Astronomy on MSN
This Week in Astronomy with Dave Eicher: The Dumbbell Nebula
In this episode, Astronomy magazine Editor Emeritus Dave Eicher invites you to head out in the evening and point a telescope at one of the sky's finest planetary nebulae. This one's number 27 on ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
This Week in Science: World's Oldest Mummies, A Diabetes Mystery, And More!
The Sun is flaring up unexpectedly; a 60-year diabetes mystery may finally be solved; the oldest human mummies aren't what we expected; and much more! Our Sun Is Becoming More Active And NASA Doesn't ...
When the biggest geomagnetic storm in 20 years hit Earth in May 2024, photographer Kavan Chay was in Tumbledown Bay, New ...
Astronomers have used an X-ray spacecraft called XRISM to observe powerful winds blowing from a neutron star — the findings ...
Dive into the fascinating crossroads of astronomy and astrology — where science meets symbolism, and the sky tells two very ...
The banner over the bar stated “Science Is Real,” and on a recent Monday night, the science was very real. “Astronomy on Tap Charlottesville,” which has brought the wonders of the universe to ...
Dr. Gregory Feiden, a University of North Georgia (UNG) professor of astronomy, and his research group have spent the past ...
A Curtin University study cataloged over 112,000 instances of unintended radio emissions from Starlink satellites, impacting up to 30% of astronomical images from a Square Kilometre Array (SKA) ...
Astronomers have discovered a tiny, ghostly galaxy in a remote corner of the universe, likely a cosmic castaway flung from ...
A new SETI methodology focuses on detecting the "spillover" from directed interstellar communications, mirroring how we communicate with our own spacecraft, rather than relying on broad, speculative ...
11don MSN
Ten years ago, gravitational waves changed astronomy. A new discovery shows there's more to come
Ten years ago, scientists heard the universe rumble for the first time. That first discovery of gravitational waves proved a ...
The Lake Havasu City Astronomy Club is looking for volunteers after it has reacquired equipment for a region-wide telescope recording program.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results