Images from ALMA telescope provide insight to the earlier years of our universe.
Researchers at Kyushu University have found that stars in the early universe may have formed from “fluffy” molecular clouds.
Fluffy strands of cosmic gas and dust illuminated by bright young stars form a beautiful cloudscape in a neighboring nebula.
Data from the Esa Euclid telescope enable precise analysis of an Einstein ring around the galaxy core of NGC 6505 and thus the surrounding dark ...
Stars form in regions of space known as stellar nurseries, where high concentrations of gas and dust coalesce to form a baby ...
Stars are born in dense molecular clouds, but did they always form this way? Recent research suggests that in the early ...
Disney World has been preparing for the launch of Epic Universe with the recent additions of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at ...
Using a revolutionary dark energy camera, astronomers have discovered the largest haul of "missing link" intermediate-mass ...
Hunting for alien civilizations isn't a matter of just waiting around for them to show up; it's the business of combing ...
The James Webb Space Telescope has shown that the Milky Way’s black hole is constantly blazing with light, releasing long ...
A cosmic filament, 3 million light-years long, has been directly imaged for the first time — offering a new glimpse into the ...
Scientists didn't expect that stars would be able to still form in the dwarf galaxy known as Leo P, which the James Webb ...