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NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has been unwaveringly focused on our universe. With its unprecedented power to detect and ...
Almost a thousand of the world's top space scientists will visit Durham University next week (7 to 11 July) as we host the UK's National Astronomy ...
A new cosmological simulator logs its scientific predictions and refutations in real time, storing hashes in blockchain with full offline ...
How does the camera on the James Webb Space Telescope work and see so far out? – Kieran G., age 12, Minnesota Imagine a ...
For years, astronomers have been working to piece together the story of our universe, but the critical early chapters ...
When a space rock the size of a small building gets a little too close for comfort, scientists everywhere pay attention. In late 2024, astronomers spotted a new asteroid named 2024 YR4.
But a team of scientists has now made it possible for you to explore the cosmos from the comfort of your own home. Their ...
Their incredible interactive map, dubbed COSMOS-Web, lets you scroll through almost 800,000 galaxies and peer back as far as 13.5 billion years. That means looking back through 98 per cent of cosmic ...
In the name of open science, the multinational scientific collaboration COSMOS on Thursday has released the data behind the largest map of the universe. Called the COSMOS-Web field, the project, with ...
But NASA's newest space telescope has a few advantages. While Webb is designed to peer deep into small slivers of the sky, SPHEREx's wider field of view will observe the sky in all directions.
But, capturing the full scale of what the James Webb Space Telescope is capable of and showcasing it for all to see has been difficult, even with the beautiful images it has delivered.
The Webb data gave a Hubble constant of 72.6 km/s/Mpc, which was very close to the Hubble Telescope at 72.8 km/s/Mpc.