Today in Space

Launch Plume: SpaceX Jellyfish

Thursday, March 19, 2026 · © Michael Seeley

NASA · Astronomy Picture of the Day

ven if you live with your head in the clouds, you won’t find a jellyfish like this one very often. The featured image shows a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida on March 4. The launch happened 52 minutes before sunrise, and the second stage rocket exhaust plume was high enough in the sky to catch the light of the rising sun, while the photographer was still in the dark. This combination of light and shadow, possible at dawn or dusk, makes the exhaust, mostly water vapor and carbon dioxide, appear as a glowing cloud. It only looks like it's going down, as the rocket follows the curvature of the Earth on its way to space. A related effect is the twilight phenomenon, which causes colorful contrails sometimes mistaken for UFOs. But, in case you are wondering: real jellyfish were sent to space by NASA in the 1990s as part of a science experiment.

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Near-Earth Objects

21 objects tracked on Thursday, March 19, 2026 — sorted by closest approach

2026 FA

  • Diameter 5–11 m
  • Miss Distance 649,779 km
  • Lunar Dist. 1.7 LD
  • Velocity 26,431 km/h
  • Magnitude 28.7 H

2026 DV17

  • Diameter 11–26 m
  • Miss Distance 874,265 km
  • Lunar Dist. 2.3 LD
  • Velocity 17,768 km/h
  • Magnitude 26.8 H

2026 FV

  • Diameter 10–21 m
  • Miss Distance 1,469,900 km
  • Lunar Dist. 3.8 LD
  • Velocity 26,486 km/h
  • Magnitude 27.2 H

2026 EF2

  • Diameter 9–21 m
  • Miss Distance 1,772,790 km
  • Lunar Dist. 4.6 LD
  • Velocity 21,192 km/h
  • Magnitude 27.3 H

2026 DP15

  • Diameter 17–39 m
  • Miss Distance 1,990,053 km
  • Lunar Dist. 5.2 LD
  • Velocity 27,533 km/h
  • Magnitude 25.9 H

2026 ED3

  • Diameter 55–122 m
  • Miss Distance 3,066,869 km
  • Lunar Dist. 8.0 LD
  • Velocity 68,919 km/h
  • Magnitude 23.4 H

2026 EF3

  • Diameter 33–74 m
  • Miss Distance 4,161,631 km
  • Lunar Dist. 10.8 LD
  • Velocity 26,483 km/h
  • Magnitude 24.5 H

2026 FP

  • Diameter 11–25 m
  • Miss Distance 4,296,858 km
  • Lunar Dist. 11.2 LD
  • Velocity 17,844 km/h
  • Magnitude 26.9 H

2026 EO2

  • Diameter 41–92 m
  • Miss Distance 7,218,609 km
  • Lunar Dist. 18.8 LD
  • Velocity 29,563 km/h
  • Magnitude 24.0 H
⚠ Potentially Hazardous

2017 VR12

  • Diameter 196–439 m
  • Miss Distance 8,006,665 km
  • Lunar Dist. 20.8 LD
  • Velocity 23,201 km/h
  • Magnitude 20.7 H
⚠ Potentially Hazardous

884793 (2017 VR12)

  • Diameter 203–455 m
  • Miss Distance 8,006,672 km
  • Lunar Dist. 20.8 LD
  • Velocity 23,201 km/h
  • Magnitude 20.6 H

2026 EG3

  • Diameter 38–84 m
  • Miss Distance 14,251,796 km
  • Lunar Dist. 37.1 LD
  • Velocity 50,060 km/h
  • Magnitude 24.2 H

2024 ES2

  • Diameter 14–31 m
  • Miss Distance 15,250,245 km
  • Lunar Dist. 39.7 LD
  • Velocity 34,277 km/h
  • Magnitude 26.4 H

2026 BR7

  • Diameter 91–203 m
  • Miss Distance 17,408,938 km
  • Lunar Dist. 45.3 LD
  • Velocity 26,482 km/h
  • Magnitude 22.3 H
⚠ Potentially Hazardous

2014 AF51

  • Diameter 207–463 m
  • Miss Distance 17,440,362 km
  • Lunar Dist. 45.4 LD
  • Velocity 32,192 km/h
  • Magnitude 20.5 H
⚠ Potentially Hazardous

879537 (2014 AF51)

  • Diameter 215–481 m
  • Miss Distance 17,440,362 km
  • Lunar Dist. 45.4 LD
  • Velocity 32,192 km/h
  • Magnitude 20.5 H

2000 SZ162

  • Diameter 9–21 m
  • Miss Distance 30,699,480 km
  • Lunar Dist. 79.8 LD
  • Velocity 21,297 km/h
  • Magnitude 27.3 H

2020 FP1

  • Diameter 54–121 m
  • Miss Distance 35,279,592 km
  • Lunar Dist. 91.7 LD
  • Velocity 93,461 km/h
  • Magnitude 23.4 H

2017 UN7

  • Diameter 19–43 m
  • Miss Distance 39,127,087 km
  • Lunar Dist. 101.7 LD
  • Velocity 17,542 km/h
  • Magnitude 25.7 H

2023 VC2

  • Diameter 11–24 m
  • Miss Distance 59,184,949 km
  • Lunar Dist. 153.9 LD
  • Velocity 43,567 km/h
  • Magnitude 27.0 H

2022 EQ2

  • Diameter 41–91 m
  • Miss Distance 64,513,404 km
  • Lunar Dist. 167.8 LD
  • Velocity 27,228 km/h
  • Magnitude 24.1 H