News
The fundamental building blocks for planet formation can exist even in environments with extreme ultraviolet radiation, according to a new study.
Observations show a stronger galaxy piercing a weaker one with a lance of radiation, reducing its star-making ability.
Astronomers have observed two distant galaxies - both possessing roughly as many stars as our Milky Way - careening toward ...
Front Page Detectives on MSN5h
Astronomers Puzzled to Find a Perfectly Spherical Bubble in Space, Data Collected by a Powerful Radio TelescopeAstronomers Puzzled to Find a Perfectly Spherical Bubble in Space, Data Collected by a Powerful Radio Telescope Space is ...
6h
Live Science on MSNAstronomers spy puzzlingly 'perfect' cosmic orb with unknown size and locationNew radio images reveal an unusually faint and symmetrical supernova remnant, nicknamed Telios, lurking just below the ...
As one galaxy smashed into the other, the winner pieced its cosmic victim, leaving behind a high level of radiation in a ...
The quasar’s radiation is stripping away gas in its companion galaxy, leaving behind clumps too compact to form new stars.
A new preprint suggests that an ancient Chinese star catalog dates to 355 B.C.E. But other researchers aren't convinced, ...
Scientists using radio wavelength data from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) spotted a strangely ...
Astronomers are using Hubble to study vivid gas clouds and newborn stars in the tilted spiral galaxy NGC 3511.
Scientists using the XRISM satellite have uncovered a major clue to one of astronomy’s longstanding mysteries: why galaxy ...
A new, more detailed study of 1,000 distant galaxies explains why some gas-rich galaxies don’t produce as many stars as you’d ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results