Live Science on MSN
Astronomers close in on ancient signal from 'one of the most unexplored periods in our universe'
A faint radio "whisper" from ancient hydrogen reveals the universe was heating up long before it filled with starlight.
Veritasium on MSN
Why Most People Can’t Truly Grasp the Size of the Cosmos
From the speed of light to the size of galaxies, the universe operates on scales far beyond human intuition. Even at 186,000 ...
IFLScience on MSN
Peculiar Glow In The Milky Way Might Be Dark Matter Signature
Dark matter is a fundamental hypothesis when it comes to our understanding of the universe, but it remains a hypothesis. We ...
A new study suggests that Dark Matter — long thought to be completely invisible — might subtly tint light as it passes ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Mysterious glow from Milky Way's center could prove dark matter exists
Using supercomputer simulations, a team of researchers investigated a mysterious source of gamma light coming from the Milky ...
Astronomers see no stars ejected from the center of our Milky Way galaxy, giving them important information about the Sgr A* black hole.
Johns Hopkins researchers may have identified what could be a compelling clue in the ongoing hunt to prove the existence of dark matter.A mysterious ...
Space on MSN
Not-so-dark matter? Mysterious substance might leave red and blue 'fingerprints' on light
A new study suggests dark matter could subtly tint or polarize light, leaving faint color clues that next-generation ...
For decades, astronomers have listened to the cosmos through pulsars — rapidly spinning neutron stars that emit perfectly ...
It does take up a good chunk of space on your device, and there’s a bit of a learning curve to get the most out of all its ...
Live Science on MSN
'Most pristine' star ever seen discovered at the Milky Way's edge — and could be a direct descendant of the universe's first stars
Astronomers have discovered a surprisingly "pristine" red giant with the lowest concentration of heavy elements ever seen in ...
A University of York study suggests light passing through dense dark matter may pick up a faint red or blue tint.
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