Three ultra-massive galaxies from the early universe, named "red monsters" show star formation happened faster than believed.
According to a study published in Nature, an international team headed by the University of Geneva (UNIGE) discovered three ...
This low-mass supermassive black hole, spotted with NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray ... 1.5 Gyr after ...
an astronomer from the University of Bath in the United Kingdom. "Yet somehow these Red Monsters appear to have swiftly ...
It would take the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST ... Ishan Mishra, working in the laboratory of Nikole Lewis, associate professor of astronomy, wrote computer code modeling First's spectral data to ...
By probing chemical processes observed in the Earth's hot mantle, Cornell scientists have started developing a library of ...
At the heart of our Milky Way galaxy lurks a supermassive black hole about four million times the mass of the sun, called ...
NASA’s Voyager 2 flyby of Uranus decades ago shaped scientists’ understanding of the planet but also introduced unexplained oddities. A recent data dive has offered answers. In 1986, Voyager 2's flyby ...
An international team that includes the University of Bath in the UK has discovered three ultra-massive galaxies (‘Red ...
Astronomers have identified three ultra-massive galaxies -- nearly as massive as the Milky Way -- already in place within the first billion years after the Big Bang. This surprising discovery was made ...
To put that into perspective, the universe is now about 13.8 billion years old. The discovery could provide insight into ...
This illustration shows a red, early-universe dwarf galaxy that hosts a rapidly feeding black hole at its center. Using data ...