News
4d
Discover Magazine on MSNThe Oldest Rocks on Earth Are in Canada, and They’re 4.16 Billion Years OldDiscover how scientists found and dated the oldest rocks on the planet, and why studying them can help explain how life on ...
4d
Discover Magazine on MSNA Giant Planet Forming Around a Small Star Creates Cosmic MysteryLearn how a new discovery of a giant planet can help scientists refine their theories of how planets form.
6d
Discover Magazine on MSNJames Webb Space Telescope Captures Smallest Exoplanet Ever Seen in Historic FirstLearn more about TWA 7 b, an exoplanet with the mass of Saturn that was captured by creating a fake eclipse.
8d
Discover Magazine on MSNTake a First Look at the Vera C. Rubin Images: Millions of Galaxies and Thousands of AsteroidsDiscover the first images from NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory and learn about what it's new mission is for space.
15d
Discover Magazine on MSNThese Glistening Glass Beads on the Moon Likely Came From Ancient Lunar VolcanoesLearn more about these shimmery, orange and black beads on the moon that researchers describe as “tiny, pristine” time capsules.
1d
Space.com on MSNNASA exoplanet-hunting spacecraft and citizen scientists discover a cool new alien worldA new gas giant world discovered by citizen scientists using data from NASA's exoplanet-hunting spacecraft TESS is cool, ...
13d
Discover Magazine on MSNDiscover the Handfish: A Bizarre Fish That Walks With Finger-Like FinsWhat is the handfish? Discover the handfish, a tiny fish with finger-like fins that’s critically endangered and needs our ...
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNThe James Webb Space Telescope Reveals Its First Direct Image Discovery of an ExoplanetResearchers identified the likely planetary candidate’s infrared light after blocking out its host star’s overwhelming glare ...
“We find that both exhibit strong linearly increasing trends, coupled with a large surge in magnitude between 330 and 220 ...
In September 2023, a strange seismic signal rippled across global monitoring stations. Every 90 seconds, for nine days straight, the Earth subtly pulsed — and then it happened again a month later. No ...
They’re not a perfect match, but it’s way too hot on the first planet for us to hop over and confirm for ourselves.
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