Astronomers see galaxies in ultra-high definition0
- From Around the Web, Space
- August 20, 2021
Astronomers have captured some of the most detailed images ever seen of galaxies in deep space.
Astronomers have captured some of the most detailed images ever seen of galaxies in deep space.
Six months ago, the craft started sending back never-before-seen views of the Red Planet
Astronomers think they have a new way to calculate the size of supermassive black holes: by studying the feeding patterns of these invisible giants.
Astronomers have discovered a splinter of stars and gas sticking out of the Milky Way Galaxy that is around 3,000 light-years long.
It’s a bizarre smear campaign.
Mark the date: 24 September 2182. That’s the day, according to a study released today, that a half-kilometer-wide asteroid called Bennu—recently visited by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft—has the greatest chance of colliding with Earth in the next 300 years. The researchers behind the NASA-sponsored study emphasize that the risk of an impact remains very small—one in 2700, or 0.037%—and that, armed with the wealth of data from OSIRIS-REx’s 2 years orbiting the asteroid, they now know much more about it and the risk it poses.
The findings might challenge established models of the formation of gas giants.
The Solar System is positively lousy with magnetic fields. They drape around (most of) the planets and their moons, which interact with the system-wide magnetic field swirling out from the Sun.
Heat spawned by high-speed charged particles slamming into the air above the poles spreads far
Whose job is it to take out the trash when the ISS is retired?