Fluffy strands of cosmic gas and dust illuminated by bright young stars form a beautiful cloudscape in a neighboring nebula.
Around 13.7 billion years ago, something collapsed. It fell outward into the nothingness that stretched in every direction, ...
Since Hubble’s launch, astronomers have discovered over 1 trillion galaxies, but Andromeda stands out as the closest and most ...
In 1920, astronomers Harlow Shapley and Heber Curtis held a Great Debate. Shapley argued that the spiral nebulae were small ...
The Andromeda nebula ... The current record holder is a galaxy a staggering 34 billion light years away, seen just 200 million years after the big bang, when the universe was 20 times smaller than it ...
The big picture: NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has captured an extraordinary cosmic event that astronomers are calling the "Bullseye." The massive galaxy LEDA 1313424 has been observed with an ...
LEDA 1313424, aptly nicknamed the Bullseye, is two and a half times the size of our Milky Way and has nine rings — six more than any other known galaxy. High-resolution imagery from NASA’s Hubble ...
Though it was seven phone generations ago, overstuffing 2017's Galaxy Note 7 infamously led their batteries to catch fire. Samsung could pitch the S25 Edge's thinner size to consumers looking for ...
A new image from NASA's Hubble space telescope shows what's nicknamed The Bullseye. It’s real name is Gargantuan Galaxy Leda 1313424. It has star-filled rings from a blue dwarf galaxy that went ...
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has captured some stunning images of a ‘Grand Design’ spiral galaxy, revealing intricate details of its swirling arms and structure. The Southern Pinwheel ...
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope captured this view ... Billions of years from now, the Milky Way and the neighboring Andromeda galaxy are due to collide, but computer simulations suggest that ...
NASA's Hubble telescope just hit bullseye ... "There’s a very narrow window after the impact when a galaxy like this would have so many rings." ALSO SEE: Will Milky Way And Andromeda Really Collide?