Search results
The Next Frontier: Black professionals aim high for NASA, STEM-related passions
Palm Beach Post via Yahoo News· 2 days agoT’mari Bowe is cruising at 100 mph, some 2,300 feet off the ground with his eyes locked on the...
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
WKBT La Crosse· 1 day agoHow common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible...
Powerful Webb Telescope captures most distant known galaxy, scientists say
Fox News· 2 days agoThe James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has captured what scientists believe is the most distant known...
Vanishing Without a Trace: Why Stars Mysteriously Disappear From the Night Sky
SciTechDaily· 4 days agoAstrophysicists at the University of Copenhagen help explain a mysterious phenomenon, whereby stars...
A New Way to Measure the Rotation of Black Holes
Universe Today· 6 days agoDr. Pasham found AT2020ocn, a bright flash captured by the Zwicky Transient Facility at Palomar Observatory. Part of the star’s remnants are flung from the black hole, but part falls into the accretion disk.
James Webb: Earliest and most distant galaxy ever observed
BBC News· 2 days agoThe James Webb Space Telescope has smashed its own record for detecting the most distant known galaxy. Called JADES-GS-z14-0, the collection of stars was spied as it was a mere 290 million years ...
Webb Finds the Farthest Galaxy Ever Seen (So Far)
Universe Today· 2 days agoThere are some things that never cease to amaze me and the discovery of distant objects is one of them. The James Webb Space Telescope has just found the most distant galaxy ever observed! It ...
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
Wisconsin State Journal· 1 day agoHere's what to know about this fairly common celestial event. The summer offers great weather to explore the night sky with a star or planet-viewing app, said Michelle Nichols at Chicago's Adler Planetarium.
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
Billings Gazette· 1 day agoSix planets will line up before dawn on June 3 in what's known as a planetary parade. The summer offers great weather to explore the night sky with a star or planet-viewing app, said Michelle Nichols at Chicago's Adler Planetarium.
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
Arizona Daily Star· 1 day agoSix planets will line up before dawn on June 3 in what's known as a planetary parade. The summer offers great weather to explore the night sky with a star or planet-viewing app, said Michelle Nichols at Chicago's Adler Planetarium.