The early universe has a lot more massive black holes than suspected.
Astronomers may have finally cracked one of the universe’s biggest mysteries: how black holes grew so enormous so fast after ...
An extremely early Type II supernova explosion, named after the Titan goddess of dawn in Greek mythology, occurred just 1 ...
For years, the James Webb Space Telescope has been spotting enormous black holes in the early universe that defy all ...
Twelve billion years ago, long before our sun was even a cloud of dust, a young galaxy flared with a light that shouldn’t ...
Like stretch marks left on skin that expanded too quickly or cracks embedded in freezing ice, cosmic strings are artifacts of ...
An international research team led by scientists at Waseda University and Tohoku University has discovered an extraordinary ...
Astronomers have long chased a hard question: how did black holes grow so huge so fast. Researchers at Maynooth University in ...
Researchers from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities and Université Paris-Saclay have reopened one of cosmology’s oldest ...
New simulations suggest early black holes grew rapidly through intense feeding, helping explain why massive black holes appeared so soon after the Big Bang ...
Astronomers used the James Webb Space Telescope and gravitational lensing to observe SN Eos, an ordinary supernova from the ...