Researchers have found that stars in the early universe may have formed from 'fluffy' molecular clouds. Using the ALMA telescope to observe the Small Magellanic Cloud -- whose environment is similar ...
Located around 900 light-years away in the Puppis constellation, Tylos orbits its parent star at an absurdly close distance, ...
The Hubble Space Telescope captured the ​​colorful, wispy clouds near the Tarantula Nebula, one of the most luminous and ...
Explore the astonishing findings from the Webb Telescope on the restless black hole Sagittarius A* at the Milky Way's center.
Also called molecular clouds, they can be massive, spanning hundreds of light-years and forming thousands of stars.
A red supergiant star appears to have changed in just a few years – an astronomical blink of an eye – which suggests it may ...
Stars are born in dense molecular clouds, but did they always form this way? Recent research suggests that in the early ...
Nasa's James Webb Space Telescope is providing the best look yet at the chaotic events unfolding around the supermassive ...
Gamma rays detected by NASA's Fermi spacecraft indicate that microquasars are powered by small black holes slowly devouring ...
Scientists observed constant flares from the Milky Way's black hole, revealing unpredictable and intense activity.
The James Webb Space Telescope has shown that the Milky Way’s black hole is constantly blazing with light, releasing long flares as well as short flashes every day.