Utilizing a slime mold algorithm, astronomers have mapped the cosmic web, enhancing our understanding of galaxy evolution.
It's being called the "comet of the century" and won't be back for 80,000 years.
Local astronomer William “Bill” Spizzirri, a volunteer with the Fort Bend Astronomy Club’s Astronomy on Wheels program, will explain the difference between meteors and meteorites, where they come from ...
Kitt Peak National Observatory is celebrating 60 years of welcoming visitors to the moutnaintop collection of telescopes 55 ...
All the planets parade from sunset to midnight. Look to the west southwest as twilight fades to spot brilliant Venus. Our sister world slinks along the horizon gaining little altitude ...
The $1.6 billion mission is an extremely complicated engineering challenge and will make gravitational wave detections in ...
Engaging articles, breathtaking images and expert knowledge ...
A small asteroid is going to be captured by Earth’s gravitational pull and temporarily become a "mini-moon" this autumn, ...
The Physics of the Accelerating Universe Survey (PAUS), an international collaboration across 14 institutions, has covered a ...
Capital residents will have the opportunity to witness this 'once in a lifetime' event which will see the C/2023 A3 or ...
Wakefield and District Astronomy Society is launching another taster course for people. Chairman Paul Campbell said: “Are you ...
Since the first sighting of the first-discovered and largest asteroid in our solar system was made in 1801 by Giuseppe Piazzi, astronomers and planetary scientists have pondered the make-up of this ...