Researchers propose that hydrogen gas from the early Universe emitted detectable radio waves influenced by dark matter.
In 1867, Lord Kelvin imagined atoms as knots in the aether. The idea was soon disproven. Atoms turned out to be something ...
In a recent feat that’s sparked excitement in quantum labs worldwide, Caltech researchers have managed to place atoms in a ...
Faint radio signals from the Universe’s dark ages could uncover how dark matter shaped the cosmos. Tel Aviv University ...
Astronomers have unveiled a new catalog of massive galaxy clusters, revealing new insight on the evolution of the universe ...
On the night of Oct. 5, 1923, Edwin Hubble observed a strange star that flickered in intensity at regular intervals. The star ...
Using the James Webb Space Telescope, scientists have charted billions of years of galactic evolution, and found that ...
This year, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Shimon Sakaguchi from Osaka University in Japan, Mary E. Brunkow from the Institute for System Biology and Fred Ramsdell from Sonoma ...
"They are the parents of all matter in the universe today, including our own bodies, while the knots can be thought of as our ...
Japan–US scientists combine T2K and NOvA data to measure neutrino mass gaps with record precision, offering clues to the ...
According to the laws of physics, matter and antimatter behave the same way and were formed in equal quantities in the Big ...
A novel imaging technique used for the first time on a ground-based telescope has helped a UCLA-led team of astronomers to ...