Astronomers see no stars ejected from the center of our Milky Way galaxy, giving them important information about the Sgr A* black hole.
The Milky Way ripples like a vast cosmic wave. Gaia’s precise measurements reveal a colossal motion sweeping through the galaxy’s disc, an echo of something mysterious in our galaxy’s ancient past.
Space.com on MSN
Why October is the perfect time to look for the Andromeda galaxy
Catch a glimpse of the Andromeda Galaxy as it hangs high in the October night sky. Late October presents a perfect ...
Space on MSN
How Our Galaxy's Black Hole Was Captured
Caltech’s Katie Bouman explains how the Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration captured the first imager of the Sagittarius A* ...
list25 on MSN
25 almost unbelievable facts about the Milky way
Cardiologist: 9 American foods you 'couldn't pay me to eat'—after 20 years of treating heart attacks Tension over evidence ...
Using ESA's Gaia satellite and NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), astronomers from the Ege University in ...
An astrophysicist has proposed an intriguing explanation for why humanity has never made contact with an extraterrestrial ...
The solar system is composed of the sun, eight major planets, five dwarf planets, over a hundred moons, and countless comets ...
Clearly, Darkness, the intentional manifestation of man’s collective hatred, fear and bigotry, is playing for all the marbles. It’s the death wish in human consciousness, the palpable desire, now ...
IFLScience on MSN
Prof Brian Cox Explains What He Finds "Remarkable" About Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Story
In an interview with the BBC, professor of particle physics in the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of ...
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