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Home › space exploration

space exploration

Germinated moss spores after space exposure.

Moss Survives Outside Space Station For 9 Months, Marking Historic First

November 21, 2025

NGC 6505 galaxy Einstein ring

Overlooked for 140 years: Perfect Einstein ring discovered by accident

February 11, 2025

JWST image of Leo P galaxy

Scientists discover tiny galaxy that pressed ‘pause’ for 2.5 billion years

January 20, 2025

Dust in the heart of galaxy NGC628.

See how the James Webb Space Telescope has revolutionized astronomy in just 3 years

December 27, 2024

Image of the universe from the James Webb Space Telescope

If the universe is already infinite, what is it expanding into?

December 11, 2024

star WOH G64

Amazing image captures dying star in another galaxy for the first time

November 22, 2024

Astronomers trace mysterious radio bursts back to the universe’s mightiest galaxies

November 6, 2024

This artist’s illustration shows a red, early-Universe dwarf galaxy that hosts a rapidly feeding black hole at its center. Using data from NASA's JWST and Chandra X-ray Observatory, a team of U.S. National Science Foundation NOIRLab astronomers have discovered this low-mass supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy just 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang. It is accreting matter at a phenomenal rate — over 40 times the theoretical limit. While short lived, this black hole’s ‘feast’ could help astronomers explain how supermassive black holes grew so quickly in the early Universe.

This speed-eating black hole is breaking the laws of physics

November 5, 2024

Fittingly nicknamed the Dark Wolf Nebula, this cosmic cloud was captured in a 283-million-pixel image by the VLT Survey Telescope (VST) at ESO’s Paranal Observatory in Chile. Located around 5300 light-years from Earth, the cold clouds of cosmic dust create the illusion of a wolf-like silhouette against a colorful backdrop of glowing gas clouds.

Cosmic ‘dark wolf’ lights up the sky for Halloween

November 1, 2024

Dwarf planet Ceres

Icy discovery on Ceres: Dwarf planet hiding within asteroid belt covered in frozen water

October 14, 2024

What appears as a faint dot in this James Webb Space Telescope image may actually be a groundbreaking discovery. Detailed information on galaxy GS-NDG-9422, captured by Webb’s NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph) instrument, indicates that the light we see in this image is coming from the galaxy’s hot gas, rather than its stars. Astronomers think that the galaxy’s stars are so extremely hot (more than 140,000 degrees Fahrenheit, or 80,000 degrees Celsius) that they are heating up the nebular gas, allowing it to shine even brighter than the stars themselves.

140,000° inferno: Inside the galaxy hosting universe’s hottest known stars

October 4, 2024

Artist's illustration of the exoplanet WASP-107b based on transit observations from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope as well as other space- and ground-based telescopes, led by Matthew Murphy of the University of Arizona and a team of researchers around the world.

Astronomers take first images of strangely inflated and asymmetrical planet

October 3, 2024

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