The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Rubin Observatory could catch the Milky Way’s next supernova before anyone else does
The next Milky Way supernova may not surprise astronomers at all. According to a recent study available on the arXiv preprint server, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, ahead of its decade-long Legacy ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Frozen Earth twin candidate found hiding in old Kepler telescope data
Astronomers have pulled a frozen, Earth-sized world out of archival data from the retired Kepler Space Telescope, revealing a ...
Live Science on MSN
Experiment shows complex molecules can form on space dust — offering new clues to the origins of life
The complex building blocks of life can form spontaneously in space, a new lab experiment shows.
16hon MSN
Nasa’s new dark matter map
High-resolution images may help scientists understand the ‘gravitational scaffolding into which everything else falls and is ...
15hon MSN
Inside Hanle, Ladakh’s Remote Stargazing Destination That Recently Witnessed Red Auroras Once Again
Beyond the auroras, Hanle remains India’s most important stargazing destination and a dark sky reserve ...
Looking for the world's best places to travel in 2026? Here, travel experts share their picks for the top travel destinations ...
The UNESCO-listed island of Socotra faces an onslaught of sustainability challenges, from climate change to an ...
There’s something especially magical about sliding into a booth at midnight, ordering that $9.99 breakfast (served all day, naturally), and watching the colorful lights play across the chrome fixtures ...
A UBC Okanagan-led research project has given a group of international scientists their clearest view yet of the Milky Way's ...
Pulsating remnants of stars hint at a clump of invisible matter thought to be about 10 million times the sun’s mass.
Live Science on MSN
'Previously unimaginable': James Webb telescope breaks own record again, discovering farthest known galaxy in the universe
The James Webb Space Telescope has confirmed the most distant, early galaxy in the known universe. The new contender, MoM-z14, is visible just 280 million years after the Big Bang.
Using ESA's Gaia satellite, astronomers have investigated three open clusters in the galactic disk, namely Berkeley 17, 18 ...
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