(NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI; Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale) JWST has captured one of its most eerily beautiful images yet: A ...
Webb has captured the haunting “Exposed Cranium” nebula—an otherworldly cloud shaped by a dying star that looks remarkably like a brain inside a skull.
Satellite views and space telescopes allow scientists to see amazing wonders, such as sand seas in the Namib Desert, "spiderweb" formations on Mars, and even distant nebulae. Sometimes, though, a ...
The Hubble and Euclid space telescopes caught a stunning portrait of a dying star at the heart of the Cat's Eye Nebula.
A dying star’s final breath creates a haunting, brain-shaped cosmic silhouette.
If you’ve seen illustrations or models of the solar system, maybe you noticed that all the planets orbit the Sun in more or ...
Astronomers using the Very Large Telescope study faint brown dwarfs in the RCW 36 nebula to understand substellar populations and the initial mass function in a young massive cluster.
According to astronomers, these types of aging stars produce large amounts of cosmic dust and spread it into space.
March evenings offer some of the best observing conditions of the late-winter sky, with the Moon gradually fading from a ...
A small, round piece of asteroid Ryugu (sample #91), called “S-lunar,” contains tiny particles (less than 1 mm) that will allow planetary scientists to study the magnetic signature of the early solar ...
Samples from Ryugu, a small, near-Earth asteroid, preserve natural remanent magnetization (NRM) from the early history of the solar system. However, despite multiple studies, there is currently no ...
To uncover the history of our solar system, it is necessary to study the dynamic evolution of the ancient solar nebula materials. These materials interacted and coevolved with the weak but widespread ...