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A distant galaxy 12 billion light-years away shows signs of being a jellyfish galaxy, with trailing streams of gas caused by ram pressure stripping.
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured a view of Lynds 483 (L483), an "actively forming star system," according to NASA.
Pan across the James Webb Space Telescope's view of the Cosmic Cliffs, "a region at the edge of a gigantic, gaseous cavity within the star cluster NGC 3324," according to NASA/ESA. NGC 3324 is within ...
Astro Brief is a collaboration between KSMU, the Missouri Space Grant, and MSU's Department of Physics, Astronomy and ...
Imagine gazing at the cosmos, not through a telescope, but immersed in a vivid journey that transports you to the farthest ...
The planet, which astronomers believe is orbiting a young red dwarf star approximately 34 light years away, has been dubbed ...
Webb’s new images of the Bullet Cluster reveal the most detailed dark matter map yet, shedding light on cosmic collisions and ...
The James Webb telescope has made another stunning discovery -- this time of a massive planet that could potentially sustain ...
The most distant known example of what astronomers call a “jellyfish galaxy” has been spotted by NASA’s James Webb Space ...
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has been unwaveringly focused on our universe. With its unprecedented power to detect and ...
Astronomers using NASA's James Webb Space Telescope spotted TWA 7b, a Saturn-sized exoplanet around a nearby star ...
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