Jason Steffen In The News
Wired
Jason Steffen studies planets in other solar systems. His most famous work鈥擮K, second-most famous work鈥攚as with NASA鈥檚 Kepler Mission, a survey of planetary systems. But you鈥檙e more likely to have heard of Steffen, a professor at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, in a very different context: as a student of the airplane boarding process. Years ago, after waiting in yet another line on a jam-packed jetway, the physicist thought to himself, 鈥淭here has to be a better way than this.鈥
Popular Science
Some 322 light-years away in the constellation Libra lies one of the most extreme and hottest worlds discovered by astronomers so far. Launched into Earth orbit last December, the European Space Agency鈥檚 shiny new exoplanet-hunting satellite CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (or CHEOPS) spotted exoplanet WASP-189b, a gas giant circling close to one of the hottest known stars with a planetary system.
BBC
If you鈥檝e ever queued on a crowded walkway, sandwiched tightly between two strangers, and thought: 鈥楾here must be a better way to board a plane鈥, here鈥檚 the good news: You鈥檙e right. The bad news? Most airlines simply don鈥檛 care.
The National Interest
While the planet has been on lockdown the last two months, a new space telescope called CHEOPS opened its eyes, took its first pictures of the heavens and is now open for business.