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The 'Little Red Dot' celestial bodies were discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope in 2023, in the distant early ...
Recently, the astronomical community has welcomed an exciting discovery: water vapor has been detected in the atmospheres of ...
13 天on MSN
NASA's Webb Telescope Discovers 300 'Mysterious' Objects That May Illuminate Universe's Origins
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope is helping scientists make discoveries that could alter theories about the universe's ...
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Why does the universe exist?
Is there a scientific reason why the universe exists? In other words, what is the science of why there is anything at all, ...
Scientists have discovered a giant black hole that they believe may have been formed in the first few microseconds after the ...
15 天on MSN
A sharper image of the early universe: Program brings greater understanding to star and ...
What was the universe like in the first few hundreds of millions of years after it came into existence? How did the first stars and galaxies form? Those are questions that astronomers now have a ...
14 天on MSN
Magnetic fields in the infant universe may have been billions of times weaker than a fridge ...
The magnetic fields that formed in the very early stages of the universe, may have been billions of times weaker than a small fridge magnet, with strengths comparable to magnetism generated by neurons ...
6 天on MSN
Simulations solve centuries-old cosmic mystery—and discover new class of ancient star systems
For centuries, astronomers have puzzled over the origins of one of the universe's oldest and densest stellar systems, known ...
In the name of open science, the multinational scientific collaboration COSMOS on Thursday has released the data behind the largest map of the universe. Called the COSMOS-Web field, the project, with ...
Some of the earliest galaxies found with JWST are also the brightest. That's a problem for our ideas about the universe. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate ...
New data from the South Pole Telescope indicates that the birth of the first massive galaxies that lit up the early universe was an explosive event, happening faster and ending sooner than suspected.
(Nanowerk News) An international team that was led by the University of Geneva (UNIGE) and includes Professor Stijn Wuyts from the University of Bath in the UK has identified three ultra-massive ...
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