Space.com on MSN
Happy Astronomy Day 2025! Celebrate by hunting these 6 spectacular night sky targets
Astronomy day 2025 is upon us! To celebrate, we've picked six targets to emphasize the variety and scale of objects visible ...
The universe is a slow-changing place. While it's mostly true that the heavens and the deep-sky objects in it will look ...
Take a look at the universe as you've never seen it before in these winning images from this year's astronomy photographer of ...
A new class of supermassive black holes embedded in a thick gas shell could explain small red dots in images from the James ...
Space on MSN
Don't miss the beautiful summer Milky Way next week as the new moon goes dark on Sept. 21
The moon is near new phase this week, and clearer skies and cooler overnight temperatures means that this is also an optimum week to check out the beautiful summer Milky Way.
“These microbes, if we found them, would be anaerobic,” Schwieterman explains in the release, meaning the microscopic ...
Astronomers are trying to determine what caused a series of gamma-ray bursts, the most powerful explosions in the universe, ...
The Habitable Worlds Observatory is poised to tell us whether Earth-like planets are common—if it can get off the ground ...
Montgomery Advertiser on MSN
Things to do in Montgomery for Oct. 2-8
'Murder on the Orient Express' opens Oct. 2, and Montgomery is giving away free beer downtown on Oct. 3. For tickets call the ...
Montgomery Advertiser on MSN
Things to do in Montgomery for Sept. 25-Oct.1
Ballet and the Beasts continues a 40-plus year tradition of free dance performances Sept. 26, 6-8 p.m. at Montgomery Zoo. Montgomery Ballet will dance a traditional performance of "Carnival of the ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
JWST Spotted A Tiny Red Dots In The Ancient Universe — It Hides A Cosmic Monster
A mysterious population of glowing red dots scattered across the early universe has led astronomers to a startling new theory: these objects may not be ancient galaxies, but instead an entirely new ...
Wisconsin's historic Yerkes Observatory reveals a place where Edwin Hubble, Carl Sagan, and many pioneering women of astronomy once explored the cosmos.
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