Astronomy

  1. Astronomy

    Pictures of young star show unusual outbursts

    Ejections from stellar newborn move faster and in different directions than astronomers thought.

    By
  2. Space

    Belief in multiverse requires exceptional vision

    If you can’t see it, it doesn’t exist. That’s an old philosophy, one that many scientists swallowed whole. But as Ziva David of NCIS would say, it’s total salami. After all, you can’t see bacteria and viruses, but they can still kill you. Yet some scientists still invoke that philosophy to deny the scientific status […]

    By
  3. Astronomy

    Magnetic field of black hole measured

    Pulsar near Milky Way’s center makes first assessment of this type possible.

    By
  4. Astronomy

    Milky Way’s black hole pulling in gas cloud

    Galaxy's maw begins to tear apart and change the velocity of an approaching object.

    By
  5. Astronomy

    The solar system has a tail

    Clover-shaped clumps of charged particles extend billions of kilometers in our wake.

    By
  6. Astronomy

    Clouds may keep exoplanets cool

    Even when close to their stars, other worlds could harbor liquid water.

    By
  7. Astronomy

    Postcards from Voyager

    Suzanne Dodd is project manager for NASA’s twin Voyager probes.

    By
  8. Astronomy

    Cradled galaxies betray violent past

    Hubble snaps ‘the Penguin’ and its egg-shaped companion.

    By
  9. Astronomy

    Hubble finds hints of a planet oddly far-flung from its star

    If confirmed, the dark gap in space debris will challenge astronomers' theories.

    By
  10. Planetary Science

    Gone perhaps, but Kepler won’t soon be forgotten

    Astronomers look forward to building on the planet-hunting telescope's discoveries.

    By
  11. Space

    Kepler mission may be over

    The planet-hunting telescope has been crippled by the failure of two out of four pointing devices.

    By
  12. Astronomy

    Most Earthlike planets yet seen bring Kepler closer to its holy grail

    Space telescope finds globes that, compared with our world, are slightly larger and orbit a smaller star.

    By