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Lurking 600 million light-years away, the supermassive black hole ... type of event." The galaxy (orange) and the tidal disruption event (blue) as imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope and ...
There’s a new class of cosmic object in town. And it might just overturn our understanding of black holes and galaxy ...
Have you ever had an X-ray taken of your bones? Well, so has the Milky Way. NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory regularly images ...
According to the images, the phone will have the same Titanium Silver and Titanium Icy Blue options as the base Galaxy S25, alongside the Titanium Jet Black seen ... to solve its space dilemma.
Rather than solid arms, spiral galaxies may show density waves—regions where matter slows down and bunches up, like cars in ...
The word itself comes from galaktikós kyklos, or “milky circle,” the ancient Greek term for the Milky Way, our home galaxy.
Follow-up observations by the Hubble Space Telescope revealed that this black hole lies 2,600 light-years from the galaxy's core, where a much larger black hole resides — a behemoth 100 million ...
It shows a rotational structure but no visible stars. This characteristic aligns with the hypothesis of a dark galaxy, primarily composed of dark matter. Measurements indicate that unexplained matter ...
Captured by the VST, NGC 3640 reveals a turbulent history of cosmic cannibalism, but its current companion, NGC 3641, remains ...
A beautiful but skewed spiral galaxy dazzles in this NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image. The galaxy, called Arp 184 or NGC ...