Supermassive black holes lurk at the centers of massive galaxies, including our own Milky Way. Puzzlingly, supermassive black ...
Mysterious blasts of radio waves from across the universe called fast radio bursts help astronomers catalog matter. ESO/M. Kornmesser, CC BY-SA Chris Impey, University of Arizona If you look across ...
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have spotted something that shouldn’t exist—at least not so early in the ...
New simulations show that early ultraviolet light controlled whether ultra-faint dwarf galaxies could form stars.
Even before the first stars lit up the Universe, the Cosmos was not the cold place most researchers once imagined. New results suggest that the so-called cosmic “dark ages,” the muted era between the ...
Scientists study some of the universe's earliest objects (stars that formed soon after the Big Bang as they provide valuable ...
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Why were galaxies so active in the early universe? We may be getting close to the answer
Early galaxies were star-forming machines, furiously gobbling up gas and spitting out stars. A new model helps explain why ...
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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, billions of stars and their attendant planets. The universe teems with huge, ...
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