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Astrophysics
There are billions of potentially inhabited planets in the Milky Way alone. Here's how NASA will at last discover and measure them.
Do you think you know the Solar System? Here's a fact about each planet that might surprise you when you see it!
With two different black hole event horizons now directly imaged, we can see that they are, in fact, rings, not disks. But why?
When stars form, they emit energetic radiation that boils gas away. But it can't stop gravitational collapse from making even newer stars.
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will study many dangerous cosmic phenomena, knowledge of which may help save humanity.
If you think you know how an astronomical nova works, buckle up. You're in for a ride like you never expected.
Earth is the Solar System's only known inhabited planet. Could Venus, if its phosphine signal is real, be our second world with life?
On July 12, 2022, NASA will release the first science images taken with the James Webb Space Telescope. Here's what to hope for.
The James Webb Space Telescope is about to begin science operations. Here's what astronomers are excited about.
In all of science, no figures have changed the world more than Einstein and Newton. Will anyone ever be as revolutionary again?
We've only seen Uranus up close once: from Voyager 2, back in 1986. The next time we do it, its features will look entirely different.
On July 12, 2022, JWST will release its first science images. Here are 5 ways the telescope's findings could change science forever.
Researchers have discovered 830-million-year-old microbes living inside a salt rock on Earth. Could the same occur on Mars?
Over time, the Universe becomes less dominated by dark matter and more dominated by dark energy. Is one transforming into the other?
13.8 billion years ago, the hot Big Bang gave rise to the Universe we know. Here's why the reverse, a Big Crunch, isn't how it will end.
Atomic clocks keep time accurately to within 1 second every 33 billion years. Nuclear clocks could blow them all away.
In all of human history, only 5 spacecraft have had the right trajectory to exit the Solar System. Will they ever catch Voyager 1?
The high pitches from the flute and the harp would reach your ears before the notes from the tuba and the cello.
Everything is made of matter, not antimatter, including black holes. If antimatter black holes existed, what would they do?
Do the laws of physics place a hard limit on how far technology can advance, or can we re-write those laws?
At four million solar masses, the Milky Way's supermassive black hole is quite small for a galaxy its size. Did we lose the original?
Time isn't the same for everyone, even on Earth. Flying around the world gave Einstein the ultimate test. No one is immune from relativity.
The idea of black holes has been around for over 200 years. Today, we're seeing them in previously unimaginable ways.