If you missed seeing the alignment of six planets in the sky in January, don't worry. Another one is coming up in February.
Scientists also discovered a second planet, a brown dwarf orbiting another low-mass star. Gaia-5b orbits the Gaia-5 star, around 134 light-years away from Earth.
Data from the Gaia spacecraft shows that even unassuming stars can host monumental companions like massive planets.
By tracing the corkscrew wobble of two stars as they move through the sky, the Gaia space mission has discovered one new ...
Venus, Jupiter, Mars, Mercury, and Saturn will align in February Mercury and Saturn will appear closest on4 Best viewing is ...
Astronomers have long relied on two main methods to detect exoplanets—the transit method, which looks for dips in a star’s ...
Two Grand Canyon-size features on the far side of the moon were likely formed in about 10 minutes after an unknown object ...
For decades, fusion researchers struggled with neutron isotropy, a key indicator of scalable plasma stability. Zap Energy’s ...
With an assist from the NEID spectrograph, a team of astronomers have confirmed the existence of exoplanet Gaia-4b—one of the ...
Using data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia mission, scientists have found a huge exoplanet and a brown dwarf. This is ...
HWO will be the first space telescope built to find potentially habitable planets and analyze their atmospheres for signs of ...
Two-dimensional materials are substances with a thickness of a few nanometres or less. Electrons in these materials are free to move in the two-dimensional plane, but their restricted motion in ...