Interesting Engineering on MSN
Astronomers may have spotted black holes hiding inside giant stars for first time
The newly discovered 'black hole star' could explain the emergence of supermassive black holes in the early universe.
13don MSN
Observations shed light on fragmentation code and growth mystery of high-mass star formation
A collaborative team has revealed new observational evidence that sheds light on the mystery of massive star formation. Researchers from Yunnan University, the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory of the ...
A study involving University of Arizona astronomers and telescopes is shedding new light on how black holes feed on matter and belch out energy.
Our solar system’s third discovered interstellar visitor, comet 3I/Atlas, will dip into the glare of the Sun this week, ...
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope are unraveling the mysteries of TRAPPIST-1e, an Earth-sized exoplanet 40 ...
University of Bristol astrophysicists are helping shed new light on an Earth-sized exoplanet 40 light years away where liquid water in the form of a ...
At the edge of the heliosphere, the solar wind runs up against the interstellar medium, the gas, dust, and radiation in the ...
An international team of astronomers has performed photometric and spectroscopic observations of a compact stellar system ...
Emirates News Agency on MSN
World Maritime Day Parallel Event 2025 features global dialogue on ocean sustainability, maritime innovation
The first day of the World Maritime Day Parallel Event, hosted by the United Arab Emirates, witnessed high-level participation from maritime industry leaders, international organization experts, and ...
The discovery that black hole growth may not be limited to galactic centers could shed light on the role supermassive black ...
India Today on MSN
Watch: Nasa launches three big spacecraft on single Falcon-9 rocket
Each vehicle from this “triple launch” is tasked with investigating different aspects of the dynamic interactions between the ...
At just 25, Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin applied quantum physics to a treasure trove of astronomical observations to show that stars are mostly hydrogen and helium.
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