Astronomers see no stars ejected from the center of our Milky Way galaxy, giving them important information about the Sgr A* black hole.
The Milky Way ripples like a vast cosmic wave. Gaia’s precise measurements reveal a colossal motion sweeping through the galaxy’s disc, an echo of something mysterious in our galaxy’s ancient past.
Using ESA's Gaia satellite and NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), astronomers from the Ege University in ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists Baffled by Galaxy Spin Patterns That Could Prove We’re Inside a Black Hole
For decades, astronomers have looked to the outer reaches of the cosmos for answers to our most fundamental questions: Where ...
When it comes to science, a simple observation can upend everything you think you know, such is the case with one star ...
Elliptical galaxies instead tend to be older, more massive, and with stars distributed not in a nice little disk, but in a ...
Event Horizon' should have been lost in space. From Reviewer Paul Tatara (CNN) -- I don't know when it happened, but at some point it must have become proper etiquette to let mov ...
Replaylee, and it's where you'll find your last five Ghost Writers. It's been a long journey, and Playtonic's excellent ...
Astronomers have just detected the brightest cosmic flash ever recorded—an ultra-powerful radio burst from deep space that’s ...
I recall the original release of Super Mario Galaxy with fondness. When it released in 2007, it was the first new mainline 3D ...
The last designer debut of this all-important fashion month, and arguably the most anticipated one, Matthieu Blazy’s first ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results