Space.com on MSN
James Webb Space Telescope could illuminate dark matter in a way scientists didn't realize
Smooth filaments stretching for many light-years, seen by the powerful space telescope, could indicate what the right "recipe ...
Space.com on MSN
James Webb Space Telescope finds 1st evidence of 'dinosaur-like' stars in the early universe
"A bit like dinosaurs on Earth — they were enormous and primitive. And they had short lives, living for just a quarter of a ...
“Using newer mathematical tools, my colleague and I have demonstrated a new theory that may accurately describe the universe.
Morning Overview on MSN
Astrophysicists tackle the big question of an infinite universe
The question of whether the cosmos goes on forever is no longer just a late night thought experiment, it is a live research ...
NASA’s Roman Space Telescope will study thousands of cosmic voids, mapping galaxy distributions to investigate dark matter, dark energy and the universe’s large-scale structure through precise ...
If the fabric of the universe is a flat, rubbery sheet, Earth is a pothole that bends the fabric of spacetime into a funnel around it. But what would it be like to overcome Earth’s gravity, lift off ...
A radical new theory begins with a central claim: consciousness is the fundamental field of reality; time, space, and matter develop from it.
12don MSN
Most normal matter in the universe isn't found in planets, stars or galaxies: An astronomer explains
If you look across space with a telescope, you'll see countless galaxies, most of which host large central black holes, ...
In a glimpse of the early universe, astronomers have observed a galaxy as it appeared just 800 million years after the Big ...
The James Webb Space Telescope has revolutionized astronomy in just two years of operations, but how can it see a galaxy 33.8 billion light-years away in a universe that is only 13.8 billion years old ...
Cosmic dawn galaxies seen by JWST reveal hidden clues about dark matter and keep rival theories about its true nature alive.
Dominik Bošnjak is a freelance writer from Croatia. He has been writing about games for as long as he can remember and began doing so professionally circa 2010. If he was forced to pick a favorite ...
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