News

Think of a mystery musical instrument. If a physicist is told the loudness of the sound it makes at every possible frequency, ...
Astronomers have turned the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) into a time machine to peer back in cosmic time to 1 billion years after the Big Bang.
The observable universe is vast, extending about 93 billion light-years across, containing galaxies, stars, planets, and all ...
Scientists say the Universe has no edge, but that doesn't mean it's infinite. A Manchester astrophysicist explains what we ...
NASA’s SPHEREx mission is mapping the entire sky in 102 infrared colors, turning raw space data into a public tool for ...
A vast filament of gas stretching across the cosmos may help solve the mystery of the Universe’s missing matter. Astronomers ...
A new cosmological simulator logs its scientific predictions and refutations in real time, storing hashes in blockchain with full offline ...
In a new article published in New Scientist, Neukart details how space-time itself could retain a “memory” that recorded the history of the universe.
Jack Kirby, the man who drew it in 1940, went on to fight in World War II against that real-life villain and later to co-create much of the Marvel Universe we know today.
For years, scientists have worked to chart the universe’s massive structure, aiming to test key models of cosmology. These ...
To convert that into miles multiply 100 thousand times 5.9 trillion. It is a big number! We also live in a universe and it is 93 billion light years across. Now we are getting somewhere. But wait.
A new international study drawing on 73 million nights of data reveals that our sleep patterns are seriously shaped by the day of the week, the season, and where we live.