News

Eos may never form stars—but it’s offering a new way to see the invisible parts of our galaxy. 4.5 billion years ago the Sun ...
"It's like trying to spot a fish by looking for ripples in a pond, rather than trying to see the fish itself." ...
Stars don’t just form planets—they may also re-supply their disks with gas, reshaping how and where planets emerge.
In a groundbreaking study published on April 30, 2025, in Popular Science, astronomers from the exoALMA project have captured ...
Clues that pointed astronomers to these locations included swirling gas influenced by an early planet’s gravity, as well as rings and gaps of dust inside dust disks. The survey also clearly ...
Rather than solid arms, spiral galaxies may show density waves—regions where matter slows down and bunches up, like cars in ...
Dust storms, a familiar yet formidable force in the Borderland, have the potential to do more than disrupt daily life in El ...
boosting astronomers' ability to map out the planet formation process with greater precision by revealing finer structures within the protoplanetary disks — the swirling gas and dust surrounding ...