Astronomy
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AstronomyThe Milky Way may have grown up faster than astronomers suspected
Most of the galaxyâs disk was in place before a merger 10 billion years ago with a dwarf galaxy called Gaia-Enceladus/Sausage, a new study suggests.
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AstronomyA study of Earthâs crust hints that supernovas arenât gold mines
Supernovas arenât the main source of gold, silver and other heavy elements, a study of deep-sea crust suggests.
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SpacePlanet-forming disks around stars may come preloaded with ingredients for life
Methanol spotted around a hot, young star probably originated in interstellar space, suggesting some chemistry for life may start before stars form.
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AstronomySaturn has a fuzzy core, spread over more than half the planetâs diameter
Analysis of a wave in one of Saturnâs rings has revealed that the planetâs core is diffuse and bloated with lots of hydrogen and helium.
By Ken Croswell -
SpaceA rare glimpse of a star before it went supernova defies expectations
A hydrogen-free supernova in a nearby galaxy appears to have come from an unusual source.
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SpaceStars made of antimatter could lurk in the Milky Way
Fourteen celestial sources of gamma rays provide preliminary hints of matter colliding with âantistarsâ in our galaxy.
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AstronomyMysterious âyellowballsâ littering the Milky Way are clusters of newborn stars
The first comprehensive analysis of the celestial specks indicates they are clusters of infant stars of various masses.
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AstronomyNeutron stars may not be as squishy as some scientists thought
NASAâs NICER X-ray telescope finds that the most massive known neutron star has an unexpectedly large diameter.
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AstronomyA record-breaking, oxygen-starved galaxy may be full of gigantic starsâ shrapnel
The newly discovered galaxy may have once been home to stars more than 300 times as massive as the sun â a peek at conditions in the early universe.
By Ken Croswell -
PhysicsUranium âsnowflakesâ could set off thermonuclear explosions of dead stars
Uranium crystals that settle in the cores of white dwarfs could trigger nuclear chain reactions that blow the dead stars apart, a new study suggests.
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AstronomyHereâs why humans chose particular groups of stars as constellations
Distances between stars, their brightnesses and patterns of human eye movement explain why particular sets of stars tend to be grouped together.
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AstronomyThe âUSS Jellyfishâ emits strange radio waves from a distant galaxy cluster
The unusual pattern of radio waves dubbed the USS Jellyfish tells a story of intergalactic gas meeting black hole by-products.
By Ken Croswell