A new study suggests the Milky Way’s gamma-ray glow could be a dark matter signal shaped by ancient galactic mergers.
New simulations suggest dark matter could explain the mysterious gamma-ray glow at the Milky Way’s center. The findings show that the galaxy’s early mergers may have shaped dark matter in a way that ...
The century-old mystery of dark matter — the invisible glue thought to hold galaxies together — just got a modern clue.
The wide frequency coverage of GLEAM gave astronomers the first "radio colour" map of the sky, including the galaxy itself.
Deep in the heart of our galaxy, there is a faint but powerful glow that has puzzled scientists for more than a decade.
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Is This Mysterious Glow at the Center of the Milky Way Caused by Dark Matter?
An excess of gamma rays in the center of our galaxy could mean scientists have finally detected dark matter particles—or not ...
Live Science on MSN
For the first time, James Webb telescope detects 5 'building blocks of life' in ice outside the Milky Way
New observations from the James Webb Space Telescope have uncovered five complex organic molecules trapped in the ice around ...
RIT researchers have revealed a new view of the Red Spider Nebula, as featured in ‘The Astrophysical Journal’ and by the ...
Do the building blocks of life exist beyond the Milky Way, and can we identify them? This is what a recent study published in ...
NASA says something strange is happening with our Universe and how quickly it's expanding. Scientists have been studying new data from the Hubble Space Telescope. They say the expansion rate has ...
Astronomers used the James Webb Telescope to detect complex carbon molecules frozen around a young star, ST6, beyond our ...
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