Civil Mentors Official on MSN
China’s Giant Radio Telescope That Can Hear the Universe
China has completed the world’s largest radio telescope, known as FAST — but its true purpose goes beyond size. In this video, we explore how the FAST telescope works, what it's listening for, and why ...
Space.com on MSN
This is the largest-ever galaxy cluster catalog. Could it reveal clues about the dark universe?
Astronomers have unveiled a new catalog of massive galaxy clusters, revealing new insight on the evolution of the universe ...
Researchers propose that hydrogen gas from the early Universe emitted detectable radio waves influenced by dark matter.
Live Science on MSN
James Webb telescope finds that galaxies in the early universe were much more chaotic than we thought
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, scientists have charted billions of years of galactic evolution, and found that ...
A faint radio "whisper" from ancient hydrogen reveals the universe was heating up long before it filled with starlight.
Tel Aviv scientists predict ancient radio signals from the early Universe that could reveal how dark matter shaped stars and ...
Opinion
Space.com on MSNOpinion
Information could be a fundamental part of the universe – and may explain dark energy and dark matter
The story begins with the black hole information paradox. According to relativity, anything that falls into a black hole is gone forever. According to quantum theory, that is impossible. Information ...
Scientists have released a new study on the arXiv preprint server that catalogs the universe by mapping huge clusters of ...
A novel imaging technique used for the first time on a ground-based telescope has helped a UCLA-led team of astronomers to ...
Amazon S3 on MSN
A look at the observable universe and the tiniest Planck length
Distance scales from the Planck length to a 93-billion-light-year observable universe expose extreme limits of physics and ...
On human timescales, the universe may as well be eternal. It’ll be here long after our species and our planet are gone, but it does have an end. The generally accepted long-term evolution of the ...
Researchers have moved one step closer to solving one of science’s greatest mysteries—why the universe is filled with matter instead of nothing. Scientists at Indiana University have made a major ...
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