Astronomers photographed a baby planet, WISPIT 2b, during its formation process within a dusty ring around its star system.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Two collisions, one star, and a new view of planet formation
When you look up at the night sky, planets seem calm and fixed. But a new study shows that nearby planetary systems can be ...
Most airplane contrails go unseen from space, yet they may drive much of aviation’s climate impact, according to new MIT ...
Regtechtimes on MSN
Why astronomers think planets are colliding more often than we believed
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has captured a spectacular scene in a star system not far from Earth, offering the rare chance to witness massive planets colliding. For decades, astronomers have studied ...
Santa Cruz Sentinel on MSN
‘Super-Jupiter’ exoplanet is not so Jupiter-like, UCSC study finds
Xi Zhang, a professor of Earth and planetary science at UC Santa Cruz, has discovered that an exoplanet classed as a ...
4 Hugh Wizzard: It is a brand new partnership as Wallabies giant Nick Frost is replaced in our lock combination by Saracens ...
WANE 15 on MSN
2025’s extreme weather had the jet stream’s fingerprints all over it, from flash floods to hurricanes
Finally, the wavy jet stream became locked in place by persistent high-pressure systems, anchoring storm tracks over the same regions. This led to repeated episodes of heavy rainfall and catastrophic ...
PlanetF1.com on MSN
Brundle claims Oscar Piastri ‘misread’ after Norris title defeat
Martin Brundle believes that Oscar Piastri was "misread" in F1 2025. He is not as "stone cold, horizontal" as thought.
Apple TV aired it at 9 pm ET/6 pm PT, and it became the streamer’s most-watched show, surpassing Ted Lasso and Severance. The ...
Live Science on MSN
Science history: James Webb Space Telescope launches — and promptly cracks our view of the universe — Dec. 25, 2021
The James Webb Space Telescope blasted off from a launchpad in French Guiana in 2021, before reaching a spot in orbit a million miles away. It soon began breaking cosmology.
Scientists have discovered a giant cosmic filament where galaxies spin in sync with the structure that holds them together.
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