Stories by SWNS on MSN
Scientists use James Webb telescope to reveal how Earth will die
Earth will eventually be destroyed when the Sun dies around five billion years from now, according to new research.
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) captured an amazing video of the outflow Herbig-Haro 49/50 (HH 49/50), a newborn star.
Space.com on MSN
James Webb Space Telescope catches 6 galaxies merging into one of the largest galaxies we've seen
An intense demolition derby of at least six galaxies smashing into one another has been found lurking in the early universe ...
The James Webb Space Telescope has revealed the first atmosphere around a surviving planet around a white dwarf. Credit: NASA ...
Space.com on MSN
The JWST imaged the universe's oldest galaxies, and scientists can't explain what they saw
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, astronomers have spotted a massive and densely packed galaxy cluster before such ...
Webb captures dramatic temperature spikes on HD 80606 b, one of the most extreme giant planets ever discovered.
A new image from the James Webb Space Telescope is giving astronomers a striking look at young stars forming 1,280 ...
A new James Webb telescope snap shows off the glowing gas, sculpted jets and newborn stars lurking within the giant cosmic ...
Massive galaxies? Dusty black holes? Black hole stars? Scientists have raised a lot of theories around what the crimson blobs ...
The "Pink Planet," formally known as GJ504b, was discovered in 2013 and is technically not a planet but rather a ...
India Today on MSN
Webb finds brave planet that survived the death of its sun. It should have died too
The James Webb Space Telescope has studied WD 1856 b, a giant planet orbiting a dead star, offering a rare glimpse into the possible future of our Solar System after the Sun dies.
NASA is commencing a $30 million rescue mission as soon as this week to nudge a space observatory to a higher orbit before it falls back to the planet. The Swift Observatory, launched in 2004, studies ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results