A new study casts doubt on the universe’s accelerating expansion, suggesting dark energy might be weakening over time.
Discover Magazine on MSN
Where Is the Center of the Universe? Stop Looking — It’s Everywhere and Nowhere at Once
Where is the center of the universe? Learn why researchers say the rules may not apply to the center of the universe.
Evidence suggests the universe’s expansion has started to slow, not accelerate. The results imply dark energy is weakening ...
Space.com on MSN
Rubin Observatory peers into the 'hidden universe' and discovers stream of stars longer than our entire Milky Way
"The discovery of this stream highlights how much is still unknown about the life histories of galaxies, how the hidden ...
ZME Science on MSN
The Universe Expansion Might Be Slowing Down Now
The universe is expanding. That much is clearer. But it’s less clear whether this expansion is accelerating or slowing down.
Space.com on MSN
James Webb Space Telescope spots rapidly feeding supermassive black hole in the infant universe: 'This discovery is truly remarkable.'
Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), astronomers have uncovered a voraciously feeding and rapidly growing ...
That's the case for a galaxy described in a new paper by PhD student Sijia Cai of Tsinghua University's Department of ...
Discover James Webb discoveries revealing the JWST early universe, cosmic dawn insights, and groundbreaking new space ...
Physicists have taken the Universe’s temperature, revealing the searing trillion-degree heat of the Big Bang’s first plasma.
ZME Science on MSN
Astronomers Think They May Have Spotted the Universe’s First Stars Glowing From the Dawn of Time
Astronomers have chased the first stars for decades, squinting at the early universe for any hint of their brief, brilliant lives. Now a tiny, lensed speck coined LAP1-B may be the clearest glimpse ...
“The Universe will just get colder and deader from now on,” added Douglas Scott, study author and a cosmologist at the ...
Molecules containing noble gases shouldn’t exist. By definition, these chemical elements — helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon and radon — are the party poopers of the periodic table, huddling in the ...
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