It’s always amazing, and more than a little humbling, when the universe reminds us that our “common sense” is provincial, ...
The most distant known star in the universe is no longer a faint, anonymous point of light. With the James Webb Space ...
In fact, these jets often expand into wide plumes or “lobes” that fan out far above and below their host galaxies. The jets ...
A team of astronomers using a variety of ground and space-based telescopes including the W. M. Keck Observatory on Maunakea, ...
A new set of precision distance measurements made with an international collection of radio telescopes have greatly increased the likelihood that theorists need to revise the “standard model” that ...
Keck Observatory reports that spectroscopy from its Keck Cosmic Web Imager, combined with data from NASA’s James Webb and ...
There is an important and unresolved tension in cosmology regarding the rate at which the universe is expanding, and ...
Look up on a dark night and the stars seem scattered at random. Step back in scale, though, and the Universe looks nothing ...
In the leading model of cosmology, most of the universe is invisible: a combined 95% is made of dark matter and dark energy.
Nearby, the stars and galaxies we see look very much like our own. But as we look farther away, we see the Universe as it was in the distant past: less structured, hotter, younger, and less evolved.
A cosmic measurement technique independent of all others adds strong evidence pointing to a problem with the current theoretical model describing the composition and evolution of the Universe. A new ...