how medications influence the resilience of the microbiome under standard conditions. These findings call for pharmaceutical research to be rethought: in the future, medications should be assessed not only pharmacologically, but also microbiologically. “If you disrupt the microbiome, you open the door to pathogens – it is an integral component of our health and must be considered as such in medicine,” stresses Maier.

    Microbiome research in Tübingen has made an important discovery here. If the effect on the microbiome is incorporated in the development of medicinal products, the hope is that in the long term patients could receive more suitable treatments with reduced side-effects.”


    President Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. (Dôshisha) Karla Pollmann 

     

    Source:

    Journal reference:

    Grießhammer, A., et al. (2025). Non-antibiotics disrupt colonization resistance against enteropathogens. Nature. doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09217-2.

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  • Newly Discovered Space Rock Is Caught In A Unique 10:1 Dance With Neptune

    Newly Discovered Space Rock Is Caught In A Unique 10:1 Dance With Neptune

    There are a lot of worlds beyond the orbit of Neptune. Some are dwarf planets, while many others are much smaller rocks floating in the colder edges of our Solar System. But they do not orbit randomly. In particular, several bodies are in a complex dance with Neptune, including Pluto – but none quite like the newly discovered 2020 VN40.

    Celestial bodies are known to synchronize. This is a phenomenon known as resonance. Basically, whether they orbit a star or something else, worlds can organize themselves with a rhythm, and the number of orbits they do is in proportion. For example, Pluto and Neptune are in a 3:2 resonance. Neptune does three orbits for every two of Pluto.

    It is also very stable, and Pluto and Neptune can never collide because, during Pluto’s closest approach (which is closer to the Sun than the orbit of Neptune), Neptune is on the other side of its orbit. Many trans-Neptunian objects have something similar, but not 2020 VN40.

    This world orbits with a 10:1 resonance. Neptune takes about 165 years to do one lap around the Sun. 2020 VN40 instead takes 1,648 years. But if this was not weird enough, the closest approach to the Sun of this small world happens when Neptune is close by.

    “This new motion is like finding a hidden rhythm in a song we thought we knew,” co-author Ruth Murray-Clay, from the University of California Santa Cruz, said in a statement. “It could change how we think about the way distant objects move.”

    “This is a big step in understanding the outer Solar System,” added Rosemary Pike, lead researcher from the Center for Astrophysics at Harvard & Smithsonian. “It shows that even very distant regions influenced by Neptune can contain objects, and it gives us new clues about how the Solar System evolved.”

    There is no danger of 2020 VN40 colliding with Neptune, as the orbit of this distant world is very inclined with respect to the plane of the Solar System, at over 33 degrees. This resonance is short-term stable; it would not survive on a billion-year timescale.

    The object was discovered in 2020 and tracked over many months. The discovery is part of the Large inclination Distant Objects (LiDO) survey, which aims to classify and understand peculiar objects that exist at the edge of the Solar System.

    “It has been fascinating to learn how many small bodies in the Solar System exist on these very large, very tilted orbits,” explained Dr Samantha Lawler of the University of Regina, a core member of the LiDO team. 

    “This is just the beginning,” added Kathryn Volk of the Planetary Science Institute. “We’re opening a new window into the Solar System’s past.”

    A paper discussing this result is published in The Planetary Science Journal.

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  • I want to run a PB in the World Championship final

    I want to run a PB in the World Championship final

    “It’s my title”: Kerr sizes up his 1500m rivals

    Now, with the target firmly on his back, Kerr is chasing something even rarer than a world title, consistency at the top, and he’s well aware of exactly what kind of gauntlet lies ahead.

    The men’s 1500m is one of the deepest, most unpredictable events in track and field, and this year’s race will be no exception. From Olympic champions to breakout stars, the event is stacked with talent and ambition, and never fails to deliver surprises. But the reigning world champion isn’t backing down.

    One of the biggest names still looming in the 1500m conversation is Ingebrigtsen.

    The Norwegian star has long been one of the event’s most dominant figures, boasting the Olympic title from Tokyo 2020, the European crown, and the indoor mile and 1500m world records. Yet, the outdoor world title has continued to elude him. He and Kerr haven’t met since the dramatic final at Paris 2024, where Kerr took silver and Ingebrigtsen missed the podium entirely. Their rivalry is far from settled, but in today’s stacked field, it’s only one of many storylines to watch.

    “I think it’s smart that he didn’t sign up [for Grand Slam Track], to be honest,” Kerr told Citius Mag podcast referencing the new elite track event series introduced in 2025 that featured the sport’s biggest stars, such as Kerr, in head-to-head competition. “Like in any non-paced race he hasn’t won in the last couple of years… It’s gonna expose kind of most of his tactical stuff.”

    Then there’s the rise of the American contingent.

    Cole Hocker, described by Kerr as a “tough competitor”, holds the Olympic title while Yared Nuguse, the bronze medallist in Paris and a ferocious racer with seemingly endless strength, has become one of Kerr’s most frequent and formidable opponents.

    “What I’ve learned from Yared really is… the guy just will not turn up to a race not ready to win,” Kerr said. “He’s always just kicking about… It’s very difficult to drop him. You kind of have to out-strength him.”

    The British delegation is strong, too, with the likes of the 2022 world champion Jake Wightman, plus Neil Gourley, and Elliot Giles also in the mix. Still, Kerr isn’t losing sleep over domestic rivals, or over hype around fast times and records.

    “These kind of June, July times don’t really bother me in any way, unless they’re world records,” said the Scot. “It’s still difficult to even have one medal. So you just take everything with a grain of salt and make sure you’re ready to go when the time comes.”

    And while he’ll be watching the USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the end of July – which doubles as the world trials – with interest, he’s also fully focused on his own lane.

    “At the end of the day, if you don’t believe in yourself, then no one is going to believe in you. So. I mean, it’s my title. If anyone wants to come talk…, I’m here for you… I truly believe I’m still the front runner for it just because, track record, to be honest.”

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  • Cindy Crawford says Kaia Gerber was ‘traumatised’ by her racy photos which were hanging in the house

    Cindy Crawford says Kaia Gerber was ‘traumatised’ by her racy photos which were hanging in the house

    Cindy Crawford is getting candid about the side effects of her supermodel past, particularly how it impacted her daughter, Kaia Gerber. On a recent episode of Monica Lewinsky’s Reclaiming podcast, the 59-year-old icon revealed that some of her most provocative photos were on full display in her home for years.

    “There were pictures of me in the house that I never explained to my kids,” Crawford shared. “Once in a while, one of them would say, ‘We just thought it was normal that your mum was photographed like that.’” She laughed, adding, “I’m sure my kids are traumatised, like every kid is.”

    Crawford, whose decades-spanning career included countless risqué shoots in the ’80s and ’90s, said her perspective shifted after starting a family. “I did stop doing those kinds of photos before we got married,” she said of her 1998 wedding to businessman Rande Gerber. “I’ve turned down shoots since, I just didn’t want my nine-year-old getting teased at school.”

    While she’s proud of most of her work, Crawford admitted there is one shoot she regrets. “It’s not even the most revealing, but I felt manipulated,” she recalled. “That’s the only one I look back on and feel hurt.”

    She contrasted that experience with working with famed photographer Herb Ritts, saying she felt “100% safe” and “not sexualised” during their collaborations.

    As she approaches 60, Crawford is focused on self-care, promoting her long-running skincare brand Meaningful Beauty. She credits its signature sun-protectant moisturizer for her radiant look, adding, “Confidence is what people really notice.”

    Despite the shock factor at home, Kaia Gerber, now 23, has carved out her own path in fashion—though likely with fewer awkward family portraits on display.

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  • Is ‘Superman’ a Success? Budget, Cast Salaries and More Revealed

    Is ‘Superman’ a Success? Budget, Cast Salaries and More Revealed

    Ahead of the world premiere of James Gunn’s “Superman” on July 7, DC Studios co-chief Peter Safran took the stage to thank the most important person seated in the audience — Warner Bros. Discovery president CEO David Zaslav — “for your faith and trust in James and in me to make this movie and to kick-start the new era of DC.”

    In fact, there were only a few echoes of DC past inside the TCL Chinese Imax theater, including Michael Rosenbaum, who played Lex Luthor in the long-running series “Smallville,” and Will Reeve, the son of the late Christopher Reeve and thus ambassador to the Richard Donner “Superman” oeuvre. Otherwise, the night stood as the dawn of a new beginning for the film franchise that has earned $16.8 billion over 58 films at the box office but has been eclipsed in recent years by crosstown rival Marvel.

    But did Gunn, who took the reins of DC with Safran in 2022 and also wrote and produced the film, pull off a franchise jump-start? The refrain heard on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank and around Hollywood was “Good enough,” accompanied by a sigh of relief as Gunn’s movie lifted off to $220 million worldwide, ushering in a 10-year vision for DC.

    Zaslav took a victory lap before the ink was dry on the weekend’s box office numbers, calling the performance soaring and “just the first step.” But his posture struck many in town as odd and premature given that CEOs rarely weigh in publicly about a film’s opening weekend.

    “Domestically, ‘Superman’ stuck the landing, but international numbers are disappointing,” says box office analyst Jeff Bock of Exhibitor Relations of the $95 million overseas haul. “For ‘Superman’ to be one of the biggest summer blockbusters — not to mention reset an entire universe — the film needed to pack more punch in its debut. Obviously, the following weeks will tell the true box office tale, but this has to be viewed as a slightly underwhelming start for DC and WB.”

    More importantly, Wall Street is feeling good about the bow. Warner Bros. Discovery stock jumped 2.4%, from $11.73 at the close of July 11 to $12.01 by the end of the day on July 14. Wall Street analyst Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities calls the film’s performance “very impressive domestically and a huge boost for the franchise given some worries coming in.” He adds: “The international is a mixed, but overall an A- weekend for ‘Superman.’”

    And one top agent says he can understand a little crowing from Zaslav. “Considering the press treated him like the village idiot/punching bag for so long, you can’t blame a guy for grabbing on to any piece of good news,” says the agent.

    The film cost $225 million and another $125 million to market globally, the latter including pricey stunts like a Superman figure hovering at the apex of London’s tallest building, The Shard, on July 1. One rival studio executive estimated that the Shard gambit alone cost seven figures. Warners always believed that Superman would under-index internationally because the titular hero is inextricably linked with “the American way.”

    Typically, a film’s stars earn the top salaries. But in this case, Gunn was by far the highest earner, pulling down 20 times more than David Corenswet (Superman/Clark Kent) and Rachel Brosnahan (Lois Lane), who each earned $750,000 to Gunn’s $15 million, according to sources (Gunn also draws a seven-figure salary as the studio’s top executive).

    And Nicholas Hoult, who plays archvillain Lex Luthor, nabbed a $2 million payday. Although Warner Bros. has sequel options on Corenswet and Brosnahan, a sequel announcement does not appear to be imminent. Instead, sources say the studio is fast-tracking a “Wonder Woman” movie. And the studio is thrilled with Matt Reeves’ just-submitted screenplay draft for the sequel to “The Batman.”

    Warner Brothers declined comment.

    Still, Zack Snyder’s “Man of Steel,” which marked the last DC reset, performed better when adjusted for inflation, earning $200 million worldwide in its opening frame, or $276 million in today’s dollars.

    And “Superman” will need to keep audiences filling up the cineplex to be deemed a true success. That seems likely given the critical and fan response, with word of mouth strong thanks to an A- CinemaScore.

    Ultimately, “Superman” largely avoided stepping into the culture wars until too late in the film’s run-up to make a difference. Gunn’s brother Sean, who plays Maxwell Lord in the film, told Variety at the premiere: “We love our immigrants. Yes, Superman is an immigrant, and yes, the people that we support in this country are immigrants. And if you don’t like that, you’re not American.” On the other side of the political divide, Frank Grillo, who plays Rick Flag Sr., sparked a ripple of anti-MAGA outrage when he liked an opening-weekend social media post released by the White House depicting President Donald Trump as the Man of Steel along with the caption “THE SYMBOL OF HOPE. TRUTH. JUSTICE. THE AMERICAN WAY. SUPERMAN TRUMP.”

    But one hot-button issue is resonating with some moviegoers. Pro-Palestinian activists and influencers are hailing the film on social media for what they see as an overt rebuke of Israel in the wake of its deadly military campaign in Gaza. In the film, Lex Luthor has started a foreign war and is making billions off the conflict. The aggressor nation, dubbed Bovaria, drops bombs and oppresses its desert neighbor until Superman saves the day.

    Twitch streamer Hasan Piker, who has a massive following, called the film “two hours and like 10 minutes of fuck Israel the entire time” — a sentiment echoed across social media on opening weekend.

    However, the timeline might not align with Israel as a stand-in for Bovaria. Gunn turned in his script in May 2023, months before the current Israel-Gaza conflict escalated.

    Still, the perception may ultimately help keep “Superman” in the conversation long after opening weekend. Says Bock: “The saving grace for the new DCU might be if the film can go 12 rounds and stay in theaters throughout August.”

    (Rebecca Rubin contributed to this report.)

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  • Security forces kill three terrorists in Balochistan – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. Security forces kill three terrorists in Balochistan  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Pakistani officer martyred, three Indian-backed terrorists sent to hell in Awaran Operation  Ptv.com.pk
    3. President, PM praise security forces for Awaran operation  Associated Press of Pakistan
    4. Major martyred, three India-backed terrorists killed in Balochistan IBO  The Express Tribune
    5. Army major martyred in Balochistan terror attack: ISPR  Dunya News

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  • New study maps bacterial communication to fight MRSA infections

    New study maps bacterial communication to fight MRSA infections

    Imagine two people talking over a walkie-talkie set. Successful communication depends on them being tuned to the same frequency. If others try to communicate nearby, interference can occur, and important messages may be lost.

    Something similar happens in the world of bacteria. Bacteria communicate on their own “frequencies” when, for example, they coordinate an attack on a host by infecting a wound. However, other bacterial species can disrupt this communication, which, in turn, weakens the ability to coordinate and attack.

    Now, researchers from the University of Copenhagen have conducted the largest mapping to date of the frequencies – or signaling molecules – that Staphylococcus bacteria use to communicate.

    Staphylococci are a family of bacteria that, among other places, live on our skin. One species, Staphylococcus aureus, also exists in antibiotic-resistant variants known as methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). MRSA strains are therefore more difficult to treat than regular staphylococci.

    The researchers then used their new knowledge to effectively treat an MRSA infection.

    With our mapping, we can identify which signaling molecules are most effective against MRSA. We found that a signal from another Staphylococcus variant, Staphylococcus simulans, was very potent against S. aureus. Originally, the signaling molecule was isolated from a bacterial strain from a cow, but it is also present on goats, horses and humans.”


    Christian Adam Olsen, professor at the Department of Drug Design and Pharmacology at the University of Copenhagen and one of the authors of the new study

    The researchers tested, in a mouse model, whether the signaling molecule from S. simulans could also disrupt MRSA signals and prevent infection. It could.

    “In the experiment, we showed that with a single dose of this signaling molecule, the mice could overcome an MRSA skin infection just as effectively as mice treated daily with an antibiotic ointment, which is a current option for treating staphylococcal skin infections,” says postdoc Benjamin Svejdal Sereika-Bejder, who also contributed to the new study.

    A new weapon against antibiotic resistance?

    Antibiotic resistance is an increasing problem in society, which is why there is great interest in finding alternative treatments for bacterial infections. Therefore, the researchers also investigated whether bacteria would develop resistance towards treatment with the signaling molecule.

    “No one has previously tested whether staphylococci develop resistance towards treatment with these signaling molecules, as we see with antibiotics. In our experiments, we observed that under laboratory conditions, the bacteria did not develop resistance even after 15 days. This is very promising but will require further testing in animal models,” says postdoc Benjamin Svejdal Sereika-Bejder.

    This alternative technique weakens the bacteria’s ability to communicate effectively but does not kill them, as is the case with antibiotics. The bacteria are allowed to live but have a harder time coordinating an attack on the host’s immune system.

    “The explanation is likely that there is no evolutionary pressure on the bacteria to develop resistance, as they do not perceive the signaling molecules as being lethal to them. They are also encountering the signaling molecules from other bacteria in their natural environment,” says Christian Adam Olsen.

    Source:

    University of Copenhagen – The Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences

    Journal reference:

    Gless, B. H., et al. (2025) Mapping of quorum sensing interaction network of commensal and pathogenic staphylococci. mBio. doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00967-25.

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  • ‘You can’t settle for average!’ – Luka Modric still feels ‘the fire inside me’ as he explains why he picked AC Milan over other offers after leaving Real Madrid

    ‘You can’t settle for average!’ – Luka Modric still feels ‘the fire inside me’ as he explains why he picked AC Milan over other offers after leaving Real Madrid

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    • Modric explains why he joined Milan
    • Speaks about his hunger and desire to win titles with new club
    • Croatian left Madrid after spending 13 years

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  • Mac graphics settings for Cyberpunk 2077 aim for console-like simplicity

    Mac graphics settings for Cyberpunk 2077 aim for console-like simplicity

    PC-like power, console-like benefits

    Cyberpunk is a big get for the Mac’s gaming team, as it’s an enduringly popular open-world game with a distinctive look, but it’s also of a piece with all of the AAA gaming launches the Mac has seen in the last couple of years. It’s a popular and graphically impressive game from a major studio, but it’s also coming to the Mac years after it initially arrived on PCs and consoles.

    Cyberpunk’s graphics settings show where the Mac could have advantages as a gaming platform, though. Like PCs, Apple Silicon Macs are available at all kinds of price and performance levels, from the low-end fanless MacBook Air to the top-tier M3 Ultra Mac Studio. But unlike PCs, where developers can’t account for all of the possible CPU, GPU, motherboard, storage, and RAM configurations, Windows versions, and graphics driver updates, the Mac comes in a more finite number of configurations with more tightly controlled software. This makes it easier for developers to target and tune for specific hardware.

    Case in point, Cyberpunk’s “For this Mac” preset. Unlike the PC game’s Steam Deck preset, this isn’t a fixed collection of specific settings made with one particular hardware configuration in mind. Rather, it’s a dynamic preset that chooses different settings based on which specific Mac hardware you’re running the game on. An M1 Mac using this preset would get different settings than an M4 Max Mac using the same preset, and players can choose it knowing that they ought to get reasonably smooth and consistent performance with the best settings that their individual Mac can reasonably handle. (The one setting “For this Mac” doesn’t touch is ray-tracing, which can be manually enabled on M3- and M4-series Macs with the GPU hardware to support it but which won’t be turned on automatically.)

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  • What We Saw When NASA Sent A Probe To Explore Kuiper Belt Object Arrokoth

    What We Saw When NASA Sent A Probe To Explore Kuiper Belt Object Arrokoth

    In 2006, NASA launched New Horizons on a long journey to study dwarf planet Pluto over 5 billion kilometers (3.1 billion miles) from Earth. 

    The spacecraft first headed to gas giant Jupiter for a gravity assist in 2007, in a maneuver which would increase its velocity by around 14,000 kilometers per hour (9,000 miles per hour). As it did so, it imaged Jupiter’s moons Io, Europa, and Ganymede, before heading towards Pluto at its new zippy speed of around 300 million miles per year.

    Arriving at its primary target in 2015, the spacecraft collected data on Pluto and its moons Charon, Nix, Hydra, Kerberos, and Styx. 

    “Data from New Horizons clearly indicated that Pluto and its satellites were far more complex than imagined, and scientists were particularly surprised by the degree of current activity on Pluto’s surface,” NASA explained of the mission. “The atmospheric haze and lower than predicted atmospheric escape rate forced scientists to fundamentally revise earlier models of the system.”

    But the spacecraft was not done yet. Following the Pluto flyby, NASA redirected it towards an object in the Kuiper belt, around 6.4 billion kilometers (4 billion miles) from Earth. When it arrived in 2019, the object became the most distant object ever visited by a spacecraft.

    The object was officially named Arrokoth in 2019 after the word for “sky” in the Powhatan/Algonquian language.

    “The name ‘Arrokoth’ reflects the inspiration of looking to the skies and wondering about the stars and worlds beyond our own,” Alan Stern, New Horizons principal investigator from Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, Colorado, said in a statement at the time. “That desire to learn is at the heart of the New Horizons mission, and we’re honored to join with the Powhatan community and people of Maryland in this celebration of discovery.”

    Arrokoth is a contact binary, with one lobe in contact with a smaller lobe, resembling a space snowman. The two lobes are believed to have clumped together under the force of gravity, but this closeup view of the asteroid revealed a few mysteries.

    “What we’ve learned after sitting down and scratching our heads a little bit is that it’s what we call a ‘cold classical Kuiper Belt’ object,” New Horizons mission scientist Carey Lisse told the BBC’s Sky at Night magazine.

    “It’s not cold because it’s far from the Sun; it’s dynamically cold. Its orbit has been pretty much the same for the entire history of the Solar System.”

    These “cold” objects make up around a third of the Kuiper belt, with their circular orbits indicating that they haven’t been disturbed too much by the giant planets of the Solar System.

    The team believes that Arrokoth is a “primordial” object, being largely unaffected by other objects in the past 4.6 billon years. That makes it pretty useful for studying the early Solar System, though heating can still affect the object at its surface, and perhaps as much as 10 meters (32 feet) deep.

    One interesting aspect of the object, studied since New Horizon’s brief visit, is how the two lobes came together. 

    “They are just touching each other, it’s like they are kissing, or if they were spacecraft they would be docking,” New Horizons co-investigator William McKinnon explained to Sky and Telescope. “There is no evidence that the merger of these two lobes was at all violent.”

    According to that team, the two objects must have come together very slowly indeed, impacting at relative speeds of less than 3 meters per second. Others have put the velocity of impact at even lower. 

    “We find that the individual mapped mounds on Arrokoth’s larger lobe, Wenu, are consistent with the merger or assembly of discrete, similarly sized multi-km-scale planetesimals from Arrokoth’s natal collapse cloud,” another recent team, which looked closely at mounds on the object, explained in their paper. 

    “Our numerical calculations of collisional mergers of precursor bodies indicate that normal impact speeds ≲1 m/s are necessary to preserve the shapes of the individual subunits, using gravel friction parameters.”

    Further study of such objects could tell us a lot about the formation of the Solar System. While no further trips are planned to Arrokoth, New Horizons is still operational.

    “The New Horizons mission has a unique position in our solar system to answer important questions about our heliosphere and provide extraordinary opportunities for multidisciplinary science for NASA and the scientific community,” Nicola Fox, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington, said in a 2023 statement. “The agency decided that it was best to extend operations for New Horizons until the spacecraft exits the Kuiper Belt, which is expected in 2028 through 2029.” 

    If another suitable target can be identified soon, New Horizons may be able to take a closer look at it, revealing further details of the Kuiper belt.

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