The Hubble Space Telescope has imaged a "200,000 light-year-long trail of newborn stars" that may have been left behind by a runaway supermassive black hole. Video Credit: Black Hole Animation NASA’s ...
We go in depth on black holes: the strangest objects in the universe! Black holes are not just the strangest objects in the universe, they're the sharpest test we have of how reality actually works.
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Astronomers discover a black hole growing 13 times faster than physics allows
A distant quasar is defying two fundamental expectations of black hole physics. The object, known as ID830, is growing at 13 ...
A newly detected X-ray transient may reveal the first direct evidence of an intermediate-mass black hole consuming a white dwarf. A newly observed cosmic outburst is giving astronomers a rare glimpse ...
NASA says stargazers will have a rare opportunity to catch a planetary parade of Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus, and Jupiter.
Terrifying NASA simulation reveals biggest known black holes and the largest could devour our galaxy
A NASA animation has sized the biggest black holes known to scientists, including one that has the mass of 66 billion Suns.
Digital Camera World on MSN
Thanks to old photos, NASA scientists found what happens before a supernova explodes
Researchers used James Webb Telescope images to identify the star, which went supernova 40 million years ago ...
Krupa Padhy uncovers how we really learn foreign languages – in a dual challenge involving both Portuguese and Mandarin.
Traces of ancient life on Mars can persist for tens of millions of years in the ice, even under the influence of cosmic radiation. This conclusion was reached by scientists from NASA and the ...
Ripples in the fabric of space-time called gravitational waves may be the key to solving the Hubble tension — one of the biggest nagging problems in physics.
Space on MSN
NASA X-ray spacecraft stares into the 'eye of the storm' swirling around supermassive black holes
The NASA/JAXA X-ray spacecraft has allowed astronomers to dive into the metaphorical "eye of the storm" swirling around supermassive black holes.
A subtle gravitational-wave “hum” from merging black holes may help settle the cosmic fight over how fast the universe is ...
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