Space. It's really, really big. How big is it? Well, according to astronomers, the observable universe is around 92 billion light-years in diameter, but that's all we can see (hence the word ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Astronomers found a colossal spinning structure hiding in the universe
Astronomers have uncovered a vast, razor-thin strand of galaxies that is not just drifting through space but spinning ...
Scientists have released a new study that catalogues the universe by mapping huge clusters of galaxies. These clusters are some of the largest known objects in the universe — and they can help ...
Live Science on MSN
'We were amazed': Scientists using James Webb telescope may have discovered the earliest supernova in the known universe
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope report that a powerful gamma-ray burst detected in March may have been produced by the explosion of a massive star just 730 million years after the Big ...
A team of astrophysicists has unveiled how colossal stars thousands of times more massive than the Sun shaped the earliest star clusters and galaxies. These short-lived giants not only forged the ...
Galaxy Y1 shines thanks to dust grains heated by newly-formed stars (circled in this image from the James Webb telescope). Astronomers have uncovered a previously unknown, extreme kind of star factory ...
Space on MSNOpinion
Most normal matter in the universe isn't found in planets, stars or galaxies – an astronomer explains where it's distributed
But the Big Bang theory predicts that about 5% of the universe's contents should be atoms made of protons, neutrons and ...
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